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Season Predictions

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Super Bowl picks, odds, scores for Chiefs vs. Eagles: Who do analysts predict will win on Sunday?

Will Andy Reid, Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs become the first team ever to win three consecutive Super Bowls? Can Nick Sirianni's Philadelphia Eagles flip the script from SB LVII and secure the franchise's second Lombardi Trophy on Sunday?

Our analysts provide their Super Bowl LIX picks.

  • WHERE: Caesars Superdome (New Orleans)
  • WHEN: 6:30 p.m. ET | FOX, Tubi, FOX Deportes, Telemundo, NFL+
  • MONEYLINE: Chiefs -120 | Eagles +100
  • SPREAD: Chiefs -1.5 | O/U: 48.5
  • Lines provided by DraftKings are current as of 7 a.m. ET on Wednesday, Feb. 5.


OVERALL TRENDS FROM THE PICKS BELOW

  • Average score prediction for the Chiefs: 26.9
  • Average score prediction for the Eagles: 25.2
  • Average total points scored: 52.0

Keegan Abdoo: Chiefs 27, Eagles 21

  • Why: Patrick Mahomes is nearly perfect and cements the Chiefs as a historic dynasty, with Steve Spagnuolo's defense coming up with just enough stops to solidify a Kansas City victory.


Jack Andrade: Chiefs 20, Eagles 17

  • Why: Another close win for the Chiefs to complete the three-peat as Chris Jones takes advantage of the Eagles' OL injuries to win Super Bowl MVP.


Mike Band: Chiefs 24, Eagles 20

  • Why: As he does best, Patrick Mahomes leads the Chiefs on a game-winning touchdown drive in the closing minutes of Super Bowl LIX. Vic Fangio's defense bends but doesn't break ... until the game's final drive.


Judy Battista: Chiefs 28, Eagles 24

  • Why: The Eagles look like the more complete, balanced team, but it's impossible to pick against the Chiefs in this situation. Steve Spagnuolo will figure out a way to limit the damage from Saquon Barkley, and Patrick Mahomes will get enough support from bit players (as he did in the AFC Championship Game) to complete the three-peat and make history.


Ali Bhanpuri: Chiefs 27, Eagles 24

  • Why: In a back-and-forth ballgame that includes at least one Saquon Barkley breakaway score, the Chiefs prevail -- and make NFL history -- thanks to yet another Patrick Mahomes-led game-winning drive.


Tom Blair: Chiefs 26, Eagles 21

  • Why: I have no choice. The Eagles can and probably should win, but in the end, I think one of the best Super Bowl-capturing operations in recorded history will simply find a way to make it happen again.


David Carr: Chiefs 30, Eagles 27

  • Why: The Eagles tie up the game late in the fourth quarter but leave too much time on the clock for Patrick Mahomes to work his magic. The Chiefs win their third championship in a row after Harrison Butker nails a 53-yard field goal as time expires. 


Brooke Cersosimo: Chiefs 27, Eagles 23

  • Why: I strayed a bit at midseason -- that feels silly in hindsight -- but I’m back to my preseason Super Bowl pick. The Chiefs have proven time and time again that they will come through on the biggest stage, and well, it doesn’t get much bigger than having a three-peat on the line. I expect Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes to outcoach and outplay their Philly foes to secure their third Lombardi Trophy in as many seasons.

 

Jeffri Chadiha: Chiefs 24, Eagles 23

  • Why: Philadelphia’s defense will force a couple turnovers, but Kansas City will contain Saquon Barkley enough to give Patrick Mahomes a chance to lead a game-winning drive in the final minute.


Eric Edholm: Chiefs 28, Eagles 25

  • Why: I really think the Eagles have a great chance to win, but the Chiefs just have not let games get away from them this season. They always seem to find the formula for victory, and Patrick Mahomes is just better than Jalen Hurts.


Michael F. Florio: Chiefs 28, Eagles 24

  • Why: Chiefs over Eagles was my Super Bowl pick in the preseason, and I am sticking with it. Kansas City has arguably the best head coach-coordinator duo in league history, Chris Jones is the best defensive playoff performer I have seen and I do not need to tell you how good the Patrick Mahomes-Travis Kelce combo is. Until someone beats the Chiefs, I'm not picking against them.


Christian Gonzales: Chiefs 34, Eagles 27

  • Why: Patrick Mahomes finds Travis Kelce for two touchdowns, while Jalen Hurts and Saquon Barkley rush for 100-plus yards each. However, the Chiefs’ championship DNA is strong in the final minutes of the game as Kansas City makes NFL history with a three-peat.


Grant Gordon: Chiefs 23, Eagles 18

  • Why: Kelly Green is no match for the Big Red machine. Despite being miscast in the role of villains, Andy Reid, Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce and the Chiefs will provide us with a moment we will long look back upon as they become the first Super Bowl three-peaters. Much like the 49ers before them, the Eagles will fight valiantly to the end in a Super Bowl rematch only to find the same heartbreaking fate against the Kansas City juggernaut. Mahomes will drive the Chiefs down for a game-winning TD en route to Super Bowl MVP honors before Chris Jones closes it out with a sack of Jalen Hurts.


Anthony Holzman-Escareno: Chiefs 30, Eagles 27

  • Why: No. 15 is inevitable. The best player in NFL history adds another Super Bowl MVP to his ledger to join Michael Jordan (6), Tom Brady (5) and LeBron James (4) as the only players in NFL/NBA/MLB/NHL history with at least four career championship MVP awards.


Maurice Jones-Drew: Chiefs 45, Eagles 42

  • Why: Saquon Barkley will make all former and current running backs proud in this game, but just like in past years, it will be Patrick Mahomes who gets the last laugh. The three-time Super Bowl MVP executes a game-winning drive to give Kansas City its fourth Lombardi in six years and further cement himself as the best player of his generation.


Dante Koplowitz-Fleming: Chiefs 33, Eagles 30 (OT)

  • Why: Another Super Bowl rematch and another wash-and-repeat win for the Chiefs, as Patrick Mahomes leads them down the field to set up another game-winning chip shot by Harrison Butker -- but this time in overtime.


Bobby Kownack: Chiefs 30, Eagles 27

  • Why: Philadelphia boasts both a better-ranked offense and defense, with a triple-digit advantage over Kansas City in point differential this season. Naturally, Patrick Mahomes will still find a way to win it in the final minute.


Gerald McCoy: Chiefs 28, Eagles 21

  • Why: With both the Chiefs and Eagles having no shortage of playmakers on both sides of the ball, the biggest disparity between them is coaching. Andy Reid and Steve Spagnuolo got the best of Nick Sirianni's group two years ago, and they'll do it again Sunday. 


Dan Parr: Chiefs 27, Eagles 24

  • Why: The Eagles are the better all-around squad, but the best team doesn’t always win. The Chiefs’ edge at quarterback allows them to squeak out of New Orleans with a three-peat.


Kevin Patra: Chiefs 27, Eagles 25

  • Why: Patrick Mahomes.


Lance Zierlein: Chiefs 23, Eagles 21

  • Why: The Chiefs are inevitable -- at least that's the way it's starting to feel. They played their least-consistent football in years in 2024 and yet kept winning, and now they are playing their best ball of the season. This will be a hard-fought game, one that comes down to the wire. Ultimately, though, Mahomes and Reid get their fourth ring.

Michael Baca: Eagles 27, Chiefs 23

  • Why: An evenly matched affair comes down to a crucial Brotherly Shove play on the game's final drive, but Philadelphia fakes out Kansas City's defense and instead calls a pass to A.J. Brown that scores the game-winning touchdown and prevents the first-ever Super Bowl three-peat. 

 

Jeremy Bergman: Eagles 23, Chiefs 18

  • Why: Kansas City's dominance in one-score games comes to an end with its three-peat on the line. Behind Saquon Barkley, the Eagles control time of possession and earn their second Lombardi.


Gennaro Filice: Eagles 27, Chiefs 17

  • Why: I'm rolling with the best roster over the best player. Fading Patrick Mahomes is typically foolish, but Philadelphia's loaded defense is the most imposing unit in this matchup by a comfortable margin.


Matt Okada: Eagles 26, Chiefs 23

  • Why: While Patrick Mahomes and Andy Reid can pull a win out of just about anywhere, the Eagles' defense is peaking and their run game is unstoppable. Philly forces three turnovers and outlasts a late-game surge by the Chiefs to stop the three-peat.


Chad Reuter: Eagles 31, Chiefs 28

  • Why: This Eagles team is ready. Their offensive and defensive lines are strong, Saquon Barkley will eat, and kicker Jake Elliott will make a 42-yard field goal (despite his issues with long field goals, he’s 9-of-10 from 40-49 yards this season) to cement himself a spot in Philadelphia sports lore.


Marc Ross: Eagles 30, Chiefs 28

  • Why: Kansas City's winning magic has to end at some point, doesn't it? The Eagles almost beat the Chiefs in the Super Bowl two Februarys ago, and Philly is drastically better now than it was then. With Saquon Barkley on offense and the league's top-ranked defense, the Eagles are simply the better team overall. Look for another close one, but the Eagles deny the Chiefs a historic finish by converting a Brotherly Shove in the last minute.


Nick Shook: Eagles 30, Chiefs 26

  • Why: Jalen Hurts and the Eagles exact revenge in a wild affair in the Big Easy, capping a magical title run in fitting fashion via a game-sealing Saquon Barkley touchdown scamper.

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