On Sunday, Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba made sure his first postseason experience will end at Super Bowl LX. The third-year pro out of Ohio State caught a team-leading 10 passes (including an impressive one-handed snag) for 153 yards and a touchdown on the way to Seattle’s 31-27 victory against the division-rival Los Angeles Rams in the NFC Championship Game.
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Late in the second quarter with Seattle trailing 13-10, Smith-Njigba ran to an open spot in the left corner of the end zone and QB Sam Darnold found him for a TD to re-take the lead. The score sent the lively home crowd at Seattle’s Lumen Field into a frenzy.
Guess who?! JSN.
LARvsSEA on FOX/FOX One
Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/n5xJggtR4n— NFL (@NFL) January 26, 2026
Seattle scored again early in the third quarter, but L.A. would twice pull to within four points. Ultimately, however, the Seahawks never relinquished their halftime lead on the way to the four-point win.
After the game, an emotional Smith-Njigba sought to deflect the praise away from his performance and toward the One who made it possible.
“I just want to give all the glory to God,” the 23-year-old told Fox Sports. “Without Him, I’m nothing. Just what He has had on this team and this city and myself, I just want to give Him all the glory. It’s an honor to be here in Seattle. It’s an honor to lace ’em up with these guys. For us to be going to the Super Bowl, it’s a dream come true.”
Giving all the glory to God.
Nothing better than what JSN says here on FOX Sports after winning the NFC Championship. pic.twitter.com/I6cNe9YJqN
— Sports Spectrum (@Sports_Spectrum) January 26, 2026
After missing the playoffs the past two years, Seattle vaulted to the No. 1 seed in the NFC thanks to one of the league’s best defenses and the emergence of Smith-Njigba as perhaps the league’s best receiver. He led the NFL with 1,793 receiving yards in the regular season, and he’s eclipsed the 100-yard plateau in 10 of Seattle’s 19 total games and the 150-yard mark in three of them, including Sunday.
In Sunday’s postgame press conference, Smith-Njigba again pointed to God.
“I want to give all glory to God,” he said. “Win or lose — draw — I wouldn’t be here without Him.”
Sunday was not the first time Smith-Njigba has spoken openly about his faith. He said he was “blessed by God” after winning the Rose Bowl in 2022 with Ohio State, and in a statement declaring his eligibility for the NFL Draft, he made sure to express his gratitude to God.
“Most of all I want to thank God for giving me strength,” he wrote. “Leaning on Him has always been my answer, and He has not failed me yet because I know I’ll come out stronger than ever.”
He calls himself a “Follower of Christ” on X, and alongside quarterback C.J. Stroud and other teammates, he helped foster a culture of faith within the Ohio State program that has carried forward, with the Buckeyes’ football team hosting campus-wide faith events the past two years.
JSN also frequently includes the acronym AGTGOD on his Instagram posts, which means “All glory to God.”
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During the 2024-25 season, Smith-Njigba was asked about his faith by KING 5 News in Seattle.
“Growing up, being a follower of Christ is big,” he said. “Just having that foundation means everything. Leaning on Him, giving Him all my worries and just Him handling it, it’s the best feeling in the world.”
When asked before this season on “The Pivot” podcast about his new role as Seattle’s unquestioned No. 1 wide receiver, the Rockwall, Texas, native said he wasn’t placing extra pressure on himself.
“For me, it’s God’s timing,” he said. “It’s perfect timing. … Now I feel most ready, more than ever. I’m excited. I feel like I’m in the right place.”
God’s timing has now led Smith-Njigba to the pinnacle of his sport — Super Bowl LX on Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, California. With the NFC title clinched, he and his teammates now turn their attention to their opponent in the big game, the New England Patriots and MVP-candidate Drake Maye. New England bested the Broncos, 10-7, in Denver on Sunday.
Super Bowl LX will be a rematch of Super Bowl XLIX in February 2015, which New England won, 28-24.
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