BOOM. Just days before Super Bowl LX, Roger Goodell stepped to the mic and flat-out called a bombshell Wall Street Journal report “not true.” The claim? The NFL slapped the Seattle Seahawks with a $5 million fine for breaking ownership rules. Goodell’s exact words: the fine never happened.
But hold up — the drama is far from over. Beneath the denial lies a ticking clock that could force one of the NFL’s most storied franchises onto the auction block right after the confetti falls.
The Ownership Rule That Won’t Go Away
Ever since Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen passed in 2018, the Seahawks have been controlled by the Paul G. Allen Trust — not a single individual. League bylaws demand one controlling owner. The NFL granted extensions, partly tied to a stadium clause that expired in spring 2025. Now, with no more grace period, pressure is mounting on Jody Allen, Paul’s sister and trust chair, to sell.
Goodell praised her leadership Monday: “Jody is doing a great job… They’re in the Super Bowl.” Yet he added the killer line — “eventually the team will need to be sold in accordance with [the trust].” Translation: the clock is running.
Super Bowl High or Fire-Sale Heartbreak?
The Seahawks are set to face the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX. A Lombardi Trophy could skyrocket the franchise value — the Celtics just sold for $6.1 billion off a championship run. Vice chair Bert Kolde admitted a title “helped the Celtics’ sale price quite a bit.”
Imagine hoisting the trophy in Levi’s Stadium… only to watch your beloved team hit the market weeks later. Legacy vs. league rules. Family promise vs. billion-dollar business.
The Legacy Paul Allen Saved
Rewind to 1997: Paul Allen rescued the Seahawks from relocation to Southern California, campaigned statewide, and delivered Lumen Field after a razor-thin referendum victory. Now his own trust directive — sell the team and give proceeds to charity — collides with NFL ownership law.
- No fine issued (per Goodell)
- Trust mandates eventual sale
- Blazers sale closing this spring
- Seahawks expected on market post-Super Bowl
The NFL says it will “be supportive” when Jody decides the timing. But with the grace period gone and bylaws unchanged, how much choice does she really have?
One thing is certain: Super Bowl week just got a whole lot spicier.









