The Super Bowl logo conspiracy theory is alive, afer all.
An observant NFL fan found evidence that the Super Bowl logo conspiracy theory actually does apply to the logo used for Super Bowl 60 this season.
For those unfamiliar, the Super Bowl logo conspiracy theory is simple. Fans believe that over the last four Lombardi Trophy matchups, the colors used in the logos foreshadowed who would play in the Super Bowl.
This proved true for Super Bowls 56, 57, 58 and 59:
The logo conspiracy theory hasn’t been brought up much ahead of Super Bowl 60 on Feb. 8.
As you can see in the image, the primary colors of the Los Angeles Rams (dark blue), Seattle Seahawks (college navy and action green), Denver Broncos (orange) and New England Patriots (nautical blue) are absent in the Super Bowl 60 logo. But does that mean the logo conspiracy theory is dead for this year? Not one bit, actually.
The Super Bowl 60 Logo Has Hope
X/Twitter user @TimContic points out that if you invert the colors for the Super Bowl logo, they turn into the Seahawks and Broncos’ primary colors. Thus, the Super Bowl logo conspiracy will somewhat apply this year if the two home teams win on Sunday:
The Broncos, who will be without star quarterback Bo Nix, host the Patriots for the AFC Championship Game on Sunday at 3:00 p.m. EST. The Seahawks play host to the Rams in the NFC Championship Game at 6:30 p.m. EST.
Bad Buny will headline the Super Bowl halftime show. During the Divisional Round on Sunday, the NFL announced that legendary rock band Green Day will also perform on the grand stage at Levi’s Stadium.
ESPN’s computer model gives the Seahawks the best chance to win the Super Bowl among the remaining teams at 35.3 percent. The Rams are next at 28.7 percent, followed by the Patriots (24.1 percent) and Broncos (12 percent).
