Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The NFL officially counts and includes the statistical records logged by teams that played in the American Football League (AFL) as part of NFL history. Therefore, these teams' pre-merger win–loss records are accounted for. However, the NFL does not officially count All-America Football Conference statistics, despite the 1950 NFL–AAFC ...
A total of 20 franchises, including teams that have relocated to another city or changed their name, have won the Super Bowl. [5] There are four NFL teams that have never appeared in a Super Bowl: the Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lions, Jacksonville Jaguars, and Houston Texans, though both the Browns (1950, 1954, 1955, 1964) and Lions (1935, 1952 ...
This list also counts all seasons since a team last won the league championship or Super Bowl. Of active NFL teams, 20 have won the Super Bowl, 7 have not won a Super Bowl, but have won an AFL or NFL championship pre-merger, and 5 have not won any championship or Super Bowl.
The New England Patriots and Pittsburgh Steelers are tied atop the NFL's all-time Super Bowl leaderboard. Both have won six during their franchise's histories. Fourteen NFL teams have won multiple ...
With a win over the Philadelphia Eagles in New Orleans on Feb. 9, the Chiefs will become the first NFL team to achieve a three-peat since the 1967 Packers, whose run commenced before the first ...
The Worst. 4. Super Bowl XLVIII: February 2, 2014, Met Life Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. ... Pittsburgh edged out “America’s Team” to win a then-record third Super Bowl title, cementing ...
A three-peat. Two teams (the New England Patriots and the Dallas Cowboys) won three Super Bowl titles in four years and the Pittsburgh Steelers won 4 Super Bowl titles in 6 years, which included back to back championships twice. New England did the same from 2016–2018, winning the first and the last Super Bowls of three appearances.
Team with the lowest regular season winning percentage to reach the Super Bowl, 9–7 (0.563) Los Angeles Rams, 1979 Arizona Cardinals, 2008 New York Giants, 2011. Team with the lowest regular season winning percentage to win the Super Bowl, 9–7 (0.563) New York Giants, 2011. Longest playoff game, 82 minutes, 40 seconds