Drake Maye entered the postseason riding a wave of efficiency and explosive plays. But in January, production only matters if it translates into championships.

In Mayeâs case, it didnât. Despite advancing through the first three rounds, his performances never fully settled, and that instability showed up under the brightest lights.
In the Super Bowl against the Seattle Seahawks, his rhythm disappeared against an overwhelming defense. Now, Troy Aikman believes Maye never truly stood a chance against Seattleâs elite unit.

âHe (Maye) didnât have much of a chance, Iâll be honest with you,â Aikman said. âHe was under a lot of pressure. That defense just, theyâre so well coached, and theyâre so talented.
They just were playing at a different speed, and that defense played at a different speed pretty much throughout the entire season.â
During the regular season, the New England Patriots were often criticized for benefitting from a softer schedule. That debate can wait.

Whatâs factual is this: they averaged 28.8 points per game across 17 contests. However, once the playoffs began, that number dipped sharply. Against stronger competition, New England averaged just 16.8 points per game.
Still, Aikman isnât focused on the early rounds. The multiple-time Super Bowl champion is zeroing in on one thing: Mike Macdonaldâs defense.
And the box score helps explain his stance. Maye finished 27-of-43 for 295 yards, two touchdowns, three turnovers, and absorbed six sacks. The raw yardage looks respectable. The context tells a different story.

Zoom out, and the issue becomes clearer. It wasnât volume. It was pressure. When a defense blitzes, an offense typically has two answers: adjust protection to match rushers or throw quickly to a receiver vacated by the extra rusher. New England struggled to do either consistently.
The Seahawks didnât blitz often. But when they did, it was efficient. The unit blitzed just 11 times, or 20.8% of Mayeâs drop-backs.
And they managed to generate pressure on 85.7% of those blitzes. On those snaps, Maye went 4-of-10 for 22 yards with one interception and one sack. Thatâs not just inefficiency; thatâs disruption.
Even more telling, there were moments on film where receivers were open downfield. If those throws connected, Seattle would have paid for sending extra rushers.

Instead, the Patriots appeared unprepared for the timing and disguise of the blitzes.
Maye had five inaccurate throws in critical spots. Execution didnât match the opportunity.
And this is where Aikmanâs broader point lands. Seattle wasnât just aggressive; they were structurally dominant. Entering the Super Bowl, the Seahawks led the NFL in EPA per drop-back when blitzing (-0.40) and ranked fourth in pressure rate on blitzes (49.1%).
They finished No. 1 in points allowed at 17.2 per game and ranked in the upper tier in both total yards and passing yards allowed.
So, when Troy Aikman noted that Maye didnât have a chance against Seattleâs defense, it wasnât exaggeration. Seattle was disciplined, efficient, and operating at a different speed.
Meanwhile, after the Patriots lost the game, Maye addressed his lingering shoulder issue and offseason plans for the same.
Drake Maye wonât require surgery to repair his shoulder
Drake Maye entered Super Bowl week managing more than just game preparation. The second-year quarterback and MVP runner-up suffered a shoulder injury during the AFC Championship against the Denver Broncos.

Although he finished that game, the issue lingered. Reports indicated he was limited in practice leading up to the matchup against the Seahawks, raising quiet concerns about his readiness.
New England officially listed him as questionable, not only because of the shoulder but also due to an illness. Still, Maye suited up at Leviâs Stadium after receiving shoulder injections.
He played through it. And when the Patriots fell 29â13, the injury wasnât used as a public excuse in the immediate aftermath. When asked about it days later, Maye kept his response measured.
âJust get some time off. Timeâs the best healer,â he told the reporters on Tuesday. âDefinitely just need time off. Nothing that needs anything to be done. Just some time away and time to get some rest and time away from football.â
As it stands, the 23-year-old is not expected to require surgery. The plan appears straightforward: rest and recovery. That offers some reassurance after what was, overall, an elite regular season followed by a postseason that didnât match that standard, culminating in his first Super Bowl appearance and a tough loss.
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