Seahawks Issue Statement After NFL’s Final Ruling on Penalty for 49ers Star Deommodore Lenoir — Punishment Ignites Serious Doubts About League Integrity
The Seattle Seahawks have officially spoken out after the NFL issued its final disciplinary ruling against Deommodore Lenoir of the San Francisco 49ers — a decision that immediately ignited widespread outrage throughout the Seahawks community.
According to the league’s announcement, Lenoir was fined $45,000 for unsportsmanlike and provocative conduct during the playoff game in which the Seattle Seahawks dominated the 49ers 41–6. No suspension. No additional discipline. For Seattle, the ruling landed as a deeply troubling conclusion — especially given the potential health implications of the incident.
Jaxon Smith-Njigba successfully ragebaiting Deommodore Lenoir 😭🥀✌🏾 pic.twitter.com/LD818AUF8L
— Stadium Live (@StadiumLiveApp) January 18, 2026
The altercation occurred in the third quarter, with the Seahawks firmly in control. Video that quickly spread across social media showed Lenoir initiating a helmet-to-helmet headbutt toward Jaxon Smith-Njigba after the play — an action widely viewed as provocative, uncontrolled, and unrelated to football. According to team sources, Smith-Njigba later experienced neck discomfort and strain, prompting close medical monitoring during and after the game.
While the NFL acknowledged that the act violated league standards for safety and sportsmanship, officials ultimately determined that the conduct did not rise to the level of a suspension, closing the case with a financial penalty alone.

Seattle’s response was swift.
In a carefully worded organizational statement, the Seahawks avoided naming Lenoir directly but made their frustration unmistakable:
“We respect the authority of the NFL,” the statement read. “But when a clear line is crossed and the consequences are visible to everyone, closing the matter with a single number inevitably raises questions. Not about one isolated moment — but about where the league’s true standards are set when the stage is at its biggest.”
That message resonated immediately across Seahawks Nation. Former players, analysts, and fans echoed the concern, arguing that playoff intensity cannot serve as a shield for dangerous behavior, particularly when the NFL has repeatedly emphasized player safety as a core value.
“Forty-five thousand dollars for an action that puts a player’s neck at risk?” one former Seahawks player said. “With today’s contracts, that’s not deterrence — that’s a cost of doing business.”
Inside the organization, Seahawks officials stressed that they are not seeking to escalate tensions with the 49ers. This is not about rivalry, nor about the lopsided 41–6 score.
Seattle delivered its message emphatically on the field.
Now, off the field, the Seahawks — and their fan base — are asking a far more uncomfortable question: Does the NFL truly protect the integrity and safety of the game, or does it simply do enough to move past moments that expose the league at its most vulnerable?
The NFL has delivered its final ruling.
In Seattle, the debate is far from over.




