The Latest: Bettors sticking with favorite Panthers

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) The Latest on Super Bowl Sunday from AP reporters covering the game, the telecast, the commercials and fans around the world (All times local):

3:10 p.m.

Bettors liked the Carolina Panthers all the way to kickoff in the legal sports books in Las Vegas.

The Panthers were 5.5 point favorites to win the Super Bowl at some books, and 5 point favorites at others in a betting line that barely budged for two weeks.

''It's been Carolina from the beginning to the end,'' said Nick Bogdanovich, the oddsmaker at the William Hill chain. ''We've been at 5.5 points forever.''

Bettors also loved the so-called ''props'' in the game, which books put on the board by the hundreds. Bettors could bet anything from whether the first score of the game was a safety to whether Peyton Manning would take the last offensive snap of the game for the Denver Broncos.

Bogdanovich said professional gamblers liked the under in the game, prompting his book to drop it from 45 to 44 points before game day.

Bettors stood in lines 10-15 deep much of Sunday waiting to place their bets. Most bookmakers said they expect the game to have a chance to surpass the record total of $119.4 million wagered legally in Nevada books two years ago.

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2:55 p.m.

Peyton Manning's best receiver joined him on the field before the big game.

Marvin Harrison, who was elected into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday, greeted Manning during pre-game warmups. Harrison played his entire career with the Indianapolis Colts, including 11 seasons with Manning.

Harrison was joined on the field by Tony Dungy, who also was elected into the Hall of Fame on Saturday. Dungy, Manning and Harrison led the Colts to a Super Bowl title nine years ago.

- Rob Maaddi reporting from Santa Clara.

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5:07 p.m. (EST)

The ''Let's Move'' campaign is taking a short hiatus at the White House for the Super Bowl.

The campaign, led by First Lady Michelle Obama, is focused on curbing obesity, but she admits that the first family takes ''Let's Move'' rules off the table for the big game.

President Barack Obama says the Obamas will watch the game with a regular group of friends. The president says they'll eat wings, pizza and nachos. He says there's also a vegetable tray ''that nobody touches.''

Michelle Obama says the football game's serious watchers go to the Treaty Room of the White House. She also says there's a champagne room ''where you really don't know what's going on, but you're close to the champagne.''

The president and first lady spoke before the game to CBS News' Gayle King.

- Will Lester reporting from Washington.

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1:12 p.m.

Both teams have arrived at Levi's Stadium for the Super Bowl.

MVP quarterback Cam Newton walked in decked out in his typical flashy style. He wore black pants, a black shirt with a bow tie and a black-and-white sports coat along with sparkly black loafers - with no socks, of course.

Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning arrived with a more traditional and conservative blue blazer with a white shirt, orange tie and gray pants.

- Steve Reed reporting from Santa Clara, California.

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12:29 p.m.

There will be two reigning MVPs on hand at Levi's Stadium today for Super Bowl 50.

Golden State Warriors guard and NBA MVP Stephen Curry will bang the ''Keep Pounding'' drum for the Panthers, the team confirmed Sunday. Curry, who grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina, and played at nearby Davidson College, remains a huge Panthers fan. He even wore Panthers gear at Warriors practice the day of the NFC championship.

Panthers quarterback Cam Newton was named the NFL's MVP on Saturday night.

Curry also hit the drum before the team's home opener against the Houston Texans. The Panthers viewed it as a good luck since they didn't lose at home all season.

Hitting the drum before the game is a tradition honoring the late Sam Mills, a former Panthers linebacker and coach who died of intestinal cancer inspired the message of ''Keep Pounding.''

- Steve Reed reporting from Santa Clara, California.

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12:20 p.m.

Team spokesman Steven Drummond said the Panthers had no problems with curfew on Saturday night and there have been no off-the-field issues leading up the Super Bowl.

''We have checked all of the boxes and we're good to go,'' Drummond said.

- Steve Reed reporting from Santa Clara, California.

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12:05 p.m.

You can follow the Super Bowl on the Empire State Building.

The building will become a virtual scoreboard, tracking the game action. At kickoff, the building's tower lights will be split in the colors of the Broncos and Panthers. Each score, the building will sparkle in the scoring team's colors and remain lit for the team holding the lead. After the game, the building will sparkle in the winning team's colors for one hour. It will remain lit for the Super Bowl champion until sunrise.

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11:40 a.m.

Security was heavy and visible Sunday around Super Bowl locations, from hotels in San Francisco to Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara.

Drones are banned around the stadium and there are overall flight restrictions.

And San Francisco will not have large-scale public viewing spot downtown, unlike the way the city offered such opportunities for the baseball San Francisco Giants' World Series championship runs in 2010, `12 and `14.

The FBI opened a multi-agency command post last week about six miles from Levi's Stadium that will be continuously staffed.

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11:30 a.m.

Fleets of buses carrying fans and media to Levi's Stadium left San Francisco - where many of the Super Bowl week events took place - around 9:30 a.m. Sunday, arriving in Santa Clara about an hour later.

The West Coast location means the game starts at 3:30 p.m. local, and the tailgating started around 10:30 a.m.

A little early for beer and sausage, although that probably won't stop anyone. Some of the tailgates also offered breakfast fare.