SEATTLE — The Seattle Seahawks are headed to Super Bowl LX. Mike Macdonald’s squad secured their spot on the world’s biggest stage by outlasting the Los Angeles Rams in a 31-27 thriller at Lumen Field on Sunday. While Sam Darnold’s arm provided the spark, it was linebacker Ernest Jones IV who provided the heart, anchoring a defense that slammed the door on his former team to clinch the conference crown.
Revenge and a Father’s Joy
For Ernest Jones IV, this win carried a weight that went beyond the stat sheet. After a messy exit from Los Angeles and a brief stint in Tennessee, Jones found his home in Seattle’s defense. He played like a man possessed against his old club, racking up critical stops as the Rams tried to mount a late-game comeback. As the final whistle blew and blue-and-green confetti rained down, Jones didn’t hunt for a camera or a microphone first. He found his young son, Ernest V, on the turf for a celebration that immediately went viral.
The image of the 26-year-old linebacker crouching down to eye-level with his toddler captures the emotional peak of a grueling season. Jones has been the vocal leader of a unit that transformed from a middle-of-the-pack group into a championship-caliber wall. On Sunday, that wall held firm when it mattered most, limiting the Rams to just one score in the final quarter. Jones finished the night with 8 tackles and a crucial pass breakup that stalled a potential Rams go-ahead drive late in the fourth.
“To have my life uprooted and then find a brotherhood here in Seattle—it’s a blessing. Looking at my son on that field, knowing we’re going to the Super Bowl after everything we’ve been through this year? Trust me, this means everything.” — Ernest Jones IV, Seahawks Linebacker
Super Bowl LX: The Final Hurdle
The Seahawks now prepare for a cross-country trip to Santa Clara to face the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LX. Seattle enters the matchup as the hottest team in the league, riding an eight-game winning streak. The defense will need to be perfect against a disciplined Patriots offense, but with Jones playing the best football of his career and Jaxon Smith-Njigba coming off a 153-yard performance, the momentum is firmly in the Pacific Northwest. Expect Macdonald to lean heavily on Jones to neutralize the run and keep the middle of the field locked down as the Seahawks hunt for their second Lombardi Trophy.

