The Seattle Seahawks’ Super Bowl 60 victory wasn’t built on flash — it was built on football that still wins in February.
Kenneth Walker III set the tone, grinding out tough yards and earning MVP by controlling tempo and wearing down the defense. Seattle didn’t chase style points. They imposed their will.
The defense defined the night. Six sacks, constant pressure, and timely takeaways turned the game into a slow squeeze. You could see confidence fade on the other sideline. That’s championship defense — not just stopping plays, but draining belief.
Sam Darnold didn’t need heroics; he needed control. Smart decisions, no backbreaking mistakes, and trust in the system. Meanwhile, Jason Myers delivered under pressure, nailing five field goals that kept the game firmly in Seattle’s grasp.
This title matters because the Seahawks never abandoned their identity. Run the ball. Defend with edge. Win the small moments. In a league obsessed with fireworks, Seattle proved substance still beats style.
That’s not just a win. That’s a statement.













Comments