SAN JOSE, Calif. — The San Jose Convention Center didn’t just host a media event Monday night; it contained a category-five hurricane of hype. But in the center of the swirling cameras, screaming fans, and reporters climbing over railings, Drake Maye stood perfectly still.
The 23-year-old quarterback, fresh off a 14-3 regular season that shocked the AFC, fielded questions for an hour without breaking a sweat. For a franchise desperate to escape the shadow of its past dynasties, Maye offered exactly what New England needed: supreme confidence. The Patriots are back in the Super Bowl, and their young signal-caller looks ready for the moment.
Opening Night—formerly Media Day—is notorious for breaking young players. It’s where football questions go to die, replaced by queries about celebrity crushes and requests to sing karaoke. Maye didn’t flinch. When asked if the lights of Super Bowl LX were too bright for a second-year player, he laughed.
“I played in the ACC. I played in Foxborough when we were 3-9 last year,” Maye said, leaning into the mic. “Pressure is trying to prove you belong. We know we belong. Now we just have to finish.”
His swagger is earned. Maye exploded in his sophomore campaign, throwing for 4,394 yards and 31 touchdowns while leading the Patriots to their first division title since 2019. He has turned a rebuilding project into a juggernaut faster than anyone predicted.
The storyline writing itself this week involves the opponent. The Seattle Seahawks, led by a resurrected Sam Darnold, stand between Maye and the Lombardi Trophy. It’s a poetic rematch of Super Bowl XLIX, but the cast has changed entirely.
While the media tried to bait Maye into trash talk about the Seahawks’ top-ranked defense, he kept his praise high but his intent clear.
“Sam’s had a great year. That defense flies around. But we aren’t here to watch them play. We have a job to do. The goal wasn’t just to get to Santa Clara. The goal is to fly home with the trophy.” — Drake Maye, Patriots Quarterback
The transformation of the Patriots’ offense is staggering. Just 14 months ago, critics questioned if Maye was the right pick at No. 3 overall. He silenced them by cutting his interception rate in half and mastering an offense that emphasizes his vertical passing ability. His 113.5 passer rating in 2025 ranked near the top of the league, a massive leap from his rookie numbers.
Fans at the convention center sensed the shift. The “Brady” chants that used to haunt young Patriots quarterbacks were gone, replaced Monday night by a deafening roar of “MAYE-DAY.”
With the media circus now officially in the rearview, the Patriots shift to closed practices at Stanford University. Head Coach Jerod Mayo will focus on installing the final red-zone wrinkles to exploit Seattle’s aggressive secondary.
The road to Levi’s Stadium is almost complete. Maye has survived the questions. Sunday, he has to survive the Seahawks pass rush.