Key events Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
Hello!
…and welcome to our live coverage of the Super Bowl!
First off, just let me say that I’m 100% committed to a Latin free Big Show blog. So for those of us not living in the Roman Empire, let’s say it clearly: this is the 60th version of the AFC-NFC Championship Game, and it’s a match-up that few would have put a flutter on way back in September when the season began. If you had, you’d have done quite well: the odds of the Seahawks and Patriots facing off for the Lombardi trophy were 4800 to 1, which is on the hail Mary side of a long shot. And yet here they are, getting set to get to kick off in about an hour-and-a-half from now. That means the fan bases on opposite ends of the country are starting to get that squirm in the stomach while the rest of us relax and dip our chips under no pressure whatsoever.
But what about the neutrals? Who are they supporting? Personally, I’ve found it quite difficult to peg my loyalty to one of these clubs. Why? Because there’s no underdog I’ve been able to grow closer to. The Seahawks are the favorites, and who wants to just jump on the bandwagon? Lame! That said, they do have the ultimate quarterback underdog leading their team. Sam Darnold is an all-time draft bust that bloomed long after his NFL draft obit was written. He put together back-to-back playoff seasons and wiped out the elite 49ers and Rams en route to the Super Bowl. Nobody saw that coming, and it’s warm and fuzzy, but again, he’s playing with the favorites. So now what? The Patriots? They’re underdogs, with Vegas handing them a 4.5 point lead. Regardless, they’re the biggest Massholes of all-time, owners of six Super Bowl titles, a couple of scandals, a coach that was detested and a pretty-boy QB who was annoyingly awesome. If you’re not a Patriots fan, the last thing you want is another decade of Robert Kraft and company.
So there’s no true, obvious underdog in this Super Bowl, which leads me to the question: which do you want to see in the confetti shower tonight and why? Let me know and we’ll get your name in the paper and chew this one out together. E-mail me on [email protected] and i’ll make you famous.
More to come, stick with us!
Anti-ICE sentiment has made an appearance at the big game

Seattle’s Aden Durde will be the first British coach to appear in the Super Bowl. He wants to ensure he’s not the last.
A great story by Melissa Jacobs:
A good pregame read: Guardian US arts writer Adrian Horton on Bad Bunny – the ultrapopular star who will take over the Super Bowl half-time show and will continue to be at the center of the US culture wars:
Who is going to win? What will the score be? Who will be MVP?
Our team of experts have predictions for all of that and more:

Fans are starting to arrive at Levi’s Stadium ahead of the showpiece event
David will be here shortly. In the meantime, here are our writers’ score predictions:
The final score will be …
Seahawks 27-24 Patriots. The best unit on the field is Seattle’s defense. After that, everything else feels like a wash. The Seahawks pass-rush is relentless and runs deep; they had six different players record at least 35 pressures this year, while no other team had more than four such players. The Patriots’ offensive line is vulnerable – and pass rushers typically decide championship games. It’s going to take a special performance from Maye (and maybe a trick play to rob a possession) to keep the Patriots in it. Oliver Connolly
Seahawks. By a lot. The Seahawks are a top-to-bottom juggernaut that can beat you so many ways. New England’s high blitz-rate success has gotten them this far, but Seattle can beat them so many ways. Quarterback protection? Check. Staunch run game? Check. High-octane passing attack? Check. Seattle’s offense is essentially quarterback proof, especially when your quarterback can compartmentalize his rags-to-riches story. Meanwhile, New England’s offense is not quite quarterback-proof, and Maye’s miscues will hurt the Patriots much more than in their three previous matchups. It’s easy to envision Maye forcing poor throws once blinded by Seattle’s defense, and Vrabel and McDaniels getting too cutesy once down a couple of scores. Melissa Jacobs
Seahawks 27-17 Patriots. Darnold settles down and plays yet another clean playoff game on the way to claiming MVP honors and cementing the signature win of his career at last, in a redemption story that gives critics more reason to pile on the Jets for holding up his progress. Mike Macdonald makes coaching defense sexy again and the loss of Kubiak – reportedly bound for Las Vegas after this game – begins the talent raid on the Seattle coaching staff. The Patriots put up a valiant fight, but Maye’s arm proves too weak in the end – but the loss just sets them up for an epic revenge tour that ends with right back in this same spot next year. Andrew Lawrence
Seahawks 17-27 Patriots. Gonzalez wins the matchup with Smith-Njigba, shrinking the options for Darnold, who regresses for all the world to see. It’s not because Darnold isn’t good: he’s an excellent quarterback and a wonderful story, and I’m happy for him, really. He’s just about to face an upstart coaching staff that has the gameplan and the pieces to make Darnold uncomfortable, frustrated and mistake prone. Maye will have just enough to get in the endzone twice, and will be helped by an interception by Gonzalez that he takes to the house. That means we have to see more of postgame Robert Kraft amid the red, white and blue confetti. Yuck. David Lengel
Seahawks 31-32 Patriots. The rise of a team written off in August as 70-1 rank outsiders is a heartwarming tale often lost in a sport dominated by extreme wealth, statistics and hot takes. Yes, their schedule was “easy” – and they even lost to the Raiders – yet here we are. No team with preseason odds longer than 40-1 have won the Super Bowl since Tom Brady’s legendary first win in the 2001 season. Coincidence? Graham Searles

3 hours ago
19

















































