Seattle Seahawks: Super Bowl LX Champions


 

It took more than a decade, but the Seattle Seahawks and their fans finally got their revenge Sunday for the famous Malcolm Butler play, defeating the New England Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl LX in Santal Clara, California, to earn their second title in franchise history. In the process, they denied the Patriots what would have been a league-leading seventh Super Bowl.


In a Super Bowl rematch that was a defensive struggle from the outset, Seahawks kicker Jason Myers converted five field goals, a Super Bowl record, and Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold threw for 202 yards and one touchdown. Seahawks running back Kenneth Walker III ran for 135 yards on the ground.


After resurrecting his career, Darnold has capped one of the greatest redemption arcs ever seen in football with a Lombardi Trophy after he was considered by many to have been a draft bust.


The Seahawks defensive front was stifling, sacking Patriots second-year quarterback Drake Maye six times, and holding him to 240 yards passing with one touchdown and two interceptions. His fumble early in the fourth quarter led to the Seahawks' only offensive touchdown of the game.


With under five minutes to play, Seahawks corner Devon Witherspoon knocked the ball out of Maye's hand on a blitz, and linebacker Uchenna Nwosu picked it up and rumbled 45 yards for the score, setting off a party in Seattle.


The two teams combined for 15 punts in the game.


Since 2015, Seattle fans have carried the bitter taste of Super Bowl XLIX, when the Patriots edged the Seahawks 28-24 thanks to Butler's stunning goal line interception of Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson in the game's waning seconds, one of the most famous plays in NFL history.


It was a different cast of characters Sunday to that 2015 game, and an entirely different outcome.


The Seahawks and Patriots were not considered serious contenders heading into the season, and this marked the first time since 1989 that two teams with preseason title odds of 60-to-1 or worse made the Super Bowl, according to Pro Football Reference and The Athletic's Mike Sando. 


Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald proved to have met the challenge of replacing beloved longtime coach Pete Carroll in 2024, who ironically parted ways with the Seahawks one day before the Patriots did the same with the legendary coach Bill Belichick.


And Macdonald outdueled Patriots coach Mike Vrabel Sunday, who had no answers for Seattle's dominant defense.


Playing in the toughest division in football, one that produced three playoff teams with a combined record of 38-13, the Seahawks have been excellent all season. They defeated the San Francisco 49ers in Week 18 to finish with a 14-3 record and clinch the No. 1 seed in the NFC and a first-round bye. 


In the divisional round, they crushed the injury-plagued 49ers 41-6, and then in a back-and-forth thriller, defeated the Los Angeles Rams 31-27 in the NFC title game.  

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