BREAKING: Seahawks’ Kenneth Walker III becomes first Super Bowl MVP running back in 21st century.
Santa Clara, California
In a Super Bowl era dominated by quarterbacks, Kenneth Walker III delivered a throwback performance that felt both rare and defining. On Sunday night, the Seattle Seahawks running back was named Super Bowl LX MVP, becoming the first running back of the 21st century to earn the honor and carrying Seattle to a championship victory over the New England Patriots.
Walker finished the night with 135 rushing yards on 27 carries, adding 26 receiving yards on two catches, controlling the tempo of the game from the opening drive to the final whistle. It was a performance built on balance, power, and patience — the kind of effort that slowly bends a defense until it breaks.
The achievement places Walker in historic company. The last running back to win Super Bowl MVP was Terrell Davis, who powered the Denver Broncos to victory in Super Bowl XXXIII more than two decades ago. Since then, the award has largely belonged to quarterbacks and wide receivers. Walker changed that narrative in emphatic fashion.

This was also the most productive playoff performance of Walker’s young career and a fitting culmination of a dominant postseason run. After rushing for 116 yards and three touchdowns against the San Francisco 49ers in the Divisional Round, Walker emerged as the centerpiece of Seattle’s offense, especially after teammate Zach Charbonnet suffered a torn ACL earlier in the playoffs. With the Seahawks short-handed, Walker answered every call.
Across the postseason, he averaged 92.7 rushing yards on 18.3 carries per game, scoring two touchdowns while providing consistent balance alongside superstar wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba. In Super Bowl LX, that balance became control. Every successful run drained seconds, flipped field position, and kept the Patriots’ defense on its heels.
With the MVP honor, Walker also etched his name into Seahawks history. He became the first Seattle player to win Super Bowl MVP since linebacker Malcolm Smith in Super Bowl XLVIII. Beyond football, he is now the third playoff MVP winner in Seattle men’s sports history, joining Smith and former SuperSonics guard Dennis Johnson, the 1979 NBA Finals MVP.
Super Bowls are often remembered for iconic throws or highlight-reel catches. Super Bowl LX will be remembered for something simpler and rarer — a running back carrying a franchise on his shoulders when it mattered most.
Kenneth Walker III didn’t just win a championship. He rewrote a chapter of Super Bowl history.













