Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Dallas Cowboys won two consecutive Super Bowls (XXVII and XXVIII); the following season they were eliminated in the NFC Championship Game by the eventual Super Bowl XXIX champion San Francisco 49ers. The Cowboys won Super Bowl XXX the following year for three titles in four seasons, and thus were two wins away from four consecutive Super ...
Armed with Bill Walsh's innovative West Coast offense, Hall of Fame level quarterback play in Joe Montana and later Steve Young, and a dominant defense, the 49ers would win five Super Bowls in 1981, 1984, 1988, 1989, and 1994, and made the playoffs every year but 1982 and 1991 during their run of dominance.
The Giants won the next three playoff meetings, which included a 49–3 rout at Giants Stadium in 1986, and the 1990 NFC championship, where they upset the 49ers 15–13, ruining the 49ers hopes of a Super Bowl three-peat after Roger Craig lost a fumble late in the fourth quarter and let the Giants score on a last-second field goal. Giants also ...
Super Bowl 23: San Francisco 49ers 20, Cincinnati Bengals 16. Super Bowl 24: San Francisco 49ers 55, Denver Broncos 10. Super Bowl 25: New York Giants 20, Buffalo Bills 19. Super Bowl 26 ...
Mahomes earned his first Super Bowl win in a sound, 31-20 win over the 49ers in Super Bowl 54. ... When is last time Chiefs made Super Bowl? Kansas City history, record. Show comments.
It would mark New England’s last Super Bowl win until 2015, and the Eagles would finally avenge this loss in 2018. ... Super Bowl XXIII (1989) San Francisco 49ers def. Cincinnati Bengals, 20-16.
The 49ers entered the game seeking to win their second straight Super Bowl. Bill Walsh retired as head coach after San Francisco's 20–16 win over the Cincinnati Bengals in the previous year's Super Bowl, but rookie head coach George Seifert did not miss a beat, as he guided the 49ers to a league-best 14–2 regular season record. Their two ...
Quarterback Y. A. Tittle. The 49ers' first game as a member of the NFL was a home match with the New York Yanks on September 17, 1950. San Francisco lost 21–17. Unlike the Cleveland Browns, who won the championship that year, the 49ers struggled in the NFL, finishing the 1950 season 3–9.