The longest streak for heads was five straight wins, from Super Bowl XLIII to Super Bowl XLVII, which is a rare occurrence ...
The Chiefs won the coin toss when they faced the Eagles in Super Bowl 57. / Patrick Breen/The Republic / USA TODAY NETWORK Bettors will truly bet on anything and nothing makes that more evident ...
With Super Bowl LIX around the corner, we look at the result of every Super Bowl coin toss and whether heads or tails is the ...
It has since been updated. One of the easiest bets anyone can place on the Super Bowl is a wager on the coin toss. You don’t need to know anything about football or sports in general.
The Massachusetts Gaming Commission made a late decision on Thursday to add several Super Bowl coin-toss markets to the Massachusetts legal sports betting catalog just days before Sunday’s ...
By that standard, betting on the result of the coin toss is relatively tame and normal, and it involves nothing more than luck. The Super Bowl coin toss is probably the most-watched flip of a coin ...
Across the first 58 Super Bowls, the coin toss landed tails 30 times and heads 28 times. The longest ever streak for one result went from Super Bowl XLIII to Super Bowl XLVII, when it landed heads ...
San Francisco 49ers linebacker Fred Warner (54) and Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) during the coin toss before overtime of Super Bowl LVIII at Allegiant Stadium. Kyle Terada ...
Coin toss odds are a prime example ... Since Super Bowl 51, where tails won for a fourth straight year, there’s been no real trend to go by. Heads has won four of the last seven times, with ...
The coin toss is a Super Bowl staple. The small ritual has major impacts, though – both on the field and in sportsbooks. Does tails ever fail in the Super Bowl? And is it actually better to lose ...
But first, let’s take a timeout to tackle one of the more trivial issues facing government: Should people in Massachusetts be allowed to bet on the Super Bowl coin toss? Gotta give them props ...