SEATTLE — The noise at Lumen Field was already deafening. The 49ers were in town, the season was on the line, and the rain was coming down sideways. But for five minutes before kickoff, the hostility vanished.
It wasn’t about the NFC West rivalry anymore. It was about Linda Thompson-Black.
Most fans know Linda as the powerhouse behind the UNCF in the Pacific Northwest. She’s the one fighting for scholarships, pushing for equity in education, and grinding to give kids a shot they wouldn’t get otherwise. She thought she was on the field to take a bow for being named the Seahawks’ “Inspire Change Changemaker.”
She was wrong.
Commissioner Roger Goodell didn’t just fly to Seattle for the rain. He walked out, handed her a colorful board, and dropped the hammer: She’s going to Super Bowl LX.
“I was just trying to hold it together. You do this work because you love it, not for the cameras. But this? This is unreal.” — Linda Thompson-Black, Post-Presentation
Look, we love the hits and the touchdowns. But this is the heartbeat of the league. Linda has spent decades in the trenches—working for Mayor Norm Rice, leading Communities in Schools, and now the UNCF. She didn’t ask for recognition. That’s exactly why she got it.
As for the game? The Seahawks fed off that energy. They came out swinging, buried the 49ers, and punched their ticket to the NFC Championship. But long after the final whistle, people were still talking about Linda’s face when she saw those tickets.
San Francisco, get ready. Seattle is coming. And Linda Thompson-Black is leading the way.
