Super Bowl LX - New England Patriots vs. Seattle Seahawks - February 8, 2026
Both Teams To Score In the 3rd Quarter - Yes (+120) (BETWAY)
This one of the more intriguing areas for a Super Bowl prop. You can bet on both teams to score in any of the four quarters. The second quarter is the most common, offering -225 odds. The fourth quarter offers -180 odds. The first quarter offers +110 odds and the third quarter features the longest odds, at +120. And that’s the one we like best.
The Seahawks just so happen to be the highest-scoring third-quarter team in the league, at 7.6 per game. The Patriots are in eighth on that list, at 5.5. New England has scored in the third quarter in five of their last six games, while Seattle has done the same in nine of their last 10 games. Looking specifically a the Super Bowl, both teams have scored in the third frame in four of the last five. We’ll take the long odds here.
A Non-QB To Record A Pass Attempt - Yes (+225) (BETWAY)
Since 2012, there have only been six non-QBs to throw passes in a Super Bowl. However, it’s worth noting which coaches called those plays. Two of those plays, or one third, were called by none other than Josh McDaniels, who is once again the offensive coordinator of the Patriots in 2025. Just like he was when he made those calls in the late 2010s.
McDaniels was in the same job he is now when the Patriots made the Super Bowl following the 2016 and 2017 seasons. And in both games, McDaniels called a trick play that saw a wideout throw a pass. The interesting thing is, exactly like those seasons, McDaniels hadn’t called such a play for the entire regular season before pulling it out in the postseason.
All regular season passes for the Patriots in 2025 were thrown by a QB. But McDaniels has already called a trick play this postseason, an incomplete pass by WR Efton Chism to Drake Maye in the Wild Card round. Seahawks WR Cooper Kupp also has experience throwing a pass in the Super Bowl, having tossed an incompletion during his Super Bowl MVP performance back in Super Bowl 56. With the Super Bowl odds for this prop offering a ton of value, it’s worth a shot considering the history of McDaniels and even Kupp to an extent.
Any Player To Record 100+ Receiving Yards - Yes (-200) (BETWAY)
After two bets on the plus (+) odds side of things, we’re going with a safer pick with shorter Super Bowl odds for our third and final prop. In the last 10 Super Bowls, there have been 12 players to record 100+ receiving yards, including at least one crossing that threshold in nine of the 10 matchups. The only one that missed was Super Bowl 58, when Travis Kelce led the field with 93 yards.
In these playoffs, the Patriots have yet to have a 100-yard receiver. They have seen two reach 75 yards, but no higher. Seattle’s Jaxon Smith-Njigba had 150+ in the NFC Championship, and he has gone for 100+ in 10 of 19 games this season. New England has had nine instances of a player going for 100+ yards this season.