The Seattle Seahawks pulled off one of the most unlikely championship runs the NFL has ever seen.
Led by Sam Darnold, Seattle became the first Super Bowl champion to go an entire postseason without committing a single turnover. No interceptions. No lost fumbles. Not once. In a league where one mistake can end a season, the Seahawks played flawless football when it mattered most.
What makes the run even more remarkable is where they started. During the regular season, Seattle committed 28 turnovers, the second-most in the NFL. Only the Vikings had more. Ball security was a problem all year, and it followed them into the playoffs as a major concern.
Then everything changed.
Once the postseason began, the Seahawks flipped the script. Darnold played controlled, efficient football, protecting the ball and making smart decisions. The offense focused on clean execution, while the defense consistently put opponents in tough positions. Game after game, Seattle avoided the mistakes that usually decide playoff outcomes.
By the time the Seahawks lifted the Lombardi Trophy, the turnaround was complete. A team known for turnovers during the regular season had delivered the cleanest postseason run in Super Bowl history.
It was not just a championship. It was proof that timing matters, adjustments matter, and that a team can redefine itself when the stakes are highest.








