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Super Bowl patches are hot collectible

Members of the press covering the Super Bowl have been given patches in past years. (John Kucko)
Members of the press covering the Super Bowl have been given patches in past years. (John Kucko)
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Updated: 1/24 10:41 am
By John Kucko

(Penfield, NY)  During the Super Bowl's early stages, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle was trying to build media interest in the showcase game.  During some of those early Super Bowl's, the NFL would give reporter's covering the game, a commemorative patch featuring the game's logo for that year. This was a practice that continued right up until Super Bowl 40.  Patches from past Super Bowls remain a valued collectible.  When the idea for the "Big Game" was hatched in the 1960's, Rozelle was adamant about winning over the press.  He would load them up with little trinkets to incur their favorable coverage.  It worked!  The Super Bowl has morphed into something that not even the legendary Rozelle could have envisioned.

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Quick Facts

Location: New Orleans - Mercedes-Benz Superdome
Kickoff: Sunday, February 3 @ 6:30pm
National Anthem Performed by: Alicia Keys
Halftime Entertainment by: Beyonce

Lombardi Trophy Facts

The Vince Lombardi Super Bowl Trophy was first named to honor the former Green Bay Packers Coach/General Manager in 1971, when the game was still known as the AFL-NFL World Championship. It is considered to be the National Football League's most prestigious award. Traditionally, the NFL Commissioner presents the Trophy to the owner of the winning team on Super Bowl Sunday at a field ceremony in their honor.

Handcrafted by Tiffany & Co. and valued at $12,500, the Vince Lombardi Trophy depicts a football in kicking position that is made entirely of sterling silver. The words "Vince Lombardi Trophy" and the NFL official logo are engraved on the base of the award. The trophy itself stands 22 inches tall, weighs seven pounds and takes 72 man-hours to create.
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