Seahawks Stun the Odds: Champions Again
The Seattle Seahawks didn’t just win Super Bowl LX — they dominated it. In a game where many betting markets leaned toward the New England Patriots, Seattle flipped the script and delivered a 29–13 victory that felt decisive from the opening drive.
Heading into the matchup, sportsbooks had the Patriots as slight favorites. New England’s late‑season surge, a young quarterback generating national buzz, and a defense that had carried them through the playoffs all contributed to the betting momentum. But once the game kicked off, none of that mattered.

Seattle’s defense set the tone immediately, holding the Patriots scoreless through the first half and limiting them to just 18 total yards before halftime. The Seahawks’ pass rush overwhelmed Drake Maye, sacking him six times and forcing multiple turnovers — including a fourth‑quarter scoop‑and‑score that effectively sealed the game.
On offense, Seattle leaned on Kenneth Walker III, who delivered a monster performance with 135 rushing yards and earned Super Bowl MVP honors. Jason Myers added a Super Bowl–record five field goals, giving Seattle steady control even when drives stalled.
By the time the Patriots finally found the end zone, the Seahawks were already too far ahead. The final score — 29–13 — doesn’t just reflect a win. It reflects a statement.
Seattle wasn’t the betting favorite. Seattle wasn’t the media favorite. Seattle was simply the better team.
And on the biggest stage in football, they proved it.
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