The 30-year-old model is celebrating the Maroon 5 frontman!
Behati Prinsloo is proud of her husband!
The 30-year-old model took to Instagram on Sunday to cheer on husband Adam Levine as he prepares to perform at the halftime show during Super Bowl LIII with his band, Maroon 5.
Prinsloo shared a shot of Levine and the rest of Maroon 5 walking onto the field ahead of their big performance.
"Once in a life time....so proud of these boys @maroon5 #superbowl53 ?," she gushed in the caption.
Ahead of the big game between the Los Angeles Rams and New England Patriots, Levine sat down exclusively with ET's Kevin Frazier and revealed how Prinsloo and their two daughters -- Dusty, 2, and Gio, 11 months -- will be celebrating his halftime moment, which will also include Travis Scott and Big Boi.
"The little, little kids, they are going to stay home," the 39-year-old singer shared. "It is a little bit of a fiasco out here, it is a little crazy, so we are going to keep them home... but they are going to watch on TV and I am going to wear daddy bracelets so they can see that I am representing them well... They get to watch on TV, I am sure they prefer that too, instead of the chaos."
"My wife will be out here, though, very, very soon, which will be nice," he added.
Also during ET's sit-down with the Maroon 5 frontman, he opened up about his band's decision to take on the gig, something that was cloaked in controversy following the NFL's stance to Colin Kaepernick and others who took a knee during the national anthem as a form of peaceful protest against police brutality.
"You know, I think when you look back on every Super Bowl halftime show, it is this insatiable urge to hate a little bit," he said. "I am not in the right profession if I can't handle a bit of controversy. It is what it is. We would like to move on from it and speak through the music."
Despite the quasi-inevitable nature of the controversy, Levine said that "no one thought about it more than I did."
"No one put more thought and love into this than I did," he said of his decision to perform. "... I spoke to many people, most importantly though, I silenced all the noise and listened to myself, and made my decision about how I felt."
"I think we wanted to make sure we were able to speak once again through the music, so yes, absolutely, once we processed these things, it took a lot of looking inward and introspection," he continued. "And I thought to myself, 'What is my greatest tool, you know, what is the thing that I can use to express myself ... the best way for the band to express themselves, and how are we going to do it this year? What do we owe ourselves, what do we owe the people?'"
"That is what we did, and I am beyond proud of the finished product, and literally never, never been more excited in my entire life to present this to the people because I believe that it's truly a reflection of all of us," he added.
Watch more of ET's interview with Levine below:
RELATED CONTENT: