
It all comes down to this. The New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks will meet Sunday, Feb. 8 in Super Bowl 60 from Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif.
New England was able to get past the Denver Broncos in the AFC Championship in difficult weather conditions in the second half to advance to their first Super Bowl since defeating the Los Angeles Rams in the big game following the 2018 season.
The Patriots underwent a massive year-over-year turnaround, going from 4-13 in 2024 to 14-3 in 2025, behind first-year head coach Mike Vrabel and second-year QB Drake Maye.
The Seahawks held off the Rams in the NFC Championship for their second win in three matchups with Los Angeles and will play in their first Super Bowl since falling to the Patriots after the 2014 season. The Seahawks won the Super Bowl the season before that against the Broncos.
The Patriots will be trying for their seventh title, which would break a tie with the Pittsburgh Steelers for the most Super Bowl wins. Head coach Mike Vrabel, who won three Super Bowls as a linebacker with the Patriots, can become the first person in NFL history to win a Super Bowl as a player and head coach with the same team. This will be the Seahawk's fourth Super Bowl appearance (one win).
Note: Odds by DraftKings Sportsbook and subject to change.
Seattle Seahawks -3.5 vs. New England Patriots
Sunday, Feb. 8, 6:30 p.m. ET, NBC
Money Line: Seahawks (-205); Patriots (+170)
Total: 46.5; Opened: 46.5
Betting notes
Entering the season, the Patriots and Seahawks were both 60-1 to win the Super Bowl. The Patriots were as long as 120-1 after Week 3.
If the Patriots close as underdogs, it will break a streak of eight straight Super Bowls where New England was the betting favorite. The last time the Patriots were Super Bowl underdogs was Tom Brady's first full season with New England in 2002 (Patriots won outright, 20-17).
In Super Bowl XLIX between the Patriots and Seahawks, the Patriots covered as 1-point favorites, the game went over the total of 47.5 and Brady won Super Bowl MVP at +200 odds (per SportsOddsHistory).
Underdogs have covered five straight Super Bowls (4-1 outright) and have won three straight. Since 2007, underdogs are 11-7 outright and 13-5 ATS in the Super Bowl. Since 2001, underdogs are 13-11 outright and 17-7 ATS in the Super Bowl. Underdogs are 23-36 outright and 30-27-2 ATS in the Super Bowl all-time.
AFC teams are 8-3 ATS in the last 11 Super Bowls. Overall, the NFC is 28-27 outright and 27-26-2 ATS against the AFC.
Teams to win the Super Bowl are 50-7-2 ATS. The only time in the last 15 Super Bowls that a team won the game but did not cover the spread was in Super Bowl LVI when the Rams beat the Bengals by 3 and did not cover the 4.5-point spread.