USA TODAY International Edition

A record 26 million expected to place legal bets.

Super Bowl will draw $ 6.8 billion in wagers as legal betting boosts interest

- Mike Snider Contributi­ng: Brett Molina.

Call it the Super Betting Bowl.

It’s not just the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers who will have plenty at stake when the two teams face off in Super Bowl LIV on Sunday in Miami.

A record of about 26 million Americans, 3 million more than last year, are expected to place bets on the big game, according to the American Gaming Associatio­n. Taking into account casino sports wagers, informal bets and dollars collected in office pools, bettors will wager about $ 6.8 billion, 13% more than in 2019 when $ 6 billion was waged.

Nearly 5 million in the U. S. are expected to place Super Bowl bets via a mobile app or online site, up 19% from last year, suggests a survey of 2,200 adults conducted last week for the gaming associatio­n by Morning Consult. About 4 million in the U. S. are expected to place bets in person at a casino or sportsbook, an increase of 25%.

Contributi­ng to the betting bonanza: It’s easier to place legal bets than in the past. More states have made it legal to bet on sports since the 2018 Supreme Court decision overturnin­g the federal ban on sports gambling. Fourteen states now have legal sports betting with the most recent, New Hampshire, approving it earlier this month.

“I think a lot of that ( increase in betting) can be attributed to the spread and expansion of legal betting,” said Dave Forman, the associatio­n’s senior director of research.

In states where it is legal to bet on sports – originally only allowed in Nevada – you can place bets at sportsbook­s and on apps such as DraftKings and FanDuel, favorite fantasy sports sites that have expanded into sports betting.

Mobile bets on Super Bowl LIV

You can use DraftKings and FanDuel websites to place bets. But you do everything with your smartphone anyway, so why not use an app to make mobile bets on the Super Bowl.

First, download the DraftKings or FanDuel sportsbook app for your smartphone. Once you boot up the app, you will have to enter personal informatio­n and set up an account. ( You can download the apps and look at the possible bets in states where sports betting is not allowed, but you cannot place bets.)

Looking through the DraftKings app, for instance, you can place one of 400 bets on the Super Bowl. You can choose from traditiona­l bets such as picking a team with the point spread ( Chiefs are favored by 1.5), whether the total score will be over or under 54.5 points and which team will win the coin toss ( and will it be heads or tails). You also can bet on whether certain plays such as a flea flicker) will happen, and what color of Gatorade will be dumped on the winning coach ( yellow/ green is the favorite).

About 52% of bettors say they are siding with the Kansas City Chiefs, while 48% pick the San Francisco 49ers, the AGA survey found.

Set up or join a Super Bowl office pool

If you can’t place a legal bet – or standard betting just isn’t your thing – you could consider organizing a fun Super Bowl betting game with your coworkers. One of the most popular is Super Bowl Squares, where participan­ts can win money based on the score of the game.

Players pick squares from an unlabeled 10- by- 10, 100- square grid. Once participan­ts have chosen their squares, the organizer randomly places numbers between 0 and 9 horizontal­ly and vertically along the grid.

For example, let’s say the Chiefs represent the horizontal portion of the grid and the 49ers are the vertical portion. The square you’ve chosen aligns with Chiefs and the number 4 and the Niners and the number 7. To win, the score at the end of the quarter ( or game) must match the numbers you’ve drawn. In this case, if the Chiefs are up 14- 7, you win, or if the Niners are winning 27- 24.

Make an old- fashioned wager

If you or a friend want to just choose a team to bet on you can wager cash or something symbolic of the teams participat­ing in the game.

For high- profile bets, Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas and San Francisco Mayor London Breed have not yet announced what each plans to wager, according to The Kansas City Star.

In the House of Representa­tives, Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, a Missouri Democrat representi­ng Kansas City, is wagering Kansas City barbecue against bets of Ghirardell­i Chocolate, See’s Candies and other snacks from fellow Democrats House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who represents San Francisco, and Rep. Ro Khanna, whose district includes Silicon Valley.

Kansas City barbecue joints that ship across the U. S. include Joe’s Kansas City Bar- B- Cue and Fiorella’s Jack Stack Barbecue while San Franciscob­ased Alioto- Lazio Fish Co. will ship local Dungeness crabs. Ghirardell­i and See’s ship chocolate and other goodies nationwide, as does Kansas Citybased Russell Stover.

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