Super Bowl 60 at Levi’s Stadium pits the Seattle Seahawks against the New England Patriots on Sunday, February 8, 2026. Best bets and angles.
Super Bowl 60 at Levi’s Stadium pits the Seattle Seahawks against the New England Patriots on Sunday, February 8, 2026. Best bets and angles.

NFL Super Bowl 60 is finally here, and it’s a rematch with plenty of narrative — but the betting angles don’t need to be complicated. If you’re building a card for the big game, the cleanest approach is to target the most repeatable outcomes: Seattle’s most likely touchdown paths, a passing-yard number that fits a Patriots chasing script, and the simple head-to-head result.
This year’s Super Bowl LX is being played at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara on Sunday, February 8, 2026, with 6:30pm ET kickoff.
Seattle’s path to winning this game is pretty straightforward: finish drives and make New England work for everything. The Patriots can absolutely move the ball with Drake Maye if the volume is there, but the question is whether they’re doing it from in front — or whether they’re forced into a pass-heavy, higher-tempo chase.
Seattle can win this matchup in a few different ways, but the common thread is they’re better placed to produce touchdowns without needing everything to be perfect. If the Seahawks get even a modest lead, they can dictate tempo, keep New England’s run game quiet, and force Maye into longer downs where the pass rush can hunt.
When you’re betting an anytime touchdown in a Super Bowl, you want a player whose chances don’t disappear if the game tightens up. Walker ticks that box. He’s the most natural “finish the drive” option for Seattle, whether it’s a red-zone carry, a short-yardage punch-in, or a broken tackle that turns a good play into six.
If Walker is the power route to points, JSN is the cleaner, craftier one — and that matters in a game where red-zone windows shrink fast. Smith-Njigba doesn’t need a deep shot to score either. He’s a genuine threat on quick hitters, crossers, and designed looks that can turn into a walk-in if New England lose leverage for half a second.
This is the one that pairs nicely with a Seattle win: Maye can still cash his overs even if the Patriots don’t lift the trophy. If New England fall behind at any point, the game tends to tilt toward volume — more dropbacks, more hurry-up, and more chunk-yard chances. At this price, you’re effectively betting on game flow as much as you’re betting on Maye’s talent.