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Kurtenbach: Super Bowl 60 is coming to the Bay and San Jose — not San Francisco — should host

Super Bowl 60: The Bay Area is set to host another Super Bowl, but this time, the South Bay should lead the way.

With less than four weeks until Super Bowl 50, Levi’s Stadium is decorated with a large mural of the Lombardi Trophy, on Monday, Jan. 11, 2016, in Santa Clara, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
With less than four weeks until Super Bowl 50, Levi’s Stadium is decorated with a large mural of the Lombardi Trophy, on Monday, Jan. 11, 2016, in Santa Clara, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
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Santa Clara is going to host another Super Bowl. And this time, it should host the whole week’s worth of festivities.

On Monday, NFL owners awarded Levi’s Stadium Super Bowl 60, to be played in February 2026.

It’s a bit of a surprise that it’s returning to the bay, as Super Bowl 50, held in 2016, left a bad taste in everyone’s mouth. Bad planning, bad traffic, bad weather (the sun was out, roasting upper-deck fans), and a downright awful game all led to the belief that Levi’s Stadium’s first Super Bowl would also be its last.

Surely, the 49ers and the NFL will try to fix the mistakes of that Super Bowl week. But the easiest solution isn’t going to San Francisco and using Chase Center or Oracle Park for events. No, it’s hosting the week’s ever-growing list of festivities near the stadium.

Super Bowl LX should be the Silicon Valley Super Bowl, the San Jose Fiesta, the South Bay Celebration.

Sign installers continue dolling up Levi's Stadium with Super Bowl 50 signage on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016, in Santa Clara, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group)
Sign installers continue dolling up Levi’s Stadium with Super Bowl 50 signage on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2016, in Santa Clara, Calif. (Karl Mondon/Bay Area News Group) 

The last time the Super Bowl came to our region, the week of events was focused in San Francisco, the town the 49ers still pretend to represent.

Yes, SAP Center hosted the early-week Opening Night, and the teams practiced at Stanford and San Jose State, but big whoop. The big shots and big events were up north. San Francisco’s Market Street was riddled with America’s favorite narcotic — football — and the Moscone Center, the Ferry Building and Pier 70 were all hot spots throughout the week.

San Jose and the South Bay were an afterthought. So much so that when folks staying in San Francisco hotels needed to get to the game on Sunday, no one seemed to consider Highway 101 traffic.

Fireworks explode over a colorful Super Bowl 50 halftime show in Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Feb. 7, 2016. (Jim Gensheimer/Bay Area News Group Archives)
Fireworks explode over a colorful Super Bowl 50 halftime show in Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara in 2016. (Jim Gensheimer/Bay Area News Group Archives) 

No, the stadium isn’t just “down the street.” That’s a rookie mistake.

It’s an all-too-typical story. There are more than 4 million people in San Mateo, Santa Clara and Alameda counties, and they are far too easily forgotten when we talk about “The Bay.”

Even with some population decline, San Jose remains the Bay Area’s largest city and one of the largest cities in the United States. And it’s a real city, too, unlike so many of the low-density sprawls in Texas, Arizona and Florida. Yet the epicenter of Silicon Valley is treated as if it’s Sacramento by outsiders (and some insiders, too).

So while the lofty “economic impact” numbers that PR agencies toss around are mostly phony, I think there would be value in San Jose, Santa Clara County and the South Bay actually serving as the Super Bowl’s true host this time around.

The reason Levi’s Stadium won the bid for Super Bowl LX is simple: It’s running unopposed.

With the World Cup coming to North America in the summer of 2026, many of the NFL’s top-choice stadiums will need to renovate their fields at the end of the NFL season to better accommodate the other kind of football.

Levi’s is ready, though.

And while San Jose and the South Bay will not be running unopposed for the week’s festivities, after so many decades of being treated as second-best — an afterthought — this region deserves some recognition over The City.

It deserves a celebration of itself.

It’s not as if there’s not enough corporate money in the region to make it happen.

Levi Stadium takes on a party atmosphere during the halftime extravaganza at Super Bowl 50 on Sunday Feb. 7, 2016 at Levis Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. (Shmuel Thaler/ Santa Cruz Sentinel)
Levi Stadium takes on a party atmosphere during the halftime extravaganza at Super Bowl 50 on Sunday Feb. 7, 2016 at Levis Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. (Shmuel Thaler/ Santa Cruz Sentinel) 

And after receiving oodles of public funding from the city of Santa Clara, the least the 49ers can do is campaign to make Super Bowl LX a South Bay affair.

San Jose, in particular, should be the epicenter of the Super Bowl week. So much of the news regarding the city is doom and gloom. But, like all great cities, San Jose is constantly evolving, and there are plenty of signs this current transition will be for the better. I hope all the positives will be celebrated often between now and 2026, but we should put that party on the books anyways.

I want to see Santana Row and San Pedro Square bustling. Let’s extend Christmas in the Park until February — you know the theme.

Let’s welcome every corporate vice president and big-media airhead to a city and region where modern work actually gets done.

Let’s invite the world to a part of the bay they have mistakenly overlooked and underestimated for too long.

We’re really going to do this again, so let’s do it right. Let’s celebrate the South Bay, Silicon Valley and San Jose this time.