NEW YORK — Super Bowl Sunday is one of the busiest home-cooking days of the year, and safety data shows the most dangerous moment isn’t kickoff — it’s halftime.
Halftime is when kitchens surge back into action. Food is reheated, knives come out again, blenders are restarted and ovens are reopened — all while attention snaps back toward the television. Parents move quickly, juggle multiple tasks and assume they will only step away for a moment.
That moment matters.
Data tied to Super Bowl weekend shows a clear rise in kitchen-related injuries, with lacerations and burns accounting for the majority of reported cases. Cuts from knives, burns from ovens and contact with hot surfaces are the most common injuries, and they are most often linked to distraction and rushed food preparation.
Guacamole preparation is a repeat problem. National injury tracking has documented tens of thousands of emergency room visits over the years tied specifically to avocado-cutting injuries, many occurring during large food-prep events such as the Super Bowl.
In New York, housing density intensifies the risk. Many families cook in smaller kitchens, often in apartments where counter space is limited and foot traffic is constant. During halftime, movement peaks as people move between rooms, answer doors or reset food — just as focus drops.
Parents often don’t see this moment as dangerous because it feels routine. Cooking is familiar. Kids are nearby. The game is paused. But safety officials consistently point to divided attention — not lack of experience — as the leading factor behind these injuries.
Most Super Bowl-related kitchen accidents don’t happen after the final whistle. They happen during the busiest stretch, when everyone is rushing to be ready before play resumes.
For families across New York City, Buffalo and communities statewide, halftime isn’t just a break in the game. It’s the window when kitchens get crowded, attention slips and small mistakes turn into emergency room visits.


