Who Won The 2015 Super Bowl Coin Toss

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Below is a full listing of the Super Bowl coin toss results and stats relating to the Super Bowl coin toss and check out our free prediction on the game. This history of the Super Bowl coin toss has every result since the Green Bay Packers won the coin toss with a ‘heads’ call in Super Bowl I in 1967. Betting on the Super Bowl coin toss is one of the most popular Super Bowl props every year. However, we would never recommend betting on such a thing. Even though Super Bowl coin toss history shows some definitive trends, this is still a random proposition and you are paying to much juice for a prop with 50/50 odds. At Doc’s Sports we have been handicapping the Super Bowl for nearly four decades and we isolate the Super Bowl Prop Bets that have high value.

Year

Super Bowl

Teams

Site

Coin Toss Result

Coin Toss Winner

1967

Super Bowl 1

Green Bay 35, Kansas City 10

Memorial Coliseum (Los Angeles, CA)

Heads

Packers

1968

Super Bowl 2

Green Bay 33, Oakland 14

Orange Bowl (Miami, FL)

Tails

Raiders

1969

Super Bowl 3

New York Jets 16, Baltimore 7

Orange Bowl (Miami, FL)

Heads

Jets

1970

Super Bowl 4

Kansas City 23, Minnesota 7

Tulane Stadium (New Orleans, LA)

Tails

Vikings

1971

Super Bowl 5

Baltimore 16, Dallas 13

Orange Bowl (Miami, FL)

Tails

Cowboys

1972

Super Bowl 6

Dallas 24, Miami 3

Tulane Stadium (New Orleans, LA)

Heads

Dolphins

1973

Super Bowl 7

Miami 14, Washington 7

Memorial Coliseum (Los Angeles, CA)

Heads

Dolphins

1974

Super Bowl 8

Miami 24, Minnesota 7

Rice Stadium (Houston, TX)

Heads

Dolphins

1975

Super Bowl 9

Pittsburgh 16, Minnesota 6

Tulane Stadium (New Orleans, LA)

Tails

Steelers

1976

Super Bowl 10

Pittsburgh 21, Dallas 17

Orange Bowl (Miami, FL)

Heads

Cowboys

1977

Super Bowl 11

Oakland 32, Minnesota 14

Rose Bowl (Pasadena, CA)

Tails

Raiders

1978

Super Bowl 12

Dallas 27, Denver 10

Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, LA)

Heads

Cowboys

1979

Super Bowl 13

Pittsburgh 35, Dallas 31

Orange Bowl (Miami, FL)

Heads

Cowboys

1980

Super Bowl 14

Pittsburgh 31, Los Angeles Rams 19

Rose Bowl (Pasadena, CA)

Heads

Rams

1981

Super Bowl 15

Oakland 27, Philadelphia 10

Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, LA)

Tails

Eagles

1982

Super Bowl 16

San Francisco 26, Cincinnati 21

Pontiac Silverdome (Detroit, MI)

Tails

49ers

1983

Super Bowl 17

Washington 27, Miami 17

Rose Bowl (Pasadena, CA)

Tails

Dolphins

1984

Super Bowl 18

Los Angeles Raiders 38, Washington 9

Tampa Stadium (Tampa, FL)

Heads

Raiders

1985

Super Bowl 19

San Francisco 38, Miami 16

Stanford Stadium (Stanford, CA)

Tails

49ers

1986

Super Bowl 20

Chicago 46, New England 10

Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, LA)

Tails

Bears

1987

Super Bowl 21

New York Giants 39, Denver 20

Rose Bowl (Pasadena, CA)

Tails

Broncos

1988

Super Bowl 22

Washington 42, Denver 10

Jack Murphy Stadium (San Diego, CA)

Heads

Redskins

1989

Super Bowl 23

San Francisco 20, Cincinnati 16

Joe Robbie Stadium (Miami, FL)

Tails

49ers

1990

Super Bowl 24

San Francisco 55, Denver 10

Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, LA)

Heads

Broncos

1991

Super Bowl 25

New York Giants 20, Buffalo 19

Tampa Stadium (Tampa, FL)

Heads

Bills

1992

Super Bowl 26

Washington 37, Buffalo 24

Metrodome (Minneapolis, MN)

Heads

Redskins

1993

Super Bowl 27

Dallas 52, Buffalo 17

Rose Bowl (Pasadena, CA)

Heads

Bills

1994

Super Bowl 28

Dallas 30, Buffalo 13

Georgia Dome (Atlanta, GA)

Tails

Cowboys

1995

Super Bowl 29

San Francisco 49, San Diego 26

Joe Robbie Stadium (Miami, FL)

Heads

49ers

1996

Super Bowl 30

Dallas 27, Pittsburgh 17

Sun Devil Stadium (Tempe, AZ)

Tails

Cowboys

1997

Super Bowl 31

Green Bay 35, New England 21

Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, LA)

Heads

Patriots

1998

Super Bowl 32

Denver 31, Green Bay 24

Qualcomm Stadium (San Diego, CA)

Tails

Packers

1999

Super Bowl 33

Denver 34, Atlanta 19

Pro Player Stadium (Miami, FL)

Tails

Falcons

2000

Super Bowl 34

St. Louis 23, Tennessee 16

Georgia Dome (Atlanta, GA)

Tails

Rams

2001

Super Bowl 35

Baltimore 34, New York Giants 7

Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, FL)

Tails

Giants

2002

Super Bowl 36

New England 20, St. Louis 17

Louisiana Superdome (New Orleans, LA)

Heads

Rams

2003

Super Bowl 37

Tampa Bay 48, Oakland 21

Qualcomm Stadium (San Diego, CA)

Tails

Buccaneers

2004

Super Bowl 38

New England 32, Carolina 29

Reliant Stadium (Houston, TX)

Tails

Panthers

2005

Super Bowl 39

New England 24, Philadelphia 21

ALLTELL Stadium (Jacksonville, FL)

Tails

Eagles

2006

Super Bowl 40

Pittsburgh 21, Seattle 10

Ford Field (Detroit, MI)

Tails

Seahawks

2007

Super Bowl 41

Indianapolis 29, Chicago 17

Dolphin Stadium (Miami, FL)

Heads

Bears

2008

Super Bowl 42

New York Giants 17, New England 14

University of Phoenix Stadium (Glendale, AZ)

Tails

Giants

2009

Super Bowl 43

Pittsburgh 27, Arizona 23

Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, FL)

Heads

Cardinals

2010

Super Bowl 44

New Orleans 31, Indianapolis 17

Sun Life Stadium (Miami, FL)

Heads

Saints

2011

Super Bowl 45

Green Bay 31, Pittsburgh 17

Cowboys Stadium (Arlington, TX)

Heads

Packers

2012

Super Bowl 46

New York Giants 21, New England 17

Lucas Oil Stadium (Indianapolis, IN)

Heads

Patriots

2013

Super Bowl 47

Baltimore 34, San Francisco 31

Superdome (New Orleans, LA)

Heads

Ravens

2014

Super Bowl 48

Seattle 43, Denver 8

MetLife Stadium (East Rutherford, NJ)

Tails

Seahawks

2015

Super Bowl 49

New England 28, Seattle 24

University of Phoenix Stadium (Glendale, AZ)

Tails

Seahawks

2016

Super Bowl 50

Denver 24, Carolina 10

Levi's Stadium (Santa Clara, CA)

Tails

Panthers

2017

Super Bowl 51

New England 34, Atlanta 28

NRG Stadium (Houston, TX)

Tails

Falcons

2018

Super Bowl 52

Philadelphia 41, New England 33

US Bank Stadium (Minneapolis, MN)

Heads

New England

2019

Super Bowl 53

New England 13, Los Angeles 3

Mercedes-Benz Stadium (Atlanta, GA)

Tails

Los Angeles

2020

Super Bowl 54

Kansas City 31, San Francisco 20

Hard Rock Stadium (Miami, FL)

Tails

San Francisco

2021

Super Bowl 55

Tampa Bay 31, Kansas City 9

Raymond James Stadium (Tampa, FL)

Heads

Kansas City

A team known for the Butt Fumble is now known for The Coin Flip.

In one of the most bizarre moments of a bizarre, contentious series, the New York Jets and New England Patriots had a bizarre coin-flip controversy at the start of overtime that led to the Jets oddly getting the ball after losing the toss and marching down the field for a game-winning touchdown.

Won

Here’s how it went down. After a patented, last-minute Tom Brady touchdown the Jets and Pats met at midfield for the coin flip. The visiting Pats called heads and won. Then, referee Clete Blakemen asked New England whether they wanted to kick, an odd leading question. (The better question would have been: “Do you want to receive?”

Feb 01, 2015 The coin landed on TAILS. The Patriots called heads and lost the coin toss. Before the 2015 Super Bowl, heads and tails had evenly split the first 48 Super Bowls. Heads had a five-year run from. Pat McAfee says that the only thing that Kansas City won on Super Bowl Sunday — the coin toss — was something he lost a wager on and reacts to Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers dominating. This history of the Super Bowl coin toss has every result since the Green Bay Packers won the coin toss with a ‘heads’ call in Super Bowl I in 1967. The team that has won the coin toss has gone on to win the Super Bowl 24 times, posting a.444-win percentage. Maybe losing the coin toss gives the team the extra motivation for the game. Out of the winning teams that won the coin toss, heads and tails have come up 12 times each, showing its true 50/50 odds.

The Patriots captains, including Matthew Slater, appeared confused by the question, though a replay suggests Slater said New England wanted to kick. Before anyone knew what was going on, Blakeman was asking a stunned Antonio Cromartie whether the Jets wanted to receive. Cromartie sort of shot Slater a “what’s going on here” glance and said the Jets would take the ball.

Won

Then, Slater went up to Blakeman and asked, “we won, don’t we get to choose?”

Blakeman clearly responded: “You said kick.”

Who Won The 2015 Super Bowl Coin Toss History

He did. Slater can deny all he wants and Patriots fans can say he should be able to take it back, but even though the question Blakeman asked was awkward, Slater said what he said and, much like on an elementary school playground, there are no takebacks. It was a major mistake from a team not known for such things. Or was it?

Here’s where the story gets even stranger: Belichick later said he wanted to kick to the Jets to start OT. He’s done it before (to the Broncos in 2013 on a very windy day), but this didn’t seem to be the situation to test it out again. Despite an ego the size of Gillette Stadium, Belichick also rarely throws players under the bus (except for one notable exception) and given Slater’s reaction, desperate to change his call, maybe the hoodied one was covering for his player.

Who Won The 2015 Super Bowl Coin Toss Results

The Jets went down the field and Ryan Fitzpatrick hit Eric Decker for the game-winning touchdown. Any complaining should keep that in mind — despite the mistake, New England had a chance to right its wrong.

Coin

Who Won The 2015 Super Bowl Coin Toss 2021

And right now it means the Jets are in the playoffs, the Steelers are out and a home-field advantage that felt predestined for New England is greatly up in the air.