|
Sparks, Keys, Petty headline Super show
Ben Walker
PHOENIX—She’s just a rookie, and already Jordin Sparks is going further
in the NFL than her father. Only 2 1/2 months after the youngest
“American Idol” winner released her debut album, the teen is set to
perform the national anthem Sunday at the Super Bowl. In nine years as a
pro cornerback, pop Phillippi Sparks never reached the big game.
“I said, ‘Dad, I’m singing at the Super Bowl,’” she said Thursday. “He
said, ‘At least one of us made it.’” No surprise about which team she’ll
root for when the New York Giants play the New England Patriots. Her dad
spent all but one season with the Giants.
“There definitely is a tie with them,” the 18-year-old Sparks said. “I
got to go for the underdogs.” Sparks considers herself a “huge,
humongous football fan.” Nine-time Grammy Award winner Alicia Keys, who
will provide the pregame entertainment, is less so — most of the time,
anyway.
“Even I, who might think the Mighty Ducks and Penguins are playing, love
the Super Bowl,” Keys said. For the record, she’s pulling for her
hometown Giants.
Tom Petty, headlining the halftime show with his Heartbreakers, stayed
neutral. “I’m for everybody,” he said. The Rock and Roll Hall of Famer,
however, has a fan in Bill Belichick. In a light moment for him, the
Patriots coach admitted he was sorry to miss Petty’s performance and
said he might play the band’s CDs while preparing for the game.
“Well, it’s never kept anyone from winning,” Petty said. Like previous
halftime performers Prince, the Rolling Stones and U2, Petty’s greatest
challenge will come in whittling down his band’s work into a tight set.
They have a total of 12 minutes to perform, and that includes moving 56
carts on and off the field.
“There’s this football game that has to go on,” Petty said. Petty grew
up in Gainesville, Fla., and does root for the Gators. He also wasn’t
picking any political candidates, even though his “American Girl” was
blasting during Hillary Clinton’s recent campaign rallies in New
Hampshire. |