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The following NFL head coaches have coached in two or more Super Bowls. Of eligible coaches not in the Hall of Fame, only two have had three or more appearances: Mike Holmgren and Dan Reeves. There are only two eligible coaches with multiple wins to not be inducted into the Hall of Fame: George Seifert and Mike Shanahan.
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Miami Dolphins, 40 years – Lost Super Bowl XIX, 1984 season; Washington Commanders, 33 years – Won Super Bowl XXVI, 1991 season (played as Washington Redskins) Buffalo Bills, 31 years – Lost Super Bowl XXVIII, 1993 season; Los Angeles Chargers, 30 years – Lost Super Bowl XXIX, 1994 season (played as San Diego Chargers)
The longest tenured head coach on his current team is Mike Tomlin who has been with the Pittsburgh Steelers since 2007. Andy Reid is the only active coach with multiple Super Bowl wins with three. Other active head coaches to have won a Super Bowl are Tomlin, John Harbaugh, Sean McVay, Sean Payton, and Pete Carroll. Reid, Tomlin, Harbaugh, and ...
Michael Martz (born May 13, 1951) is an American football coach. Best known for his coaching tenure with the St. Louis Rams of the National Football League (NFL), he served as the offensive coordinator for the Rams' Greatest Show on Turf offense in 1999 that led the franchise to its first Super Bowl title in Super Bowl XXXIV.
AP Coach of the Year (1995) Sporting News Coach of the Year (1995) UPI NFC Coach of the Year (1995) [11] [30] 20 Andy Reid: 1999–2012: 224 130 93 1 .583 19 10 9 AP Coach of the Year (2002) Pro Football Weekly Coach of the Year (2002) Sporting News Coach of the Year (2000, 2002) [11] [31] 21 Chip Kelly: 2013–2015: 47 26 21 0 .553 1 0 1 [32 ...
Six other coaches—Don Coryell, Jim Hanifan, Vince Tobin, Ken Whisenhunt, Bruce Arians, and Kliff Kingsbury—have led the Cardinals to the playoffs, and in 2009 they went to the Super Bowl. [3] There have been 43 head coaches for the Cardinals franchise since it became a professional team in 1920; fourteen of the team's coaches are former ...
The years listed are the years where the coaches listed below made the playoffs, not the entire span of the coach's career. Championship appearances (Super Bowl starting in 1966) are also listed, with championship wins being in bold. Note that only NFL/AFL years are counted, so those from the AAFC in Paul Brown's case are not included.