Chiefs: Super Bowl Week

Laddie Morse

So, we find our Kansas City Chiefs at another Super Bowl for the fourth time in five seasons. The Chiefs reached Super Bowl LIV following the 2019 season and won it by beating the San Francisco 49ers 31-to-20. Then they went back-to-back in Super Bowl LV, but lost to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 31-to-9 and played the whole game without scoring a touchdown. That defeat was mostly due to the loss of Offensive Linemen prior to the game. The very next year, the Chiefs and the Buffalo Bills played in a game that has been considered by many to be one of the best games of all time. Chiefs fans know it as the “13 Second” game or the “Grim Reaper” game. However, the Cincinnati Bengals came into Arrowhead and beat K.C. that same year in the AFC Championship game, but they turned around lost to the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LVI. Last year, the Chiefs beat the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LVII in a great game, 38-to-35. That brings us up to this Super Bowl. Super Bowl LVIII:

The San Francisco 49ers will be the Away team and the Kansas City Chiefs will be the Home team in this Super Bowl, simply because the NFC and the AFC switch off Home and Away from year to year. The 49ers currently are the #1 seed in the NFC — which is the likely reason they are favored — and their record is 14-and-5 while the Kansas City Chiefs is the AFC #3 seed and are 14-and-6, which basically means they’ve played one more playoff game this year.

The Chiefs Game Plan is being installed over these four days of Practice in K.C. with the last day being Saturday and the teams traveling to Vegas on Sunday. Both WR Skyy Moore and OL Prince Tega-Wanogho would need to be upgraded to the active roster for them to be illegible for this Super Bowl. Although Willie Gay didn’t play in the AFC Championship game — and he was missed as a “spy” on Lamar Jackson — he did have a Full Practice on Thursday so he’s been ungraded already and that is a big positive for the Defense.

Once the Chiefs arrive in Vegas, they will practice at the Raiders’ facilities during the week leading up to the Super Bowl. The 49ers will practice at UNLV.

While WR Kadarius Toney is no longer on the limited list of players not practicing, I don’t expect much from him. Now, just because I don’t expect much from him, doesn’t mean Andy Reid hasn’t already written him into his game plan, a few plays that might include Toney. Here’s Toney at practice goofing off…

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The cost is $48.00 per t-shirt. If you buy more than one you can get a four interest free installments deal.

If you’re wanting to fly to Vegas to watch the Chiefs play in the Super Bowl, the cost of airline tickets and hotel cost will likely not be your biggest expense (3:03):

The cost for actual tickets to get into the game will vary to a degree. Either way, the ticket prices are not in line with what the common man can afford. From businessinsider.com:

BusinessInsider goes on to report:

In an article written by Svetozar Pavlović called, “2024 Super Bowl ads sell out for CBS: How much does a 30-second commercial cost on TV?” he reveals that:

Also…

So, Super Bowl I — which wasn’t even named that at the time — had a 30-second commercial that cost $37,500 dollars and now it’s up to $7 Million for a 30-second ad? Wow, how times have changed. Here’s Joe Namath and Farrah Fawcett — a few years later — in a Noxzema Super Bowl Commercial in 1973 (0:29):

The Super Bowl has become big, big, really big… business, if you didn’t already know. The owners are counting on us fans to follow along with the game… and commercials too. I guess we do. We really do.

Laddie Morse — ArrowheadOne