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Seahawks Win! Coach’s Words Leave Critics Speechless

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This is the same NFL that gave America a halftime show so explicit that parents nationwide were struggling to shield their children.

The same league that plastered “End Racism” across end zones while blackballing players who publicly support Trump.

And yet, on a stage watched by 120 million people, Macdonald thanked God first.

Youngest Coach to Win Super Bowl Built Christian Locker Room

Long before the Super Bowl, Macdonald openly shared that his Christian faith is his daily guide. He said God placed him in the Seahawks’ coaching seat, and that faith is “what I lean on” and “where your strength comes from.”

His offensive coordinator, Klint Kubiak, has also been vocal. He said realizing “your identity is not in your job, our identity is in Christ” changed his life. Kubiak even gave every Seahawks player a Bible for Christmas.

Team chaplain Jonathan Rainey leads Bible studies, reminding players that Sundays are for football, so “the team becomes their church.”

Throughout the season, multiple players openly credited God for their performance. Patriots quarterback Drake Maye, after losing in the AFC Championship, still thanked “the good Lord.”

But don’t expect ESPN to air hours-long specials on Christianity thriving in NFL locker rooms. Acknowledging that would force the left to admit something they despise: Christian faith isn’t fading—it’s flourishing where it counts most.

Third-Youngest Head Coach in NFL History Makes Super Bowl Win Look Easy

At 38, Macdonald became the third-youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl, behind only Sean McVay and Mike Tomlin, who were both 36.

He started as a defensive intern with the Baltimore Ravens in 2014 at 27. No NFL playing career, no famous coaching pedigree—just a finance degree and relentless work ethic.

Seven years later, he got his first coordinator job. In January 2024, the Seahawks hired him at age 36. His first season ended 10-7 with no playoff appearance.

Macdonald made bold moves: he fired his offensive coordinator, traded quarterback Geno Smith, and parted ways with star receiver DK Metcalf.

Those decisions paid off. The Seahawks finished 14-3, a franchise record, and dominated the playoffs. Macdonald’s defense held Patriots quarterback Drake Maye to six sacks, two interceptions, and a fumble in the Super Bowl. His unit pressured the quarterback on 51% of dropbacks while blitzing only 17% of the time. Linebacker Uchenna Nwosu returned an interception for a touchdown, crushing any hope of a Patriots comeback.

This Is What The Left Fears Most

Young, successful, unapologetic Christians thriving in positions of power.

Macdonald didn’t hide his faith to avoid controversy or appease sponsors. At 38, after winning a Super Bowl in just his second season as head coach, his first instinct was to point millions of viewers toward God.

The Seahawks’ locker room isn’t merely tolerant of Christianity—it is built around it. And now, they are Super Bowl champions.

The mainstream media won’t highlight this story because it shatters their narrative: that faith is dying, young people are abandoning Christianity, and public belief is a liability in modern America.

Mike Macdonald just proved every one of those assumptions wrong.

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