Let’s be honest, the Russell Wilson career trajectory has been less of a graceful arc and more of a nosedive that even a stunt pilot would find terrifying. Once upon a time, he was the toast of Seattle, a Super Bowl champion, and a guy who looked like he was pre-booking his ticket to Canton. Now? He’s been benched by the New York Giants for a rookie after just three games, and the football world is starting to ask some very uncomfortable questions.
During a recent Amazon Prime broadcast, two guys who know a thing or two about elite football—Hall of Fame Tight End Tony Gonzalez and Wilson’s former teammate Richard Sherman—grabbed their shovels and started digging a grave for Wilson’s Hall of Fame chances. And boy, they did not hold back.
Tony Gonzalez: "If ever there was somebody who played himself out of a Hall of Fame, it's Russell Wilson…"
Richard Sherman: "Without that legendary defense (in Seattle), he's been 4-11, 7-8, 0-3 to start with the Giants…"
#NFL pic.twitter.com/bZeE4ymB8f
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) September 26, 2025
Tony Gonzalez, a man whose bust in Canton is already collecting dust, dropped a bombshell. “If ever there was somebody who played himself out of a Hall of Fame, it’s Russell Wilson,” Gonzalez said, with the kind of bluntness that makes producers sweat. He painted a picture of a player who was “the man” in Seattle but has since become a high-priced journeyman, collecting checks from Denver, Pittsburgh, and now New York, leaving a trail of disappointment in his wake.
“They paid him $39 million to leave,” Gonzalez said about Wilson’s disastrous stint in Denver. It is the kind of exit package usually reserved for a CEO who tanked the company, not a franchise quarterback. Ouch.
Just when you thought it couldn’t get more brutal, Richard Sherman, a key member of that legendary “Legion of Boom” defense that helped Wilson get a ring, jumped in with a resounding “I agree.” Sherman’s argument is simple, yet devastating. He suggests we need to look at Wilson’s career in two distinct parts: with the Legion of Boom, and without it.
“Without that legendary defense, he’s been 4-11, 7-8, 0-3 to start with the Giants,” Sherman said, rattling off records that would make a rookie cringe. The narrative is clear: Wilson was a “winning football player” when he had an all-time great defense cleaning up his messes. But when he had to go out on his own, the results just haven’t been there.
It’s the ultimate “was it him, or was it the system?” debate, and Sherman is planting his flag firmly on the side of “it wasn’t him.” The irony wasn’t lost on anyone that Sherman was delivering this eulogy from the very stadium where Wilson threw that infamous goal-line interception in Super Bowl XLIX—a moment that arguably marked the beginning of the end for that Seahawks dynasty.
Despite the public flogging, Wilson maintains he’s a “winner” and has a “championship mentality.” But at this point, it feels like he’s trying to sell beachfront property in Arizona. After a short, ugly run with the Giants, his future in the league is murkier than ever. Is this the end of the road for the quarterback once known as “Mr. Unlimited?”
Only time will tell, but one thing is for sure: the debate over his legacy just got a lot spicier, and his former teammates aren’t afraid to turn up the heat.
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