Seattle Seahawks suffocate New England Patriots’ offense in 29-13 Super Bowl 60 win

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Late in the third quarter, New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye dropped back to pass, looking for answers.

As Seattle defenders closed in on him, he tried to step up in the pocket. But defensive end Derick Hall clocked him, knocking the ball out — and a Seattle defender pounced on it.

Several Seahawks went to the end zone and started flapping their arms in celebration as Seattle coach Mike Macdonald pumped his fist on the sideline. As Maye went to get up, he hit his hand against the ground in frustration. He didn’t know it yet, but his night was about to get worse.

Seattle swarmed Maye all game, sacked him six times, forced him into three turnovers and generally gave him little room to breathe as the Seahawks beat the Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl 60.

“It’s crazy. It’s a one-of-a-kind feeling,” Seattle cornerback Devon Witherspoon said in a postgame interview.

The Seattle offense played more of a supporting role but did enough to win. Running back Kenneth Walker III gained 161 yards from scrimmage on 29 touches and was named the MVP. Kicker Jason Myers made five field goals, setting a Super Bowl record.

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