The Seattle Seahawks are Super Bowl champions for the second time in their history as they beat the New England Patriots 29-13 on Sunday at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California. Eleven years after a loss to New England that still echoes in franchise memory, the Seahawks authored a far more definitive ending. This time, there was no late-game doubt, no single play to debate. There was only control, sustained over four quarters, and a scoreboard that reflected it.
Seattle won because it dictated terms early, absorbed resistance calmly, and tightened its grip as the game matured. The Patriots, chasing a historic seventh Lombardi Trophy, never found oxygen. From the opening series, momentum leaned one way and never fully tilted back.
Seattle Seahawks’s Super Bowl LX win built on defensive authority and timely execution
Why did the game turn so firmly in Seattle’s favor. The answer sat at every level of the Seahawks defense, a unit known as “the Dark Side,” which imposed itself from the first snap and refused to bend when field position tightened. New England entered with a defense that thrived on discipline, but it was Seattle that set the tone physically and mentally.
The Seahawks offense moved with intent early, advancing deep into Patriots territory on the opening drive before settling for three points. That restraint proved strategic. Rather than forcing plays, Seattle trusted its defense to keep pressure mounting. Kenneth Walker III provided rhythm on the ground, breaking through with explosive runs that flipped field position and wore down pursuit angles. His first-half effort turned short possessions into scoring chances and drained belief from the opposing sideline.
Sam Darnold operated with efficiency instead of excess. He avoided risk, extended drives, and delivered when opportunity finally opened. That moment arrived late in the third quarter, after a forced fumble shifted possession. Five plays later, a touchdown pass to AJ Barner stretched the lead and altered the emotional math of the game.
From there, the Seahawks defense tightened further. Pressure forced rushed throws. Takeaways followed. A late interception and a fumble return touchdown sealed the result. New England managed a brief response, but it arrived too late and without leverage.
Seattle did not chase highlights. It chased certainty. By the final minutes, even a long touchdown run being called back could not change the ending. The Seahawks had already won the game where it mattered most.