
Getty Image / Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire
Year after year, clout-chasing individuals seek to steal the spotlight of the biggest stage in American sports by streaking onto the field and displaying a message of some sort on their bodies. One incident at Super Bowl LX in the Bay area featured a streaker revealed to be Alex Gonzalez, a repeat offender.
The incident took place in the pivotal 4th quarter and while the Super Bowl advertisers and NBC were certainly happy to have an additional ad spot during the game, the teams were none too pleased and Patriots WR Kyle Williams (#18) was the individual on the field who caught Alex Gonzalez before security was able to run him down.
Super Bowl LX Streaker Named As Alex Gonzalez, A Repeat Offender
International media outlets were quick to identify the streaker as Alex Gonzalez. It was reported by The Express UK and US outlets, as well as the Irish Star, Mirror, Times Now, and Tyla. Interestingly, many American-based media outlets did not report on the streaker as the trend in recent years is not to give them the publicity they crave and thus encourage future streakers to storm the field.

Getty Image / JOSH EDELSON / AFP
While NBC did not show Gonzalez on the field, fans in the stadium filming the incident shared clips to social media which quickly went viral. You can see the Patriots WR get hands on Gonzalez here who quickly submitted, hit the ground, and covered his head while bracing for security to bear down on him. Anyone watching could see this wasn’t hit first rodeo long before he was identified:
Kyle Williams huge tackle for loss patriots ball pic.twitter.com/b2H9OEKZNU
— ludwig (@LudwigAhgren) February 9, 2026
Another view from the stands shows the incident unfolding:
@aubreygavelloo Patriots could have used him tonight
He had a message written on his body, three words, ‘trade with ——.’
Some Super Bowl TV spots sold for $10 million during the game with advertisers also committing $10 million in advertising spending in other NBC events. The aim here was to gain all that coverage, in essence, for free. But it will certainly cost him.
Alex Gonzalez ran onto the field at Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas. It was later revealed that stunt cost him $42,000 in fines.
At this point, it is unclear what this Super Bowl incident will cost Gonzalez, if anything. On his Instagram page where he has 1.3 million followers, he hasn’t posted to his grid in several weeks and there are currently no posts to his Stories.