Minnesota Vikings 2010 Super Bowl Betting Odds: With a story-book ending to a unforgettable career within his grasps, Brett Favre leads the Minnesota Vikings into enemy territory tonight at 6:45 PM ET (3:45 PM PT) on FOX. In what would likely be a record-breaking game, all Minnesota has to do is beat the NFC’s top-seed in a dome full of crazy “Who Dat!” screaming heads… difficult but now impossible! If so, 40-year-old, No.4 will reserve his team a spot in the 2010 Super Bowl Betting Odds across the field from either the Mark Sanchez and the Jets or from Peyton Manning and the Colts.
According to 2010 Super Bowl Betting Odds makers at BODOG.com, the Minnesota Vikings [4/1 or +400 ML] Betting Odds of winning the 2010 Super Bowl XLIV in Miami, Florida are at the moment third best. Wants to see who’s got a leg up on Favre and the Vikings in the 2010 Super Bowl Betting Odds category? Just visit BODOG.com NOW and bet on your favorite!
The NFC Championship game will be a battle between the NFL’s No.1 vs No.2 scoring offenses. "You never know what could take place at any given moment," Vikings left tackle Bryant McKinnie said.
"It's huge," emerging Vikings wide receiver Sidney Rice said. "They have just as many weapons as we do."
Given the statistics, both defenses come into this classic matchup with the idea that this could easily turn into track-meat in a matter of no time at all. "Basically, you have to put yourself in a four-quarter mode, no matter what happens," linebacker Chad Greenway said. "Obviously, they can do a few things and do them well. They're not the highest-scoring offense for no reason. They're going to come out and put points up and move the ball; we just have to bend but not break."
"You have to be careful not to have the mind-set that we have to score every time we get the ball — although, they might," Favre said. "I know you can't go out and press; you can't make it any worse than it is."
"Just about the time you put it in a box as a high-scoring game — No.1 and No.2 scoring offenses — it doesn't turn out that way," Vikings head coach Brad Childress said. "How do you know how the ball bounces?"




