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It has been quite a few months for Darnold, after winning the Super Bowl, now he's tied the knot.

You could make the case that Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold is living his best life right now.

After winning the Super Bowl with the Seahawks a couple of months ago, Sam was likely riding high.

But there is a possibility that Sam could do something that was even better than winning a Super Bowl, and that's getting married. 

Darnold tied the knot with fiancée Katie Hoofnagle on Friday, April 3, with Hoofnagle posting several images on her Instagram account of the big day.

We saw a video made up of the couple's big day, along with a photo collage that began with a picture of Sam and Katie, with the caption "big year for rings," with Hoofnagle Darnold referencing the Super Bowl ring and wedding ring.

So, we now know that Darnold and Hoofnagle have tied the knot, but the next big-ticket item fans wanted to know was who was in attendance.

And there were some high-profile people who watched Sam tie the knot.

A source told PEOPLE that there was quite the NFL contingent at the wedding with San Francisco 49ers star Christian McCaffrey and his wife, Olivia Culpo, Seahawks teammate Cooper Kupp and his wife, Anna Marie, along with Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen, Hailee Steinfeld, and Christian Kirk.

So that is some serious star power that was on hand to see what was likely Darnold's best day of his life...yes, even better than the Super Bowl win.

It has been quite the last few months for Darnold, as he reached the NFL pinnacle, having done a mountain of work to get back from the NFL wilderness.

Not seen by many as "the" guy to get Seattle to the Super Bowl, Sam did it and ended any doubts over his ability to perform in big games.

So that was superb for him, but to then marry Katie, that was just the cherry on top of what has been an outstanding last couple of months for the former first-round pick.

Now, he will enjoy married life until he is required to be back in the Seahawks facility to begin preparations on the Super Bowl defense.