HOUSTON – If you looked at all the major ticket sellers, the prices for Super Bowl tickets dropped immediately after the Dallas Cowboys lost to the Green Bay Packers on Sunday.
We wanted to know if that will have any impact on Houston's financial success during this event.
"I still think it's going to be absolutely insane," Candice Aycox, with Ready For Super Bowl, said.
"Better Uber wherever you have to go, because it's going to be a crazy place," Ralph Brown, also with Ready For Super Bowl, said.
No doubt Houston is a sports town.
"Houston knows how to throw a party. We expect a lot of Texans to come in because it's in their backyard," A.J. Mistretta of Visit Houston said.
Even though the price of Super Bowl tickets dropped after the Cowboys were knocked out, there's little concern it will affect the financial windfall the Houston area is expected to reap.
"We're going to have a sellout game no matter what, no matter how you slice it. A lot of folks come in for the game, but a lot of folks come in for the parties, for the experience," Mistretta said.
Some think had Dallas won, then Houston would be even more crowded than it's going to be.
"Obviously, you're going to have a higher demand if they're in a closer vicinity," Aycox said.
But Sherrie Handrinos disagrees.
She runs her own marketing company and has seen no cancellation in Cowboys fans' plans to have parties in Houston.
"Whether they were there or not, they're still coming in town and having parties here," Handrinos said. "People want to come for the experience of Super Bowl, no matter what city it's in."
Good news for business, bad news for at least some Texans fans.
"I'm just glad the Cowboys aren't it, to be honest. I'm a Houston Texans fan," Ali Girdley, Ready For Super Bowl, said.
Consensus is yes, had the Texans or the Cowboys been in the Super Bowl, it would have been an even bigger event here. But it's the Super Bowl, which means the city is still going to be packed with plenty of people willing to spend their money.