RENTON, Wash. – Don’t look for Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman to move to safety on any plays Sunday against the Dallas Cowboys.

“Yeah, I don’t think we’re going to be doing that again,” Sherman said with a chuckle.

Free safety Earl Thomas couldn’t resist taking a little dig earlier this week at his buddy Sherman, who got caught in a spot where he normally wouldn’t be on the 60-yard touchdown reception Monday night by Washington receiver DeSean Jackson.

“Sherman was trying to play safety,” Thomas said. “That should teach him a valuable lesson about the guys that are behind him. It’s hard back there.”

Sherman and strong safety Kam Chancellor did a flip-flop on the play, with Sherman moving inside and Chancellor going outside.

“It was actually Cover 2 when they had me at safety,” Sherman said. “They [Washington] send two seams [with two receivers] at us and you have to pick one. You pick your poison with that play. But I think we’re effectively going to throw that one out.”

Seattle coach Pete Carroll agrees, taking the blame for a scheme that didn’t work.

“Richard was in a half-field situation back there that he’s not in very often," Carroll said. “But that was a little my fault. I shouldn’t have put him there.”

No doubt the Cowboys saw that play on film and might try to do something similar with receivers Dez Bryant and Terrance Williams. But the Seahawks won’t play it the same way again. Sherman won’t be moving to safety.