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Detroit Lions, 59 years – NFL champions four times in 1935, 1952, 1953, and 1957; appeared in one other NFL Championship Game in 1954; and appeared in two NFC Championship Games in the 1991 and 2023 seasons. [85] New York Jets, 56 years – Won Super Bowl III, 1968 season [86] [n 8] Minnesota Vikings, 48 years – Lost Super Bowl XI, 1976 season
This year’s game will be played at Caesars Superdome in New Orleans. It's the city's 11th time hosting the Super Bowl. Before the game on Feb. 9, read below for a little history of the Super Bowl.
Here is a year-by-year list of every Super Bowl: ... Miami | Date: Feb. 2, 2020. Super Bowl LIII: New England Patriots 13, Los Angeles Rams ... Pre-Super Bowl era league champions. 1965: Green Bay ...
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.
In the history of championships in major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada (which include the NFL, MLB, NBA, and NHL), a city/metropolitan area has been home to multiple championships in a season 19 times, most recently in 2020 when the Tampa Bay Lightning won the 2020 Stanley Cup and Tampa Bay Buccaneers won Super Bowl LV.
The Big Ten has undergone a drastic transformation over the past three decades. What was, true to its name, a 10-team league for 40 years expanded to 11 when it added Penn State in 1990 . It was ...
The Packers entered the Super Bowl never having trailed by more than 7 points at any point during the season—a feat that had never been accomplished during a complete season in the Super Bowl era. The last team to complete a season with this distinction was the Detroit Lions in 1962. [25] In the Super Bowl game itself, the Packers never trailed.
46–10 Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana: January 25, 1987 XXI: Bill Parcells: New York Giants: Denver Broncos: Dan Reeves: 39–20 Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena, California: January 31, 1988 XXII: Joe Gibbs (2) Washington Redskins: Denver Broncos: Dan Reeves [2] 42–10 Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego, California: January 22 ...