NFL and law enforcement officials say fans can tell if they are buying real Super Bowl tickets by checking for the heat-sensitive logos.
Football
None of the eight highest-scoring teams in NFL history won the Super Bowl, with only the 2013 Broncos, 2007 Patriots and 1983 Redskins even reaching the title game.
Everyone has a journey to travel before reaching the Super Bowl. Some are touching, some tragic, some inspiring, some uncomplicated.
Tom Brady appears to have everything: wealth, fame, and a treasure-trove of football prizes, a famous wife, good looks, respect from teammates and peers, and a close-knit family.
As much as we’d love to be a wiseguy, we’re just a wise guy. But we are going to bet against one of the NFL’s most explosive receivers.
The Las Vegas Stadium Authority will continue to work with the Oakland Raiders to build a football stadium in Las Vegas that will be shared with UNLV, authority board Chairman Steve Hill said Wednesday.
That was one of the longest lines in the history of not only sports wagering but sports cashing.
Amazingly, the $750 million in public money already committed to a proposed 65,000-seat domed stadium in Las Vegas seems to have fallen to sidebar status.
Relocation of NFL franchises, a hot-button topic in pro football for the past year, remained a focus of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell’s questioners Wednesday leading to Super Bowl LI.
UNLV coach Tony Sanchez’s third recruiting class stands at 18 with 13 high school recruits and five junior college commits from six states.
Before handicapper Ted Sevransky moved to Las Vegas and became known as “Teddy Covers,” he lived in Michigan, where in 1998 he tried to cash in on the anti-Packers sentiment there.
When Tico Rodriguez took over as Desert Pines football coach in 2013, he thought the Jaguars’ freshman class had a chance to be special. Four years later on National Signing Day, his hunch proved correct.
Local athletes expected to sign a national letter of intent during the signing period, which runs Wednesday through April 1.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said Wednesday during his pre-Super Bowl address that the league has not yet determined whether Las Vegas is a viable market for a franchise.
“The sharper guys aren’t afraid to lay the higher prices. Will there be overtime? They’re not afraid to lay (minus-1000) on the ‘No.’ It’s the same thing with a safety. They’ll lay (minus-900) that there won’t be a safety.”