The lights are already bright in San Francisco, and they’re only getting brighter for the New England Patriots.
Just days before Super Bowl 60 kicks off, the franchise finds itself back on the sport’s biggest stage under first-year head coach Mike Vrabel, with a young quarterback now tasked with navigating football’s most relentless spotlight.
With that attention comes the inevitable parade of questions-some thoughtful, some repetitive, and some almost too obvious to ignore. Drake Maye got one of those questions on Monday.
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During a media interview ahead of Sunday’s game, the New England Patriots quarterback was asked what might be the most predictable Super Bowl question of all.
“You and your team… are you planning to win this Sunday?” the interviewer asked. Maye didn’t hesitate.
“Are we planning to win?” he replied, flashing a wide smile. “What else would we be planning to do?”
The moment was brief, but it captured exactly where the Patriots stand heading into Super Bowl 60: confident, composed, and unfazed by the noise that inevitably surrounds championship week.
Patriots embrace Super Bowl spotlight
For New England, this Super Bowl run marks a remarkable turnaround.
In Mike Vrabel‘s first season as head coach, the Patriots not only stabilized after years of transition but surged all the way back to the NFL‘s biggest game. That alone has made them one of the most talked-about teams of the week.
Maye, in just his second NFL season, has become the face of that resurgence. His calm response wasn’t rehearsed or defiant-it was matter-of-fact. The New England Patriots didn’t travel this far to participate, they came to win.
That same theme has followed Vrabel throughout media week. The head coach, who played in three Super Bowls during his own New England playing days, was asked whether Sunday’s game qualifies as a “must-win” for the franchise.
Vrabel didn’t bristle at the question, but the implication was obvious. When you reach the Super Bowl, especially with a roster built around youth and momentum, the opportunity doesn’t come with guarantees of return trips.
While Vrabel has kept his answers measured and professional, the subtext is clear: this moment matters.
For Maye, the challenge is different. The Super Bowl spotlight can overwhelm even veteran quarterbacks, let alone one still early in his career.
A clear communicator unfazed by pressure
Yet throughout the postseason, Maye has shown an ability to balance confidence with composure, rarely sounding rattled or distracted by the magnitude of the stage.
His response Monday fit that pattern, there were no cliches. It was just a reminder that winning is the expectation, not the aspiration.
As media obligations continue and questions pile up, Maye and the Patriots know the circus won’t last forever. Super Bowl week has a way of stretching even the simplest moments into headlines, but once Sunday arrives, the talking stops.
Until then, players and coaches will keep answering questions-some insightful, some obvious, and some unavoidable.
Thankfully for everyone involved, Super Bowl media week does have an expiration date.
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