As is tradition, the winning coach of Super Bowl LIX had Gatorade dumped on him after the game was over. This is why people ...
Know who else celebrates? Bettors who put some green down on the correct celebratory Gatorade color. One of the most popular Super Bowl non-game prop bets involves the color of the Gatorade used ...
Bets among sports fans have already begun to find out what the color of Gatorade will be ... but later more people chose to consume it. The Gatorade flavor lemon-lime. This classic flavor will ...
The Philadelphia Eagles dominated the Kansas City Chiefs from wire to wire in the 2025 Super Bowl, and when it was time to celebrate with a Gatorade shower for head coach Nick Sirianni, the color ...
That year, the Baltimore Ravens beat the Giants and the team dumped yellow Gatorade on head coach Brian Billick. The color was notable because it became something sports bettors could wager on ...
X Gatorade was +220 to be the color dumped in Super Bowl LIX. Imagine if you had parlayed the Eagles to win and yellow to be the Gatorade color? Regardless, fans and bettors of Eagles are leaving ...
As a result, it was Philadelphia who got to dump Gatorade on head coach Nick Sirianni after the game. The color of said Gatorade? Lime Green/Yellow (-195). Ever since sports gambling started to ...
There are an almost countless amount of prop bets you can wager on the Super Bowl and one of the most fun ones that people love to bet on is the color of the Gatorade that will be poured on the ...
The Gatorade color that landed on the winning coach was yellow (technically the option was yellow/green), which emerged as the odds favorite late in the week. The bet cashed at -195 odds at FanDuel.
Good luck with correctly predicting the Gatorade color unless you have some inside information. There is no objective process or edge to find with this prop. Since it's simply a guessing game ...
“Gatorade Color is always the most interesting prop to price,” ESPN BET‘s Director of North American Sports Trading, Adrian Horton, told The Post. “You’ll shift these odds on not a lot ...