Super Bowl 60 Betting Odds: What Are the Chances of a Scorigami Final Score?
A scorigami is one of the weirdest long-shot bets you’ll see on the Super Bowl odds board. It cashes only if the game ends with a final score that has never happened before in NFL history.
For Super Bowl 60, Sports Interaction has Scorigami (Yes) priced at +2200, reflecting just how rare this outcome really is.
So far, only three Super Bowls have ever ended in a scorigami:
- Super Bowl 21 (1987). Giants 39, Broncos 20
- Super Bowl 24 (1990). 49ers 55, Broncos 10
- Super Bowl 48 (2014). Seahawks 43, Broncos 8
That last one, Seattle’s 43–8 blowout of Denver, is the most recent example, and it happened more than a decade ago.
The reason scorigamis are so uncommon comes down to how football scoring works. You can’t score a single point on its own. Safeties are rare. Two-point conversions and eight-point touchdowns exist but don’t show up often. That leaves a lot of possible score combinations sitting untouched in the historical record.
From a betting perspective, scorigami is pure chaos insurance. You’re not betting on teams or players. You’re betting on something going off the rails just enough to land on a number the league has never seen. At +2200, it’s a fun novelty prop, not a cornerstone play, but Super Bowls have a habit of getting strange when the spotlight is brightest.
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