Fanatics Super Bowl party brings big stars to Strip — PHOTOS
Before the throngs of celebrities made their way into Marquee Dayclub inside the Cosmopolitan for Fanatics Super Bowl LVIII Party, they first made their way down the blue carpet.
Former NFL star Tom Brady and Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby greet each other on the blue carpet at the Fanatics Super Bowl LVIII Party at Marquee Dayclub at the Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas on Saturday Feb. 10, 2024. (Mick Akers/Las Vegas Review-Journal.)
Before the throngs of celebrities made their way into Marquee Dayclub inside the Cosmopolitan for Fanatics Super Bowl LVIII Party, they first made their way down the blue carpet to announce their arrivals.
Thrown each year by Fanatics owner Michael Rubin, the party has become the hottest ticket during Super Bowl weekends.
The 700 people who attended the party were treated to an array of live performances from Travis Scott, Meek Mill, Ice Spice and Las Vegas regulars the Chainsmokers.
All the performers traversed the blue carpet in addition to: Tom Brady, Joe Burrow, Robert Kraft, Damar Hamlin, Jelly Roll, Peyton Manning, Jalen Rose, Maxx Crosby, Lil Baby, CeeDee Lamb, Guy Fieri, Gary Vaynerchuk, and Aces stars A’ja Wilson and Chelsea Gray.
Some attendees skirted the blue carpet entrance and opted for the walkway with less attention including: part-time Las Vegas resident Shaquille O’Neal, Formula One CEO Stefano Domenicali, Liberty Media CEO Greg Maffei and Queen Latifah.
Out-of-towners account for 92 percent of StubHub ticket buyers for sports and entertainment events in Las Vegas, the secondary market ticket seller announced Tuesday.
Teams have won back-to-back Super Bowls nine times in NFL history. The Chiefs are attempting to become the first team to win three straight this season.
Here are the seven biggest betting long shots to win the Super Bowl, according to Sportsoddshistory.com, which has tracked Super Bowl odds dating to 1977.
Two top library district employees accepted free Super Bowl tickets worth thousands of dollars and requested a third ticket, potentially violating conflict of interest policy.
The bettor placed a $100 parlay in May on the Rangers to win the World Series (22-1), the Chiefs to win the Super Bowl (6-1) and a team to win the NBA title at 70-1.
The TV broadcast for Super Bowl 58 at Allegiant Stadium was watched by nearly two-thirds of Americans, according to a custom Nielsen survey commissioned by the NFL.