Powered by Roundtable

The Seahawks only have four selections in the NFL Draft, so general manager John Schneider has to make them count.

The Seattle Seahawks' offseason approach has been to consolidate what they already have, despite losing some key pieces.

Mike Macdonald's team is still in good shape, but due to those free agent losses, the franchise has only four selections in the upcoming NFL Draft to fill roster holes.

So that means general manager John Schneider has to hit on his draft choices, with the Seahawks having one selection in each of the first three rounds, before a sixth-rounder pick to close out the draft.

We have seen many mock drafts come out, and when it comes to Seattle at No. 32, there isn't really a clear theme emerging.

Some have the Seahawks taking a corner or safety due to the free-agent losses of Coby Bryant and Riq Woolen.

Plus, with Kenneth Walker moving to the Kansas City Chiefs, a running back like Jadarian Price is also an option, so the Seahawks will have to wait to see how the draft board falls.

But for NFL.com's Gennaro Filice, in his latest mock draft, the Seahawks take Clemson corner Avieon Terrell.

"At 5-10 3/4, 186 pounds, Avieon’s a touch smaller than his older brother, Falcons corner A.J. Terrell," Filice wrote. "But don’t let the lighter frame fool you: The 21-year-old plays with an intoxicating edge. And it gets results, like eight forced fumbles over the past two seasons.

"Avieon offers inside/outside versatility, with many projecting him as an NFL nickel. Long story short, the reigning Super Bowl champs add another feisty, versatile cover man to their collection."

In Terrell, Macdonald's secondary is getting a tough, physical corner who loves taking the ball away.

As Filice wrote, Terrell had eight forced fumbles over the past two seasons, with five of them coming last season. So the Seahawks, who were already good at taking the ball away, get another player who takes it away for fun.

Terrell is a versatile corner and has elite skills in man coverage, according to several evaluators, so the Seahawks, if they did select Terrell, would be getting a Day 1 starter in the secondary.

While other needs like running back and pass rusher are on the to-do list, if Terrell falls to the Seahawks, I'd imagine the franchise will be quick to turn in that draft card.