USA TODAY US Edition

Super Bowl sights and sounds energize Sin City

- Chris Bumbaca

LAS VEGAS – The pill – casino jargon for “roulette ball” – landed on No. 11. The people wearing San Francisco 49ers jerseys at the table had their chips on the black oval with white “11” letters. Winners, they whooped and hollered.

“Aiyuk!” said the one in the San Francisco Fire Department bucket hat, as the two men reached for the kind of high five fueled by that certain type of rush.

If that doesn’t sum up the Vegas flair and influence on Super Bowl 58, which featured the 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday, what does?

Thousands of fans descended upon the bottom of The Strip the day before “the Big Game.” It was an influx said 10-year Vegas resident Dominick Lynch, a host at Wahlburger­s in The Shoppes at Mandalay Bay mall.

“I’ve never really seen it this busy. We’ve always had a rush-in with the convention­s and stuff, but it’s never been quite like this,” Lynch told USA TODAY Sports. “You can just feel it walking around. It’s great.”

Nearly every team in the NFL was represente­d on the apparel worn by fans on site throughout the Super Bowl festivitie­s. A steady stream of a sea of (different shades of) red poured into Vegas throughout the week.

“There’s a lot of red in this room,” one security worker shouted Saturday near the convention center.

The fan distributi­on appeared about even, perhaps a bit tilted in the favor of San Francisco; the Niners fan base flocked from nearby California, while “Chiefs Kingdom” has always been a well-traveled bunch.

Vegas and its gambling and entertainm­ent allure has always been even more of a tourist destinatio­n during Super Bowl weekend. According to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, 500,000 additional people were expected to travel to Las Vegas for Super Bowl 58 than any previous Super Bowl weekend. The LVCVA expects hosting the Super Bowl will bring in between $600 million to $700 million for the city, most of which would be earned around Allegiant Stadium (via ticket sales, concession­s and merchandis­e) and the surroundin­g casinos.

Dealers at the casinos toward that end of The Strip near the stadium wore jerseys of NFL teams.

Beginning Friday, casinos across town began filling up. Travelers kept checking in Saturday. There were families of all sizes and age ranges. One was that of Niners fan Henry Bande, who traveled to Las Vegas from Seattle for the weekend. His sister lived in north Las Vegas, and the group was attending the Super Bowl Experience at Mandalay Bay Convention Center. He didn’t have a ticket to the game, but he and his family wanted to experience the first Super Bowl in Las Vegas.

“Just to be here, the atmosphere. This is incredible,” Bande told USA TODAY Sports. “This is probably one of the biggest events for Las Vegas, to have this, right?”

Bande said he felt at home with the number of Niners jerseys he saw.

“Nothing beats Vegas when it comes to big events like this,” he said.

As for what appealed to him, Bande said “just the fact that the stadium is so close to The Strip and all the hotels and all the things happening around the city, it’s unbelievab­le.”

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/AP ?? A fan walks by signage for the Super Bowl as the Bellagio fountains erupt Saturday along the Las Vegas Strip.
JOHN LOCHER/AP A fan walks by signage for the Super Bowl as the Bellagio fountains erupt Saturday along the Las Vegas Strip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States