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SANTA CLARA, CA – Stefon Diggs and Kayshon Boutte sat quietly by each other in a somber New England Patriots postgame locker room.

The Seahawks’ ‘Dark Side’ defense had just turned the lights out on the Patriots in a 29-13 Super Bowl 60 victory.

“We struggled. Some plays we probably want back. We didn’t play our best. We lost. Got to take it on the chin,” Diggs said. “They played a better game. That was a good (expletive) team we played.”

Super Bowl 60’s final score wasn’t even indicative of what transpired on the field. The Patriots were held scoreless through the first three quarters. New England’s offense was neutralized until it scored 13 points and gained 253 yards in what essentially was a futile fourth quarter with the game already decided. The Patriots offense never got within Seattle’s 40-yard line prior to the final quarter.

“They have a hell of a defense. One of the top defenses in the league,” Diggs said. “They are fast in the back end, they have fast backers and they got a good interior.”

The irony of Seattle’s Super Bowl 60 win is that Drake Maye was the one seeing ghosts.

Sam Darnold, notoriously known for his ‘seeing ghosts’ comment, was the quarterback who managed the game, took what the defense gave him and avoided costly turnovers.

Maye was the quarterback that had multiple errant throws, an ill-advised interception to Seahawks safety Julian Love and a pick-six to linebacker Uchenna Nwosu.

“I’d like to go back to the beginning and redo it,” Maye said. “There are so many plays that can decide and change the game. I had an (interception) returned for a touchdown. There were plays in the first half where I feel like I could’ve made a better throw or make a better decision. It really just comes down to who makes the plays and who doesn’t. They made plays tonight.”

Maye completed 27-of-43 passes for 295 yards (235 yards coming in the fourth quarter) to go with two touchdowns and two interceptions. Maye was sacked six times and fumbled once. According to Next Gen Stats, the Seahawks generated a 52.8% pressure rate, the highest in a Super Bowl since at least 2018.

“It definitely hurts,” Maye said. “It’s been a long ride. They played better than us (Sunday). They deserved to win that game.”

What might hurt New England even more is the fact its defense played well enough to win … until things went off the rails in the fourth quarter. Seahawks running back Kenneth Walker III was the sole provider of consistent offense and kicker Jason Myers’ four field goals were the only points given up through three quarters. But when Darnold tossed a 16-yard touchdown to tight end AJ Barner to put the Patriots in a 19-0 hole, the deficit was insurmountable.

“It’s tough,” Patriots defensive tackle Milton Williams told USA TODAY Sports. “We just didn’t make enough plays to win the game. We didn’t make enough plays when we needed to.”

The Super Bowl loss won’t quiet critics who were up in arms about the Patriots’ strength of schedule this season. New England had the NFL’s easiest schedule (in terms of opponent combined win percentage). Then the Pats defeated a Los Angeles Chargers team with a patchwork offensive line, a turnover-happy C.J. Stroud and the Houston Texans without Nico Collins, and a Bo Nix-less Denver Broncos club in a blizzard en route to Super Bowl 60.

There’s no guarantee that they’ll make it back to the NFL’s ultimate game. The AFC figures to be better in 2026 and the conference’s postseason featured no Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson and Joe Burrow. But the Patriots spent over $200 million in guaranteed money on free agents in 2025. Most of their impact players will return next season and they have invaluable Super Bowl experience to go along with the agony of defeat.

“It’s definitely gonna sting. It’s gonna sting all the way up to the start of next year. But I’m proud of the guys. I’m proud of this team,” Patriots cornerback Christian Gonzalez said. “All year nobody believed in us. … To make it to where we were, is a testament to our work. We came up short. Every year a team loses the Super Bowl.”

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy — Breezy Johnson and Mikaela Shiffrin are teaming up again.

The newest Olympic champion and the two-time Olympic gold medalist are paired for the team combined, which they won at last year’s world championships. The event includes one run of downhill, which Johnson will do, and one run of slalom, which Shiffrin will do.

The other teams for the race on Tuesday, Feb. 10 are:

Jackie Wiles (downhill) and Paula Moltzan (slalom)

Bella Wright (downhill) and Nina O’Brien (slalom)

Keely Cashman (downhill) and A.J. Hurt (slalom)

U.S. Skiing created the teams based on results, which could have meant a highly anticipated pairing of Lindsey Vonn and Shiffrin, two of the most successful Alpine skiers in history. Shiffrin, the all-time leader with 108 World Cup wins, leads the overall and slalom season standings. Vonn, whose 84 World Cup wins trail only Shiffrin and Ingemar Stenmark, leads the downhill standings.

But Vonn broke her left leg in a crash during Sunday’s downhill. Johnson won gold in the race, elevating her to the top spot among the U.S. downhillers.

‘I’m really excited for the team combined. I’m excited to get another crack down the slope,’ Johnson said after winning gold on Sunday, Feb. 8, joining Vonn as the only American women to win the Olympic downhill title.

‘I think it could be a really good event for us,’ Johnson added.

It gives Johnson a chance to duplicate what she did at last year’s worlds. She won the downhill title before pairing with Shiffrin to win the inaugural team combined event.

‘The vibe around it, teaming up and feeling like we’re doing it together, was so cool,’ Shiffrin said last year after they won.

Shiffrin and Johnson have been friends since they were children, and Johnson credits Shiffrin and her mother Eileen for encouraging her to keep going early in her career.

‘In many ways, I don’t know if I would be sitting here without Mikaela because she and her family took me under their wing and allowed me to have confidence in myself,’ Johnson said last fall. ‘We were both very intense kids. People were like, ‘Breezy, you need to chill out. You need to have more fun.’ And I was like, `I don’t understand. I just really like skiing and I like competing and I like getting better.’ And I wasn’t getting anybody who was telling me that.

‘(Mikaela) was like, ‘There’s nothing wrong with you. Keep doing what you’re doing.’ And her mom was like, `No, there’s tons of kids out here. They’re having fun and some of them may be good, but if you do that you will not be good,” Johnson recalled. ‘And that helped me to be like, no, I’m going to be intense. I’m going to be serious. And if people say that that’s wrong, that’s on them.’

Now both are Olympic champions, with the possibility of winning more gold.

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American skier Lindsey Vonn’s story of determination ended Sunday at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Vonn suffered a torn ACL injury in the days leading up to her fifth Olympics appearance.

Vonn decided to compete for Team USA despite the injury, but she suffered a crash during the women’s downhill ski event final and needed to be airlifted to a hospital.

A replay of the crash was shown during the NBC broadcast in the moments that followed the conclusion of Super Bowl 60. The broadcast was edited down, spending just three minutes on Vonn, from the start of her race at the gate to her being airlifted off the course and taken to a hospital.

The three-minute window also included two replays and showed the reactions from some of her peers who were also competing.

She was in stable condition and underwent surgery for a broken left leg.

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Just here for the commercials?

Super Bowl ads are as big a part of the annual tradition as buffalo wings, with brands shelling out enormous sums – over $10 million in 2026 – to secure commercial space during the big game.

Since 1989, USA TODAY Ad Meter has let viewers judge all the game’s national commercials, helping decide the best every year. Budweiser won the contest for the ninth time last year – and 15th overall for Anheuser-Busch – by bringing back their beloved Clydesdale horses.

This year’s commercial slate includes plenty of familiar national brands but fans should expect to learn about a bunch of new companies and products, with the AI and weight-loss drug industries set to each air multiple ads.

Here’s a look back at 2026’s Super Bowl commercials:

Rate the best and worst Super Bowl ads!

Good Will Dunkin’ Super Bowl ad

Lay’s Super Bowl commercial

Budweiser Super Bowl commercial goes ‘Free Bird’

Ring Super Bowl commercial

Sabrina Carpenter Pringles commercial

Poppi Charli XCX Super Bowl commercial

Mr Beast Super Bowl commercial

Cadillac Formula 1 Super Bowl commercial

Hims Super Bowl commercial

Hellmann’s Super Bowl commercial

Coinbase Super Bowl commercial

Liquid IV Super Bowl commercial

Levi’s Super Bowl commercial

Marshawn Lynch Super Bowl commercial

Svedka Super Bowl commercial

Volkswagen Super Bowl commercial

Redfin Rocket Mortgage Super Bowl commercial

Kurt Russell Michelob Super Bowl commercial

Claude Super Bowl commercial Anthropic AI

OpenAI Super Bowl commercial

Bon Jovi in State Farm Super Bowl commercial

DraftKings Super Bowl commercial

Jurassic Park Super Bowl commercial

Matthew McConaughey Uber Eats Super Bowl ad

Bud Light Super Bowl commercial

Toyota Super Bowl commercial

Ben Stiller Super Bowl commercial: Instacart

How much does a Super Bowl commercial cost?

All those eyes aren’t cheap for advertisers, and the cost of some national 30-second commercials during Super Bowl 60 have topped $10 million, according to Bloomberg – a huge jump from the $8 million that brands shelled out just one year ago.

Super Bowl commercial by year

Super Bowl I, 1967 – $37,500
Super Bowl II, 1968 – $54,500
Super Bowl III, 1969 – $55,000
Super Bowl IV, 1970 – $78,200
Super Bowl V, 1971 – $72,500
Super Bowl VI, 1972 – $86,100
Super Bowl VII, 1973 – $88,100
Super Bowl VIII, 1974 – $103,500
Super Bowl IX, 1975 – $107,000
Super Bowl X, 1976 – $110,000
Super Bowl XI, 1977 – $125,000
Super Bowl XII, 1978 –$162,300
Super Bowl XIII, 1979 – $185,000
Super Bowl XIV, 1980 – $222,000
Super Bowl XV, 1981 – $275,000
Super Bowl XVI, 1982 – $324,300
Super Bowl XVII, 1983 – $400,000
Super Bowl XVIII, 1984 – $368,200
Super Bowl XIX, 1985 – $525,000
Super Bowl XX, 1986 – $550,000
Super Bowl XXI, 1987 – $600,000
Super Bowl XXII, 1988 – $645,500
Super Bowl XXIII, 1989 – $675,500
Super Bowl XXIV, 1990 – $700,400
Super Bowl XXV, 1991 – $800,000
Super Bowl XXVI, 1992 – $850,000
Super Bowl XXVII, 1993 – $850,000
Super Bowl XXVIII, 1994 – $900,000
Super Bowl XXIX, 1995 – $1.15 million
Super Bowl XXX, 1996 – $1.085 million
Super Bowl XXXI, 1997 – $1.2 million
Super Bowl XXXII, 1998 – $1.29 million
Super Bowl XXXIII, 1999 – $1.6 million
Super Bowl XXXIV, 2000 – $2.1 million
Super Bowl XXXV, 2001 – $2.2 million
Super Bowl XXXVI, 2002 – $2.2 million
Super Bowl XXXVII, 2003 – $2.2 million
Super Bowl XXXVIII, 2004 – $2.3 million
Super Bowl XXXIX, 2005 – $2.4 million
Super Bowl XL, 2006 – $2.5 million
Super Bowl XLI, 2007 – $2.385 million
Super Bowl XLII, 2008 – $2.699 million
Super Bowl XLIII, 2009 – $2.999 million
Super Bowl XLIV, 2010 – $2.954 million
Super Bowl XLV, 2011 – $3.1 million
Super Bowl XLVI, 2012 – $3.5 million
Super Bowl XLVII, 2013 – $3.8 million
Super Bowl XLVIII, 2014 – $4 million
Super Bowl XLIX, 2015 – $4.25 million
Super Bowl 50, 2016 – $4.5 million
Super Bowl LI, 2017 – $5 million
Super Bowl LII, 2018 – $5.2 million
Super Bowl LIII, 2019 – $5.3 million
Super Bowl LIV, 2020 – $5.6 million
Super Bowl LV, 2021 – $5.5 milllion
Super Bowl LVI, 2022 – $6.5 million
Super Bowl LVII, 2023 – $7 million
Super Bowl LVIII, 2024 – $7 million
Super Bowl LIX, 2025 – $8 million
Super Bowl 60, 2026 – $10 million

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SANTA CLARA, CA – Kenneth Walker III’s impressive playoff run was punctuated with a Lombardi Trophy and a Super Bowl MVP.

Walker provided consistent offense in what was a defensive battle throughout the 29-13 win. The Seahawks running back rushed 27 times for 135 yards. He registered 161 yards from scrimmage in the victory.

Walker’s ground total was the most rushing yards by a player in the Super Bowl since Terrell Davis romped for 157 yards in Super Bowl 32. He’s also the first running back to win Super Bowl MVP since Davis won the award in Super Bowl 32.

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Walker found room to run against a stout Patriots defense and was tough to tackle.

The MVP award capped off a superb postseason campaign for Walker. He amassed more than 100 yards from scrimmage in all three of Seattle’s playoff games. Including the regular season, and produced at least 100 yards from scrimmage in four straight games. It’s the longest such streak of his career.

Walker had a 30-yard run and a 29-yard scamper in the second quarter that set up a successful Jason Myers field goal. The running back had a catch and run that went for 20 yards in the third quarter that led to another Myers field goal which extended the Seahawks’ lead, 12-0.  

The Seahawks running back averaged five yards per carry.

Walker’s contract is set to expire this offseason. But the running back proved his worth throughout the postseason and underscored his value in Super Bowl 60.

Seattle’s win now gives the franchise two Super Bowl titles.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The dust has now settled on the 2025 NFL season, as the Seattle Seahawks beat the New England Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl 60 to capture their second-ever Lombardi Trophy.

With a winner now determined in that contest, NFL fans will eagerly look ahead to next season, which is shaping up to bring a lot of change.

Already, 10 NFL teams have hired new coaches. Soon, clubs will make major changes to their rosters through free agency and the 2026 NFL Draft, hoping to shape themselves into contenders for what figures to be another wide-open playoff race.

Of course, many teams will also be looking to get healthier during the offseason. Notably, the Kansas City Chiefs will be hoping Patrick Mahomes can quickly recover from a torn ACL he suffered in Week 16 while the Indianapolis Colts will have to make a decision about Daniel Jones in free agency and hope he can recover from a torn Achilles in time to start Week 1.

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Add in the uncertainty surrounding veteran players like Kirk Cousins, Kyler Murray, Tua Tagovailoa and Aaron Rodgers, and the NFL’s quarterback carousel could spin at a dizzying pace this offseason.

All that potential change makes it difficult to prognosticate exactly who should win the Super Bowl next season. Here’s an early look at the Super Bowl 61 odds for every NFL team as the league’s 2025 season and playoffs wind to a close.

Super Bowl 61 odds

The Seahawks (+950) and Rams (+950) are co-favorites to win Super Bowl 61, according to odds from DraftKings Sportsbook. They are the only teams to boast better than 10-1 odds to win the Lombardi Trophy.

The Baltimore Ravens (+1300) have the shortest Super Bowl odds among teams that failed to make the playoffs last season. Meanwhile, the Arizona Cardinals and Miami Dolphins – who each changed coaches during the offseason and are dealing with questions at the quarterback position – are tied with the longest odds to win the 2027 Super Bowl.

Below is a full look at the latest odds to win Super Bowl 61:

Seattle Seahawks (+950)
Los Angeles Rams (+950)
Buffalo Bills (+1100)
Philadelphia Eagles (+1300)
New England Patriots (+1300)
Baltimore Ravens (+1300)
Los Angeles Chargers (+1400)
Green Bay Packers (+1400)
Detroit Lions (+1400)
Kansas City Chiefs (+1500)
San Francisco 49ers (+1700)
Houston Texans (+1900)
Denver Broncos (+1900)
Jacksonville Jaguars (+2000)
Chicago Bears (+2500)
Cincinnati Bengals (+2800)
Dallas Cowboys (+3500)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (+4000)
Washington Commanders (+6000)
Pittsburgh Steelers (+6000)
Minnesota Vikings (+6000)
Indianapolis Colts (+6000)
New York Giants (+7000)
Atlanta Falcons (+8000)
Tennessee Titans (+10000)
New Orleans Saints (+10000)
Carolina Panthers (+10000)
Cleveland Browns (+15000)
New York Jets (+18000)
Las Vegas Raiders (+18000)
Miami Dolphins (+20000)
Arizona Cardinals (+20000)

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SANTA CLARA, CA — Super Bowl 60 was disrupted early in the fourth quarter when a fan bolted onto the field. 

A shirtless man ran on from the direction of the Seattle Seahawks end zone, briefly forcing a pause in the action. He ran a good length of the field as security tried to converge on him but actually split them on the opposite half of the field, spreading his arms in a victorious pose as he continued his sprint. As he approach another pocket of guards deploying to stop him, Patriots receiver Kyle Williams left his huddle and jogged toward the man in what appeared to be a half-hearted attempt to stop him. 

Williams stood near the fan as security finally apprehended the fan around the 10-yard line and took him away. 

Fan on the field at Super Bowl 60

Coincidentally or not, the Patriots scored their first points of the night on a touchdown pass to Mack Hollins shortly thereafter.

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Sam Darnold became the first quarterback to win a Super Bowl after playing with five or more NFL teams. His parents have been there for every step of the way.

While Darnold’s low point followed him to his different stops, until he made it as a starter with the Vikings, and subsequently, the Seahawks, the passer made it clear that his parents were the crutch he needed to continue his NFL odyssey.

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Following the 29-13 Super Bowl win, the passer shared a heartfelt message about the belief his parents instilled in him:

‘It’s special,’ Darnold said postgame. ‘I shared a great moment with my parents and my fiancee Katie after the game, and I think that’s what kind of got me a little bit. Me and my dad don’t cry very often. I told my dad, and my mom … I’m here because of their belief in me. They believed in me throughout my entire career, and I think that’s why I was able to believe in myself almost ad nauseum.

He continued: ‘Some people called me crazy throughout my career for believing in myself so much, and having so much confidence. It was because of my parents, because of the way they believed in me throughout my entire career. It allowed me to go out there and play free, and have a ton of confidence.’

While Darnold didn’t have the flashiest Super Bowl stat line – 19 of 38 passing, 202 yards, one touchdown – it was enough to get the job done.

Leaning heavily on its defense, Seattle kept the Patriots at bay until the game was all but secured in the second half. Running back Kenneth Walker earned Super Bowl MVP honors, gashing the Patriots defense for 135 yards rushing..

Now, the Darnolds have a Super Bowl-winning son – and one who’s clearly thankful for them.

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A first impression can be a lasting one – just ask Kenneth Walker’s dad.

The elder Walker watched his son Kenneth run around, through and over the New England Patriots defense en route to a Super Bowl MVP in Seattle’s 29-13 Super Bowl 60 victory.

While Walker’s dad is very familiar with his son’s talents, it was the first time he got to take in a performance from the running back in person during an NFL game.

‘My dad, he comes out to Seattle all the time to watch games, but he never goes to the game ’cause he don’t like crowds,’ Walker said. ‘This is his first NFL game, and we won a Super Bowl, so it means a lot to me, and I know he’s proud of me, for real.’

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Walker added that his agent convinced his father to come to the game, and that he was even mic’d up for the duration. The running back said he wasn’t sure that his dad would be in attendance.

To his credit, Walker put on a show: with 135 yards on 27 carries, Walker gave his dad something to remember for a lifetime.

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MILAN — Ilia Malinin didn’t want to skate the long program in the Olympic figure skating team competition. He wanted to rest up for the more important individual men’s event beginning Tuesday. His coaches felt the same way. It was a definite no. 

But when U.S. Figure Skating called upon him late Saturday night, saying the event was going to be too close and potentially lost without him, he had no choice but to say yes.

It turned out to be the best decision of his young career.

On a night in which the Olympic team competition finally arrived as a major event after three underwhelming attempts in 2014, 2018 and 2022, Malinin saved the United States from an embarrassing final-day collapse and delivered the Americans the well-earned gold medal. 

“Absolutely, this is definitely the smartest decision I’ve made,” Malinin told USA TODAY Sports during an exclusive interview after the medal ceremony. “I got a chance to just really feel the ice, feel the environment, just feel the atmosphere. I’m just so proud of everyone and myself for what we put out there tonight.

‘This definitely is one of the happiest days of my life, and really just sets me up in the right mood and mindset for the next days to come.”

The 21-year-old self-proclaimed “Quad God” was backstage when the scores of the only man who could beat him, Japan’s Shun Sato, popped onto the big screen in the Olympic figure skating venue. Malinin’s long program score was 200.03 points. 

Sato’s? 194.86. Malinin had done it. The Americans had won. 

At that moment, Malinin came running from behind the curtains to celebrate with his teammates in the rink-side team boxes. But he didn’t just dash to them — he dove into the cheering collection of happy Americans, his arms raised high. He was lifted off his feet. He was flying. This was the image of the athlete in triumph. He would worry about how much this took out of him for the individual event on another day. This was the highlight of his already stellar young career.

This is the second consecutive Olympic gold medal for the United States in the team event. Ice dancers Madison Chock and Evan Bates, who won both of their team competitions, are the only Americans to repeat as champions. Last time, they had to wait two and a half years to receive their medals due to the excruciating long investigation of the Kamila Valieva doping scandal. This time, they got them right away.

The final night in the three-day competition showed that this is a test of wills, and skating skills, but it’s also basic math. As the evening began, the United States carried a five-point lead over Japan into the final three long programs: pairs, women and men. 

The evening started off well for the Americans, who gained an unexpected point when pairs team Ellie Kam and Danny O’Shea finished fourth, not fifth, in the pairs long program. The little things mattered on this night.

That became evident when three-time U.S. champion Amber Glenn turned in a nervous and underwhelming performance to finish third, two places behind Japan’s Kaori Sakamoto. All of a sudden the competition was tied with just one discipline left, the men’s long program. Had Kam and O’Shea not gained that extra point, Japan would have taken the lead. 

And then it came down to what most Olympic figure skating competitions are all about: one skater against another. Ilia Malinin against Shun Sato. Malinin won last year’s world championships, his second in a row. Sato was sixth. Sato was replacing countryman Yuma Kagiyama, who defeated a shaky Malinin in the short program Saturday night.

Both men rose to the occasion; Malinin just did a little bit more. “Ilia was spot on with what he needed to do,” said 1988 Olympic champion Brian Boitano, co-host of USA TODAY’s Milan Magic podcast. 

To think that deciding battle might never have happened had Malinin not said yes to skating the long program. 

But he did.

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