There is no one in the world who can do what Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch can do. No. One.

This, of course, should be a mostly uncontroversial statement — especially if you’ve watched much of the ‘Hawks over the past few seasons — but in case you needed a quick reminder, it’s worth re-watching the infamous “Beast Quake” rush against the New Orleans Saints in 2011.

By now, Lynch’s epic 67-yard touchdown run has been well-chronicled as the play that shook the earth. (The crowd’s reaction literally registered as a small earthquake on a nearby seismometer.)

I mean, where do you even begin to describe the man’s singular ability?

There’s the incredible strength that keep his legs driving, even after he’s essentially brought to a dead-stop around the 34-yard line. There’s the eye-opening burst as Lynch crosses the 40, the moment when it becomes clear that this play might turn into more than some routine carry. Finally, there’s Lynch’s jaw-dropping power at the Saints 35-yard-line, when he takes an emasculated Tracy Porter, and tosses him aside with one arm like a rag doll.

It might not be hyperbole to suggest that Lynch is the only person with the combination of agility, speed, and sheer muscle necessary to make that play. Lynch, in that moment, and in so many others like it, is the very definition of irreplaceable.

So, naturally, he may be on his way out of Seattle.