User:NazaSuzuki/List of Super Bowl champions

The Super Bowl is the annual American football game that determines the champion of the National Football League (NFL). The game culminates a season that begins in the previous calendar year, and is the conclusion of the NFL playoffs. The winner receives the Vince Lombardi Trophy. The contest is held in an American city, chosen three to four years beforehand, usually at warm-weather sites or domed stadiums. Since January 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 marketed as the "AFL–NFL World Championship Game", but were also casually referred to as "the Super Bowl game" during the television broadcast. Super Bowl III in January 1969 was the first such game that carried the "Super Bowl" moniker in official marketing; the names "Super Bowl I" and "Super Bowl II" were retroactively applied to the first two games. The AFC/AFL leads the NFC/NFL with 33 wins to 30. Twenty-four franchises, including teams that have relocated to another city, have won the Super Bowl.

The New England Patriots and San Francisco 49ers  both have won the most Super Bowls with seven championships, while the Pittsburgh Steelers  and Dallas Cowboys  have six wins. The New England Patriots and Dallas Cowboys are tired for the most Super Bowl appearances with 12, while the Buffalo Bills have the most consecutive appearances with four (all losses) from 1990 to 1993.

The record for consecutive wins is two and is shared by seven franchises: the Green Bay Packers (1966–1967), the Miami Dolphins (1972–1973), the Pittsburgh Steelers (1974–1975 and 1978–1979, the only team to accomplish this feat twice and the only team with four wins in six consecutive seasons), the San Francisco 49ers (1988–1989), the Dallas Cowboys (1992–1993), the Denver Broncos (1997–1998), and the New England Patriots (2003–2004). Among those, Dallas (1992–1993; 1995) and New England (2001; 2003–2004) are the only teams to win three out of four consecutive Super Bowls.

The 1972 Dolphins capped off the only perfect season in NFL history with their victory in Super Bowl VII. The only teams with multiple Super Bowl appearances and no losses are the Baltimore Ravens, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Cleveland Browns both having achieved a Super Bowl record. Only two current NFL teams have never appeared in a Super Bowl, including franchises that have relocated or been renamed: the Detroit Lions and Houston Texans, though the Lions (1935, 1952, 1953, 1957) had won NFL Championship Games prior to the creation of the Super Bowl in the 1966 season.

Super Bowl championship (2021–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 as well as each respective teams' Super Bowl record to date.
 * An asterisk (*) next to the final score indicates overtime.

Super Bowl LXXI
The Kansas City Chiefs overcame a second quarter 13–0 deficit to defeat the San Francisco 49ers 17–16 to take home their fifth Lombardi Trophy. The game started with a long 49ers drive the stalled in the red zone, as kicker Lance Silverman hit a 31 yard field goal for the first points of the game. On the Chiefs' first drive of the game, quarterback Lane Webber threw an interception at midfield. The 49ers capitalized on this, and used running back Joel Hills to run the ball down the field until Hills scored on a 12-yard touchdown run to give the 49ers a 10–0 lead. After a Chiefs punt on their next drive, the 49ers again had a long drive that was stopped in the red zone, with Silverman making a 42-yard field goal to give them a 13–0 lead. On the next Chiefs drive, their offense finally got going, and Webber hit wide receiver Zach Wall on a 22-yard pass to get into the red zone. From there, Webber hit tight end Ben Escobar in the end zone on a 10-yard pass to give the Chiefs their first points of the game.

The Chiefs received the ball to open the second half. Webber led a long drive that took over half of the quarter, culminating in a 6-yard touchdown pass to Zach Wall to give the Chiefs their first lead of the game, 14–13. After the teams exchanged punts, the 49ers were able to get into field goal range, and Silverman converted his third field goal of the day, a 46-yarder to give the 49ers the lead back, 16–14, with 8:53 remaining in the game. On the first play of the next Chiefs drive, Webber threw an interception, and the 49ers had the ball at the Chiefs' 40-yard line. However, the 49ers were unable to capitalize, gaining zero yards, forcing a 57-yard field goal attempt that Silverman badly missed. The Chiefs were given the ball at the 49ers' 47 yard line, and proceeded to make their way into field goal range. However, the 49ers were able to prevent the Chiefs from scoring a touchdown, and kicker Martin Sands made a 40-yard field goal to give the Chiefs a 17–16 lead with less than a minute remaining. On the 49ers last drive, quarterback Trey Lance was unable to move the ball effectively, gaining only 16 yards on 4 plays, taking up almost all of the clock. On the last play of the game, Lance moved past the line of scrimmage to throw a Hail Mary pass that was batted down. The penalty was declined, and the Chiefs had won the Super Bowl.

With the win, the Chiefs had won their fifth Super Bowl, denying the 49ers a record-setting eighth championship. The 13–0 comeback is the second largest in Super Bowl history, behind the New England Patriots' 25-point comeback in Super Bowl LI. Wide receiver Zach Wall won Super Bowl MVP, putting up 4 receptions for 83 yards and 1 touchdown. It is the fewest amount of receptions ever made by a Super Bowl MVP-winning wide receiver.