SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The road to Super Bowl 60 didn’t start on a whiteboard in Foxborough or a film room in Nashville. For Mike Vrabel, it started in a cramped office in Columbus, Ohio, where he sat across from Urban Meyer and absolutely face-planted.
“Nobody is going to have a worse first interview than I did,” Vrabel admitted Tuesday, the Super Bowl LX logo looming behind him at Levi’s Stadium. “I wasn’t prepared. I sat down with Urban Meyer in front of a staff, interviewed for a position and completely bombed it and had no idea.”
Fast forward to this Sunday, and that same “unprepared” linebacker is 60 minutes away from etching his name into NFL lore. When the New England Patriots clash with Mike Macdonald’s Seattle Seahawks, Vrabel isn’t just chasing a Ring—he’s chasing a ghost from 1971.
The Buckeye Connection No One Talks About
If Vrabel hoists the Lombardi Trophy Sunday night, he will become only the second Ohio State alumnus to win a Super Bowl as a head coach. The first? You probably haven’t heard of him, but he’s a legend in Baltimore.
Don McCafferty, an offensive lineman on Ohio State’s 1942 national championship squad, led the Baltimore Colts to a 16-13 victory over the Dallas Cowboys in Super Bowl 5. That was January 17, 1971. For 55 years, McCafferty has stood alone on that mountaintop. Vrabel—who still holds the Buckeyes’ career sack record with 36—is knocking on the door.
“That’s probably my first adversity. I played, I won, but coaching? That was different. You don’t just walk in because you have stats. You have to earn it. Urban made sure I knew that.” — Mike Vrabel, Patriots Head Coach
The Macdonald Factor
Standing in Vrabel’s way is the NFL’s defensive wunderkind, Mike Macdonald. The Seahawks’ head coach has turned Seattle into a fortress this season, and like Vrabel, he’s a product of the college grind—cutting his teeth at Georgia while Vrabel was reinventing himself at Ohio State.
The chess match is set: Vrabel’s gritty, disciplined Patriots style versus Macdonald’s complex, shifting defensive schemes. It’s a battle of the “defensive minds” that feels like a throwback to a grittier era of football, fitting for the diamond anniversary of the Super Bowl.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Kickoff is set for 6:30 p.m. ET at Levi’s Stadium. The Patriots are currently 2.5-point underdogs, a position Vrabel has thrived in his entire career. If New England pulls this off, the narrative shifts from “Belichick’s successor” to “Vrabel’s Era.” But first, he has to outcoach the kid from Seattle.

