Patriots vs Seahawks live score tracker—where to follow play-by-play, drive charts, and updated team stats in real time

Patriots vs Seahawks live score tracker—where to follow play-by-play, drive charts, and updated team stats in real time
Patriots vs Seahawks live

Super Bowl LX between the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots tips off at 6:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026, and the fastest way to keep up—whether you’re watching on a delay, commuting, or second-screening the broadcast—is to pick the right tracker for the kind of detail you want. Some feeds are best for instant scoring and play-by-play, others for drive charts and possession flow, and a separate tier for advanced player-tracking stats once the data populates.

Below is a practical guide to where to follow everything in real time—without bouncing between ten tabs.

The quickest “what just happened” feed

If your goal is pure speed—touchdowns, turnovers, field goals, and timeouts—use a live scoreboard view that updates on every snap. These trackers prioritize:

  • Current score, quarter, time remaining

  • Field position, down-and-distance

  • Scoring summary and team stats that refresh continuously

They’re ideal for checking in at a glance, or for keeping a small screen open during commercials or social scrolling. Most will also show instant drive starts (e.g., “NE ball at NE 25”) and basic play text.

Best for play-by-play and drive charts

Play-by-play feeds are where you get the full story: formation-level context isn’t usually included, but you’ll see every snap logged with the result, penalty notes, and whether a play stands after review. For Super Bowl viewing, the most useful play-by-play trackers add drive charts, which show:

  • How a drive began (kickoff, punt return, turnover, safety kick)

  • Plays, yards, and time of possession

  • Where it ended (TD, FG, punt, turnover on downs, interception, fumble)

Drive charts matter because they reveal game shape quickly: whether one team is living in third-and-long, whether a defense is forcing short fields, and whether possessions are ending in points or empty trips.

Where updated team stats are most reliable

For team stats—total yards, third downs, sacks, penalties, time of possession—look for trackers that refresh “official-style” totals as the game unfolds. These are especially useful when the game turns into a field-position fight and the scoreboard alone doesn’t capture momentum.

In the first half, two stats typically tell the truth fastest:

  • Third-down conversion rate (who’s staying on schedule)

  • Turnovers and takeaways (who’s winning extra possessions)

If you’re tracking pace, keep an eye on plays run and yards per play—they often explain why a team is leading even when total yards look close.

Advanced stats: when you’ll see the deeper numbers

The most detailed “next level” tracking—player speed, separation, time to throw, completion probability, pressure rate—usually appears in a specialized advanced-stats hub that uses on-field tracking data. These numbers don’t always update instantly on the same cadence as a basic gamecast, but they become extremely useful as the game settles:

  • Time to throw and pressure rate show whether protections are holding up

  • Target depth and separation show how offenses are generating (or failing to generate) explosive plays

  • Rush efficiency and yards before contact show whether the run game is earning easy yards or grinding

If you want one place to answer “Is the quarterback actually struggling, or just getting no help?” this is where it shows up.

Quick chooser: pick the tracker that fits your need

What you want Best type of tracker What you’ll get fastest
Instant score changes Live scoreboard Score, clock, possession, field position
Full snap-by-snap text Gamecast play-by-play Every play logged, penalties, reviews
Possession flow Drive chart view Drive starts/ends, plays, yards, TOP
Team totals Live box score Passing/rushing splits, third downs, sacks
“Why it’s happening” Advanced tracking hub Pressure, separation, speed, probability

Tips for following in real time without getting lost

  • Use two screens smartly: keep a live scoreboard on one device and a drive chart/play-by-play on the other.

  • Refresh around reviews: official stats sometimes lag during replay decisions; the clean totals usually lock in right after the ruling.

  • Bookmark the box score: it becomes the best single page in the fourth quarter, when you want updated team totals and key player lines instantly.

  • Halftime timing note: halftime typically lands around 8:00–8:30 p.m. ET, depending on game pace, so expect a surge of stat updates and drive summaries as the first-half data finalizes.

Sources consulted: NFL, ESPN, CBS Sports, FOX Sports