Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Kasen Williams has exactly zero minutes left that he's willing to donate to practice squad.

In Seattle or otherwise.

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And while his play on the field has proven as much through two preseason games, he decided he'd voice that obvious yet refreshing opinion publicly, after Friday's 20-13 win.

"I’ve been on the practice squad for two years now, and quite honestly I’m just tired of it," Williams said.

He described his mindset in trying to make the final roster as "to just go up and get it." That phrase works both figuratively and literally. Nearly all six of his preseason grabs have been leaping catches over a defender. And even a Pro Bowler wasn't immune on Friday.

Against Vikings cornerback Xavier Rhodes in the first quarter, he brought in an acrobatic 27-yard reception. He went to the air again on the same drive to secure his first preseason touchdown -- a fade from one yard out.

“It was more important for me to do it against a starting corner; somebody that’s known in the league," he said. "For me to do it now is perfect for me.”

Williams didn't end his reign of terror there. He immediately stonewalled Jerick McKinnon on the ensuing kick return, stopping the return man at his own 12-yard line. But don't think that's his first special teams contribution, just his most obvious.

"He did well on teams last week, also," head coach Pete Carroll added. "You’re all watching it, and we’re watching it together. He’s competing his tail off and doing some great stuff, so it’s really exciting.”

Barring an act of God, Congress or both, Williams will make the Seahawks 2017 final roster. The only blemish on his record was a second-quarter "drop" on a bit of an underthrow by quarterback Russell Wilson. Even then, Williams adjusted back to the ball and dispatched his defender.

Unfortunately, he let it slip through his arms. It would have been a tremendous play and he should have made the catch. But, it hardly outshines his preseason brilliance.

Through two games, Williams has caught six of eight targets for 147 yards and a touchdown while being a willing special teams contributor. He's been everything the team has needed him to be.

The only question regarding his roster status now:

Can he unseat anyone to move into a featured top-three wide receiver role? That requires unseating any of Paul Richardson, Tyler Lockett and Jermaine Kearse.

A tall task -- but he certainly has a flair for making large leaps.

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