Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Coaches listed by Games 1st, Wins 2nd, then Super Bowl number Games Coach Wins Losses Win percentage Super Bowls Team(s) 9: Bill Belichick: 6: 3 .667: XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX, XLII, XLVI, XLIX, LI, LII, LIII
Jacksonville Jaguars, 29 years – 1995 expansion team; three AFC Championship Game appearances in the 1996, 1999, and 2017 seasons. [ 86] Dallas Cowboys, 28 years – Won Super Bowl XXX, 1995 season. Tennessee Titans, 24 years – Lost Super Bowl XXXIV, 1999 season.
Reid's next Super Bowl appearance, Super Bowl LVII, pitted his Chiefs against the Philadelphia Eagles, whom he previously coached. [113] He led the Chiefs to a narrow 38–35 victory over his former team to earn his second Super Bowl victory as a head coach. [114] In the 2023 season, Reid led the Chiefs to an 11–6 record and another AFC West ...
Despite starting the 1993 season 0–2, they again defeated the Buffalo Bills in Super Bowl XXVIII, 30–13 (becoming the first team in NFL history to win a Super Bowl after starting 0–2). Dallas finished the regular season 12–4 as the number 1 seed of the NFC.
The Steelers' sixth Super Bowl win came in Super Bowl XLIII (2008) under current head coach Mike Tomlin, [2] who was hired to replace the retiring Cowher in 2007. [5] [6] As of 2023, the Steelers have had only three head coaches in the last 55 years.
Quarterbacks with multiple Super Bowl starts. Tom Brady started ten Super Bowls, double that of John Elway, who is second. Brady won seven. 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.
John Fox, the team's third coach, was the longest-tenured coach in team history. In his nine seasons as head coach the Panthers recorded a regular-season record of 73–71 (.507), the most wins for a head coach in team history, and a playoff record of 5–3. The team's fourth head coach, Ron Rivera, served nine seasons as head coach and had a ...
In terms of tenure, Bill Walsh has coached more games (152) and more complete seasons (10) than any other head coach in 49ers franchise history. He led the 49ers to playoff appearances in seven seasons, three of which led to the Super Bowl championship, in 1981, 1984 and 1988. [3]