The 2026 Super Bowl betting landscape offers many routes: individual player props, straight spread picks (Patriots vs. Seahawks currently -4.5, total 45.5), alternate lines and full same-game parlays. One popular angle is predicting the margin of victory — and recent history supports a narrow finish: three of the last four Super Bowls were decided by exactly three points, which has pushed bookmakers to price a three-point margin at around +500. If you want a single-game margin play, sportsbooks list Seattle winning by three at about +950 and New England doing so at roughly +1100.
If you prefer to chase bigger payouts, folding a margin or player prop into a same-game parlay (SGP) can multiply returns. SportsLine’s predictive model — which runs 10,000 simulations per NFL game — has produced several high-return picks and has been used to assemble a longshot Super Bowl parlay that they say could pay $15,000 on a $10 stake. The model’s historical picks (dating to 2024) show a recorded return-to-profit pattern and a 53-37 mark on top-rated selections, according to the write-up.
One spotlight selection in that longshot parlay is Patriots receiver Kayshon Boutte as an anytime touchdown scorer at +310. Despite modest volume (he ranked 68th among wideouts in catches during the regular season), Boutte finished 18th in receiving TDs with six, added points in the playoffs and scored in the red zone in the AFC title game. The piece notes Seattle’s defense is strong overall but has still allowed a heavy share of scores via the pass — eight of the Seahawks’ last 10 touchdowns came through the air — which helps justify targeting passing-scoring props. The SportsLine model projects Boutte to log 0.31 touchdowns in the game, making his anytime-TD price look appealing to the outlet.
SportsLine says the parlay includes three of its model’s Super Bowl picks, including a touchdown-scorer prop offering about 25-1, and promises the full parlays and specific Seahawks vs. Patriots recommendations are available only on its site. The article also mentions a DraftKings promotion (a $300 bonus bet offer) tied into placing wagers there.
Fan Take: This kind of model-driven same-game parlay coverage matters because it gives fans and bettors a data-based way to explore higher-risk, higher-reward plays for the biggest game of the year. If more bettors lean on simulation models and props, we could see markets adjust faster and specialty wagers (like anytime scorers and exact margins) become even more popular and competitive.

