Seahawks Star Smashed His Head On Street Light Atop Super Bowl Parade Bus In Scary Accident [VIDEO]
This article was originally published on Total Pro Sports.
![Seahawks Star Hit His Head On Street Light During Super Bowl 60 Parade In Accident That Could Have Gone A Lot Worse [VIDEO]](https://www.totalprosports.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/seahawks-6-1024x563.jpg)
Well, a painful hit to the head wasn’t something Abe Lucas had in mind during the Seattle Seahawks’ Super Bowl 60 parade on Wednesday.
Three days after defeating the New England Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl 60, the Seahawks held their Super Bowl parade in Emerald City. It’s Seattle’s first “big four” sports championship celebration in 12 years, when the Seahawks won Super Bowl 48 back in the 2013 season.
As the parade bus drove through the streets, a distracted Abe Lucas failed to notice that it was approaching a street light. The veteran offensive lineman never saw what was about to hit him:
Seahawks OL Abe Lucas hit his head on a street light during the Seahawks’ Super Bowl parade 😳 pic.twitter.com/6d5LWBHBsD
— GhettoGronk (@GhettoGronk) February 12, 2026
It’s fortunate that Lucas didn’t fall off the bus and onto the street there, or that the bus wasn’t driving faster. Fortunately, Lucas appeared to be just fine.
Early estimates were that more than one million people would attend the Seahawks’ Super Bowl parade, per KOMO News.
Abe Lucas Played A Significant Role In The Seahawks’ Super Bowl Season

The Seahawks’ offensive line was an issue near the end of Russell Wilson’s tenure. But Sam Darnold enjoyed an excellent o-line in his Super Bowl-winning campaign, and it was largely thanks to Lucas.
Lucas finished with a 2025 Pro Football Focus grade of 75.6, 24th among 89 offensive tackles. His 76.8 pass-blocking grade ranked 18th among players at the position, too.
Of course, blocking for Darnold was only part of the story. Seattle boasted an elite rushing attack and still won the Super Bowl despite Zach Charbonnet’s unfortunate season-ending injury in the Divisional Round against the San Francisco 49ers.
Walker was practically unstoppable in Super Bowl 59 with 135 rushing yards. On top of that, Darnold was only sacked once, whereas Drake Maye was brought down six times and lost two fumbles.
