Pro Bowl players on the two Super Bowl teams will not participate in the Pro Bowl.
No. Not all teams are represented in the Pro Bowl. Only players voted in by the fans, players and coaches make the Pro Bowl roster. In the last Pro Bowl (2012 season) six teams did not have at least one player on the roster. The teams were: Chargers, Jaguars, Titans, Panthers, Eagles and Rams.
Now that the Pro Bowl is played the week between the Conference Championship games and the Super Bowl, players on Super Bowl teams who make the Pro Bowl are considered Pro Bowlers and they do get paid.
Both teams have had many players play in the NFL Pro Bowl.
No, the players do not pay to go to the Pro Bowl. The winning team of the Pro Bowl game get significantly more money than the losing team, however both teams are well paid.
No. Players from both teams did not participate in the 2011 Pro Bowl, due to the fact that they were playing each other the next week in Super Bowl XLV. This has always been the case, ever since the Pro Bowl was moved to the week prior to the Super Bowl.
Well, that's impossible actually... because the pro bowl teams are made of of players from many different NFL teams. The best individual players from the AFC teams and the NFC teams are voted in, and they comprise an AFC and an NFC team which play in that Pro Bowl only. In the Super Bowl, the actual NFL teams who played the games throughout the season and beat the other playoff teams play each other. For instance, in any given year, one individual player from the Denver Broncos might play in the Pro Bowl because he was voted the best in his division. However, even though he plays in the Pro Bowl with other non-Broncos players, his team (the Broncos) won't go to the Super Bowl unless they beat all the other teams throughout the season.
All first team Pro Bowl players get paid. All Alternates who accept the invitation to play get paid. If an Alternate is named to the tem and declines, they are not considered to be Pro Bowl players and they do not get paid.
All first team Pro Bowl players get paid. All Alternates who accept the invitation to play get paid. If an Alternate is named to the tem and declines, they are not considered to be Pro Bowl players and they do not get paid.
money
The Pro Bowl coaches traditionally were from the losing teams in the NFC and the AFC championship games. But a new formula has been used since the 2010 Pro Bowl, which invites the coaching staffs from losing teams in the divisional playoff games that have the best overall records in each conference. This enables the Pro Bowl coaches to have more time with players since the game is now held the week before the Super Bowl.
Nope