List of Super Bowl Champions
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- | |align=center|[[NFL | + | |align=center|[[NFL Super Bowl 44|XLIV]] |
|February 7, 2010 | |February 7, 2010 | ||
| style="background:#d0e7ff;"|[[New Orleans Saints Season (2009)|New Orleans Saints]]<sup>*</sup> | | style="background:#d0e7ff;"|[[New Orleans Saints Season (2009)|New Orleans Saints]]<sup>*</sup> | ||
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- | |align=center|[[NFL | + | |align=center|[[NFL Super Bowl 45|XLV]] |
|February 6, 2011 | |February 6, 2011 | ||
| style="background:#d0e7ff;"|[[Green Bay Packers Season (2010)|Green Bay Packers]]<sup>*</sup> (5)<sup>[note 3]</sup> | | style="background:#d0e7ff;"|[[Green Bay Packers Season (2010)|Green Bay Packers]]<sup>*</sup> (5)<sup>[note 3]</sup> | ||
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- | |align=center|[[NFL | + | |align=center|[[NFL Super Bowl 46|XLVI]] |
|February 5, 2012 | |February 5, 2012 | ||
| style="background:#d0e7ff;"|[[New York Giants Season (2011)|New York Giants]]<sup>*</sup> (5) | | style="background:#d0e7ff;"|[[New York Giants Season (2011)|New York Giants]]<sup>*</sup> (5) | ||
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- | |align=center|[[NFL | + | |align=center|[[NFL Super Bowl 47|XLVII]] |
|February 3, 2013 | |February 3, 2013 | ||
|style="background:#fcc;"|[[Baltimore Ravens Season (2012)|Baltimore Ravens]]<sup>†</sup> (2) | |style="background:#fcc;"|[[Baltimore Ravens Season (2012)|Baltimore Ravens]]<sup>†</sup> (2) | ||
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- | |align=center|[[NFL | + | |align=center|[[NFL Super Bowl 48|XLVIII]] |
|February 2, 2014 | |February 2, 2014 | ||
- | |[[ | + | |style="background:#d0e7ff;"|[[Seattle Seahawks Season (2013)|Seattle Seahawks]]<sup>*</sup> (2) |
- | + | |align=center| 43–8 | |
- | + | | style="background:#fcc;"|Denver Broncos Season (2013)|Denver Broncos]]<sup>†</sup>(7) | |
|[[MetLife Stadium]] | |[[MetLife Stadium]] | ||
|[[East Rutherford, New Jersey]] | |[[East Rutherford, New Jersey]] | ||
- | |align=center| | + | |align=center| 82,529 |
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|- | |- | ||
- | |align=center|[[NFL | + | |align=center|[[NFL Super Bowl 49|XLIX]] |
|February 1, 2015 | |February 1, 2015 | ||
|[[AFC Championship Game|2014–15 AFC Champion]]<sup>†</sup> at [[NFC Championship Game|2014–15 NFC Champion]]<sup>*</sup> | |[[AFC Championship Game|2014–15 AFC Champion]]<sup>†</sup> at [[NFC Championship Game|2014–15 NFC Champion]]<sup>*</sup> | ||
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- | |align=center|[[NFL | + | |align=center|[[NFL Super Bowl 50|L]] |
|February 7, 2016 | |February 7, 2016 | ||
|[[NFC Championship Game|2015–16 NFC Champion]]<sup>*</sup> at [[AFC Championship Game|2015–16 AFC Champion]]<sup>†</sup> | |[[NFC Championship Game|2015–16 NFC Champion]]<sup>*</sup> at [[AFC Championship Game|2015–16 AFC Champion]]<sup>†</sup> | ||
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- | |align=center|[[NFL | + | |align=center|[[NFL Super Bowl 51|LI]] |
|February 5, 2017 | |February 5, 2017 | ||
|[[AFC Championship Game|2016–17 AFC Champion]]<sup>†</sup> at [[NFC Championship Game|2016–17 NFC Champion]]<sup>*</sup> | |[[AFC Championship Game|2016–17 AFC Champion]]<sup>†</sup> at [[NFC Championship Game|2016–17 NFC Champion]]<sup>*</sup> |
Revision as of 20:37, 5 February 2014
The Super Bowl is an annual American football game that determines the champion of the National Football League (NFL). The contest is held in an American city that is chosen three to four years beforehand, usually in warm-weather or domed sites. Since 1971, the winner of the American Football Conference (AFC) Championship Game has faced the winner of the National Football Conference (NFC) Championship Game in the culmination of the NFL playoffs. Before the 1970 merger between the American Football League (AFL) and the National Football League (NFL), the two leagues met in four such contests. The first two were known as the "AFL-NFL World Championship Game." Super Bowl III in 1969 was the first such game that carried the "Super Bowl" moniker, the names "Super Bowl I" and "Super Bowl II" were retroactively applied to the first two games. The NFC/NFL leads in Super Bowl wins with 25, while the AFC/AFL has won 22. Eighteen different franchises, including teams that relocated to another city, have won the Super Bowl.
The Pittsburgh Steelers have won the most Super Bowls with six championships (record 6–2), while both the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers have five wins each (Cowboys 5–3; 49ers 5–1). Dallas and Pittsburgh have the most Super Bowl appearances with eight, while the Buffalo Bills have the most consecutive appearances with four losses in a row from 1990 to 1993 (the Miami Dolphins are the only other team to have three consecutive appearances: 1972-74). The New England Patriots, Denver Broncos and Minnesota Vikings have also lost a record four Super Bowls. Buffalo and Minnesota are both 0–4, Denver is 2–4 and New England is 3–4. The record for consecutive wins is two and is shared by seven franchises: the 1966-67 Green Bay Packers, the 1972-73 Miami Dolphins, the 1974-75 and 1978-79 Pittsburgh Steelers (the only team to accomplish this feat twice), the 1988-89 San Francisco 49ers, the 1992-93 Dallas Cowboys, the 1997-98 Denver Broncos, and the 2003-04 New England Patriots. The 1972 Dolphins' win capped off the only perfect season in NFL history. The only team with multiple Super Bowl appearances and no losses is the Baltimore Ravens, who in winning Super Bowl XLVII unseated and replaced the 49ers in that position. Four current NFL teams have never appeared in a Super Bowl, including franchise relocations and renaming: the Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lions, Jacksonville Jaguars, and Houston Texans, though both the Browns and Lions had won NFL Championship games prior to the creation of the Super Bowl.
Contents |
Super Bowl Championship (1966–present)
Numbers in parentheses in the table are Super Bowl appearances, as of the date of that Super Bowl and are used as follows:
- Winning team and Losing team columns indicate the number of times that team has appeared in a Super Bowl.
- Venue column indicates number of times that stadium has hosted a Super Bowl.
- City column indicates number of times that that metropolitan area has hosted a Super Bowl.
National Football League (NFL, 1967–1970) | American Football League (AFL, 1967–1970) |
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NFL Champion‡ | AFL Champion^ |
National Football Conference (NFC, 1971–present) | American Football Conference (AFC, 1971–present) |
NFC Champion* | AFC Champion† |
Super Bowl appearances by team
NFL‡/NFC* teams (25 wins) | AFL^/AFC† teams (22 wins) |
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NFL‡/AFC† team<ref group=note name=e>The Colts moved over to the newly formed AFC in 1970. Additionally, two other teams also made the move from the old NFL, the Steelers and Browns. </ref> |
In the sortable table below, teams are ordered first by number of appearances, then by number of wins, and finally by year of first appearance. In the "Season(s)" column, bold years indicate winning seasons, and italic years indicate games not yet played.
Appearances | Team | Wins | Losses | Winning percentage | Season(s) |
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Teams with no Super Bowl appearances
Teams with Super Bowl appearances but no victories
Teams with long Super Bowl droughts
Super Bowl rematches
See also
- History of National Football League Championship (1920–present)
- List of AFC champions
- List of NFC champions
- List of NFL champions
- List of Grey Cup champions, in the equivalent event for the Canadian Football League
- List of Super Bowl records
- Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Award
- List of NFL franchise post-season droughts
- List of NFL franchise post-season streaks
Notes
References
External links
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