Sam Darnold’s journey to a Super Bowl ring is among the most unusual of the 34 quarterbacks who’ve started and won the big game. Taken third overall in the 2018 draft, Darnold floundered early with the New York Jets, spent a brief period with the Carolina Panthers, then revived his career into a Pro Bowl season with the Minnesota Vikings. After a late-season slide, the Vikings moved on, and Darnold signed a multi-year deal with the Seattle Seahawks — a gamble that paid off as he earned Pro Bowl honors and helped Seattle capture its second Super Bowl the next year.
Seattle held a victory parade on Wednesday, where Darnold expressed gratitude to the people who backed him. He said that while many doubted him, those closest to him — including fans, owner Jody Allen, GM John Schneider and coach Mike McDonald — kept faith, and he thanked the teammates who helped make the season possible.
Teammates publicly supported Darnold all year, sometimes forcefully. Linebacker Ernest Jones IV defended the quarterback to the crowd, proclaiming the team’s strength and issuing a profane rebuke to anyone criticizing their squad.
Darnold thrived within a talented roster and an elite defense, playing a pivotal role in several big wins. He orchestrated a comeback victory over the Los Angeles Rams and league MVP Matthew Stafford in Week 16, followed by another key win in the NFC title game. In the Super Bowl he stood up to a New England defense that mixed coverages constantly, completing difficult throws on the opening drive and helping set up Jason Myers’ Super Bowl-record five field goals.
As the game progressed, Seahawks running back Kenneth Walker III’s production opened opportunities in the passing game. Darnold capitalized, leading a long scoring drive capped by a 16-yard touchdown to AJ Barner that made it 19–0 early in the fourth quarter. With core pieces under contract, the franchise looks positioned to stay competitive; defensive end Leonard Williams declared, “It’s not over yet,” and said he intends to return next season.
Fan Take: This story matters because it shows how a change of scenery and strong team structure can resurrect a quarterback’s career, something every NFL fan watches for during the offseason. If Seattle’s model — pairing a stout defense and a reliable run game with a steady veteran QB — proves sustainable, it could influence how teams evaluate mid-career quarterbacks and roster building going forward.

