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A championship appearance is listed as appearing in an NFL Championship (1932—1969), AFL Championship (1960—1969), or Super Bowl Championship (1966—present). Active droughts are listed in bold type.
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):
This also remains as the Lions' fourth and most recent league title and most recent championship appearance (including the Super Bowl) as of 2024, starting a sixty-seven year championship drought for the Lions, which is currently the fourth-longest championship drought in the four major North American sports leagues. [13]
A magical season for the Lions ended one game short of the franchise’s first Super Bowl appearance. ... season to end that drought when Detroit won back-to-back playoff games after winning just ...
Longest Super Bowl, elapsed time between kickoff and end of game, 4 hours, 14 minutes (includes 34 minute power outage in the 3rd quarter) Baltimore Ravens vs. San Francisco (XLVII) [7] Longest Super Bowl, amount of playing time, 74 minutes, 57 seconds (overtime game) Kansas City Chiefs vs. San Francisco 49ers (LVIII)
Sunday’s game was only the second of the 58 Super Bowls to go to overtime. The longest Super Bowl game will also go down as the most-watched program in U.S. television history.
The Chargers' championship win 61 years ago is noted for being the only major sports title for the city of San Diego, the longest drought for a major American city. [13] [14] The Chargers played in San Diego through 2016, then returned to Los Angeles in 2017. The Patriots' first league championship came in the 2001 season in Super Bowl XXXVI.
NFC Championship Game logo, 2008–2010 (Used with old shield since 2005) The structure of the NFL playoffs has changed several times since 1970. At the end of each regular season, the top teams in the NFC qualify for the postseason, including all division champions (three division winners from the 1970–71 to 2001–02 seasons; four since the 2002–03 season) and a set number of "wild card ...