Packers-Seahawks Joint Practice: Play and Player of the Day

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GREEN BAY, Wis. – Evan Williams finished Green Bay Packers training camp with a bang.
While it was a rough day at the office for Green Bay’s No. 1 defense, Williams intercepted Sam Darnold to give the Packers the win in the starters vs. starters 2-minute drill to cap Thursday’s joint practice against the Seattle Seahawks.
Packers-Seahawks Play of the Day: Evan Williams
Evan Williams closed practice with the type of highlight-reel play made so often last season by Xavier McKinney.
“Really, I was just reading the quarterback’s eyes off the rip and he kind of had a good tilt toward the boundary to my left,” Williams explained of his 2-minute drill interception. “I looked pre-snap before the play even started. I was looking at my matchups.
“They had 11 [Jaxon Smith-Njigba] and Cooper Kupp over to my right and I’m thinking, OK, those are more route-runner type, not (necessarily) go-deep type of guy. And we had MVS to my left with a tight end, so I’m thinking, ‘OK, that guy’s got real gas. I might have to play over the top of him.’ Yeah, I got to my post, I got good depth, and he let it launch. It might have been in the air a little too long and I was able to go cover some ground.”
On the play, rookie defensive tackle Warren Brinson had a big push up the middle. Darnold saw Smith-Njigba get a step on cornerback Keisean Nixon. The ball probably did hang in the air too long, like Williams said, which allowed the second-year safety to range from centerfield to his left to make a high-point interception.
“I thought it was mine, so I’m kind of mad about it, but Evan’s a hell of a player,” Nixon said. “He’s been playing really good. He take a big jump from Year 1 to Year 2. Close it out, that’s what you’re supposed to do.”
Williams celebrated immediately after catching the ball. After a short return, he slid to the turf and did a Steph Curry-style “night-night” celebration.
“I was waiting to pull that out,” he explained. “I was telling my coach, if I get one, I’m going to pull it out right now. I was honestly so juiced, hearing the crowd and all that, after I picked it off, I wanted to go return it, but I heard Coach Haf [defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley] yelling, ‘Get down,’ so I’ll get down.”
Evan Williams INT in 11v11's
— Alexander Basara (@Basaraski) August 21, 2025
Good lord the push up front from Warren Brinson. Likely would end in a sack
(📹 @ Chase.Nitz on IG) pic.twitter.com/2MQXOxOK9I
More Packers-Seahawks 2-Minute Drills
Both teams ran a pair of 2-minute drills, with all four starting at the 30-yard line with 1:30 on the clock. Green Bay went 2-0 on defense and 1-1 on offense.
Offensively, what was left of Green Bay’s No. 1 offense gained two first downs before the drill was for some reason cut short. Trailing 28-21, Malik Willis converted fourth-and-11 with a pass over the middle to Malik Heath. After a false start and incompletions to Heath, who was open deep, and Julian Hicks, Willis escaped to his left and connected with Luke Musgrave for a first down.
Willis got the offense organized and clocked the ball with 11 seconds remaining but didn’t get another snap.
Up next was Green Bay’s No. 1 defense, which had to protect a 35-28 lead. Sam Darnold connected with Jaxon Smith-Njigba for one first down but a big scramble up the middle was called back by a penalty before Evan Williams’ interception.
Sean Clifford directed Green Bay’s backups, with the score 28-26. Clifford went 0-for-4 but appeared to get a mulligan. Starting with 1:08 on the clock, Clifford converted a fourth-and-8 with a pass to tight end Ben Sims, who got out of bounds with 45 seconds to go. Clifford got another first down with a completion to Isaiah Neyor and hit Kawaan Baker on a slant for 7.
On third-and-3, Neyor torched cornerback Damarion Williams for what should have been a long touchdown, but Clifford overthrew him. Mark McNamee booted a 55-yard field goal.
With the situation 30-28, Green Bay’s backups on defense scored a decisive win against Drew Lock. On fourth-and-10, Kingsley Enagbare capped a good day with a sack.
Packers-Seahawks Players of the Day: Kamal Hadden, Kingsley Enagbare
The most dominant player on the field was Seattle receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, who was unstoppable for most of the practice.
From Green Bay’s perspective, first-year cornerback Kamal Hadden might have put himself back in the mix for a spot on the 53-man roster.
Hadden was beaten a handful of times during Saturday’s preseason win at the Colts. At practice this week, rookie Micah Robinson took Hadden’s spot with the No. 2 defense. On Thursday, though, Hadden rejoined Bo Melton as the No. 2 pairing.
After going 1-1 during the one-on-ones, Hadden broke up a pass from Drew Lock to former Packers receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling to start a third-down period. Hadden celebrated by screaming a series of obscenities at Seattle’s sideline. During a seven-on-seven red-zone period, Hadden broke up another pass from Lock.
Kingsley Enagbare also had an excellent day. He had sacks during a third-down period and 2-minute drill, back-to-back impact rushes – he batted down the pass on the second of those – and a tackle for loss on a running play by Kenneth Walker.
More Green Bay Packers News
Zach Tom was thrown out of #Packers-Seahawks joint practice today for his role in the big fight. Here's what he had to say afterward. ⬇️https://t.co/Jv9UiErfGX
— Bill Huber (@BillHuberNFL) August 21, 2025
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Bill Huber, who has covered the Green Bay Packers since 2008, is the publisher of Packers On SI, a Sports Illustrated channel. E-mail: packwriter2002@yahoo.com History: Huber took over Packer Central in August 2019. Twitter: https://twitter.com/BillHuberNFL Background: Huber graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, where he played on the football team, in 1995. He worked in newspapers in Reedsburg, Wisconsin Dells and Shawano before working at The Green Bay News-Chronicle and Green Bay Press-Gazette from 1998 through 2008. With The News-Chronicle, he won several awards for his commentaries and page design. In 2008, he took over as editor of Packer Report Magazine, which was founded by Hall of Fame linebacker Ray Nitschke, and PackerReport.com. In 2019, he took over the new Sports Illustrated site Packer Central, which he has grown into one of the largest sites in the Sports Illustrated Media Group.