"Long" will be defined to be "7 yards or more".
This will be adjudicated by the "extra points" line item in the NFL game book.
An interception thrown on a two-point conversion will not count for the purposes of this prop.
This will be adjudicated by Alison and can be appealed to Patrick upon disagreement.
We'll expect there to be something similar to this setlist from last year.
Those Rockets players play against the Raptors at 2pm on Sunday.
Alperen Sengun and the Rockets play against the Raptors at 2pm on Sunday. Passing touchdowns and passing two-point conversions will both be allowed to count for Mahomes's point total. Mahomes will not be considered to have scored twice in the event that he ends up, for instance, passing a touchdown to himself.
The Hockey Club play the Capitals at 12:30pm ET; the Lightning play the Canadiens at 1pm ET.
This will be adjudicated by adding up the PIM column for all four teams in the ESPN box score. The minutes need not be served in order to count for this (e.g. if a two-minute penalty is given with only a minute to go in the game, it will still count as 2 PIMs).
Overtime is considered to be relevant for this prop. In the event of a tie, "No" will win by default because Worthy needs to strictly out-catch Brown.
If no touchdowns are scored, "15 or lower" will win by default.
This will be adjudicated by the "Fourth Down Efficiency" section of the NFL game book.
Extra points are not relevant for this prop.
Ohio State at Nebraska tips off at 2pm ET.
This will be adjudicated by the "College" listing on the players' NFL player pages. This will only apply to touchdown scorers (so quarterbacks who throw touchdown passes won't count). Three touchdowns by the same player who went to, for example, Clemson will be considered three touchdowns for the purposes of this prop (that is, we don't need three different touchdown scorers).
This will be adjudicated by the "time of possession" line item in the NFL game book.
Overtime will not be relevant for this prop; it refers strictly to the second half.
If no touchdowns or scored, "17 or higher" will win by default.
This will be adjudicated by the "kickoff returns" section in the NFL game book.
Starting at kickoff, ending at the first cut to commercial after the MVP award presentation.
Pushable if both Kelce and Swift are together the first time we see either of them.
Safeties and two-point conversions (offensive and defensive) will all count for this.
If the rushing totals are exactly equal, "No" will win; Barkley needs strictly more rushing yards.
This will be adjudicated by the "Scoring Plays" section of the NFL game book. Extra points and two-point conversions (by the touchdown-scoring) team are not considered to be scoring plays distinct from their respective touchdowns. The scoring plays need not be on consecutive plays in the game.
This will be adjudicated by the ESPN box score of the game. Mahomes needs to strictly have a higher QBR so a tie will result in "No" winning by default.
This will be adjudicated by Justin and can be appealed to Patrick upon disagreement.
Because of the wording, if it's tied at halftime, this prop resolves to "No".
Because of the wording, if Tom Brady is not wearing a tie at all, this prop resolves to "No".
This will be adjudicated by the player's position as listed on their NFL.com player page.
Pushable if no touchdowns are scored.
The 27-79 range is inclusive of those two numbers. This prop is specifically not pushable.
Any individual player can only add their jersey number to the sum once.
A touchdown scorer who scores multiple times will have their jersey number included each time, not just once.
Pushable if no touchdowns are scored or if the median value is exactly 25.5.
If there are no touchdowns scored, the jersey number of the first kicker who scored will be used. If the only score of the game is a safety, "Yes" will win by default.
Return yardage of any kind will not count. In the event of a tie, the trio of players on the team that lost the Super Bowl will be deemed to win this prop.
Any play that is noted as having been a "Punt formation" or "Field Goal formation" in the game book will not be considered to be one in which the Eagles "lined up to go for". In other words, fakes don't count; they have to come out with a usual offensive package. If the Eagles attempt no such conversions, "Yes" will win by default.
Basically, a usual touchdown is one that's scored by a more-or-less typical offensive package on a play that didn't have a turnover.
An individual player's jersey number can only be included in the sum once. Passing touchdowns will not result in the quarterback's jersey number being included in the same. In the event of a tie, the team that lost the Super Bowl will be deemed to win this prop.
Pushable if both teams' line score poker hands are exactly the same, including kickers where relevant.
For example, a game ending 21-17 results in a sum-of-digits of 2 + 1 + 1 + 7 = 11.
Much has been written about this but, ultimately, the exact phrase "two-point conversion attempt" needs to appear in the NFL game book. The defense at the start of the PAT play will never satisfy this prop, even if they actually do score.
Cade Cunningham and the Pistons play against the Hornets at 1pm on Sunday. If the points and completions are equal, "No" will win by default. Cunningham's points must strictly be higher than Mahomes's completions.
If Mahomes does not throw a touchdown pass, "9 yards or less" will win by default.
Both extra points and field goals count for this prop. This will be adjudicated by the "extra points" and "field goals" line items in the NFL game book.