Matt Hasselbeck didnât mince words when he sized up the one Patriots trait that could stress the Seattle Seahawks most in Super Bowl LX.
If he had to name a kryptonite for Seattleâs defense this season, Hasselbeck said itâs been quarterbacks who can scramble, the plays that turn solid coverage into a back-breaking first down. And thatâs exactly why Drake Mayeâs running ability is the matchup heâs watching closest as New England prepares to face Seattle on the biggest stage.
Super Bowl LX is set for Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026 at Leviâs Stadium in Santa Clara. Hasselbeck spoke with Heavy in an exclusive interview earlier this week. The former Seahawks quarterback’s comments ring a little louder with his strong Boston ties.
Matt Hasselbeckâs warning: Mayeâs legs can change the whole game
Hasselbeck framed it the way quarterbacks and QB coaches often do: some weeks, the coaching point isnât âthrow it away.â Itâs âif itâs not there, run.â
Thatâs the Patriotsâ built-in escape hatch. Maye doesnât need perfect protection on every snap if he can punish coverage with his legs, on scrambles, broken plays, or even a handful of designed keepers that force Seattleâs front to play more cautiously.
And in a Super Bowl, those âhiddenâ yards can be the difference between a punt and points.
The other piece: âavailabilityâ and the shoulder storyline
Of course, Mayeâs mobility matters most if heâs healthy enough to use it.
Maye has been managing a right shoulder issue in the lead-up to the game, but heâs sounded confident late in the weekâtelling reporters he feels âgreat,â per multiple reports.
That matters because Hasselbeckâs other Super Bowl truth fits Maye perfectly: âAvailability is the best ability.â He also delivered an ultra-visual warning every fan understands: you canât help your team from the blue tent.
Hasselbeck specifically brought up Mayeâs tendency to get a little too âadventurousâ on slides, suggesting New Englandâs quarterback has to be smarter about protecting himself, especially now, with a title on the line and his shoulder already a talking point. (Thatâs not a critique of Mayeâs toughness, just the reality that one awkward hit can swing everything in February.)
Why Seahawks fans should care about Mayeâs scrambling early
Hasselbeck said when he watches the first couple drives of a game, heâs not fixated on quarterback body language. Heâs watching the line of scrimmage, protection, push, and whether the run game is respected.
Thatâs where Mayeâs legs become a multiplier.
If Seattle is winning up front, the Seahawks can keep Maye in longer downs and force him to live in the pocket. But if the Patriots are staying on schedule — and Maye is converting third downs with scrambles — Seattleâs defense gets put in the kind of stress cycle that leads to penalties, busted leverage, or a late hit that extends a drive.
And thatâs the part that can feel like âkryptoniteâ: it doesnât show up as a 40-yard bomb. It shows up as third-and-7 becoming a first down anyway.
What it could mean for New Englandâs Super Bowl plan
This is where the Patriots can be dangerous, even against a disciplined defense.
New England doesnât need to turn Super Bowl LX into a track meet. They can win with:
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a handful of early QB movement plays to force Seattleâs edges to hesitate,
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scrambles on third down that steal possessions,
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and red-zone moments where Mayeâs legs create an extra gap the defense has to defend.
Itâs the kind of plan that also travels well in a Super Bowl environment, where nerves and timing can be imperfect early. If the Patriots can turn chaos into first downs, thatâs a formula that can keep Seattle from ever getting comfortable.
The bottom line
Hasselbeckâs point is simple and scary (for Seattle): the Seahawks can cover well, rush well, and tackle well, and still lose leverage to a quarterback who turns broken plays into chain-movers.
If Maye is healthy enough to fully weaponize his legs, the Patriots have a Super Bowl edge that doesnât require a perfect passing day.
And for Seahawks fans, thatâs why âDrake Maye scramblingâ is more than a talking point this week, itâs the one variable Hasselbeck keeps circling as the potential difference-maker.
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This article was originally published on Heavy Sports
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