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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, 1953, 1957) had won NFL Championship Games prior to the creation of the Super Bowl in the 1966 season.
Of the eligible players, only Jim Plunkett and Eli Manning have won multiple Super Bowls and not been inducted into the Hall of Fame. 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.
2011 Super Bowl (45): Green Bay Packers 31, Pittsburgh Steelers 25. 2012 Super Bowl (46): New York Giants 21, New England Patriots 17. 2013 Super Bowl (47): Baltimore Ravens 34, San Francisco 49ers 31
The Super Bowl — the NFL's championship game — pits the winner of the American Football Conference ... Date: Feb. 2, 2020. Super Bowl LIII: New ... Date: Feb. 6, 2011. Super Bowl XLIV: New ...
The Chiefs won Super Bowl LVII against the Eagles and are seeking another title in the 2025 game, which is also against the Eagles. Super Bowl LIX: TBD Super Bowl LVIII: Chiefs def. 49ers, 25-22, OT
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.
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?
The Chiefs Super Bowl win also completed a ten-year stretch in which each current Missouri-based team in the four major American sports leagues won a title (joining the St. Louis Cardinals, who won the 2011 World Series; the Kansas City Royals, who won the 2015 World Series; and the St. Louis Blues, who won the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals).