Sports
How the Patriots Can Upset the Seahawks in Super Bowl LX
The New England Patriots enter Super Bowl LX against the Seattle Seahawks as underdogs, but unlike Super Bowl XX, when the Chicago Bears KO’d New England 46-10, the Patriots do have more than a puncher’s chance against the Seahawks.
Here’s what New England will have to do Sunday to pave a path to victory:
Improve on offense
Quarterback Drake Maye looked like an MVP candidate during the regular season, when he directed a New England offense that was second among NFL teams in points per game (28.8) and third in yards per game (379.2). That offense hasn’t been nearly as effective in the postseason, however.
The Patriots are averaging 18 points per game in the playoffs. That point total includes a defensive TD New England scored during its 28-16 victory over Houston in the AFC’s divisional round.
Many of the offense’s problems in the playoffs have come on third down and in the red zone. The Patriots have converted on 13 of their 43 third-down attempts, and entered the end zone twice in six trips inside their opponents’ 20-yard line. Maye has also been sacked 15 times in the three playoff games.
Some of the issues can be explained by the snowy and windy conditions in Denver during the second half of the AFC championship game, but that still leaves 10 quarters of lackluster offense.
Maye passed for 4,394 yards with 31 touchdowns and eight interceptions during the regular season. Since New England will be facing a Seattle defense that ranked first in points allowed during the regular season (17.2), any chance of an upset on Sunday starts with Maye and the offense’s ability to revert to regular-season form.
“We’ll have to stay balanced,” New England coach Mike Vrabel said. “Our best games we were able to provide some semblance of run game and were able to kind of marry some of the play-action passes. I don’t think in this league you want to turn things into a drop-back passing game. That makes things really difficult.”
Limit Seattle’s running game
If the Patriots can be stingy against the run they can turn Seattle into something close to a one-dimensional offense and force quarterback Sam Darnold to beat them. That might be the best recipe for the defense to have success Sunday.
New England ranked fifth in rush defense during the regular season (101.7 ypg), a number that would have likely been even better if defensive tackle Milton Williams hadn’t missed five games with a high-ankle sprain.
Seattle’s offense averaged 123.3 yards rushing per game this season (tied for 10th), but running back Zach Charbonnet tore an ACL in the divisional round against the 49ers and won’t play Sunday. If the Patriots can bottle up Kenneth Walker they can focus more resources on Seattle’s passing game, meaning more pressure on Darnold and giving extra attention to wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba, who led the league with 1,793 receiving yards.
“We’ll need our best effort (defensively) on Sunday to help us win the football game,” Vrabel said.
Don’t allow big plays on special teams
The Patriots don’t have to win the special teams battle, but they can’t lose it – at least not by a significant margin.
Seattle’s Rashid Shaheed is an electric returner who is a threat to score on both kickoffs and punts. He set the tone in the divisional round by opening the game with a 95-yard kickoff return for a TD.
Shaheed and punter Michael Dickson were both named to the Pro Bowl, and placekicker Jason Myers led the league in scoring (171 points).
“Everybody treats it as if it’s their own primary position,” Seattle’s Brady Russell said. “Special teams isn’t just a side job, it’s (our) main job.”
By most metrics New England has performed well on special teams this season, and the Patriots will likely need another strong effort from that group to prevail on Sunday.
“We’re just trying to build a program, and first year of the program we ended up here,” Vrabel said. “We’re excited about it and we will be ready to go.”
Sports
Team Vitality sweep Natus Vincere, win BLAST Open Spring
A backlit keyboard is part of the gear online video game streamer Jordan Woodruff uses in his Gilbert home.
Jordan Woodruff
Team Vitality recorded a 3-0 victory over Natus Vincere on Sunday in the best-of-five grand final of the BLAST Open Spring at Rotterdam, Netherlands.
Vitality posted a 13-7 win on Inferno and 13-10 triumphs on both Anubis and Dust II to pocket the first-place prize of $150,000 and three BLAST Frequent Flyer tokens.
Robin ‘ropz’ Kool of Estonia had 65 kills for Team Vitality, while Drin ‘makazze’ Shaqiri of Kosovo led Natus Vincere with 48.
We came, we saw, we conquered without dropping a single map.
Your BLAST Rotterdam Champions ?? pic.twitter.com/xAOdztlp7S
— Team Vitality CS (@TeamVitalityCS) March 29, 2026
The 16 teams in the $400,000 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive event were split into two groups of eight that contested double-elimination brackets in Copenhagen, Denmark. The top three finishers in each bracket advanced to the six-team playoffs in Rotterdam.
BLAST Open Spring prize pool (cash prize, BLAST Frequent Flyer tokens)
1. $150,000, 3 — Team Vitality
2. $60,000, 1 — Natus Vincere
3-4. $40,000, 1 — PARIVISION, Aurora Gaming
5-6. $20,000, 1 — Team Falcons, The MongolZ
7-8. $10,000 — FURIA, Team Spirit
9-12. $7,500 — TYLOO, NRG, 9z Team, Team Liquid
13-16. $5,000 — FaZe Clan, B8, MOUZ, Ninjas in Pyjamas
–Field Level Media
Sports
Angels select contract of RHP Shaun Anderson
May 21, 2025; West Sacramento, California, USA; Los Angeles Angels pitcher Shaun Anderson (64) delivers a pitch against the Athletics in the fifth inning at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images The Los Angeles Angels selected the contract of right-hander Shaun Anderson from Triple-A Salt Lake in advance of Sunday’s series finale against the Houston Astros.
To make room on the active roster, the Angels optioned right-hander Walbert Urena, while right-hander Victor Mederos was designated for assignment to open a spot on the 40-man roster.
Anderson, 31, was 1-0 with a 10.32 ERA in seven appearances with the Angels last season and had a 5.27 ERA over nine spring training appearances with the club. In parts of six major league seasons with eight different clubs, he is 4-7 with a 6.39 ERA in 76 appearances (18 starts).
Urena, 22, made his major league debut Thursday then gave up six unearned runs over one inning Saturday against the Astros.
Mederos, 24, had 12 appearances (three starts) for the Angels since 2023 and went 0-3 with an 8.53 ERA.
The Angels also traded left-hander Jayvien Sandridge to the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday for cash considerations. Sandridge, a 27-year-old who was born in Maryland, has one major league appearance and it came with the New York Yankees last season.
Sandridge was designated for assignment by the Angels in advance of Opening Day.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Rangers RHP Jacob deGrom to make season debut this week
Sep 24, 2025; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers starting pitcher Jacob deGrom (48) throws the ball during the third inning against the Minnesota Twins at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images Texas Rangers right-hander Jacob deGrom is expected to make his season debut either Tuesday or Wednesday after skipping his scheduled start Saturday with neck stiffness.
After he was physically limited Saturday, deGrom threw from120 feet Sunday. The Rangers switched to left-hander Jacob Latz against the Philadelphia Phillies on Saturday and ended up with a 5-4 victory in 10 innings.
The Rangers are set to start a three-game series on the road against the Baltimore Orioles on Monday. Texas manager Skip Schumaker said deGrom is expected to pitch in the latter part of the series.
deGrom played catch and threw up to a distance of 120 feet on Sunday.
“We’ll see how it goes (Monday),” deGrom told reporters. “It’s definitely a big improvement from yesterday.”
The 37-year-old deGrom is coming off a season when he made 30 starts for the first time since 2019. He was named the American League Comeback Player of the Year for his efforts.
After missing most of the 2023 and 2024 seasons after Tommy John surgery, the two-time Cy Young Award winner returned to make three brief starts for Texas in September 2024. He went 12-8 with a 2.97 ERA last year while earning his fifth career All-Star selection.
–Field Level Media
