Every weekday morning, we'll round up local and national Seattle Seahawks-related links.

The Seahawks will continue to lock arms during the national anthem, Michael Bennett told Bob Condotta of The Seattle Times:

“We’re not going to stop showing unity just because we are on the road,” said Bennett, who said for now the plan is for the team to continue the demonstration of unity all season.

Bennett has watched how other teams and players have also displayed their feelings during and after the anthem — including his younger brother Martellus, a tight end for New England who raised a fist in a “Black Power” salute at the end of the anthen before a game last Sunday night at Arizona along with teammate Devin McCourty.

Michael Bennett, though, said he does not plan to follow suit.

The Seahawks should not look past the Rams, writes Dave Boling of The Tacoma News Tribune:

While the Seahawks need more time for their newly configured offensive line to jell, the Rams have a defensive front seven considered among the best in the NFL.

In the past eight meetings, the Rams have sacked quarterback Russell Wilson 35 times — and that was when he had two healthy ankles.

Elliot Harrison of NFL.com predicts a 23-13 Seahawks win:

Anticipate a ground-heavy approach for Seattle (the 49ers ran the rock 42 times against L.A.), especially if Wilson is ailing more than the 'Hawks are letting on. That would, in theory, play into Los Angeles' hands, as Seattle's offensive line is no great shakes. Neither is the Rams' quarterback situation. Still don't understand why, down 21-0, Case Keenum didn't take more chances downfield for L.A. Whether it was play calling, the protection or Keenum himself, if you don't go vertical often, the field shrinks awfully quick. You don't want Seahawks safety Kam Chancellor camping out in an eight-man front all day.