The first of two conference championships is set with four teams remaining in the hunt to win the Lombardi Trophy. In the AFC, it’s the Cincinnati Bengals against the Kansas City Chiefs, while the NFC championship will feature the Philadelphia Eagles hosting San Francisco 49ers.
Here are the opening lines and nuggets for the conference finals and for Super Bowl LVII.
Super Bowl Odds
Philadelphia Eagles +260
Kansas City Chiefs +260
Cincinnati Bengals +275
San Francisco 49ers +275
NFC Championship
San Francisco 49ers at Philadelphia Eagles (-1.5, 45.5, opened PHI -2.0)
Sunday, 3:30 p.m. ET, Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia
Betting Nuggets:
-
Five straight Philadelphia playoff games have gone under the total.
-
Kyle Shanahan is 7-1 ATS in his postseason career.
-
San Francisco has won 12 straight games, going 10-2 ATS in that stretch.
-
Favorites are 3-7 ATS in the past 10 conference championship games (5-5 outright).
Trends:
-
The 49ers have won 12 straight games, the fifth-longest streak entering a conference championship game in the Super Bowl era.
-
Three of the previous four teams to enter the conference title game on a winning streak of 12-plus games went on to win (the only loser was Pittsburgh in 2004).
AFC Championship
Cincinnati Bengals at Kansas City Chiefs (-1, 47.5 opened KC -2.5)
Sunday, 6:30 p.m. ET, GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri
Betting Nuggets:
-
If Kansas City remains the favorite, the team and Patrick Mahomes will extend their Super Bowl era records of consecutive playoff games favored in.
-
It will be 15 straight for KC and 13 straight for Mahomes. If Kansas City advances to the title game and is favored again, that would give Mahomes a postseason streak twice as long as any other QB to start their career in the Super Bowl era.
-
Joe Burrow has covered nine straight games as an underdog, including going 5-0 ATS as a playoff underdog.
Trends:
-
Seventh conference champ rematch from prior season
-
Kansas City: Fifth straight year hosting conference champ (longest streak in NFL history)
-
Joe Burrow: 3-0 vs. Patrick Mahomes, including playoffs (only QB to beat him three straight times, seeking to pass Brady for most overall wins vs. Mahomes)
-
Cincinnati: Seeking to become the second team to beat same opponent on the road in two consecutive postseasons (Washington, 1986-87, won at Chicago both years)