Seattle Seahawks WIN Super Bowl LX, 29-13
Super Bowl LX, played on February 8, 2026 at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, was a bit of a throwback and a breath of fresh air all at once. The matchup pitted the Seattle Seahawks against the New England Patriots, a rematch of the dramatic Super Bowl XLIX from 2015 that Patriots fans still bring up at family gatherings. This time, it was Seattle writing the script.
From the opening kickoff, the game unfolded more like a chess match than a highlight reel. Neither team found the end zone until deep into the fourth quarter — something you don’t see often on football’s biggest stage — and it wasn’t until Seattle finally broke through that the scoreboard truly lit up.
What made this Super Bowl especially memorable was how Seattle controlled the game with smart execution and resilience. Their defense was a relentless force, sacking New England’s quarterback and constantly flipping field position. On the other side, kicker Jason Myers etched his name into Super Bowl lore by setting a new record with five successful field goals, keeping points coming even when touchdowns felt elusive.
Eventually, Seattle’s ground game found paydirt, and running back Kenneth Walker III did more than just rumble through traffic — he earned Super Bowl MVP honors with a performance that balanced power and patience, giving the Seahawks the kind of identity-defining day offenses dream of.
Off the field, Super Bowl LX set new cultural notes as well. Bad Bunny, the Puerto Rican sensation and global superstar, headlined the Halftime Show in a mostly Spanish performance that spotlighted Latin music and heritage on the NFL’s biggest stage — a first in Super Bowl history for a predominantly Spanish-language set. His show, positioned not just as a spectacle but a moment of representation, featured huge cameos and vibrant storytelling that lit up social media even among non-football fans.
All told, Seattle walked away with a convincing 29-13 victory, marking their second Super Bowl win in franchise history and reviving fans’ memories of the “Legion of Boom” era, while the Patriots — back in the big game for the first time in years — learned that dynasties are never permanent.
Beyond the final score, Super Bowl LX joined the lore of football’s grandest event as one of those games that balanced tradition and transformation: a grueling defensive battle, a record-setting performance from a kicker, and a halftime show that broadened the cultural footprint of the Super Bowl itself.
If you’re flipping back through highlights years from now, this is the one people will still talk about for its mood as much as its metrics — a Super Bowl that felt like both a nod to the sport’s rugged roots and a step toward the future.

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