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For all of you with Super Bowl Squares here or else where


Guest boatboatboat
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Guest boatboatboat

Some watch for the commercials. Others want to see the halftime show. A few even tune in for the football. You may have heard: the Super Bowl is being played this Sunday. And that means millions will be paying attention to television’s most popular event to see who is winning their Super Bowl squares competitions.

 

If you’re unfamiliar—unlikely, considering you’re at a pro football website—here’s how it works. Each person signs up for a square in a 10-by-10 grid. After all the squares are taken, the numbers 0-9 are randomly assigned as headers to each column and to each row. The columns represent one team, and the rows the other. For example, if your numbers were three for the NFC and eight for the AFC during last year’s Super Bowl, you would have won following the Seahawks’ 43-8 domination over the Broncos. Similarly, many competitions have smaller winners for getting the score at the end of each quarter or half.

 

• SUPER BOWL SQUARES: Click here to print out SI’s Patriots-Seahawks template

 

But how likely are you to win? It all comes down to what numbers you are randomly assigned. We rejoice when it we get the numbers seven and zero and cry when we’re given twos, fives or nines. People will do math during the game. Well, if they kick a field goal and get a safety, and the other team scores a touchdown and goes for two, I’ll win!!!

 

The dreaded two is the least likely digit to come up in the final score at just 3.51%. But last year the game immediately opened with a safety, putting the Seahawks up 2-0. They held a 22-0 lead at halftime, giving my father the halftime win. What were the odds?

 

We at numberFire.com can tell you the likelihood of every final score—and the score at the end of any quarter—based on the two teams playing. To do this, we model the probability of going from any one score to another score and combine that with a distribution for how many scoring events there could be. Follow along during the Super Bowl as we update the odds in real time.

 

Historically Speaking

 

Looking at every Super Bowl since it’s inception, the most likely final score has been four for the AFC and seven for the NFC (11.36%). This is not surprising, but just looking at Super Bowls gives us a pretty small sample size, because so many potential final scores have never occurred.

 

 http://cdn-jpg.si.com/sites/default/files/2015/01/1.jpgAFC vs. NFC Final Digit in All Super Bowls

 

 

What about all games between the AFC and NFC since 2000? It’s a tie between AFC seven, NFC zero and AFC four, NFC seven (4.09%). Six final digit combinations actually never occurred over that period, all of which are combinations of twos, fives, eights and nines.

 

 http://cdn-jpg.si.com/sites/default/files/2015/01/2.jpg

 

 

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