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By Marc Lawrence
Weekend, Feb 7 – 8

MLC

The Patriots will wear white jerseys on Sunday, a color that has historically delivered success on the NFL's biggest stage.

63% of all Super Bowls (37 of 59) have been won by the team wearing white.

New England also went 5-0 this season with their all-white uniform combo.

Then again, Seattle is wearing its “double blue” tops and bottoms. They were 6-0 this season when they wore blue-on-blue.

You can’t argue with success.

But it should be noted that the past two Super Bowls were won by the team not wearing white. The Chiefs wore red in 2024, and the Eagles wore green last year.

Now that you’re color blind, enjoy the game.

ON TODAY'S SCORECARD
East to West

MLC

Since 1980 there have been a total of 8 NFL teams from Eastern Time Zones that have played in a Super Bowl game at a venue located in a Pacific Time Zone. Here they are...

Super Bowl XIV (1980, Pasadena, CA): Pittsburgh Steelers -10.5
Final: Steelers 31, Rams 19 → Steelers won and covered

Super Bowl XIX (1985, Palo Alto, CA): Miami Dolphins +3.5
Final: Dolphins 16, 49ers 38 → Dolphins lost and did not cover

Super Bowl XXI (1987, Pasadena, CA): New York Giants -9.5
Final: Giants 39, Broncos 20 → Giants won and covered

Super Bowl XXII (1988, San Diego, CA): Washington Redskins +3
Final: Redskins 42, Broncos 10 → Redskins won and covered

Super Bowl XXVII (1993, Pasadena, CA): Buffalo Bills +6.5
Final: Bills 17, Cowboys 52 → Bills lost and did not cover

Super Bowl XXXVII (2003, San Diego, CA): Tampa Bay Buccaneers -3
Final: Buccaneers 48, Raiders 21 → Buccaneers won and covered

Super Bowl L (2016, Santa Clara, CA): Carolina Panthers -5
Final: Panthers 10, Broncos 24 → Panthers lost and did not cover

Super Bowl LVI (2022, Inglewood, CA): Cincinnati Bengals +4.5
Final: Bengals 20, Rams 23 → Bengals lost and covered

Final Tally: These eastern Time Zone teams are 4-4 SU and 5-3 ATS in Pacific Time Zones.

FWIW: These Eastern visitors are 4-0 ATS in these games if they surrendered fewer than 28 points in the Championship Game (read: Patriots).

Super Bowl LX – New England, you’re on the clock.


BETCHA DIDN’T KNOW

The Sharpest Mind in Vegas

Las Vegas professional bettor Steve Fezzik wants to clear something up before Super Bowl Sunday.

He’s not anti-fun.

He is, however, anti-losing when it comes to the plethora of prop bets, especially the ones with no edge for bettors.

Steve zeroed in on what really separates winning and losing bettors on the biggest betting day of the year for VSiN.com.

The Super Bowl is the one game where novelty takes over. Exact scores. MVPs. First and last touchdowns. Bets that are fun to talk about and easy to sell — and, as Steve points out, loaded with extra vig. He calls them “needle-in-the-haystack” props, and it’s one reason sportsbooks almost never lose on the Big Game.

That doesn’t mean every prop is bad. It does mean you have to know where the edge actually lives.

Fezzik used the coin toss as a good example. The annual heads-or-tails debate is mostly noise. The real question — when it matters — is who gets the ball, and whether books are slow to adjust or pull related markets (e.g., first-half team totals) once that information becomes known. That’s an edge discussion. It just doesn’t fit neatly into most Super Bowl chatter.

He also pushed back on something most Super Bowl players suffer from: overoptimism. Bettors building a confident game script and then forcing every prop to line up with it. If your projected final score is meaningfully different from the market, Fezzik argues, that’s probably not insight — it’s overconfidence. The market is usually closer than we want to admit.

Even when it comes to in-game betting, Fezzik’s approach is more deliberate than reactive. Rather than chasing at halftime, he’ll target second-half bets before the game kicks off, when pricing is cleaner and less influenced by early noise.

Finally, if you’re betting strictly for entertainment, Steve’s advice is simple: Scale the bet size accordingly.


GRINDING OUT THE PROFITS
Through the Years

Bad Bunny takes center stage for the halftime act in Super Bowl 60.

Looking back, per CBS Sports, here is a list of every Halftime Act in Super Bowl history dating back to 1967...

SUPER BOWL HALFTIME PERFORMER

2025: Kendrick Lamar with special guest    SZA

2024: Usher, with special guests Alicia    Keys, Jermaine Dupri, H.E.R., will.i.am, Lil    Jon, Ludacr

• 2023: Rihanna

2022: Eminem, Dr. Dre. Snoop Dogg,    Kendrick Lamar and Mary J. Blige

• 2021: The Weeknd

2020: Shakira, Jennifer Lopez, Bad Bunny,    J Balvin, Emme Muniz

• 2019: Maroon 5, Travis Scott, Big Boi

2018: Justin Timberlake, The Tennessee    Kids

• 2017: Lady Gaga

• 2016: Coldplay, Beyonce, Bruno Mars

2015: Katy Perry, Lenny Kravitz and Missy    Elliott

2014: Bruno Mars, Red Hot Chili Peppe

2013: Beyonce

2012: Madonna

2011: The Black Eyed Peas, Usher, Slash

2010: The Who

2009: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street    Band

2008: Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers

2007: Prince and the Florida A&M marching    band

2006: The Rolling Stones

2005: Paul McCartney

2004: Janet Jackson, Kid Rock, P. Diddy,    Nelly and Justin Timberlake

2003: Shania Twain, No Doubt and Sting

2002: U2

2001: "The Kings of Rock and Pop"    featuring Aerosmith, 'N'Sync, Britney    Spears, Mary J. Blige and Nelly

2000: "A Tapestry of Nations" featuring Phil    Collins, Christina Aguilera, Enrique Iglesias,    Toni Braxton and an 80-person choir

1999: "Celebration of Soul, Salsa and    Swing" featuring Stevie Wonder, Gloria    Estefan, Big Bad Voodoo Daddy and tap    dancer Savion Glover

1998: "A Tribute to Motown's 40th    Anniversary" including Boyz II Men,    Smokey Robinson, Queen Latifah, Martha    Reeves and The Temptations

1997: "Blues Brothers Bash" featuring Dan    Akroyd, John Goodman and James Belushi    (also featuring "The Godfather of Soul"    James Brown and ZZ Top)

1996: Diana Ross celebrating 30 years of    the Super Bowl with special effects,    pyrotechnics and stadium card stunt. Finale    featured Diana Ross being taken from the    stadium in a helicopter

1995: "Indiana Jones and the Temple of    the Forbidden Eye" featuring Tony Bennett,    Patti LaBelle, Arturo Sandoval, the Miami    Sound Machine and stunts including fire    and skydivers. Finale included audience    participation with light sticks

1994: "Rockin' Country Sunday" featuring    Clint Black, Tanya Tucker, Travis Tritt,    Wynonna & Naomi Judd. Finale included    flashlight stunt

1993: "Heal the World" featuring Michael    Jackson and 3,500 local children. Finale    included audience card stunt



TRENDING TODAY
Whiskers Apart

MLC

This Saturday’s game between No. 4 Duke and No. 14 North Carolina will be the 88th meeting in which both teams are ranked. That’s 47 more than any other matchup (Syracuse vs. Georgetown).

Head-to-head: The Tobacco Road rivals have split those first 87 matches almost exactly, with the Tar Heels holding the slightest of edges in wins (44-43) and points per game (77.9-77.4).

FYI: top-seeded Duke beat UNC in the semifinals of last season’s ACC tournament. The Devils are 6-1 outright the next season in this series after sending the Heels packing in the conference tourney the previous season.


PERCOLATING

Most Valuable Player

Rams QB Matthew Stafford won his first NFL MVP Award on Thursday night at the annual NFL Honors show, beating out Patriots QB Drake Maye in one of the closest races ever.

The final tally: Stafford had 366 points and 24 first-place votes. Maye was right behind with 361 points and 23 first-place votes. Others receiving first-place votes: Josh Allen (2) and Justin Herbert* (1).

  • It's the closest MVP vote since 2003, when Peyton Manning and Steve McNair were co-winners of the award.

  • Stafford joins Y.A. Tittle (1963) and Rich Gannon (2002) as the oldest first-time MVPs, all at age 37.

Coming back for more: Stafford committed to return for his 18th season amid retirement speculation. "I'll see you guys next year," he said. "Hopefully I'm not at this event and we're preparing for another game at SoFi," which will host next year's Super Bowl.

More NFL Honors:

  • Awards: Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Seahawks (OPOY); Myles Garrett, Browns (DPOY); Mike Vrabel, Patriots (Coach); Christian McCaffrey, 49ers (Comeback Player); Tetairoa McMillan, Panthers (OROY); Carson Schwesinger, Browns (DROY); Joe Thuney, Bears (Protector)

  • Hall of Fame: Drew Brees (QB), Larry Fitzgerald (WR), Luke Kuechly (LB), Adam Vinatieri (K) and Roger Craig (RB) were announced as the five-man 2026 Hall of Fame Class. As previously reported, Bill Belichick and Robert Kraft didn't make the cut this year.

  • Man of the Year: The night concluded with Commanders LB Bobby Wagner being named the Walter Payton Man of the Year for philanthropy and community impact. He gave a wonderful speech honoring his late mother, Phenia.


QUOTE OF THE DAY

"The best play you can run is to open up a can of whoop ass on somebody and go win. That is a play in itself."

- Brenden Schooler, Patriots safety


STAT OF THE DAY
8-0

Drake Maye is 8-0 to the ‘over’ of 220.5 passing yards in games this season,
per Bettor Day.



SONG OF THE WEEKEND

Believe it or Not.

No. 1 song on the day of the first
Super Bowl Game in 1967.


Click Here to See and Hear It Now.



MLC


SOMETHING BREWING

Hat Tricked

The record of NFL teams whose starting quarterback’s last name is 4 letters or less is 0-3 all-time.

They include Joe Kapp, Matt Ryan and Jared Goff.

It’s why Babe Ruth never won a Super Bowl game.

It’s also right up there with which color Gator Ade will be dumped in the winning coach as far as edges in the Super Bowl are concerned.

SUPER BOWL HALFTIME PERFORMER

1992: "Winter Magic" including a salute to    the winter season and the winter Olympics    featuring Gloria Estefan, Brian Boitano and    Dorothy Hamill

1991: "A Small World Salute to 25 Years of    the Super Bowl" featuring New Kids on the    Block

1990: "Salute to New Orleans" and 40th    Anniversary of Peanuts' characters,    featuring trumpeter Pete Fountain, Doug    Kershaw & Irma Thomas

1989: "Be Bop Bamboozled" featuring 3-D    effects

1988: "Something Grand" featuring 88    grand pianos, the Rockettes and Chubby    Checker

1987: "Salute to Hollywood's 100th    Anniversary"

1986: "Beat of the Future"

1985: "A World of Children's Dreams"

1984: "Super Bowl XVIII's Salute to the    Superstars of the Silver Screen"

1983: "KaleidoSUPERscope" (a    kaleidoscope of color and sound)

1982: "A Salute to the 60s and Motown"

1981: "A Mardi Gras Festival"

1980: "A Salute to the Big Band Era" with    Up with People

1979: "Super Bowl XIII Carnival" Salute to    the Caribbean with Ken Hamilton and    various Caribbean bands

1978: "From Paris to the Paris of America"    with Tyler Apache Belles, Pete Fountain and    Al Hirt

1977: "It's a Small World" including crowd    participation for first time with spectators    waving colored placards on cue

1976: "200 Years and Just a Baby" Tribute    to America's Bicentennial

1975: "Tribute to Duke Ellington" with    Mercer Ellington and Grambling State band

1974: "A Musical America" with University    of Texas band

1973: "Happiness Is." with University of    Michigan marching band and Woody    Herman

1972: "Salute to Louis Armstrong" with Ella    Fitzgerald, Carol Channing, Al Hirt and U.S.    Marine Corps Drill Team

1971: Florida A&M band

1970: Carol Channing

1969: "America Thanks" with Florida A&M    University band

1968: Grambling State band

1967: University of Arizona and Grambling    State marching bands

 


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