Drake Maye looked like an MVP-caliber quarterback during the regular season, able to handle pressure and make big throws downfield. In the postseason, though, the pressure seemed to overwhelm him and New England’s offense sputtered.
That could be a major problem in Super Bowl LX against the Seattle Seahawks, who can bring relentless pressure. Seattle’s defensive front can swarm the quarterback, and with New England’s offense struggling to protect and sustain drives, Maye could be in serious trouble. When the Seahawks dominated in Super Bowl XLVIII, people talked about the secondary, but the truth was the pass rush set everything up — if you can get consistent four-man pressure, it simplifies things for the defenders behind them.
This iteration of Seattle’s defense has the same potential. Their ability to generate pressure without overloading creates more freedom for coverage and makes life difficult for opposing offenses. On top of that, Seattle boasts the league’s best run defense; if New England can’t threaten on the ground, Seattle can concentrate even more on getting after the passer.
New England’s defense looked solid in the playoffs, but some of that performance came against units with clear limitations — a Chargers OL that struggled, C.J. Stroud’s meltdown against the Texans, and the AFC title game where Denver used backup Jarrett Stidham. Meanwhile, Seattle’s offense is tougher than in past years. Sam Darnold has been playing well and coordinator Clint Kubiak has schemed effectively to create open looks, plus the Seahawks entered the postseason with a functioning running game.
I don’t expect Seattle to put up non-stop offensive fireworks, but their defense should frequently hand them short fields. The game will likely hinge on fundamental football — blocking, tackling and disrupting the quarterback — and Seattle’s front seven should be decisive. Prediction: Seattle 27, Patriots 10.
Fan Take: This matchup matters because it highlights how dominant defensive fronts can shape championship games, not just flashy offensive stats. If Seattle’s defense controls the line of scrimmage, it reinforces that building a stout front remains one of the most reliable blueprints for sustained NFL success.

