Super Bowl LX lands tonight under the bright California lights at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara. The New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks are back in a championship collision that feels both historic and unfinished. For New England, it’s about adding another Lombardi Trophy to a legacy that already commands respect. For Seattle, it’s about stepping back onto the biggest stage and proving this era belongs to them. The stakes are obvious. The tension is real. This is what the Super Bowl does — it magnifies everything.
Will Marcus Jones play in Super Bowl LX?
All week, one practical question has hovered over the Patriots: will Marcus Jones suit up tonight? Yes, Jones is expected to play. He does not carry an injury designation heading into the game, which means he’s cleared and available. No late uncertainty, no game-time drama attached to his name. That matters.
Jones isn’t just depth in the secondary. He’s one of the Patriots’ true momentum shifters. As a cornerback and punt returner, he has built a reputation for flipping games in a matter of seconds — whether that’s jumping a route for an interception or turning a routine return into a sudden scoring opportunity.
Those are not small details in a Super Bowl. They are often the difference.
Seattle brings speed. They bring vertical threats. They bring special teams that can tilt field position in a blink. Having Jones active gives New England flexibility — defensively and in the return game — and that kind of versatility becomes gold in tight championship contests. When kickoff arrives, he won’t just be participating. He’ll be in the middle of moments that could swing the night.
Super Bowl LX kicks off tonight, Sunday, February 8, 2026, at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California. The game is set for 6:30 p.m. ET (3:30 p.m. local time), with millions watching live on NBC and streaming platforms. By the end of the night, one team will be holding the Lombardi Trophy — and every snap, including the ones involving Marcus Jones, will have helped decide it.
For Jones, this is about proving he belongs in championship conversations. One clean return, one timely breakup, one instinctive read could quietly become the play everyone replays tomorrow morning.