Dan Johnson takes you through his preview, prediction, and pick for NFL Week 17’s game between the Carolina Panthers and the Seattle Seahawks.
Seattle walks into Week 17 at 12–3 with the NFC’s steering wheel in its hands, and the whole league knows what that means. One clean Sunday keeps the road to the conference running through their building, and every snap carries that weight. Carolina sits 8–7, and the whole city can see the division door cracked open, because this is the kind of afternoon that flips a season from “progress” to “playoff host.” Sam Darnold (QB) gets his return game in the loudest possible context, back in the stadium where old opinions still hang in the air. Bryce Young (QB) has turned “pesky” into an identity, not a compliment, and that edge shows up when the stakes try to squeeze the clock. Dave Canales gets a measuring-stick game against a Seattle program he knows inside-out, and Carolina gets to prove its late-year surge is real, not just convenient. This is January football showing up a week early in Charlotte, under a gray sky and a light breeze. Below is my prediction for NFL Week 17’s game between the Carolina Panthers and the Seattle Seahawks.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
The season-long math starts with Seattle’s edge through the air and on the scoreboard. The Seahawks sit at 0.024 EPA/play and 0.127 EPA/pass, while Carolina sits at -0.016 EPA/play and -0.025 EPA/pass. Seattle also lives at 2.59 points per drive, and Carolina sits at 1.98. That gap matches the quarterback baseline, because Sam Darnold (QB) is sitting at 0.12 EPA/play with a 51.69% success rate and a 67.22% completion rate. He’s also getting the ball out on a 2.70 time-to-throw, which pairs perfectly with a defense-first spread. Bryce Young (QB) is closer to neutral at roughly 0.00 EPA/play with a 43.53% success rate, and his 5.31% sack rate tells you how thin the margin gets when the pocket caves. That’s why the pressure split matters more than any vibe. Seattle creates pressure on 39.7% of dropbacks, while Carolina creates 28.3%. Carolina also allows pressure at 41.8% for the season, and that number spikes to 44.3% over the last six.
As with most contests this time of year, too, the injury layer sharpens the tension, with Seattle down LT Charles Cross (T) and Carolina missing Trevin Wallace (LB) and Tershawn Wharton (DT), while Robert Hunt (G) sits in the gray area.
That’s the game’s heartbeat when Seattle’s front wins time, because Carolina’s protection keeps inviting one ugly series that flips field position. Kenneth Walker (RB) matters here too, because Seattle doesn’t need run efficiency to control the game. Walker has 190 carries for 879 yards with 605 yards after contact, and those hidden yards are how Seattle turns second-and-eight into third-and-two. Carolina’s counter is Rico Dowdle (RB) with 217 carries for 1,007 yards and 660 yards after contact, but Seattle’s defense has been a wall lately at -0.124 EPA/run allowed. It also pairs with a coverage contrast that favors Seattle’s patience. Carolina plays zone on 81.8% of snaps and leans single-high at 57.2%, even in recent weeks. Seattle lives in zone too, but it blends two-high at 55.1% and keeps the roof on explosives.
That’s why I start with Jaxon Smith-Njigba (WR), because his season reads like a weekly plan. He’s at 143 targets, 104 catches, 1,637 yards, and a 3.74 yards-per-route clip, with 16 red-zone targets. He’s also hot lately with 58 targets, 41 catches, 596 yards, and five touchdowns over the last six games, which is the kind of heater that forces bracket decisions. Carolina’s answer is Tetairoa McMillan (WR), because his last-six run shows a red-zone eruption. He has 120 targets, 72 catches, 876 yards, and 12 touchdowns over that span, with 14 red-zone targets on the season and a 2.28 yards-per-route mark lately. If Carolina is going to swing this, it’s through McMillan winning in single-high windows and Young surviving enough third downs to cash it. Seattle still owns the defensive floor, though. Over the last six games, Seattle has allowed -0.165 EPA/pass and -0.124 EPA/run, and it keeps living in negative numbers.
Seahawks vs. Panthers pick, best bet
The Carolina cover case has teeth, and it starts with the recent efficiency flip. Over the last six games, Carolina sits at 0.018 EPA/play and 0.103 EPA/pass, while Seattle sits at -0.026 EPA/play and -0.033 EPA/pass. Carolina has also played cleaner on third down lately at 41.5%, while Seattle has slipped to 35.5%. The Panthers also push tempo, and the pace split matters for a total. Carolina runs 48.4 seconds per play in the last six, while Seattle drifts to 57.5. If Carolina turns this into a play-count game, the seven points start to feel heavy. The Panthers can also steal sack moments, because their defensive pressure-to-sack rate jumps to 22.5% in the last six. Seattle even shows some scoring wobble, with a 40.0% red-zone touchdown rate in the last six. I still fade the upset story because Carolina’s protection keeps inviting chaos. A 44.3% pressure rate allowed puts Young in constant negotiation, and Seattle still creates 37.3% pressure in the last six. Carolina’s run defense also slips hard lately at 0.095 EPA/run allowed, and that’s the kind of leak that turns close games into clock drains.
So I’m playing this from DraftKings with Seattle -7 at -118, and I’m treating it as a defense-led cover. I respect Carolina’s surge, but Seattle’s profile shows more ways to bank winning snaps. Seattle wins with pressure without selling out, and that matters against an offense allowing that much heat. I also see a scoring texture that leans modest, not volcanic. Both teams have watched red-zone touchdown rates dip recently, and both sit at a 50.0% field goal rate in the red zone over the last six. The total is 42.5, and I expect a game that threatens the under without ever feeling safe. Still, my official card is the side, because Seattle’s defensive efficiency stays the cleanest edge in the building.
I expect Seattle to open with controlled rhythm and make Carolina prove it can rush the passer. The Panthers’ pass rush win rate has fallen from 7.3% to 5.9% in the last six, and that invites longer-developing route combinations. Seattle should live in zone-beaters and slot movement because Carolina stays zone-heavy at 77.3% lately and keeps single-high on 59.4%. That’s where Smith-Njigba and Cooper Kupp (WR) can turn short throws into chain-moving gains. I expect Carolina to answer with urgency and red-zone intent, because its last-six third-down rate has climbed and its pass EPA has spiked. Carolina should keep feeding McMillan and stress the seams with Ja’Tavion Sanders (TE), because Seattle still plays zone on 77.9% lately. The swing will come when the Panthers face third-and-long and the pressure finally lands. Seattle’s pressure creation and Carolina’s pressure allowance point to the same ending.
Seahawks -7. My predicted score: Seahawks 24, Panthers 16.
Best bet: Seahawks -7 (-120) at Panthers
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I’m riding Jaxon Smith-Njigba (WR) 7+ receptions at -105, because the game environment screams “chain-moving volume.” Seattle is playing for the top seed, and that usually means the offense leans into its lowest-variance button. JSN has 104 catches on 143 targets for 1,637 yards, and the last six games show the weekly floor: 41 catches on 58 targets for 596 yards with five touchdowns. Carolina is still a zone-heavy defense, living around 77–82% zone with a single-high lean, and that’s the exact coverage menu that feeds slot windows and quick in-breakers. Carolina also allows pressure at 44.3% over the last six, so Seattle should answer with rhythm throws and fast decisions, not slow-developing hero balls. If the Panthers keep it close, that’s even better, because the play count rises and the target tree tightens. Seven catches is a number I can live with, and -105 is a price I’m happy to pay.
Best prop lean: Jaxon Smith-Njigba 7+ receptions (-105)
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