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The three biggest American retail banks collected 25% less overdraft revenue last year as the companies, under pressure from regulators to cap the fees, created new ways for customers to avoid the penalties.

JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Bank of America reported a combined $2.2 billion in overdraft fees in 2023, roughly $700 million less than the previous year, according to regulatory filings.

Overdraft fees are triggered when a customer attempts to spend more than the balance in their checking accounts. At around $35 per transaction at many banks, the fees have been a lucrative line item for the industry, generating $280 billion in revenue since 2000, according to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The industry is girding itself for a battle over overdraft after the CFPB last month unveiled a proposal to limit charges to as little as $3 per transaction. Banks say overdraft services are a lifeline that helps users avoid worse options like payday loans, while critics including President Biden say the fees exploit struggling Americans.

The practice has brought unwelcome attention to big banks. During a 2021 hearing, Sen. Elizabeth Warren needled JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon on the fees. Dimon at the time refused her call to refund $1.5 billion to customers.

But even before recent efforts by regulators, banks’ haul from overdraft has been on the decline. Pandemic stimulus money helped Americans trigger fewer of the fees starting in 2020, and then firms including Capital One, Citigroup and Ally voluntarily ended the practice.

Those who kept the fees, including JPMorgan, limited the types of transactions that trigger penalties, got rid of fees for bounced checks and introduced one-day grace periods and $50 cushions to reduce their frequency.

Bank of America cut the fees to $10 from $35 in 2022.

“Whether folks eliminated some fees or dramatically reduced the cost of others, there’s been very significant shifts here,” said Jennifer Tescher, CEO of nonprofit group Financial Health Network. “Banks aren’t just getting rid of overdraft, they’re trying to find more customer-friendly ways of meeting their liquidity needs while making sure they aren’t overextended.”

Industrywide overdraft revenue totaled $7.7 billion in 2022, 35% below the 2019 level, according to a May CFPB report that included all U.S. banks with at least $1 billion in assets.

Recent regulatory filings show that the trend continued last year, though JPMorgan and Wells Fargo remain by far the largest players in overdraft.

JPMorgan had $1.1 billion in overdraft revenue last year, about 12% lower than in 2022. Wells Fargo saw a 27% decline to $937 million. Bank of America posted a 64% decline to $140 million.

More than 70% of overdraft transactions no longer incur fees, and customers can choose accounts that don’t allow the penalties, a JPMorgan spokesman told CNBC. Wells Fargo and Bank of America declined to comment.

“Our customers continue to tell us they want and need access to overdraft protection, which helps them when they are temporarily short on money,” the JPMorgan spokesman said.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Just before the conclusion of the weather-delayed second round just before 2 p.m. Saturday at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open, tournament organizers temporarily closed all of the entrances to TPC Scottsdale. No more fans were being allowed into the tournament.

This is the first time this has happened in event history.

The grassy hillsides of the Stadium Course normally can accomodate thousands of fans watching the tournament but those slopes became muddy slip-n-slides, which pushed all the fans on the walkways, creating massive logjams where fans who were on site struggled to move about.

Because of all the congestion around the course, golf carts were parked. Typically, TV crews with big cameras or tournament or PGA Tour officials motor around the property throughout the day but with so much foot traffic, golf carts are being put away.

In addition, alcohol sales were halted. For a while fans could be seen lined up at the beer tubs around the course, awaiting the good word they could start buying again, but that didn’t happen.

The tournament’s Friday and Saturday rounds were declared sellouts a few days before the tournament.

In 2019, tournament organizers stopped announcing daily attendance numbers. In 2018, the Phoenix Open reported the largest single-day crowd of 216,818 for Saturday’s third round as well as an overall attendance for the week at 719,179.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LAS VEGAS – The pill – casino jargon for ‘roulette ball’ – landed on No. 11. The people wearing San Francisco 49ers jerseys at the table had their chips on the black oval with white ’11’ letters. Winners, they whooped and hollered. 

‘Aiyuk!’ said the one in the San Francisco Fire Department bucket hat, as the two men reached for the kind of high five fueled by that certain type of rush. 

If that doesn’t sum up the Vegas flair and influence on Super Bowl 58, which will feature the 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday, what does? 

Thousands of fans descended upon the bottom of The Strip the day before ‘the Big Game.’ It was an influx 10-year Vegas resident Dominick Lynch, a host at Wahlburgers in ‘The Shoppes at Mandalay Bay’ mall. 

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

‘I’ve never really seen it this busy. We’ve always had a rush-in with the conventions and stuff, but it’s never been quite like this,’ Lynch told USA TODAY Sports. ‘You can just feel it walking around. It’s great.’ 

Nearly every team in the NFL was represented on the apparel worn by fans on site throughout the Super Bowl festivities. A steady stream of a sea of (different shades of) red poured into Vegas throughout the week. 

‘There’s a lot of red in this room,’ one security worker shouted Saturday near the convention center. 

The fan distribution appeared about even, perhaps a bit tilted in the favor of San Francisco; the Niners’ fan base flocked from nearby California, while “Chiefs Kingdom” has always been a well-traveled bunch. 

Vegas and its gambling and entertainment allure has always been even more of a tourist destination during Super Bowl weekend. According to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, 500,000 additional people are expected to travel to Las Vegas for Super Bowl 58 than any previous Super Bowl weekend. The LVCVA expects hosting the Super Bowl will bring in between $600 million-$700 million for the city, most of which would be earned around Allegiant Stadium (via ticket sales, concessions and merchandise) and the surrounding casinos. 

Dealers at the casinos toward that end of The Strip near the stadium wore jerseys of NFL teams. 

Beginning Friday, casinos across town began filling up. Travelers kept checking in Saturday. There were families of all sizes and age ranges. One was that of Niners fan Henry Bande, who traveled to Las Vegas from Seattle, Washington, for the weekend. His sister lived in north Las Vegas, and the group was attending the Super Bowl Experience at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center. He doesn’t have a ticket to the game, but he and his family wanted to experience the first Super Bowl in Las Vegas. 

‘Just to be here, the atmosphere. This is incredible,’ Bande told USA TODAY Sports. ‘This is probably one of the biggest events for Las Vegas, to have this, right?’ 

Bande said he felt at home with the number of Niners jerseys he saw. 

‘Nothing beats Vegas when it comes to big events like this,’ he said. 

As for what appealed to him, Bande said “just the fact that the stadium is so close to The Strip and all the hotels and all the things happening around the city, it’s unbelievable.” 

Around 2 p.m. PT Saturday, fans – $50 per person ages 13 and up – lined up hundreds deep to enter the NFL-run Super Bowl Experience. The journey there, however, proved to be borderline treacherous for some. Lack of direction and organization led to an uncomfortable situation in the narrow hallways of Mandalay Bay as thousands tried to reach the entrance and others attempted to exit. Security staff finally controlled the situation but needed to limit the flow of foot traffic to allow the safe passage of the pedestrians.  

The Mandalay Bay scene mirrored Las Vegas Blvd. Car horns became the soundtrack of the standstill traffic. The CBS shows that broadcasted from a set in front of the Bellagio fountains had to navigate the constant blaring. Even for local residents whose work does not take them to The Strip, the traffic has caused backups across the city, Lynch said. 

‘You gotta plan ahead,’ he said.

Casinos up and down The Strip were packed, and more than a dozen A-list celebrities held events throughout the weekend. A drone light show appeared in the sky Saturday night, and a scalper was hawking tickets (authenticity unverified) outside the CVS near the Park MGM: $3,000 per ticket, with four available in Section 412 Row 10. 

‘It’s cool, man,’ Lynch said. ‘It’s a blast. We’re happy to have it. But I’ve never seen this volume, this high-energy, and this fun.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In February for Black History Month, USA TODAY Sports is publishing the series ’29 Black Stories in 29 Days.’ We examine the issues, challenges and opportunities Black athletes and sports officials continue to face after the nation’s reckoning on race following the murder of George Floyd in 2020. This is the fourth installment of the series.

This past week Darren Smith of KLKC radio in Kansas City, at Roger Goodell’s Super Bowl press conference, asked a simple question.

‘As of this press conference, the NFL Media newsroom still employs zero Black managers, zero Black copy editors, zero full-time Black employees on the news desk, and your only full-time Black employee, Larry Campbell, passed away over the weekend,’ Smith said. ‘How does knowing this sit well with you, and after two years of being asked this question, why has there not been any change or any hirings in that area?’

The question had been asked previously, the past several years, by former NFL Media employee Jim Trotter. His contract wasn’t renewed after those queries and in return Trotter filed a discrimination lawsuit against the league.

‘Well, I disagree completely that there hasn’t been any change,’ Goodell replied. ‘I’m happy to get your data and share it with our people and make sure that we get an answer for you. I don’t have all the data. I will tell you that (for) the first time, 51 percent of our employees across the league, across the network, across all of our media platforms, not including players, are either people of color or women.’

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

Trotter responded in part on X: ‘The data is what it is: the NFL newsroom has zero Black managers, zero Black copy editors, and zero full-time Black employees on the news desk. Those are facts. Nothing he says changes that. Another fact, (Goodell) refuses to acknowledge: outside of the reporters in the NFL newsroom, there are ZERO full-time Black employees. In a league whose player population is majority Black. Let that marinate for a minute. I didn’t ask (Smith) to pose that question, but I thank him for challenging (Goodell) and seeking to have Goodell’s actions reflect his words.’

Now, this is where the story takes another turn.

On Friday, the National Association of Black Journalists blasted the NFL for its lack of diverse hiring practices in its media division, and requested a meeting with that division’s executives and Roger Goodell, the league’s commissioner.

‘The National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) is disappointed with the lack of progress in the NFL’s media hiring practices,’ the organization said in a statement. ‘Just a few months short of a year since our initial outreach and call for change, the NFL continues to lack Black journalists and communicators in its news division.

‘In addition to NABJ, others have sought answers from NFL executives, but no documented progress in the organization’s media diversity efforts has been made available.

‘As we noted in our initial statement in May 2023, there have been no explanations given for how the NFL has allowed the practice of exclusion to operate over the years.

‘As a result, the NABJ media monitoring team is requesting an immediate meeting with NFL media executives and commissioner Roger Goodell to discuss what swift actions they will take to remedy the lack of diversity in its media department.’

‘As the NFL gears up for one of the most watched events in the world, it should not feel comfortable knowing that its news arm does not reflect the diversity of its players, audience and event participants. We are challenging the NFL to make a serious effort to address these inequities now,’ said NABJ President Ken Lemon and Vice Presidents Walter Smith Randolph and Kathy Chaney in a joint statement. ‘A failure to move quickly to resolve this matter reflects an insensitivity to the importance of having NFL stories told by diverse voices.’

An NFL spokesman did not immediately return a request for comment.

One of the things sometimes lost about Black History Month is that it isn’t just about documenting the tremendous successes of Black Americans or what we’ve overcome. It’s also acknowledging how the fight continues and that fight is brutal and hard and requires constant vigilance.

That’s why what the NABJ is doing is vital and important.

Will it work? The NFL will likely ignore what the NABJ has to say. How do I know this? Because the NFL has already ignored what the NABJ has had to say.

The NFL rarely does what’s right unless it’s absolutely forced to. Again, Trotter and others have been bringing up these concerns for years, and little to nothing has changed. Trotter is right. The NFL simply doesn’t care. If it did we wouldn’t still be talking about this.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Warriors and Suns squared off in a thriller Saturday night, with Golden State defeating Phoenix 113-112 on the strength of a Steph Curry 3-pointer with less than a second to go.

But the real show was the battle between Draymond Green and Jusuf Nurkic, sharing a court for the first time since Green clocked Nurkic in the head, which earned Green an indefinite suspension. There was plenty of physical play between the two, as well as an exchange of ‘too small’ gestures.

The battle continued after the game as the pair engaged in a war of words through the media.

‘It’s sad. (Green) didn’t learn anything, man’ Nurkic said. ‘Just a matter of time, he’s going to knock somebody else again. Take everything back what I said. He don’t deserve a chance.’

Nurkic took issue with Green’s ‘antics’ and said Green tries to hit people.

Told about Nurkic’s comments, Green didn’t hold back.

‘I thought I was pretty great tonight, honestly,’ Green said after a long pause. ‘He tried to get in my head and it didn’t work.

‘If he want me to walk around quiet like him, I’m never going to do that. Quiet guys don’t win.’

Green, who finished with 15 points, nine assists and seven rebounds, reiterated that he thought he had a great game.

‘(Nurkic) can keep riding the same horse that he rode in on, he can ride his ass on out of here on the same horse. It ain’t working,’ Green added.

Curry had some words for Nurkic as well, calling the Suns big man’s comments ‘idiotic’ in his postgame press conference.

‘Draymond was in his head, plain and simple,’ Curry said.

Sadly, the Suns (31-22) and Warriors (25-25) aren’t slated to meet again in the regular season. But we can always hold out hope for a playoff matchup.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LAS VEGAS – At 50, Terrell Owens looks like he might be fit enough to play in the NFL.

The Hall of Fame receiver said there’s no doubt.

“It’s all about the condition that you put yourself in,’’ Owens told USA TODAY Sports Saturday. “I’ve been able to take care of my body.  

“If you think about the playoffs, a lot of these games are won by third downs and obviously red-zone situations. Could I go out and play 70 snaps right now? Absolutely not. But I’d be a viable option if I were on the team, that’s for sure.’’

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

He played for the San Francisco 49ers, Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, Buffalo Bills and Cincinnati Bengals, amassing 15,934 receiving yards and 153 receiving touchdowns on 1,078 catches. His last NFL catch came in 2010, and he blames the league for there being no more since.

“They blackball you and they don’t put your name in the good graces of a lot of organizations,’’ he said.

In the past, Owens has compared his situation to Colin Kaepernick, the former NFL quarterback who protested during the national anthem throughout the 2017 season and never again played in the league.

On Saturday, Owens simply pointed to the process of his induction into the NFL Hall of Fame. He was not voted in until 2018, his third year of eligibility.

“And you see since 2018, you’ve seen guys with stats not even as great as mine get in on the first go-around,’’ said Owens, who turned 50 in December. “So that speaks volumes in itself.’’

What also spoke volumes: Owens skipped the induction ceremony in Canton, Ohio and delivered his speech at the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga, where he played from 1992 to 1995.

In 2022, Owens played for Fan Controlled Football, a 7-on-7 indoor league, and he scored at least two touchdowns, according to published reports.

Fan Controlled Football canceled its season in 2023.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin has broken out of his early season slump as he chases all-time leader Wayne Gretzky and tries to break a record once thought unbreakable.

Ovechkin extended his goal-scoring streak to five games on Sunday, his first five-game streak since the 2020-2021 season. Saturday, he had broken the NHL record for empty-net goals.

Gretzky, who played from 1979-99, leads the way with 894 regular-season NHL goals. Ovechkin, 38,who passed Gordie Howe last season to move into second place, has 835 goals and needs 60 more for the record. He’s still slightly behind the pace but has two years left on his contract after this season.

Here’s where he stands in his chase of Gretzky’s goal record:

How many goals does Alex Ovechkin have this season?

Ovechkin needs to average 24 goals a season during his current contract to tie Gretzky’s record. With 13 goals in the Capitals’ 51 games, he is on pace for about 21. His pace had been for 14 goals before his current run.

What did Alex Ovechkin do in the Capitals’ last game?

Feb. 11: He had a goal on three shots in a 3-2 overtime loss to the Vancouver Canucks. His pass attempt to T.J. Oshie deflected off a Vancouver defender’s skate and past Canucks goalie Thatcher Demko. ‘I think the puck goes in, it’s a good thing,’ he told reporters. ‘I’ll take it and move on.’

How is Alex Ovechkin’s season going?

Much better now than before the All-Star break, when he uncharacteristically had several long goal droughts. Ovechkin had no shots on goal in consecutive games for the first time in his career and only two goals in his first 12 games. He scored three goals over his next three games before going through a career-worst 14-game drought. He went another three games without a goal before scoring in back-to-back games on Dec. 30 and Jan. 2. He had no goals in the eight games surrounding a three-game injury absence.

But Ovechkin is now on a roll. He scored on Jan. 27 during the Capitals’ last game before the break. He also scored on Feb. 6, Feb. 8, Feb. 10 and Feb. 11 for a five-game streak. He leads the Capitals in scoring with 36 points in 48 games.

When do Alex Ovechkin and the Capitals play next?

The Capitals’ next game is Feb. 13 against the Colorado Avalanche. Ovechkin has 11 goals in 25 career games vs. the Avalanche.

Who are the NHL’s top all-time goal scorers?

The top 20 NHL all-time goal scorers have all topped 600 goals. All are in the Hockey Hall of Fame, except Ovechkin and Jaromir Jagr, who has suited up this season in the Czech Republic.

1. Wayne Gretzky,  894 goals in 1,487 games

2. Alex Ovechkin, 835 goals in 1,395 games

3. Gordie Howe, 801 goals in 1,767 games

4. Jaromir Jagr, 766 goals in 1,733 games

5. Brett Hull, 741 goals in 1,269 games

6. Marcel Dionne, 731 in 1,348 games

7. Phil Esposito, 717 goals in 1,282 games

8. Mike Gartner, 708 goals in 1,432 games

9. Mark Messier, 694 goals in 1,756 games

10. Steve Yzerman, 692 goals in 1,514 games

11. Mario Lemieux, 690 goals in 915 games

12. Teemu Selanne, 684 goals in 1,451 games

13. Luc Robitaille, 668 goals in 1,431 games

14. Brendan Shanahan, 656 goals in 1,524 games

15. Dave Andreychuk, 640 goals in 1,639 games

16. Jarome Iginla, 625 goals in 1,554 games

17. Joe Sakic, 625 goals in 1,378 games

18. Bobby Hull, 610 goals in 1,063 games

19. Dino Ciccarelli, 608 goals in 1,232 games

20. Jari Kurri, 601 goals in 1,251 games

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The ultimate prize in professional football is the Vince Lombardi Trophy, which is awarded each season to the Super Bowl champion.

But how did the Lombardi Trophy come to symbolize excellence in the NFL? And when was it first awarded?

The Kansas City Chiefs won’t give up possession of the trophy willingly though. Last season’s Super Bowl champs are back again, and they’ll be facing a familiar opponent in Super Bowl 58 in the San Francisco 49ers. These same two teams met four years ago in Miami – where the Chiefs prevailed 31-20.

Want to know more about the Lombardi Trophy? You’ve come to the right place.

SUPER BOWL CENTRAL: Latest Super Bowl 58 news, stats, odds, matchups and more.

Who is Vince Lombardi?

A good place to start is with the man for whom the trophy is named.

Vincent Thomas Lombardi was a head coach in the NFL for only 10 seasons, but his legacy as a leader and strategist is immense. Lombardi led the Green Bay Packers from the depths of despair to the league’s model franchise shortly after he took over in 1959.

Taking over a team that went 1-10-1 the previous season, Lombardi led the Packers to a 7-5 mark in his first year, a division title in his second year and back-to-back championships in Years 3 and 4. Green Bay went on to win three more NFL titles under Lombardi, including the first two Super Bowls. He also coached one year in Washington before dying of cancer in 1970.

What is the origin of the Lombardi Trophy?

The story goes like this: In 1966, former NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle wanted to have a trophy for the winner of the inaugural NFL-AFL Championship Game. He had lunch with the vice president of Tiffany and Co., Oscar Riedner, who sketched out the design of a trophy on a cocktail napkin.

The first trophy closely resembled the one in use today, made entirely of sterling silver with a football positioned on top of a three-sided base. Rozelle had the words ‘World Professional Football Championship’ engraved on the trophy and presented it to the Packers after their win over the Chiefs on Jan. 15, 1967.

Following Lombardi’s death in 1970, the trophy was renamed in his honor.

Do NFL teams get to keep the Lombardi Trophy?

Yes, they do. The NFL casts a new trophy every year to award to the Super Bowl champion.

The Pittsburgh Steelers and New England Patriots have the most Lombardi Trophies with six. The 49ers can claim their sixth with a victory in Super Bowl 58.

Smaller replicas of the Lombardi Trophy are given to each member of the winning team.

How much does the Lombardi Trophy weigh?

The Lombardi Trophy is 22 inches tall and weighs approximately seven pounds (3.2 kg).

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

After making a splash on America’s biggest secular holiday with two ads during last year’s Super Bowl, ‘He Gets Us’ is back airing more spots during Super Bowl 58.

Both commercials, which showcased ‘the love of Jesus,’ last year placed in the top 15 of USA TODAY’s 2023 Ad Meter, which ranks commercials by consumer rating. 

The first 2024 ad, entitled ‘Foot Washing’ aired during the first quarter of the game. It showed various still images of people having their feet washed and ended with the slogan: ‘Jesus didn’t teach hate. He washed feet.’

“The thing that’s different about this year is 2024 is a presidential election year, and all of that divisiveness and hostility is amplified in the presidential election,” Jason Vanderground, president of BrandHaven marketing agency, told Crain’s Grand Rapids Business.

“We’re trying to be very intentional to build off of last year’s message and instead of showing people fighting, showing people demonstrating what it looks like to love your neighbor.” 

What is ‘He Gets Us’?

The ‘He Gets Us’ website says the ad campaign is a movement not ‘affiliated with any single individual, political position, church, or faith denomination.’

‘He Gets Us’ was started by Servant Foundation – but this year is managed by the newly-formed nonprofit Come Near. The nonprofit’s stated goal is ‘sharing the life and love of Jesus in thought-provoking new ways.’

Vanderground told The Associated Press before the 2023 Super Bowl that ‘He Gets Us’ was ‘trying to get the message across to people who are spiritually open, but skeptical.”

The ‘He Gets Us’ campaign held a day of service Saturday before the Super Bowl at a Las Vegas community center, featuring a handful of current and former NFL players, distributing groceries and hot meals while the athletes led kids in football drills and games.

As for the organization that initially launched the campaign, Servant Foundation is a Kansas-based nonprofit. The group donated more than $50 million to the Alliance Defending Freedom from 2018-2020. The Southern Poverty Law Center listed the ADF as an anti-LGBTQ hate group in 2016, citing the ADF’s support of criminalizing homosexuality and approval of imprisoning LGBTQ individuals for engaging in consensual sex.

The ADF told USA TODAY in 2023 that it ‘categorically rejects’ this classification by the SPLC, calling it a ‘deliberate mischaracterization of our work.’

The ‘He Gets Us’ website says ‘Let us be clear in our opinion. Jesus loves gay people and Jesus loves trans people. The LGBTQ+ community, like all people, is invited to explore the story of Jesus.’

Who funds ‘He Gets Us’?

In 2023, Hobby Lobby founder David Green told right-wing talk show host Glenn Beck that his family was helping fund the Super Bowl 57 ads.

Green and Hobby Lobby won a significant victory in 2014 when the Supreme Court ruled that Hobby Lobby and other “closely held corporations” could continue to deny providing health insurance coverage for some or all forms of birth control based on religious objections. The ruling affected more than 60 million American workers.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Super Bowl commercials are big business, with brands shelling out millions of dollars for the right to get their products out in front of the 100 million-plus viewers who tune into the NFL’s championship game every year.

The prices for a 30-second spot have skyrocketed since the first big game kicked off back in the 1960s, with a commercial in Super Bowl I running just over $37,000.

AD METER 2024: Vote on the best commercials from the big game

For this year’s Super Bowl 58, 30-second commercials will cost $7 million for the game airing on CBS.

Here’s what to know about the astronomical cost of Super Bowl ads:

How much does a Super Bowl commercial cost in 2024?

A 30-second commercial during Super Bowl 58 costs $7 million.

Super Bowl commercial cost by year

Here’s what 30-second Super Bowl ads have cost through the years:

Super Bowl I, 1967 – $37,500
Super Bowl II, 1968 – $54,500
Super Bowl III, 1969 – $55,000
Super Bowl IV, 1970 – $78,200
Super Bowl V, 1971 – $72,500
Super Bowl VI, 1972 – $86,100
Super Bowl VII, 1973 – $88,100
Super Bowl VIII, 1974 – $103,500
Super Bowl IX, 1975 – $107,000
Super Bowl X, 1976 – $110,000
Super Bowl XI, 1977 – $125,000
Super Bowl XII, 1978 –$162,300
Super Bowl XIII, 1979 – $185,000
Super Bowl XIV, 1980 – $222,000
Super Bowl XV, 1981 – $275,000
Super Bowl XVI, 1982 – $324,300
Super Bowl XVII, 1983 – $400,000
Super Bowl XVIII, 1984 – $368,200
Super Bowl XIX, 1985 – $525,000
Super Bowl XX, 1986 – $550,000
Super Bowl XXI, 1987 – $600,000
Super Bowl XXII, 1988 – $645,500
Super Bowl XXIII, 1989 – $675,500
Super Bowl XXIV, 1990 – $700,400
Super Bowl XXV, 1991 – $800,000
Super Bowl XXVI, 1992 – $850,000
Super Bowl XXVII, 1993 – $850,000
Super Bowl XXVIII, 1994 – $900,000
Super Bowl XXIX, 1995 – $1.15 million
Super Bowl XXX, 1996 – $1.085 million
Super Bowl XXXI, 1997 – $1.2 million
Super Bowl XXXII, 1998 – $1.29 million
Super Bowl XXXIII, 1999 – $1.6 million
Super Bowl XXXIV, 2000 – $2.1 million
Super Bowl XXXV, 2001 – $2.2 million
Super Bowl XXXVI, 2002 – $2.2 million
Super Bowl XXXVII, 2003 – $2.2 million
Super Bowl XXXVIII, 2004 – $2.3 million
Super Bowl XXXIX, 2005 – $2.4 million
Super Bowl XL, 2006 – $2.5 million
Super Bowl XLI, 2007 – $2.385 million
Super Bowl XLII, 2008 – $2.699 million
Super Bowl XLIII, 2009 – $2.999 million
Super Bowl XLIV, 2010 – $2.954 million
Super Bowl XLV, 2011 – $3.1 million
Super Bowl XLVI, 2012 – $3.5 million
Super Bowl XLVII, 2013 – $3.8 million
Super Bowl XLVIII, 2014 – $4 million
Super Bowl XLIX, 2015 – $4.25 million
Super Bowl 50, 2016 – $4.5 million
Super Bowl LI, 2017 – $5 million
Super Bowl LII, 2018 – $5.2 million
Super Bowl LIII, 2019 – $5.3 million
Super Bowl LIV, 2020 – $5.6 million
Super Bowl LV, 2021 – $5.5 milllion
Super Bowl LVI, 2022 – $6.5 million
Super Bowl LVII, 2023 – $7 million
Super Bowl LVIII, 2024 – $7 million

This post appeared first on USA TODAY