The Seahawks just demolished the Patriots 29-13 in Super Bowl LX, and if you spent any time with a prop bet sheet tonight, your watch party just got a whole lot more interesting — or a whole lot quieter. Here's how every major novelty prop bet landed.
Related: Funniest Super Bowl LX Prop Bets That Actually Exist (2026) — our original pre-game breakdown with all the odds
The Coin Toss: Heads
The Seahawks called tails. The coin said no. Heads won, giving the Patriots the toss — and they promptly deferred to the second half.
If you're keeping score at home, heads snapped a tails-favored trend (tails had hit six of the last ten Super Bowls). The historical record now sits at 29 heads, 31 tails across all Super Bowls. And yes — there was a person who bet $100,000 on tails at Caesars. That's a rough way to start your evening.
Result: Heads. Tails bettors (-103 favorites at some books) — sorry.
Motown Brunch
Charlie Puth's National Anthem: The "Brave" Note
Charlie Puth handled the anthem alongside a choir, and the over/under was set at 119.5 seconds (-110 both ways at FanDuel). The sub-prop on how long he'd hold the final note on "brave" was set at 3.5 seconds.
Puth is known more for precision than dramatic vocal runs, and anthems have been trending shorter in recent years — only one rendition has eclipsed 120 seconds in the last four Super Bowls. If you took the under on his delivery style alone, you were thinking clearly.
Result: Check your stopwatch. This one needed official timing to settle.
Bad Bunny's Halftime Show: Tití Me Preguntó Opened, and Yes — He Had Guests
The first song question was one of the most popular halftime props, and Bad Bunny kicked things off with "Tití Me Preguntó" — the infectious hit from Un Verano Sin Ti that was the betting favorite heading in. If you had that one circled, nice call.
The "will anyone join him on stage" prop was a resounding YES — and not just anyone. Lady Gaga showed up to perform "Die with a Smile," and Ricky Martin joined for what turned into a full cultural celebration. Plus, the "Casita" set featured cameos from Cardi B, Karol G, Pedro Pascal, Jessica Alba, and Alix Earle. Bad Bunny performed entirely in Spanish — becoming the first halftime headliner to do so — with a "God bless America" sprinkled in for good measure.
The costume change prop? Bad Bunny performed amid tall grass and a live brass band, and the production was elaborate enough that wardrobe shifts were practically built into the staging.
Result: "Tití Me Preguntó" opened. Guest appearances: YES (Lady Gaga, Ricky Martin, and a whole party). Over 11.5 songs bettors — check the final setlist count.
The Gatorade Shower: Yellow/Lime/Green
The winning Seahawks doused head coach Mike Macdonald in yellow Gatorade — matching what the Eagles did to Nick Sirianni last year. Yellow/Lime/Green was the pre-game favorite at +220.
Remember all those bettors scanning practice footage for cooler colors like it was game film? Turns out the research paid off for the yellow crowd. Blue had a strong case given both teams' color schemes — and the Patriots used blue in their last two Super Bowl wins — but the Seahawks sideline had other plans.
Result: Yellow/Lime/Green (+220). Two years in a row.
The Streaker: YES (+300)
This one absolutely happened, and it was glorious.
A shirtless man ran onto the field and briefly stopped the game — one of the evening's most unexpectedly entertaining moments, according to multiple broadcast reports. The +300 odds meant a $10 bet returned $40, which honestly feels like a bargain for that level of entertainment.
The question was always whether the broadcast would acknowledge it — since networks sometimes pretend streakers don't exist. But given Mike Tirico's track record of narrating chaos this season (he famously called a Bills fan sprinting out of the stadium with a game ball), this one had a better chance than most of getting airtime.
Result: YES (+300). Someone decided national television was the right moment to make a life choice. Only in Vegas. Well — only in Santa Clara, technically.
The Malcolm Butler Revenge Game
This was the narrative prop of the night. The Seahawks were facing the same Patriots franchise that intercepted them at the goal line in Super Bowl XLIX — and Seattle got their revenge in the most dominant way possible.
"Will NBC show the Malcolm Butler interception?" was essentially a free square on your prop sheet. There was zero chance the broadcast wasn't replaying that play a dozen times given the rematch storyline. And "will the broadcast mention Pete Carroll's decision to pass?" — yes. Obviously yes. The entire pregame was built around this.
Result: If you had "NBC mentions Butler interception" and "broadcast discusses Carroll's play call" — you cashed both. The safest bets on the board.
Sam Darnold's Redemption Arc
Sam Darnold — the quarterback who once "saw ghosts" on Monday Night Football against the Patriots — just beat them in the Super Bowl. You cannot write this stuff.
Darnold didn't put up gaudy numbers, but his team won 29-13 and he's now a Super Bowl champion. "Will the broadcast mention 'seeing ghosts'?" was listed at heavy odds to hit, and there is absolutely no universe where NBC's production team didn't have that clip loaded and ready.
As Darnold said postgame: "All my teammates, all my coaches I ever had, always believing in me. And always believing in myself. As long as you believe in yourself, anything is possible."
From NFL castoff to Super Bowl champion. The "Sam Darnold Redemption" narrative props were some of the best value on the board.
Result: Darnold wins Super Bowl. Ghost references: inevitable.
Cardi B and Stefon Diggs: No Proposal
The "will Stefon Diggs propose to Cardi B on the field" prop was always a long shot, and tonight it had no chance. The Patriots lost badly, Diggs was involved in a late-game scuffle after getting hit out of bounds, and the overall vibe was not exactly "romantic moment on national television."
Cardi B was spotted in Bad Bunny's Casita during the halftime show, so she was at least having a good time. But the proposal? Not tonight.
Result: No proposal. The "No" side was heavy chalk, and it cashed easily.
Kenneth Walker III and the Game Props
Walker was the star of the night and took home Super Bowl MVP honors. He rushed for 135 yards on 27 carries — the eighth-best rushing performance in Super Bowl history — and scored on a 49-yard touchdown run that essentially put the game away.
If you had Walker anytime touchdown scorer props (-185 pre-game favorite), that was one of the easiest cashes of the night. His rushing over/under was probably in the 70-80 yard range, and he blew past that by halftime.
Jason Myers also set a new Super Bowl record with five made field goals — connecting from 33, 39, 41, 41, and 26 yards. The over on Myers field goals was a winner if your book offered it.
Result: Walker MVP. 135 rushing yards. 1 TD. Myers: 5 FGs (new record). Over bettors on rushing props cleaned up.
Scorigami and the Octopus: For the Deep-Cut Nerds
29-13 is NOT a Scorigami — this exact final score has happened before in NFL history. So if you found a book offering Scorigami props, the "No" side won.
As for the Octopus — a single player scoring a touchdown and the ensuing two-point conversion on the same drive — that didn't happen either. The Patriots kicked a PAT after their first touchdown instead of going for two (which was honestly a puzzling decision down 19 points), and Seattle's touchdowns didn't involve two-point attempts.
No Scorigami, no Octopus. The deep-cut nerds will have to wait for next year.
Result: Scorigami — No. Octopus — No.
The Final Prop Bet Scorecard
| YES (Lady Gaga, Ricky Martin) | Heavy favorite | |
| Gatorade Color | Yellow/Lime/Green | +220 |
| Streaker | YES | +300 |
| NBC Shows Butler Interception | YES | Heavy favorite |
| Broadcast Mentions "Seeing Ghosts" | YES | Heavy favorite |
| Cardi B/Diggs Proposal | No | Heavy "No" favorite |
| Kenneth Walker Anytime TD | YES | -185 |
| Super Bowl MVP | Kenneth Walker III | Was +550ish pre-game |
| Scorigami (29-13) | No | Long shot |
| Octopus | No | Long shot |
The Biggest Winner of the Night
Honestly? The guy who bet $100 at Circa Sports back in August on a Patriots-Seahawks Super Bowl exacta at +310000 odds. Even though he picked the Patriots to win (they didn't), the fact that he nailed the matchup at 3100/1 is still one of the wildest stories of the night. If he'd picked Seattle to beat New England, that $100 would have been life-changing money.
The Seahawks are Super Bowl champions for the second time, the revenge narrative is complete, and if you had a prop sheet at your watch party, hopefully you're the one collecting the pot.