Seahawks Coach Klint Kubiak Breaks Silence Before Super Bowl Showdown

With Super Bowl 60 looming, Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak stays locked in on the game amid rising head coach rumors and outside noise.

Klint Kubiak Keeps Focus on Super Bowl 60 Amid Head Coaching Buzz

As the Seattle Seahawks gear up for their biggest game in nearly a decade, offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak is making headlines for more than just his play-calling. With Super Bowl 60 on deck and the Las Vegas Raiders reportedly eyeing him for a head coaching role, Kubiak finds himself at the intersection of opportunity and distraction. But if you ask him, there’s no dilemma-just business.

Kubiak, who’s been coaching since 2010 and entered the NFL ranks in 2013, has steadily climbed the coaching ladder. After stints as offensive coordinator with the Minnesota Vikings in 2021 and the New Orleans Saints in 2024, he landed in Seattle in 2025-and it’s here that he’s truly hit his stride.

In his first year with the Seahawks, Kubiak has transformed the offense into one of the league’s most dynamic units. His fingerprints are all over Seattle’s run to the Super Bowl, and his work hasn’t gone unnoticed. With head coaching vacancies opening up around the league, Kubiak’s name is firmly in the mix-none louder than the buzz coming out of Las Vegas.

Still, as the Seahawks prepare to face the New England Patriots in Super Bowl 60, Kubiak made it clear during Monday’s media availability in San Francisco that his attention is exactly where it needs to be.

“It was really easy because I didn't spend any extra time on it,” Kubiak said when asked about the outside noise. “You get ready for those things in the summer, things that are important to you. Your résumé is always on your film.”

He added a nod to his coaching roots, referencing advice from his father, longtime NFL coach Gary Kubiak: “That’s something my dad always taught me-better not be sitting in that office thinking about interview questions. Better be thinking about how to win the game, because that's what it comes down to is what the silent tape says.”

That mindset has clearly served him well. Under Kubiak’s guidance, Seattle surged to a 14-3 regular season record, good enough to claim the top seed in the NFC. In the playoffs, they took down two divisional foes-the 49ers and Rams-to earn their spot on football’s biggest stage.

Now, with the Lombardi Trophy in sight and the Patriots standing in their way, Kubiak and the Seahawks are locked in on the task at hand: bringing home the franchise’s second Super Bowl title.

Kickoff for Super Bowl 60 is set for Feb. 8 at 6:30 p.m. ET in San Francisco.

And while questions about Kubiak’s future may linger, there’s no question where his focus is right now. The tape, as he says, will do the talking.