DENVER — The New England Patriots are heading back to the Super Bowl, but quarterback Drake Maye might need an ice pack before he boards the plane to Santa Clara. Following a gritty 10-7 win over the Denver Broncos in a snow-covered AFC Championship game, Maye revealed that his biggest hit of the night didn’t come from a Broncos linebacker—it came from his own left tackle, rookie sensation Will Campbell.
The First Down That Sealed the Title
With the clock winding down and the Patriots clinging to a three-point lead in freezing conditions at Empower Field at Mile High, Maye scrambled for a 3rd-and-6 conversion that effectively iced the game. As the sophomore quarterback stood up, Will Campbell, the mountain of a man drafted 4th overall to protect him, delivered a celebratory “head bump” that nearly sent Maye back to the turf. “Finishing in victory formation, I head bumped Will, and that was probably the hardest head bump of my life,” Maye told reporters while grinning through the post-game adrenaline.
The moment, captured on the Patriots’ official social media, has already gone viral. It symbolizes the bond of a draft class that has hauled New England from a 4-13 basement to a 14-3 regular season and a date with destiny in Super Bowl LX. Campbell, who returned from a mid-season MCL sprain just weeks ago, played a flawless game, neutralizing Denver’s pass rush in a performance that validated his status as Maye’s primary bodyguard.
“I told him when I got drafted: I’m going to fight and die to protect that guy. If that means a little extra juice after a first down, so be it. We’re going to the Super Bowl. I’d hit him harder if I could.” — Will Campbell, Patriots Left Tackle
The Road to Super Bowl LX
The victory marks New England’s 12th Super Bowl appearance and their first under head coach Mike Vrabel. While the offense struggled in the sub-20-degree weather—Maye was held to just 86 passing yards—the quarterback’s legs proved the difference-maker. He led the team with 65 rushing yards and the game’s only New England touchdown. The Patriots’ defense held Jarrett Stidham and the Broncos scoreless for the final three quarters, proving that this “worst-to-first” run is built on more than just Maye’s arm.
New England now prepares for a high-stakes rematch of Super Bowl XLIX against the Seattle Seahawks. For Maye, the focus shifts from surviving Campbell’s celebrations to dismantling a Seattle secondary that has looked elite throughout the NFC playoffs. If the Patriots can maintain this level of physical, “blood and violence” football, they may just bring a seventh Lombardi Trophy back to Foxborough.

