Tag: NFL

  • Trump, Swift Join Super Bowl Party As Chiefs Chase ‘Three-Peat’

    Trump, Swift Join Super Bowl Party As Chiefs Chase ‘Three-Peat’

    In a first for a sitting US President, Donald Trump will be among an array of VIPs and celebrities in a sell-out crowd of around 74,000 who will be packed into the Caesars Superdome for the biggest annual event in the American sporting calendar.

    Pop superstar Taylor Swift will also be in attendance to watch as her boyfriend Travis Kelce and his Chiefs team-mates bid to win an unprecedented third straight Vince Lombardi Trophy, and a fourth in six seasons.

    There is a heavy police presence in the city and blanket security around the event after the New Year’s Day attack which saw 14 people killed and many more injured in the Big Easy’s famous Bourbon Street district.

    A US army veteran, who the FBI say was motivated by loyalty to the jihadist Islamic State group, used a pickup trick to kill and wound revelers in the crowded French quarter.

    Authorities expect over 100,000 visitors to the city for the game which the Department of Homeland Security has assigned a Special Event Assessment Rating (SEAR) Level 1 designated event, the highest classification level of public safety risk.

    “I’m confident the safest place this weekend will be under the security umbrella we have in place around [the Superdome],” Cathy Lanier, the NFL’s chief security officer, said this week. “We have reviewed, and re-reviewed, all the events of January 1.”

    Trump’s presence will only increase the security effort with the President going beyond the traditional pre-game televised interview to attend in person.

    Trump has had a strained relationship with the NFL in the past — he was part of an anti-trust lawsuit against the league in the 1980s when he owned a club in the rival USFL league.

    In 2017, Trump criticised NFL players who knelt during the playing of the US national anthem to draw attention to issues of racial injustice, prompting strong criticism from some players.

    Trump then cancelled a planned White House reception for the Eagles after large numbers of players had made it clear they would not attend.

    But there has been no objection from players to Trump attending Sunday’s game with Chiefs star quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who is seeking his fourth Super Bowl ring, describing the prospect as “cool”.

    As always, the Super Bowl crosses over into popular culture and the half-time show this year will feature hip-hop artist Kendrick Lamar, who had a clean sweep at last Sunday’s Grammys, winning in all five categories for which he received nominations.

    Bookmakers and casinos meanwhile are taking odds on whether Chiefs star Kelce will propose to pop icon Swift after the game.

    American sportsbooks, now legal in 38 states, could take an estimated $1.39 billion in bets on the Super Bowl according to an annual report from the American Gaming Association (AGA).

    Chiefs favourites

    Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes (right) and tight end Travis Kelce (left) practice ahead of Sunday’s Super Bowl in New Orleans © Gregory Shamus / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

    For the more serious punters, the oddsmakers have the Chiefs as slight favourite for the game which is a rematch of the Super Bowl from two years ago which the Chiefs won by three points.

    The Chiefs defended their title last year, beating the San Francisco 49ers in Las Vegas and putting them one win away from an unprecedented ‘three-peat’.

    The 29-year-old Mahomes will become one of just four quarterbacks in the history of the NFL to have won more than three Super Bowls should he triumph again.

    But the Eagles have added serious offensive firepower since their defeat two years ago with mobile quarterback Jalen Hurts joined by the game-changing speed and power of running back Saquon Barkley.

    While the Super Bowl regularly draws the biggest television audience of the year in the USA, interest in the NFL is growing outside of it’s stronghold.

    There is international involvement in this year’s game with Eagles offensive tackle Jordan Mailata looking to become the first Australian to play in and win a Super Bowl.

    Having played in Brazil this year, the NFL is rapidly expanding their presence globally and next season regular season games will be held in London, Berlin and Madrid with Melbourne, Australia, to host a game in 2026.

    In this week’s build-up, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell floated the idea that the Super Bowl itself might one day be held outside the USA.

    “I do think there’s potential that someday we will have an international franchise. If we do, it would not surprise me at all if a Super Bowl follows and is played there,” he said.

    (AFP)

  • Trump Set To Make History As First Sitting President To Attend Super Bowl

    Trump Set To Make History As First Sitting President To Attend Super Bowl

    Donald Trump will make history this weekend by becoming the first sitting president of the United States of America to attend the Super Bowl.

    The Kansas City Chiefs take on the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans.

    The city was devastated by a terror attack on New Year’s Day when 14 people were killed on Bourbon Street.

    Trump, who was sworn in as the 47th president of the United States in January, is serving

    Though previous presidents such as Ronald Reagan have performed the pre-match coin toss from the White House, no sitting president has ever attended the event.

    “Security measures have been further enhanced this year, given that this will be the first time a sitting president of the United States will attend the event,” Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement.

    Earlier this week, US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the Super Bowl is “the biggest homeland security event that we do every year”.

    Trump’s attendance is likely to be controversial given his comments about the NFL throughout his political career.

    Trump, an outspoken critic of NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, has questioned the patriotism of NFL players who kneel during the playing of the US national anthem.

    The taking of the knee was a movement designed to draw attention to the issues of racial injustice in the United States.

    Sunday’s Super Bowl will be the first in four years that will not display an “End Racism” message in the end zone, a “Choose Love” message will be used instead.

    Since taking office, Trump has criticised non-discriminatory hiring practices aimed at improving workplace diversity.

    The NFL denies the decision to remove the banners calling to end racism is connected to the current political climate.

    “The Super Bowl is often a snapshot in time and the NFL is in a unique position to capture and lift the imagination of the country,” NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy told AFP.

    “Choose love is appropriate to use as our country has endured in recent weeks wildfires in southern California, the terrorist attack here in New Orleans, the plane and helicopter crash near our nation’s capital and the plane crash in Philadelphia.”

    Goodell, meanwhile, says the NFL remains fully committed to promoting diversity through its inclusive hiring practices.

    “I think we’ve proven to ourselves that it does make the NFL better,” Goodell said.

    “We’re not in this because it’s a trend to get into it or a trend to get out of it. Our efforts are fundamental in trying to attract the best possible talent into the NFL both on and off the field.”

    American presidents and the Super Bowl

    Since starting in 1967, the Super Bowl has become the biggest event in the

    Last year’s Super Bowl, which saw the Kansas City Chiefs defend their crown, was the biggest US TV broadcast since the moon landing in 1969 with 123.4 million viewers.

    Given the influence of the event on American culture, it is no surprise that politicians have become increasingly visible in its staging.

    George Bush became the first former president to appear in person for the pre-match coin toss before Super Bowl 51 in Houston in 2017.

    In 1985, President Ronald Reagan performed the coin toss via satellite from the White House.

    Former President George W Bush started a Super Bowl tradition in 2004 by granting a pre-game interview to the official broadcaster.

    Barack Obama continued the tradition but Joe Biden declined to give an interview two years in a row before leaving office in 2025.

    (BBC)