Russel Wilson appears like he'll remain with the Seahawks. Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

The uncertainty surrounding Russell Wilson's Seattle situation has prompted teams to call GM John Schneider regarding the decorated quarterback’s availability. The team continues to insist its 10-year starter is not available.

Schneider and Pete Carroll said this week the team is not shopping Wilson, who has been in off-and-on trade rumors for over a year. While Schneider confirmed he has discussed Wilson with other teams, he is not interested in a trade.

“I wouldn’t be doing my job if I didn’t listen to it, if I just blew people off,” Schneider said (via the Seattle Times’ Bob Condotta), before adding there is no substance to the trade buzz regarding Wilson. “… When it’s out there in the media and all that, of course if I was with another team I’d call and be like, ‘Hey, what’s up with Russell Wilson?’ Just because you field those calls and questions doesn’t mean we are out there actively shopping him.”

Carroll confirmed the Seahawks have “no intention” of moving Wilson, whose $35M-per-year contract runs through 2023. This, of course, comes a year after Wilson and Carroll butted heads about the state of the franchise and the QB’s agent unveiled a four-team list of acceptable trade destinations. The Broncos and Giants later made their way onto that list, and an end-of-season report indicated Wilson wanted to explore his options. The 33-year-old passer has since said he wants to finish his career in Seattle.

With more chatter about Aaron Rodgers staying in Green Bay, Wilson’s less turbulent offseason further chills the quarterback market. Jimmy Garoppolo's surgery is set to prevent him from throwing until the summer, likely impacting his trade value, and new Vikings HC Kevin O’Connell is behind Kirk Cousins. This chain of events could well represent closing doors for QB-needy teams, potentially injecting more intrigue into this year’s draft.

Wilson playing next season in Seattle would push this situation to a key point, with Condotta adding a new contract that makes the Pro Bowler the league’s highest-paid passer would be the Wilson camp’s ask in 2023. The Seahawks completed this task in 2019, when Wilson’s previous deal had one year remaining.

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