watch NFL SUPER BOWL -- 2019 LIVE STREAM

                       NFL SUPER BOWL --- 2019

The Super Bowl is the annual American football game that determines the champion of the National Football League (NFL). The game culminates a season that begins in the previous calendar year, and is the conclusion of the NFL playoffs. The contest is held in an American city, chosen three to four years beforehand,[1] usually at warm-weather sites or domed stadiums.[2] Since January 1971, the winner of the American Football Conference (AFC) Championship Game has faced the winner of the National Football Conference (NFC) Championship Game in the culmination of the NFL playoffs.



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The Packers defeated the Chiefs in the first AFL–NFL Championship Game (Super Bowl I).
Before the 1970 merger between the American Football League (AFL) and the National Football League (NFL), the two leagues met in four such contests. The first two were marketed as the "AFL–NFL World Championship Game", but were also casually referred to as "the Super Bowl game" during the television broadcast.[3] Super Bowl III in January 1969 was the first such game that carried the "Super Bowl" moniker in official marketing; the names "Super Bowl I" and "Super Bowl II" were retroactively applied to the first two games.[4] The NFC/NFL leads in Super Bowl wins with 27, while the AFC/AFL has won 25. Twenty franchises, including teams that have relocated to another city, have won the Super Bowl.[5]




The Pittsburgh Steelers (6–2) have won the most Super Bowls with six championships, while the New England Patriots (5–5), the Dallas Cowboys (5–3), and the San Francisco 49ers (5–1) have five wins. New England has the most Super Bowl appearances with eleven, while the Buffalo Bills (0–4) have the most consecutive appearances with four (all losses) from 1990 to 1993. The Miami Dolphins (1971–1973) and New England Patriots (2016–2018) are the only other teams to have at least three consecutive appearances. The Denver Broncos (3–5) and Patriots have each lost a record five Super Bowls. The Minnesota Vikings (0–4) and the Bills have lost four. The record for consecutive wins is two and is shared by seven franchises: the Green Bay Packers (1966–1967), the Miami Dolphins (1972–1973), the Pittsburgh Steelers (1974–1975 and 1978–1979, the only team to accomplish this feat twice), the San Francisco 49ers (1988–1989), the Dallas Cowboys (1992–1993), the Denver Broncos (1997–1998), and the New England Patriots (2003–2004). Among those, Dallas (1992–1993; 1995) and New England (2001; 2003–2004) are the only teams to win three out of four consecutive Super Bowls. The 1972 Dolphins capped off the only perfect season in NFL history with their victory in Super Bowl VII. The only team with multiple Super Bowl appearances and no losses is the Baltimore Ravens, who in winning Super Bowl XLVII defeated and replaced the 49ers in that position. Four current NFL teams have never appeared in a Super Bowl, including franchise relocations and renaming: the Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lions, Jacksonville Jaguars, and Houston Texans, though both the Browns (1950, 1954, 1955, 1964) and Lions (1935, 1952, 1953, 1957) had won NFL championship games prior to the creation of the Super Bowl.

The Super Bowl in 2019 will have a similar feel to that of the last year's Super Bowl … in terms of the host venue, but not necessarily the host city. Super Bowl 53 will take place in Atlanta at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Like U.S. Bank Stadium, the building that hosted last year's Super Bowl, Mercedes-Benz Stadium is a brand new facility that happens to feature a giant glass wall. And while weather again will not be a factor in an indoor stadium for the Super Bowl in 2019, attendees will appreciate warmer temperatures outside the venue.

Those who travel from Los Angeles will appreciate that climate. The Rams beat the Saints in the NFC championship game on Sunday to advance to Super Bowl 53. They will play the Patriots, who beat the Chiefs later Sunday in the AFC championship game.

When is Super Bowl 2019?

Super Bowl 53, also known as Super Bowl LIII, is scheduled for Sunday, Feb. 3 2019. Kickoff is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. ET.
Every Super Bowl since 2003 has taken place during the first week of February. From 1967-2003, all but one Super Bowl took place in January.

Where is Super Bowl 2019?

Super Bowl 53 will take place at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium, a one-of-a-kind venue and home to the NFL’s Atlanta Falcons.
Completed just in time for the 2017 football season, Mercedes-Benz Stadium seats 71,000 people but can expand to seat more than 80,000. It’s equipped with a uniquely designed retractable roof, which, if closed, hopefully won’t be leaking by the time the Super Bowl arrives in 2019.
When the venue was being built, reasonable stadium food prices were touted as revolutionary, and sure enough, Falcons concession revenue went up in the stadium’s first year. Yes, the building located in the heart of Atlanta has a Chick-fil-A inside. No, there is no word on whether it will be open on Super Bowl Sunday.

How to watch Super Bowl 2019

The 2019 Super Bowl will be broadcast on CBS and can be live-streamed on fuboTV. On the CBS broadcast, Tony Romo and Jim Nantz will be on the call for their first Super Bowl together. This will be Romo's first Super Bowl as an analyst or a player. It will be Nantz's fifth as play-by-play announcer. Tracy Wolfson and Evan Washburn will work their second Super Bowl as sideline reporters. New rules analyst Gene Steratore will also be in the booth as needed. Former kicker Jay Feely will serve as a contributor for the second time.
If you're watching in Canada, Super Bowl 52 can be streamed live on DAZN with a 30-day free trial.

Super Bowl 2019 odds

The Patriots were entering a Super Bowl as underdogs for the first time since, ironically, they played the Rams in a Super Bowl 17 years ago. Then they were not.
According to OddsShark (BetOnline), NFC-champion Los Angeles opened as a one-point favorite over AFC-champion New England in Super Bowl 53, set to be played Feb. 3 in Atlanta. Then, OddsShark tweeted later Sunday night, the odds flipped in New England's favor.

Future Super Bowl locations, host sites

2019: Atlanta, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Super Bowl 53
2020: South Florida, Hard Rock Stadium, Super Bowl 54
2021: Tampa Bay, Raymond James Stadium, Super Bowl 55
2022: Los Angeles, Los Angeles Stadium, Super Bowl 56
2023: Glendale, University of Phoenix Stadium, Super Bowl 57
2024: New Orleans, Mercedes-Benz Superdome, Super Bowl 58

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