Super Bowl odds a tossup at legal sports books

Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes celebrates after the Chiefs beat the Tennessee Titans 35-24 to win the AFC title on Sunday advance to the Super Bowl on Feb. 2 in Miami Gardens, Fla. They will face the San Francisco 49ers, who beat the Green Bay Packers 37-20 to win the NFC title. / AP photo by Charlie Riedel
Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes celebrates after the Chiefs beat the Tennessee Titans 35-24 to win the AFC title on Sunday advance to the Super Bowl on Feb. 2 in Miami Gardens, Fla. They will face the San Francisco 49ers, who beat the Green Bay Packers 37-20 to win the NFC title. / AP photo by Charlie Riedel

LAS VEGAS - Even the bookies are having a problem figuring out a favorite in the Super Bowl.

Odds opened at pick 'em Sunday at many Las Vegas sports books, though the Kansas City Chiefs quickly moved to 1-point favorites over the San Francisco 49ers. Early bettors favored the Chiefs in a game that will almost surely set new legal betting records.

The combination of an attractive matchup, close odds and the spread of legalized sports betting means hundreds of millions of dollars will exchange hands over the next two weeks before the NFC champion 49ers (15-3) and AFC champion Chiefs (14-4) meet at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

Bettors at the Westgate Las Vegas Superbook got an early start after they were offered the pick 'em odds at halftime of the NFC championship game. Oddsmaker Jay Kornegay said close to 80% of the early money was on the Chiefs and the line moved to Chiefs minus-1.

The over/under total started at 51 1/2 points and was at 53 after a bettor put $110,000 on the over.

Odds and point spreads can fluctuate up until Super Bowl LIV's 6:30 p.m. kickoff on Feb. 2, largely because of heavy bets on one side or the other.

At the new Circa sports books, the game was pick 'em with a 52 total to open. Sports book director Matthew Metcalf tweeted that bettors could bet up to $100,000 a side on Sunday with limits of $500,000 a side beginning Tuesday morning.

Most books limit bets early to see if the point spread moves while being tested by so-called sharps.

Legal betting in Nevada's 200 sports books was down last year at $145.9 million after setting a record the year before with $158.6 million in bets. A big percentage of Super Bowl betting is in so-called prop bets, which have become increasingly popular as they multiplied in recent years.

During the coming week sports books will begin releasing hundreds of different prop bets, from who will win the opening coin flip to how many penalties each team will have.

Kornegay said he expects a new record to be set in Nevada on the game, largely driven by a good economy. Bets are now legal in 13 other states, too, though not in the home states of either team or in Florida.

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