Circa owner and Detroit Lions superfan Derek Stevens plans to give away two seats on his flight to the Bay Area and two tickets to Sunday’s NFC championship game.
Football
Planning for the Super Bowl began more than two years ago, and the NFL and its Las Vegas partners are close to reaping the benefits from a worldwide audience.
Super Bowl weekend is on track to be one of the biggest weekends on record for Caesars Entertainment and its multiple Las Vegas properties.
Kenny Davidsen has stood the test of time as a Las Vegas showman, and he also has persevered as one of 30 entrants left in the $9.2 million Circa Survivor contest.
Same-game parlays, which have become wildly popular in the U.S. in recent years, became available in Nevada in June with the launch of the new Caesars app.
After raising the stakes for the Circa Million and Circa Survivor contests to $12 million last year, the sportsbook is sweetening the pot to $14 million this season.
With the Super Bowl the largest sporting event in the U.S., Las Vegas will seek to capitalize on the event outside of the game itself.
The NFL team purchased three buildings next to its Henderson headquarters, including the Las Vegas Aces’ new training facility.
Circa casino owner Derek Stevens said, “We’re back and bigger than ever. We want to make Las Vegas the hub of sports betting and football contests.”