Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Super Bowl getting propped up

Bettors going outside of traditiona­l wagering for entertainm­ent

- BY MARK ANDERSON

LAS VEGAS — Jay Kornegay was behind the counter in 2004 when someone approached with $5,000 to bet on the Super Bowl but had no idea how to decide.

The man, not a regular sports bettor, thought for a few moments and decided to put it all on the Panthers to score exactly 29 points at 30-1 odds.

Kornegay couldn’t believe it but took the man’s money — and later returned it plus the winnings. The bet cashed when the Panthers scored that amount in a three-point loss to the Patriots.

The Super Bowl draws a larger portion of casual bettors than other American sporting events, and the numerous propositio­n options each year underscore how the game’s mass appeal goes well beyond profession­al gamblers and hard-core fans.

“We’re certainly going to write a lot more tickets on the propositio­ns than the game,” said Kornegay, vice president of race and sports operations at Westgate Las Vegas. “They’ve become so popular.”

This year’s Super Bowl between the Chiefs and Eagles is next Sunday at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, the first time the championsh­ip will be played inside a venue with a sportsbook.

Next year’s Super Bowl will be in Las Vegas, the nation’s sports betting capital.

Sportsbook­s have taken advantage of the increasing popularity of prop bets, which could range from whether there will be a safety to whether the Chiefs or Eagles will score more points than LeBron James or Steph Curry when their teams meet the day before the big game.

Most props will be made available this week, but Caesars Sportsbook already has its 2,000-option menu available. Among the choices

is whether the first turnover will be an intercepti­on or a fumble. The intercepti­on is minus-170, meaning someone would need to bet $170 to win $100. The fumble is listed at plus-140, which means a $100 bet would pay $140.

Jason Scott, BetMGM vice president of trading, said he expects to put out 700 or 800 such bets for its properties in 20 states plus Washington, D.C. Kornegay said Westgate will have about 500 bets with roughly 1,000 options. Jeff Benson, Circa Sports operations manager, said his casino’s booklet will be 12 or 13 pages front and back.

“I think you have a ton of people that want just to bet the props,” Benson said. “They don’t really care who wins. That’s really a way for them to enjoy the game.”

The number of bets on props is considerab­ly higher than traditiona­l wagers such as which team will cover the point spread and whether the total number of points will be higher or lower than the posted figure. The Eagles are 1½-point favorites at FanDuel Sportsbook, and the total is 50½ points.

Kornegay estimated that for every traditiona­l Super Bowl bet, there are six or seven prop wagers.

Scott said that while some of the more unusual prop bets draw much of the attention, more than 99% of the money tends to go to about 30 high-profile bets such as which player will score the first touchdown.

The popularity of props is a fairly recent phenomenon.

Caesars is believed to have published the first prop bet when it posted at 20-1 odds that defensive lineman and goal-line running back William “The Refrigerat­or” Perry would score a touchdown for the Bears in the 1986 Super Bowl. The odds plummeted to 2-1 by kickoff, and Perry rewarded bettors by reaching the end zone late in the third quarter.

That Super Bowl was the second of a 13-game winning streak for the NFC in the title game, many of them blowouts. Kornegay was at the now-closed Imperial Palace at the time, and he wanted to find a new way to attract bettors and keep their interest throughout the one-sided games.

Before the 1995 championsh­ip between the 49ers and Chargers, prop bets were still limited, so Kornegay and his team decided to change that. They developed about 150 prop bets for the anticipate­d blowout that became a 49-26 victory by the 49ers.

“It stirred up quite a bit of interest,” Kornegay said. “And ever since then, the propositio­ns have been part of the Super Bowl weekend.”

The games usually have been much closer since the turn of the century, many coming down to the final minutes.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/AP ?? Caesars is believed to have published the first prop bet when William “The Refrigerat­or” Perry scored a touchdown for the Bears in the 1986 Super Bowl.
JOHN LOCHER/AP Caesars is believed to have published the first prop bet when William “The Refrigerat­or” Perry scored a touchdown for the Bears in the 1986 Super Bowl.

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