No single, global event has a universally recognized “just”‑completed coin toss, so there is no way to say with certainty who just won it without knowing which game or event you mean and the exact moment you’re asking about.

Likely context: Super Bowl 2026

If you’re asking about the big, very recent coin toss most people are talking about right now (Super Bowl 60 in early February 2026), then:

  • The New England Patriots won the opening Super Bowl 2026 coin toss.
  • The toss result was heads , the Patriots won and chose to defer , so they kicked off to the Seattle Seahawks and will receive to start the second half.

So, in that specific high‑profile case, the answer to “who just won the coin toss?” is: the Patriots , with the coin landing on heads.

Why the question is ambiguous

Coin tosses happen constantly:

  • Before countless football games at different levels and leagues.
  • In other sports, in promotions, and even in TV segments and viral videos.

Without a named event (like “Super Bowl,” “Monday Night Football,” or a specific match), there’s no single authoritative “latest” coin toss result to report.

If you tell me which game, league, or event you mean (for example “today’s Super Bowl” or “the Premier League match between X and Y”), I can narrow it down and give you a precise answer for that specific toss.

TL;DR: If you’re talking about Super Bowl 2026, the Patriots just won the coin toss on heads and deferred; for any other event, I’d need the game or context to answer accurately.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.