In a showdown that electrified Levi’s Stadium, the Seattle Seahawks claimed the Lombardi Trophy with a commanding 29–13 victory over the New England Patriots in Super Bowl 60. From the opening whistle, Seattle looked like the hungrier, faster, and more complete team. The narrative coming into the game centered on whether Sam Darnold could rise to the moment on football’s biggest stage and he wasted no time showing he absolutely could.
Darnold delivered one of the most poised performances of his career, but it was running back Kenneth Walker II who turned the night into his own personal highlight reel. Walker shredded the Patriots’ defense with a mix of power and burst, ripping off chunk plays and controlling the tempo from start to finish. His relentless ground attack opened up the playbook and kept New England’s defense guessing all night long, earning him the well‑deserved title of Super Bowl MVP.
The real MVP of this game was the Seahawks (Dark Side) defence, Devon Witherspoon, Derick Hall, Byron Murphy and the rest of Mike Macdonald’s ferocious unit pummeled Drake Maye. They stole the spotlight, and after the “Legion of Boom” in 2014 this defence won the franchise’s second Super Bowl.
As the confetti rained down, the Seahawks celebrated a win that felt like the dawn of a new era in Seattle football. A revitalized quarterback, a star running back at the peak of his powers, and a defence that played with unity and swagger, this was a statement victory. The Seahawks didn’t just beat the Patriots; they outplayed, outmuscled, and out‑willed them. And tonight in Levi’s Stadium, Seattle left no doubt: they are the champions of the football world.

