SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The lights at Levi’s Stadium are humming, the marine layer is rolling in over the Bay Area, and the spread sits tight at Seahawks -4.5. But let’s be real: you aren’t here for the weather report. You’re here because you have a DraftKings or FanDuel lineup to build, and you know that rostering Drake Maye and Sam Darnold isn’t enough. You need the guy who catches the 4-yard touchdown when the defense double-teams Jaxon Smith-Njigba.
Beyond the Obvious: Finding the Edge in Super Bowl 60
Everyone and their cousin will have Hunter Henry in their flex spot. The Patriots’ tight end has been a safety blanket all season. But the data screams differentiation. To take down a tournament this size, you have to pivot to the players the field is ignoring. The Championship Round gave us the blueprint: Jake Bobo didn’t just play; he found the paint. Mack Hollins didn’t just block; he led the Pats in receiving yards when it mattered most.
Here is where you find your leverage for the final game of the 2025-26 NFL season.
The Seattle X-Factor: Rashid Shaheed
If you haven’t paid attention since the trade deadline, wake up. Rashid Shaheed isn’t just a return specialist anymore; he is the Seahawks’ volatility engine. Since arriving in Seattle, he has transformed their vertical attack. The metrics are loud:
- Recent Form: 50+ scrimmage yards or a TD in five of his last seven games.
- The Matchup: New England ranked bottom-five in allowing WR touchdowns this regular season.
- The Bonus: The Patriots surrendered a punt return TD in 2025. Shaheed has three return scores this year. If he breaks one loose, you don’t just win your matchup; you lap the field.
“Everyone talks about the big names. I get it. But on this stage, the ball finds the guy who wants it most. I’ve been waiting my whole life for this Sunday.” — Mack Hollins, Patriots WR
The Patriot Value Play: Mack Hollins
New England’s offense under Drake Maye is efficient, but it lacks flash—which is perfect for DFS. Mack Hollins is priced like a punt play but produces like a WR2. With the Seahawks’ secondary likely focusing their energy on stopping the run and containing the slot, Hollins will see single coverage on the outside. He fits the “security blanket” archetype perfectly for a young QB on the biggest stage of his life.
Seahawks Sleeper: Jake Bobo
Bobo is the definition of a “vulture” option. He doesn’t need 10 targets to ruin your opponent’s day; he just needs one red-zone look. Standing 6’4″, he creates a mismatch that Darnold looks for near the goal line. At his current salary, he unlocks the budget you need to jam in a stud like Kenneth Walker III or the top-tier defenses.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
This is it. The final whistle tonight doesn’t just end the season; it crowns a legacy. For Seattle, a win validates the aggressive mid-season moves. For New England, it cements the new era. But for you? It’s about watching that green checkmark light up next to a player nobody else thought to draft. Kickoff is at 6:30 p.m. ET. Good luck.

