
KENNEBUNK, Maine (AP) â As long as they still have each other, theyâre still going to go to every Super Bowl.
Thatâs the sentiment shared by three friends who say they are the final fans who can claim membership in the exclusive ânever missed a Super Bowlâ club. And theyâre back again for number 58 â Super Bowl 58 â this year.
The three fans, all in their 80s, are Don Crisman of Maine, Gregory Eaton of Michigan and Tom Henschel, who splits time between Florida and Pennsylvania. The three are gathering this weekend in Las Vegas for the big game, and theyâre hoping they can all make it to the sixtieth edition of the game two years from now.
The fans have sat together at the Super Bowl before, and they were still trying to make last-minute arrangements to do that for this yearâs game this week. At the very least, they will get together for brunch on Friday, as always.
Eaton, 84, who runs a ground transportation company in Detroit, has been especially invested in this yearâs football playoffs, as his beloved Detroit Lions won playoff games for the first time in more than three decades. The Lions fell just short of qualifying for their first Super Bowl, but Eaton said getting together with retirees Crisman, 87, and Henschel, 82, is the real draw of going to the big game year after year.
âYeah, Iâm a Lions fan,â Eaton said. âBut in two years, I just hope Iâll be in good shape to be there again.â
The men have attended every game since the first AFL-NFL World Championship Game, the forerunner to the modern Super Bowl, took place in Los Angeles in 1967. This yearâs game is at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Sunday.
Crisman and Henschel first met at the 1983 Super Bowl, but they didnât meet Eaton until the mid-2010s. The fans have said in the past that they might be getting ready to let the tradition go, but every year they make the decision to do it again.
Theyâre part of an ever-dwindling group of people who have attended every Super Bowl that has also included media members, football executives, groundskeepers and others. Norma Hunt, wife of late football pioneer Lamar Hunt, was the sole woman to attend every Super Bowl until she died in June.
The fans all said the one thing that could keep them from attending is if they or one of the other two was not healthy enough or mobile enough to do it. Health concerns have cropped up for all of them in recent years, but they all said theyâre feeling well enough to go this year and planning on the next two.
âI think that might be the factor that would definitely tip it,â Crisman said. âIâm not looking to be the survivor. I just go for the fun, and the guys. Weâll see what this year brings and address it in December â24.â
The three men have witnessed all of the most iconic moments in Super Bowl history, but some of their most cherished memories of the game are a little more personal than David Tyreeâs âhelmet catchâ in Super Bowl 42 or Scott Norwoodâs missed field goal in Super Bowl 25. Crismanâs home is adorned with Super Bowl ephemera, right down to a collectible hat commemorating the first Bud Bowl, a promotion about beer that ran during Super Bowl 23 in 1989.
Eaton fondly remembers he got his tickets to the first Super Bowl from a friend from Michigan State University, Herb Adderley, who played for the Green Bay Packers. Henschel recalls being especially excited for Super Bowl 3 because New York Jets quarterback Joe Namath, like himself, was from the Pittsburgh area.
Crisman hadnât yet acquired tickets for this yearâs game as of mid-January, when telecommunications giant Verizon surprised him with complementary passes for himself and his daughter, Susan Metevier. Getting to Las Vegas will be much easier than his trip to Super Bowl 2 in 1968, which involved a 24-hour train ride to Miami.
The three men reminisce fondly about the era when it was possible to get a ticket to the big game for $8. Henschel recalls getting a face value ticket to Super Bowl 3 for $12 on the day of the game. This year, the cheapest tickets available are more than $7,000.
Henschel, a Pittsburgh Steelers fan, has a friendly rivalry with Crisman, a New England Patriots fan, as the two teams have met frequently in the playoffs over the years.
This year, the Patriots failed to contend, and the Steelers made an early playoff exit. But old traditions die hard, Henschel said.
âItâs funny because Don and I, he hates the Steelers and I hate the Patriots,â Henschel said. âEvery time we see each other for the first time, we give each other the finger.â
Itâll happen again this year. And they hope at least a couple more times after that.