SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Seattle Seahawks 27, New England Patriots 24.
The ghosts of the one-yard line are gone. Twelve years after the heartbreak in Arizona, the Seattle Seahawks exorcised their demons at Levi’s Stadium, capturing Super Bowl LX in a defensive masterclass that ended with a chaotic, game-sealing strip-sack on New England rookie sensation Drake Maye. Sam Darnold—yes, that Sam Darnold—is a Super Bowl champion, throwing for 265 yards and two touchdowns to deny Mike Vrabel’s Patriots a post-Belichick dynasty starter kit.
Darnold’s Dime, Macdonald’s Chess Match
This wasn’t just a win; it was a rewriting of history. Darnold, the castoff-turned-king, played the game of his life. He didn’t manage the game; he seized it. With 1:58 left and trailing 24-20, Darnold orchestrated a 75-yard drive that silenced the doubters forever. He found DK Metcalf on a slant route that Metcalf turned into a 42-yard physical altercation with the secondary, setting up the go-ahead score.
But the real story was Mike Macdonald’s defense. Facing the NFL’s highest-scoring offense, Seattle’s unit—led by a hobbled but heroic Nick Emmanwori—confused Maye all night. The rookie QB, who had looked invincible in the AFC Championship, was sacked five times. The most critical came with 0:14 on the clock. Maye stepped up, looked for a deep shot, and was swallowed by Boye Mafe, the ball popping loose and recovered by Seattle to ignite the neon-green celebration.
Key Stat: Seattle’s defense held New England to 3-of-12 on third downs, forcing two turnovers that resulted in 10 crucial points.
“They called me a bust. They called me a ghost seer. Tonight, the only thing I see is confetti. This team? We never flinched. Not when we were down at half, not when my knee was screaming. We took it. We earned it.” — Sam Darnold, Seahawks Quarterback & Super Bowl MVP
“We knew they wanted to beat us deep. We invited it. Then we crushed the pocket. That strip-sack? That’s for everyone who said the Legion was dead. We back.” — Boye Mafe, Seahawks Linebacker
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The Seahawks (15-3) now sit atop the football world, validating the bold hiring of Mike Macdonald and the gamble on Darnold. They enter the 2026 offseason not as a rebuilding project, but as the standard. General Manager John Schneider has cap space issues to solve, but the Lombardi Trophy buys a lot of patience.
For the Patriots (14-4), the loss stings, but the future is blindingly bright. Drake Maye proved he belongs on the biggest stage, throwing for 310 yards despite the pressure. Coach Vrabel has built a bully in Foxborough again. They will be favorites to return to Super Bowl LXI, provided they can shore up an offensive line that crumbled when it mattered most. The AFC runs through Maye now.

