NFL: Report: Atlanta to be awarded Super Bowl LXII

Date:

Share post:


With an owners’ vote on the horizon, the NFL plans to award Super Bowl LXII in February 2028 to Atlanta, Sports Business Journal reported Thursday.

Team owners are scheduled to meet in Atlanta in October to hold a vote on the matter.

It would mark the second Super Bowl held in the Falcons’ Mercedes-Benz Stadium, following the 2019 game that saw the New England Patriots edge the Los Angeles Rams 13-3. The city also hosted two Super Bowls at the Falcons’ previous home, the Georgia Dome.

Mercedes-Benz Stadium was recently awarded the 2031 Final Four, its first chance to hold that event after its turn in 2020 was wiped out by the COVID-19 pandemic. The stadium will be home to the 2025 College Football Playoff national championship game and eight matches at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, including one semifinal.

The Super Bowl for the current season is slated for New Orleans. California has the next two: The San Francisco 49ers’ Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara hosts in February 2026 and the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers’ SoFi Stadium in Inglewood gets its second turn in five years in February 2027.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: UMass fires coach Don Brown amid 2-8 season

UMass fired coach Don Brown on Monday after a 2-8 start to his third season. Offensive coordinator Shane Montgomery...

NCAAF: Wisconsin fires offensive coordinator Phil Longo

Wisconsin fired offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Phil Longo on Sunday, one day after a 16-13 home loss...

NCAAF: Notre Dame edges up to No. 6 in AP Top 25

A lack of upsets at the top of college football resulted in little movement at the top of...

NCAAF: Five-star QBs Julian Lewis, Husan Longstreet change college commitments

In an apparent ripple effect in the college football recruiting cycle, quarterback Julian Lewis decommitted from Southern California,...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.