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Kevin Fischer is an award-winning veteran broadcaster who has been seen and heard on Milwaukee TV and radio stations for nearly three decades.
Kevin, who is a legislative aide to state Sen. Mary Lazich (R-New Berlin), can be seen offering his views on the news on the public affairs program, “INTERchange,” on Milwaukee Public Television Channel 10. He lives with his wife, Jennifer, in Franklin.

Super Bowl betting: Heads or tails?

By Kevin Fischer
Thursday, Jan 31 2008, 05:03 AM

There’s more to Super Bowl betting than who will win, the Patriots or the Giants.

There’s the over/under, who will have more first downs, who will have more rushing yards, more passing yards, more penalties, more fumbles, interceptions, etc. The possible bets are endless.

And that includes the coin toss prior to the game.

Vegas will take bets on whether heads or tails will be called. There is no strategy involved. It’s simply a matter of pure luck.

From docsports.com:


Betting on the Super Bowl coin toss is a sure sign that you are a degenerate. Thousands of you are going to do it, though. The lure of betting on heads or tails, and kick or receive will be too much to resist. The gratification is instant, and it can give you extra money to bet at halftime. Not to mention the bragging rights when you can say that you nailed it to all your drunken buddies. The coin flip is, of course, completely random. That shouldn't stop us from doing some analysis of what has happened in the past to look for an edge, though, should it? After all, we have two weeks to kill, so there's time to analyze everything.

The coin itself will be coming from Florida. A company call Highland Mint, which is based in Melbourne, Florida has been charged with making the coin. After the coin flip takes place the coin will head to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Because the coin will be minted in Florida, and Florida is considerably more humid than Arizona, you will have to factor in the different air densities and the coordinating differences in friction into your coin flip decision-making process. And no, I 'm not serious.

We haven't yet heard who will actually toss the coin, though there is a decent chance that it will be a quarterback. Four times in the last six years a quarterback has made the toss - Roger Staubach, Y.A. Tittle, Tom Brady and Dan Marino. Brady obviously won't be tossing it this year, but his presence is a very good sign for the NFC representative. The Seahawks won the toss when Brady was the flipper, and the Patriots have lost the toss every time Brady has been in the Super Bowl. On that basis alone you might want to take an extra look at the Giants. The Giants are riding a hot streak - they won the toss last time they made the big game.

The one thing that is virtually certain is that the winning team will choose to receive the kick. That's what has happened each of the last 41 years. There is a good reason for this - teams cannot defer until the second half in the Super Bowl, so choosing to kick would be monumentally stupid unless you had a ridiculously good defense and no offense whatsoever. In other words, Baltimore probably would have kicked if they had won when they played the Giants in Super Bowl XXXV.

Want more reason to choose the Giants? The NFC can't be beat. They have won the last 10 straight coin flips. There's a bit of a twist, though - the last AFC team to win the toss was the Patriots back in XXXI against the Packers. That didn't turn out well for the Pats, and winning the coin toss hasn't turned out particularly well for a lot of teams recently. Tampa Bay was the last team to win the toss and the game, and that was five years ago. The winner of the toss has only hoisted the Lombardi Trophy twice in the last decade. So much for the theory that a team wants the ball first to set the tone and build momentum. It hasn't always been so bleak for the toss winners, though - overall they are 19-22, but they were 17-13 in the first 30 games before the recent 2-9 skid. It's up to you to decide if the losing ways will continue, or if the winner is due this time.

Overall, the Giants are 1-2 in the Super Bowl coin toss, while the Pats are an ugly 1-4. The Giants are designated as the road team this year (the NFC is the visitor in even numbered games), and as such they will call the toss. The team has never called the toss before, so we can't predict what they might do. The Pats have called it twice, and they went with heads both times. We can't predict, but at least we can be confident that we are playing on a level playing field - in the first 40 Super Bowls it went heads 20 times and tails 20 times.

The last thing you need to know before making your crucial decisions - the public loves heads, so follow or fade at your own peril.


The coin flip is just one of many odd bets you can make on the Super Bowl.

Take a look.


Comments

J. Strupp   

Go to some of the vegas casino sites and check out all of the "prop" bets they have for this game.  They are for the true degenerate.  Things like, "which song will be sung first during the half time show".  Really great stuff....er....I mean really disturbing stuff.  

January 31, 2008 12:24 PM

sfp940   

Actually the coin flip is a good bet .... they use a commerative coin that is weighted differently and supposedly will come up heads... at the Hilton this bet is at -101 (meaning you have to risk $101 to win $100) for either side, which is unheard of in this town... keep betting, it pays my salary....

February 1, 2008 12:24 AM

sfp940   

by the way, just looked at the article and there are many errors in it... the Hilton put out 450 props and is headed by Jay Kornigay (sic).  Vegas has never broken the $100 million bet on Super Bowl... too many other errors to correct...  by the way, I say it will be 45-17 New England.

February 1, 2008 12:30 AM

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