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Winning team and Losing team columns indicate the number of times that team has appeared in a Super Bowl as well as each respective teams' Super Bowl record to date. Venue column indicates number of times that stadium has hosted a Super Bowl. City column indicates number of times that metropolitan area has hosted a Super Bowl.
The 1968 AFL champion New York Jets with Joe Namath at quarterback became the first AFL team to win the Super Bowl. Starting with that Super Bowl, the AFL or AFC champion won 11 out of 13 Super Bowls. However, the AFC champion lost 13 consecutive Super Bowls, from the 1984 AFC champion Miami Dolphins through the 1996 AFC champion New England ...
John Elway started five Super Bowls, winning two. Jim Kelly started four Super Bowls without winning any, a record. He's one of eight quarterbacks who have started at least four Super Bowls. Super Bowl wins are often used to determine the greatness of a quarterback. [1] Of the eligible players, only Jim Plunkett and Eli Manning have won ...
All of those teams have at least made the Super Bowl and more than half have won it. Here's the list of every Super Bowl winner since that Chiefs-Packers game on Jan. 15, 1967:
Super Bowl 58: Kansas City Chiefs 25, San Francisco 49ers 22 (OT) The Chiefs and Eagles will play in the 59th edition of the Super Bowl on Feb. 9, 2025. Which NFL teams have won the most Super Bowls?
Patrick Mahomes and Lamar Jackson. Getty Images (2) The Kansas City Chiefs and the Baltimore Ravens competed for a spot in the 2024 Super Bowl during the AFC Championship Game on Sunday, January 28.
The $3 million indemnity that the Steelers received for joining the AFC with the rest of the former AFL teams after the merger helped them rebuild into a contender, drafting eventual-Pro Football Hall of Famers like Terry Bradshaw and Joe Greene, and ultimately winning four Super Bowls in the 1970s. [61]
By contrast, the NFC has sent 13 of the 16 NFC teams during that same time frame with only the Detroit Lions, Minnesota Vikings, and Washington Commanders missing out on an appearance in the Super Bowl. 17 of the 19 AFC champions from 2001 to 2019 have started one of just three quarterbacks - Tom Brady, Peyton Manning and Ben Roethlisberger ...