1. The Broncos aren’t the only ones who took a beating.

According to RJ Bell of pregame.com, bettors lost $19.7 million in Las Vegas. That’s largely because 68% bettors sided with the Broncos. It was the worst day for bettors in Super Bowl history.

2. Seattle’s win made Super Bowl spread history.

The Seahawks, who entered the game as 2.5-point underdogs, ended up covering the spread by 37.5 points. That’s the largest cover for any team in the 48-year history of the Super Bowl. The previous record belonged to the 1987 Washington Redskins. They covered by 35 points in Super Bowl XXII, beating the Broncos 42-10 after being three-point underdogs.

3. The house (almost) always wins

For the 22nd time in the past 24 Super Bowls, Vegas came out ahead of the bettors. The last time the sportsbooks lost a Super Bowl was in 2008, when the New York Giants upset the 16-0 New England Patriots. Even then, Vegas came out just $2.6 million in the red.

4. So does the Super Bowl underdog

Underdogs have covered in six of the past seven Super Bowls. The Green Bay Packers were the last favorite to cover the spread, when they beat the Pittsburgh Steelers 31-25 as three-point favorites in Super Bowl XLV.

5. Malcolm who?

No sports book gave individual odds on Seahawks linebacker Malcolm Smith winning the Super Bowl MVP award. Like all unlisted players, Smith was part of the “field” wager, which paid 20/1 in most places.

6. Safeties pay

Most sportsbooks had the odds of a Super Bowl safety at 8/1. A safety being the first score of Super Bowl XLVIII was valued at around 60/1, not 1 million to one, MARK CUBAN.

7. The $10 billion Super Bowl?

Experts estimate that legal gambling in Las Vegas accounts for 1% of all Super Bowl bets. By that metric, there was nearly $12 billion bet on the Super Bowl. That sounds astronomically high, but if the total is legit, it’s more than the GDP of countries such as Nicaragua, Zimbabwe and Albania. That’s also more than the yearly revenue of Fortune 500 companies like Visa, Marriott, Hershey, Heinz and Whole Foods.

8. Coin tosses are truly 50/50 affairs

After Joe Namath’s second toss landed on tails, the head-to-head Super Bowl record between heads and tails is tied at 24.

9. Opera singers don’t stretch out the national anthem

Renee Fleming’s anthem came in at 2:03, more than 20 seconds faster than the over/under on her anthem length. It was one of the longer anthems in recent years, but far quicker than Alicia Keys’ record-setting 2:36 marathon from last year.