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Coach Macdonald's faith and philosophy lead Seahawks to Super Bowl win
Summary
Mike Macdonald credited team bonds, faith and a 'stacking wins' philosophy after the Seattle Seahawks beat the New England Patriots 29-13 to win the Super Bowl.
Content
Mike Macdonald nearly left coaching for finance about 12 years ago, but he stayed in the profession and on Sunday led the Seattle Seahawks to a Super Bowl victory. The team beat the New England Patriots 29-13 in Santa Clara, and Macdonald highlighted the bonds the squad built over the season. He spoke about his personal faith journey and said the team's "stacking wins" philosophy required belief in the process and in one another. At 38, Macdonald is among the youngest head coaches to win a Super Bowl and reached 17 wins in a season including the playoffs.
What is known:
- On Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, the Seattle Seahawks beat the New England Patriots 29-13 to win the Super Bowl.
- Macdonald said the victory was built on team bonds, faith and a core philosophy the club calls "stacking wins."
- The 38-year-old coach became the third-youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl after Sean McVay and Mike Tomlin, and the first coach under 40 to reach 17 wins in a season including playoffs.
- Seattle's defence recorded six sacks of Patriots quarterback Drake Maye, forced three turnovers, and linebacker Uchenna Nwosu returned a strip-sack 44 yards for a touchdown.
- Macdonald nearly accepted an accountancy job in 2013 before taking an internship offered by Baltimore Ravens assistant Jerry Rosburg; he later served as Ravens linebackers coach, defensive coordinator at Michigan, returned to Baltimore, and was hired by Seattle in January 2024.
Summary:
Macdonald presented his faith and the team's collective approach as central to the Seahawks' championship culture, and Seattle's defence played a decisive role in the Super Bowl outcome. Undetermined at this time.
