Thereās been a bit an element of understandable apathy surrounding Super Bowl LX this weekend. Anyone who has been paying attention to the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks this postseason has seen the obvious: These teams are largely playing on two completely different planes of existence.
The Seahawks pulled the 49ersā pants over their heads in a dominating victory that felt like it was over from the first drive, then had a real heavyweight duel with the Rams in the NFC title game. On the other hand, the Patriots have fought through some grueling battles without the high-end flashes that the Seahawks have shown.
Advertisement
And the Patriots have a key weakness in this game, same as itās been all their other games: the offensive line.
This isnāt to say that the Patriots have the worst offensive line in the league, because they certainly donāt. However, in a more amped setting like the playoffs where the best teams are the only teams populating the schedule, New Englandās line has been forced to play some of the best defenses in the league and largely has not fared well. Throughout their three playoff games up to this point, the Patriots have only had a 33% success rate on offense and Drake Maye has been sacked on a rate of 16.3% of his dropbacks. The flip side is that the defense has also taken advantage of the poor weather conditions that theyāve played in, but that likely wonāt be the same environment on Sunday.
New England has a chance here in this game if the offensive line can break character from the standard that itās set. The Patriots certainly donāt have the same level of talent up front as a team thatās usually in this circumstance ā hell, even the Seahawksā offensive line, which isnāt an elite unit, has at least three plus starters on it in Charles Cross, Grey Zabel and Abe Lucas. Up to this point, over 42% of the Patriotsā offensive plays have gone for negative yardage, and they have the worst mark for first downs per drive (1.14) among any team to play in the playoffs this year. The offensive line has been battered against some of the best defensive lines that the league has to offer, and itās hard to see how that changes this week against the vaunted Seahawks front.
Advertisement
More on Super Bowl LX
The one thing that this offensive line has going for it is that Maye is one of the best athletes at quarterback in the league and has already shown that his athletic prowess can be the big difference for the Patriots in the Super Bowl. However, they still need to give him, and the running backs behind them, a chance to win this game. It really will come down to the Patriotsā ability up front to hold arguably the most cohesive front seven in the NFL at bay.
Hopefully they do, because itās best if this Super Bowl doesnāt feed into the anti-hype thatās led the discourse for the game up to this point. New Englandās front five needs to play uncharacteristically well against yet another defensive line that has far more talent than it does.
If they can pull that off, this Patriots team can be one of the more unlikely Super Bowl winners of this era.














