Heads or Tails???

Most people don’t bother, but THERE IS money to be made…

Check this out…

Heads or Tails

The NFC is a lock to win the Super Bowl coin toss!
Have we gone mad? Maybe not…Check this out.
You think flipping a coin is the ultimate fair way to decide who gets that last piece of cake in the
fridge and the NFL thought it would be a fair way to decide who gets to receive the opening kickoff in the Super Bowl.
While the fairness of the cake scenario might hold up, the Super Bowl coin toss has been an affront to
fairness with the NFC winning 13 in a row!  If you thought this was a 50-50 proposition, you were dead wrong and you would have missed out on a chance to make a lot of money over the years. Unlike the game itself – where the AFC has won nine of 12 – the NFC almost always wins it and is currently on a devastating 15-2 run of Super Bowl coin toss victories.
We went looking for answers to the obvious question about how the NFC rigs the coin toss, which had
produced a perfect split of 21 heads and 21 tails before last season’s Super Bowl (heads, won by Arizona by the way).
Super Bowl XLIV will see captains of each team gather at midfield to conduct the coin toss and sportsbooksthe world over offer betting on it – Will it be heads or tails and will the NFC or AFC win? Tails would return the split to a perfect 22-22 through 44 games. And maybe the AFC doesn’t even want to win it. The last time they won was Super Bowl XXXI and the Patriots lost to the Packers.
It’s one of the most popular props because it requires no knowledge of the game. So even a casual Super Bowl observer can throw down on the coin toss.
Trivia Question: With all the dominant defenses in Super Bowl history, has any team winning the toss ever elected to kick instead of receive?
Nope. Nada. Never gonna happen!

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