Rich Pilling/Getty Images ... tails. It's a true coin flip." For last year's Super Bowl, one Michigan bettor put down $100,000 for the coin to land on tails; it landed on heads. The Super Bowl ...
Don't lose your "head" over the Super Bowl coin toss! We'll share the heads or tails result from Super Bowl 59 between the ...
Looking back through history up through Super Bowl 58, the coin toss has resulted in heads 28 times and tails 30 times. The choice is essentially a 50/50 proposition, but one study at the Stanford ...
The longest streak for heads was five straight wins, from Super Bowl XLIII to Super Bowl XLVII, which is a rare occurrence ...
At BetMGM, one bettor put $5,000 on the coin toss to be Tails (-102) and at ESPN Bet, one bettor really put $20,945 on Tails. For the most part, coin toss betting was pretty even across the board.
The coin toss will help kick off this Chiefs vs. Eagles rematch in Super Bowl 59, so let's take a look at the history of this prop and how the odds are shaping up on heads or tails at each sportsbook.
Was the Super Bowl 59 coin toss heads or tails? The Super Bowl 59 coin toss was tails, which the Chiefs called. Kansas City won the coin toss and deferred, as you would expect them to do so.
They picked TAILS and WON the coin toss. They elected to defer receiving ball to the second half, and so the Eagles will kick off. That means the Eagles will receive the kickoff to start the ...
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 ...