SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The clock doesn’t care about your legacy. In the Super Bowl, momentum swings faster than a dime dropping. As the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots prepare to clash in Super Bowl LX at Levi’s Stadium this Sunday, history reminds us that no lead is safe until the confetti actually falls.
We aren’t just talking about close games. We are talking about the “dead on arrival” scenarios. The moments where probability hit 99.9% for the loser, and then… it flipped. From Brady’s impossible math to the Ambush in Miami, these are the comebacks that broke the models.
The 28-3 Nightmare: Patriots vs. Falcons (Super Bowl LI)
If you checked out early, you missed the greatest statistical anomaly in NFL history. Late in the third quarter, the Atlanta Falcons held a 28-3 lead. The Patriots looked old, slow, and finished.
Then, Tom Brady went surgical. New England ran 93 plays to Atlanta’s 46, tiring the Falcons’ defense into submission. Brady threw for a record-shattering 466 yards, erasing a 25-point deficit in just over 17 minutes of game time. The defense locked down Matt Ryan, forcing a strip-sack that changed the air pressure in the entire stadium. James White’s touchdown in overtime didn’t just win the game 34-28; it psychologically broke a franchise.
Mahomes Ignites the Jet Fuel: Chiefs vs. 49ers (Super Bowl LIV)
Patrick Mahomes looked human for 50 minutes. The San Francisco 49ers’ defensive front, led by Nick Bosa, battered him into mistakes, holding a comfortable 20-10 lead midway through the fourth quarter. The 49ers were already planning the parade.
Then “Wasp” happened. On a desperate 3rd-and-15, Mahomes retreated nearly 15 yards and launched a 44-yard bomb to Tyreek Hill. The stadium energy shifted instantly. Kansas City poured on 21 unanswered points in the final 6:13. Mahomes finished with two touchdowns in the fourth quarter alone, sealing a 31-20 victory. It wasn’t just a win; it was the birth of a dynasty.
The Quarter of Death: Redskins vs. Broncos (Super Bowl XXII)
John Elway and the Broncos struck first, jumping out to a 10-0 lead in the first quarter. Doug Williams and Washington looked outmatched. And then the second quarter started.
Washington didn’t just score; they erupted. In 15 minutes of football, the Redskins scored 35 points on 18 plays. Williams threw four touchdown passes in a single quarter—a record that still stands in 2026. Washington gained 356 yards in that quarter alone. They walked off the field at halftime leading 35-10 and cruised to a 42-10 blowout. It remains the most violent momentum swing we have ever seen.
The Ambush: Saints vs. Colts (Super Bowl XLIV)
Sometimes the comeback starts in the coach’s head. Trailing Peyton Manning and the Colts 10-6 at halftime, Saints coach Sean Payton knew standard football wouldn’t work. He made the gutsiest call in Super Bowl history: “Ambush.”
Thomas Morstead executed a surprise onside kick to start the second half. The ball bounced off a Colt’s helmet, and the ensuing pileup felt like it lasted an hour. The Saints recovered, stealing a possession that led to a touchdown. That theft rattled Indianapolis. Tracy Porter eventually sealed it with a pick-six, and New Orleans won 31-17. The deficit was small, but the psychological hill they climbed was Everest.
“You don’t play the scoreboard. You play the play. If you look at the scoreboard, you’re already beaten. You just execute one play, then the next, until they tell you to stop.” — Tom Brady, reflecting on Super Bowl LI
Playoff Implications / Super Bowl LX Outlook
Why does this matter now? Because the Patriots are back in the big game this Sunday against Seattle. This current New England squad has shown flashes of that same resilience, rallying from double-digit deficits twice in these playoffs. For the Seahawks, the lesson is clear: A 10-point lead against a team with this pedigree is nothing more than a trap. Expect Seattle to keep the throttle down for a full 60 minutes at Levi’s Stadium, knowing that history punishes those who coast.

