Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson (3) against the San Francisco 49ers at State Farm Stadium.  Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Russell Wilson spoke with the media on Thursday for the first time in several months, and he emphatically stated that he never wanted to leave the Seattle Seahawks and has a great relationship with head coach Pete Carroll. Depending on how things go this season, that sentiment could change dramatically.

ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler said on “Get Up!” Friday morning that there is a feeling around the NFL that the situation between Wilson and the Seahawks “could get very ugly once again” if Seattle doesn’t contend for a Super Bowl.

“Russell Wilson was straight-up frustrated because he felt his name was floated in trade rumors even a few years back,” Fowler said, as transcribed by Bleacher Report’s Tim Daniels. “And then this offseason, he had ideas to try to get the Seahawks back in the Super Bowl. He wanted to present them to the team, he was calling them up, saying, ‘Hey, what are we doing here, there?’ He felt like that was met with resistance. That they weren’t hearing him. So there was straight-up consternation.”

Some of those issues have been resolved. Fowler noted that Carroll has had several productive conversations with Wilson and included him in the decision to hire new offensive coordinator Shane Waldron. That doesn’t necessarily mean the positive feelings will linger for another year.

“Things are much better now, but his contract is very much tradable next year, where the dead money on the salary cap gets cut in half to $26 million,” Fowler said.

Had the Seahawks traded Wilson this offseason, they would have absorbed a dead salary cap hit of roughly $40 million. That is one of the reasons it was never a viable option.

Wilson’s agent provided a list of teams to which the QB would accept a trade earlier this offseason. Despite that, Wilson insists he never asked to be dealt.

Carroll also recently downplayed the drama (see his comments here), so it’s clear the Seahawks are committed to moving forward. If the team struggles in 2021, the tension could quickly return.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Astros RHP day-to-day with forearm discomfort
Route 66: Star guards score 33 each as Mavericks take 3-0 WCF lead
Braves superstar will miss remainder of 2024 season with torn ACL
Mavericks rookie takes brutal knee to the head in Game 3
Josef Newgarden wins Indianapolis 500 with a thrilling last-lap pass
White Sox manager absolutely shreds team after latest loss
Unlikely hero helps Rangers steal Game 3 over Panthers
Angels slugger suffers what might be baseball's most bizarre injury of 2024 season
Watch: Unlikely Rangers playoff hero nets two goals vs. Panthers
Celtics put Kristaps Porzingis' return from injury on hold
Watch: Panthers' Sam Reinhart nets two goals in first period vs. Rangers
Watch: Big crash ensues on Lap 1 of 2024 Indianapolis 500
Red Sox release well-traveled right-hander
Braves slugger, four-time All-Star leaves game due to knee soreness
Anthony Edwards makes declaration ahead of Game 3 against Mavericks
Watch: Matt Vierling's walk-off HR caps wild game in Detroit
Report: Star Japanese pitcher could move to MLB next year
Royals return Rule 5 pick to Yankees
Sixers viewed as a 'serious danger' to snatch core Nuggets role player
NFL reporter reveals why CeeDee Lamb isn't rushing to sign new contract