SANTA CLARA, Calif. — The noise at Levi’s Stadium is already deafening. As the Seattle Seahawks warm up for Super Bowl LX against the New England Patriots, one player looks remarkably calm amidst the frenzy. Punter Michael Dickson, the Sydney-born specialist who has revolutionized the position, is about to play the biggest game of his life. But even with the Lombardi Trophy on the line, the chatter around Dickson this week keeps drifting back to a moment of pure, unscripted chaos from five years ago.
Dickson isn’t just a leg; he’s a playmaker. And nothing proved that more than the play that defined his 2021 season—a moment he reflected on while prepping for today’s showdown.
The Kick Heard ‘Round the World
Flashback to 2021. Thursday Night Football against the Los Angeles Rams. The Seahawks were backed up, and the punt protection collapsed. Rams linebacker Jamir Jones tore through the line and smothered the kick. The ball spun wildly on the turf—a death sentence for most special teams units.
Most punters would dive on the grenade. Some might try a doomed scramble. Dickson did neither. He reached back to his Australian Football League (Aussie Rules) roots.
“I caught the snap and saw the guy had got through the protection before I’d even punted it,” Dickson recalled during media availability this week. “I knew almost immediately that I would need to find the ball to scoop it up.”
He snatched the spinning ball with one hand—a skill honed on the ovals of Sydney—rolled right, and fired a second kick. The ball launched 68 yards downfield, dying perfectly inside the Rams’ 20-yard line. Levi’s Stadium might be the stage today, but that play in Seattle remains the gold standard for punting improvisation.
Confusion in the Booth
The “Double Punt” didn’t just fool the Rams; it broke the brains of the broadcast team. Joe Buck and Troy Aikman were convinced it was illegal. “There’s going to be a penalty for that,” Buck stated live, assuming the two-kick rule would nullify the miracle.
Mike Pereira, the rules analyst, agreed. Flags flew. The stadium held its breath. Then, the referee’s microphone clicked on: No foul. Because the blocked ball never crossed the line of scrimmage, Dickson was legally allowed to kick it again. The Aussie grinned. The commentators were stunned. Seattle’s head coach at the time, Pete Carroll, dubbed it “one of the great kicking plays in the history of the league.”
From Chaos to the Super Bowl
“I’m always trying to experiment with new ways and get creative—that’s definitely the fun part of the position.” — Michael Dickson, Seattle Seahawks Punter
Fast forward to 2026. Dickson is no longer just the guy with the cool trick play; he’s the highest-paid punter in the league, fresh off a contract extension signed last year. He has been a critical weapon in Seattle’s 14-3 run this season, pinning opponents deep and flipping field position for a defense that ranked first in points allowed.
Today, against a Patriots team known for disciplined special teams play, Dickson’s ability to manipulate the ball—drop kicks, coffin corners, and maybe even another scramble—could be the difference. While quarterback Sam Darnold and the offense get the headlines, field position battles win championships.
What to Watch For
The Seahawks are looking to capture their second title, while the Patriots aim to spoil the party in this Super Bowl XLIX rematch. Keep an eye on the wind in Santa Clara. If the offense stalls, Dickson’s number will be called. He’s spent eight years preparing for this stage, turning punting from a routine exchange into a legitimate offensive weapon.
Kickoff is minutes away. For Dickson, it’s just another opportunity to do something the NFL hasn’t seen before.

