SEATTLE, WA — The confetti had barely settled on Fourth Avenue, but the undisputed king of Seattle, Mike Macdonald, wasn’t done settling scores. During Wednesday’s raucous Super Bowl LX championship celebration at Lumen Field, the Seahawks head coach delivered a savage, unscripted rebuttal to the NFL voters who handed the Coach of the Year award to New England’s Mike Vrabel just days earlier.
Standing before a sea of 12s—estimated at nearly one million strong—Macdonald didn’t just hold the Lombardi Trophy; he weaponized it.
The Moment The Crowd Erupted
The tension started simmering the moment Voice of the Seahawks Steve Raible took the mic to introduce the man who turned a 9-8 roster into 17-3 world champions in just two seasons. Raible, feeding off the lingering resentment from last Thursday’s NFL Honors, didn’t mince words.
“He should have been recognized as NFL Coach of the Year, but instead he will gladly take Super Bowl champion,” Raible roared to the sold-out stadium. “Ladies and gentlemen, the head coach of your Seattle Seahawks, Mike Macdonald.”
Macdonald, wearing a grin that said he knew exactly what he was about to do, stepped up. He didn’t thank the academy. He didn’t offer a diplomat’s answer. He grabbed the silver hardware that Mike Vrabel’s Patriots failed to capture last Sunday.
“I think we’ll take this trophy instead,” Macdonald deadpanned, hoisting the Lombardi high. The stadium registered on the Richter scale.
Ring > Resume
The context here is brutal. On Thursday, February 5, the Associated Press named Mike Vrabel the 2025 NFL Coach of the Year for leading the Patriots from the AFC East cellar to a 14-3 record. It was a historic turnaround, sure. But four days later, Macdonald’s “Dark Side” defense strangled Vrabel’s squad 29-13 in Super Bowl LX, keeping the Patriots out of the end zone until the game was effectively over.
While Vrabel watched from the sideline as Kenneth Walker III (your Super Bowl MVP) and Jaxon Smith-Njigba shredded his defense, Macdonald was busy orchestrating the perfect game plan. Wednesday’s comment was the final nail in the debate. Vrabel got the plaque; Macdonald got the parade.
Social Media Meltdown
Macdonald’s mic-drop moment immediately set X (formerly Twitter) ablaze. The “Ring vs. Award” debate is officially the offseason’s first controversy.
“Coach of the Year is cool, but a Lombardi looks better on the mantle 💍🏆” — @BigRaw252
“Savage and spot on—ring > award! #GoHawks” — @SophiaRose95749
From Hotel Meeting to History
Before the mic drop, Macdonald got real about the impossible climb. He pulled back the curtain on the moment this championship run actually started—two years ago, in a quiet hotel meeting room in Baltimore with team owner Jody Allen.
“We sat on this course two years ago,” Macdonald told the hushed crowd. “This is the vision that we had for the Seahawks. We talk about 12 is one… See how powerful this is with this football team.”
He admitted getting goosebumps looking out at the skyline, a rare crack in the stoic demeanor he carried all season. “This is why we do what we do to bring people together. That’s why football is the best sport in the world.”
What’s Next: The Target is On
Macdonald isn’t just celebrating; he’s already setting the tone for the 2026 season. Winning a Super Bowl in your second year puts a massive target on your back. The NFC West is an arms race, and with the 49ers and Rams watching this parade from home, the “Dark Side” defense will need to evolve.
But for now? The scoreboard reads: Seahawks 29, Patriots 13. And in the battle of the Mikes? One has a trophy case. The other has a ring.

