Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The other two teams that have never appeared in a Super Bowl (Cleveland and Detroit) both held NFL league championships prior to Super Bowl I in the 1966 NFL season. [n 7] Teams are listed below according to the length of their current Super Bowl droughts (as of the end of the 2023 season, after Super Bowl LVIII):
13 players have won 5 championships counting the pre-Super Bowl era; with the exception of Charles Haley, all were from the 1960s Packers. Bart Starr (quarterback) won the NFL championships with the Green Bay Packers in 1961, 1962 and 1965, Super Bowls I and II with the Packers after the 1966 and 1967 seasons, respectively.
The NFL Championship Game was ended after the 1969 season, succeeded by the NFC Championship Game. [2] [6] The champions of that game play the champions of the AFC Championship Game in the Super Bowl to determine the NFL champion. [2] The Green Bay Packers won the most NFL championships before the merger, winning eleven of the fifty ...
Win a Super Bowl in three different decades. Tom Brady – QB. 2000s: Patriots (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX) 2010s: Patriots (XLIX, LI, LIII) 2020s: Buccaneers ; Win a Super Bowl with one team and then defeat that same team in the Super Bowl the following season [4] Brandon Browner – CB. Seahawks ; Patriots ; Chris Long – DE. Patriots ; Eagles
21. Super Bowl XLV (2011) Green Bay Packers def. Pittsburgh Steelers, 31-25. The never-quit attitude of the Steelers made this a great game after the Packers were dominating 21-10 at halftime.
The Cowboys have the best all-time regular season win-loss percentage at 0.576, and the Steelers are fourth all-time in wins (674) entering Week 5. They have a combined 11 Super Bowl rings.
Peyton Manning and Tom Brady are the only starting quarterbacks to have won Super Bowls for two NFL teams, while Craig Morton and Kurt Warner are the only other quarterbacks to have started for a second team. Jim McMahon won a second Super Bowl ring having been a backup on the Brett Favre-led Green Bay Packers team that won Super Bowl XXXI.
On August 3, 1977, a G.O.A.T. was born. Thomas Edward Patrick Brady Jr., the Greatest Of All Time, entered the world on this day 42 years ago – and has seemingly been in the NFL ever since.