This post comes from our friends at TicketIQ.

As the biggest Super Bowl underdog since 2009, the Eagles fans have responded with ticket demand that could make PHI-LII one of the most lopsided crowds in Super Bowl history.

During yesterday’s media day, Tom Brady made reference to the 2005 game in Jacksonville being a ‘Philly Crowd’. In 2005, Patriots Super Bowl ticket demand was peak. That was just the third Patriots Super Bowl in the Brady era. They’ve had six more since then, and fans have likely spent over $300 million on tickets alone. As a result, they’re very tired, at least financially speaking. On TicketIQ, the cheapest ticket on Eagles side is $4,000 while the cheapest get-in is $3,750, which puts you in the nose bleeds on the Pats side.

While overall ticket prices dropped significantly after the Vikings got thumped at the Linc, they appear to be climbing back up. Since Sunday, prices are up 20%. Like LII, LI had historically low secondary quantity for sales, and in the final five days last year, prices rose 50%, as the 7-Day chart below shows.

TicketIQ founder Jesse Lawrence suggests that fans who just want to get in the door don’t worry about sides and that the Pats section could be 50% Eagles at kickoff. Traffic on TicketIQ is 5:1 in favor of the Eagles.

While the Eagles lost their only Super Bowl match-up against Brady, they beat them the last time they played during the regular season in 2015, in Foxborough to boot. As we all know, the Underdogs Eagles have nothing to lose, which may be just the edge they need. With the majority of US Bank shaping up to be Eagles fans, light poles beware.

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