Super Bowl week looks glamorous on TV, but Seahawks legend Matt Hasselbeck says the reality for players is simpler, and weirder.
Hasselbeck, who led Seattle to a Super Bowl during his playing career, described the experience as a full-blown routine disruptor: bigger crowds, more obligations, more family requests, more media, and a longer runway to one game than the body is used to handling.
âItâs all different,â Hasselbeck said in a recent interview. âThe whole deal is a whole another deal.â
And thatâs the part fans donât always consider as Super Bowl LX arrives: the pressure isnât only about Xâs and Oâs. Itâs about handling a week that doesnât resemble any other week in the NFL calendar.
Hasselbeck spoke to Heavy in an exclusive interview, as he raised awareness for a health cause.Â
Super Bowl week is a âtwo-week processâ that messes with your body
Hasselbeck said one of the strangest parts is the time. Teams spend almost the entire season living in a rhythm, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, then game day.
By the time youâre deep into the year, he said, your body is basically conditioned to that weekly cycle.
Then the Super Bowl hits.
Now itâs a two-week build to one game, and Hasselbeck said that can make players feel anxious and restless. He put it bluntly: youâre âbursting at the seamsâ waiting for kickoff.
If youâve ever wondered why some teams look tight early, or why the first quarter can feel a little strange, thatâs part of the explanation. Youâre preparing for the biggest game of your life, but doing it in a way your body and mind arenât trained to do.
Seahawks fans have heard a similar âsmall things decide big gamesâ theme from Hasselbeck this week, especially in his breakdown of what actually wins Super Bowl LX:Â turnovers, red zone, and third down execution.
The âwhoâs whoâ moment that wrecked his warmup
Hasselbeck also shared a detail that perfectly captures the Super Bowl vibe shift.
On Super Bowl Sunday, he went out to the field planning to do the same game-day warmup routine he always did. Instead, the field turned into a celebrity scene.
All of a sudden, Hasselbeck said, it was a âwhoâs whoâ of NFL quarterbacks and stars â the kind of people he grew up watching, the kind of people you want to greet and show respect to.
The problem: he wasnât warming up anymore.
He said he ended up shaking hands and talking so much that he had to pull himself away, realizing he wasnât getting his normal work done. He even mentioned trying to save his voice after weeks of media and conversation.
Itâs a small moment, but itâs the kind of moment that can matter. Super Bowl Sunday is still football, but itâs football inside an event that has its own gravity.
Even halftime isnât normal
Then thereâs halftime.
Hasselbeck said he was warned that Super Bowl halftime is longer than usual, and that the best move is to relax and prepare for a long break.
But in his Super Bowl, the halftime show went even longer. The Rolling Stones played, and Hasselbeck said it stretched the downtime further.
Thatâs another example of what he meant when he said the Super Bowl can feel like youâre part of âa show,â not just a game.
And when youâve spent all season building your internal clock around a normal NFL Sunday, those little timing changes can feel massive.
Why this matters for Seahawks fans right now
As Seattle heads into Super Bowl LX, Hasselbeckâs main point is a reminder: the team that handles the week wins a hidden battle before the opening kickoff.
And Hasselbeckâs Super Bowl-week perspective lands even harder when Seattle is forced to monitor availability in real time, something he addressed directly when talking about the week-of injury anxiety every contender faces.
Every roster has talent. Every staff has a plan. But Super Bowl week adds noise, family logistics, media obligations, and a level of magnification where âany slip up gets magnified.â
Hasselbeck made it clear, the stage is different, and the challenge is different.
And for the Seahawks, the goal is simple: keep the week from beating you before the Patriots ever line up across from you.
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This article was originally published on Heavy Sports
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