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The best NFL teams that never made it to a Super Bowl
JUDY GRIESEDIECK/Star Tribune via Getty Images

The best NFL teams that never made it to a Super Bowl

Some franchises' best efforts have not led to victory parades or even Super Bowl berths. Because of untimely injuries, unfortunate circumstances, or myriad other reasons, many teams' plans throughout NFL history have not produced the desired result. These are the best of those efforts from the Super Bowl era.

 
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25. 1980s Seattle Seahawks

1980s Seattle Seahawks
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We are not yet at the possible champions sector of the list, but the Chuck Knox/Steve Largent Seahawks factored into the AFC's 1980s contention mix. Their 9-7 1983 team derailed the Broncos and Dolphins in John Elway and Dan Marino's rookie years to qualify for their first AFC title game (a Raiders rout). Seattle avenged that defeat a year later in the wild-card round after a 12-4 season but could not keep up with Marino in his record-setting form. However, the Seahawks interrupted Elway's AFC West reign in 1988 and totaled four playoff berths in six years under Knox.  

 
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24. Early-1970s Cincinnati Bengals

Early-1970s Cincinnati Bengals
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Boasting quality teams in one of the two most challenging eras to be an AFC contender, Paul Brown's Bengals made the four-team playoff bracket three times from 1970-75. Led by offenses Bill Walsh helped design, one featuring a young Ken Anderson, the Bengals won the AFC Central in 1970 and '73. Cincinnati held off dynasty-in-waiting Pittsburgh in the latter year. These Bengals did not win a playoff game, coming closest in a 31-28 loss in Oakland in an 11-3 1975 season, but faced some dominant opposition -- including a stacked 1973 Dolphins squad. Promoting Bill Johnson over Walsh after Brown's 1976 retirement looms as this franchise's biggest "what if?"

 
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23. Dome Patrol New Orleans Saints

Dome Patrol New Orleans Saints
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Like the NBA's Pacers in LeBron's East years, these Saints crested at a bad time — as Joe Montana and Steve Young thrived. Anchored by their Dome Patrol linebacker quartet — Hall of Famers Rickey Jackson and Sam Mills, 1991 Defensive Player of the Year Pat Swilling, and Vaughan Johnson — that saw its members combine for 19 Pro Bowl nods, the Saints booked four playoff spots from 1987-92. They twice won 12 games (their 12-3 1987 team's DVOA ranked behind only the 49ers), won the NFC West in 1991, and led the NFL in scoring defense in '91 and '92. Unfortunately, Jim Mora's teams did not win a postseason game and came close only once. 

 
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22. Post-John Elway Denver Broncos

Post-John Elway Denver Broncos
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Roads through Tom Brady and Peyton Manning were treacherous for other AFC threats, but the Broncos nearly broke through. Built around defense and myriad 1,000-yard rushers, the Broncos made the playoffs four times from 2000-05. The Ravens and Manning, respectively, shellacked three Mike Shanahan teams in Round 1. But Shanahan's 2005 squad became the first to oust Brady in the playoffs. Led by Champ Bailey (eight INTs, two TDs), the 13-3 Broncos ranked second in '05 DVOA but fell short of Super Bowl XL when the Steelers upset them in Denver. A Jake Plummer-to-Jay Cutler 2006 pivot preceded a five-year playoff drought.

 
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21. Mike Zimmer's Minnesota Vikings

Mike Zimmer's Minnesota Vikings
Greg M. Cooper-USA TODAY Sports

The Vikings ranked in the top 10 defensively from 2015-19. Zimmer's teams made the playoffs with three QBs — Teddy Bridgewater, Case Keenum, Kirk Cousins —  and won 10-plus games in each of those slates. Minnesota used the 2012, '13, '14, and '15 drafts to assemble its defensive nucleus, which backed Keenum in a 13-3 2017 season and Cousins in an 11-5 '19 campaign. The Vikings beat the Saints twice in the playoffs under Zimmer despite having the inferior passer —  once on perhaps the play of the 2010s  and were a 27-yard field goal from edging the 2015 Seahawks. While they were blown out after each postseason win, these Vikes showed some staying power.

 
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20. Early-1990s Miami Dolphins

Early-1990s Miami Dolphins
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Don Shula's final seasons produced some forgotten contenders (or Dan Marino-propped-up lineups). Miami failed to provide its icon with much help, defensively or on the ground but made four postseasons in the final five Marino-Shula years. Three Bills teams eliminated the Dolphins; the 1992 AFC championship game was in Miami but non-competitive. Miami would have gone to the '94 title game (in a Bills-less bracket) had Pete Stoyanovich made a 48-yard game-winning field goal try in San Diego. Fun fact: The Dolphins had one 1,000-yard rushing season during Marino's 17-year career (Karim Abdul-Jabbar, 1996).

 
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19. Mid-1970s Baltimore Colts

Mid-1970s Baltimore Colts
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Like Paul Brown's Bengals, these Colts emerged at a bad time for AFC success outside of Pittsburgh or Oakland. A young nucleus almost entirely different from the Super Bowl V champions won three straight AFC East titles from 1975-77. The eventual champion Steelers ousted the Colts in 1975. Bert Jones won the 1976 MVP award for the best of these Colt teams — an 11-3 squad — but the best Steel Curtain edition muzzled Baltimore in Round 1 again. Dave Casper's Ghost to the Post sequence helped the Raiders vanquish the Colts in a 1977 overtime classic. The Colts never made the playoffs again in Baltimore.

 
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18. Rex Ryan's New York Jets entrance

Rex Ryan's New York Jets entrance
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This may be too brief to be deemed a run, but Ryan's first two Jets teams made a strong impression before the regime's lean years. Among the Jets' four playoff victims during their 2009-10 mini-surge: the 13-3 Chargers and 14-2 Patriots. Peyton Manning's final Colts game was a loss to the 2010 Jets. While the '09 Colts and '10 Steelers ended these defense-oriented Jet iterations' hopes in AFC championship games, this was still the most noise Gang Green has made since the Joe Namath days. Unfortunately for the Revis Island Jets defenses, Mark Sanchez did not climb to Namath's level, and regression followed.

 
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17. Randall Cunningham's Philadelphia Eagles

Randall Cunningham's Philadelphia Eagles
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The Eagles paired a new-age quarterback with upper-crust defenses, opening a Super Bowl window. Buddy Ryan's 1988 team interrupted the Giants and Washington's NFC East reigns but lost to the Bears in the Fog Bowl. Early playoff exits followed in 1989 and '90, leading to Ryan's ouster. Rich Kotite's 10-6 1991 team did not make the playoffs, losing Cunningham to an ACL tear in Week 1, but Football Outsiders called that Reggie White-led defense the best of the past 34 years. The '92 Eagles exorcised past playoff demons by beating the Saints, but a Cowboys blowout soon confirmed Philly missed its chance. 

 
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16. Late-1980s Minnesota Vikings

Late-1980s Minnesota Vikings
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The 1987 Vikings nearly became the only eight-win team (thanks to their scabs' 0-3 strike work) to book a Super Bowl berth. A week before a 17-10 defeat in Washington, 8-7 Minnesota — on the strength of Anthony Carter's 227-yard receiving performance — stunned 13-2 San Francisco (No. 1 in offense and defense that year) 36-24 in Round 2. Darrin Nelson's goal-line drop prevented Jerry Burns' team from forcing OT against Washington, and the Vikings' double-digit-win teams (and No. 1 defenses) the next two years ran into 49ers Super Bowl squads. The 1989 Herschel Walker trade, which ravaged Minnesota's draft capital, helped end this chapter.

 
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15. Early-1970s San Francisco 49ers

Early-1970s San Francisco 49ers
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Not mentioned much because of what the 49ers became in the 1980s, their teams of the early '70s challenged the Cowboys for NFC supremacy. Led by 1970 MVP John Brodie and Hall of Fame defenders Jimmy Johnson and Dave Wilcox, the 49ers won three straight NFC West crowns from 1970-72. Their 10-3-1 1970 team ousted the defending NFC champion Vikings, and in '71, the 49ers eliminated Washington. Their legacy is an 0-3 playoff mark against the Cowboys, however. A Dallas 15-point, fourth-quarter comeback in a 1972 divisional game keyed a 49ers swoon that lasted until Bill Walsh and Joe Montana's arrivals.

 
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14. Late-1960s Los Angeles Rams

Late-1960s Los Angeles Rams
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Known more for their work in other decades, the Rams carried championship potential in the late 1960s. Spearheaded by Roman Gabriel and a Fearsome Foursome defensive line that housed Hall of Famers Deacon Jones and Merlin Olsen, George Allen's Rams notched 10-plus-win seasons from 1967-69. They tied for 1967's best record at 11-1-2, and Gabriel won MVP honors in 1969. The Rams beat the Packers in December of '67 but saw Vince Lombardi's final team get to the Ice Bowl via a Los Angeles blowout. The eventual NFL champion Vikings eliminated the 1969 Rams. Allen was coaching Washington by 1971.

 
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13. Late-1990s Jacksonville Jaguars

Late-1990s Jacksonville Jaguars
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Only three teams made more AFC championship game appearances than the Jaguars in the 1990s, despite the north Florida franchise's debut not coming until 1995. Tom Coughlin's 1996 team upset the Bills and shocked the No. 1-seeded Broncos to secure a sophomore-season title game. Aided by an offense that housed Hall of Famer Tony Boselli and Pro Bowlers Mark Brunell and Jimmy Smith, the Jags made four straight playoff brackets from 1996-99. But their '99 team had Titans issues, going 15-0 against all non-Titans opposition and 0-3 against their then-AFC Central rivals. The last of those defeats cost the Jags a Super Bowl XXXIV berth. 

 
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12. Run and Shoot Houston Oilers

Run and Shoot Houston Oilers
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Known for a cutting-edge aerial attack, these Oilers made the playoffs every year from 1987-93. Warren Moon led all QBs by 700-plus passing yards in 1990 and '91, earning Offensive Player of the Year acclaim for his 4,689-yard '90 showing. Moon drove the Oilers to an 11-game win streak and the No. 2 seed in his final Houston season (1993). It is fair to call these Oilers regular-season sensations. They went 3-7 in the playoffs and never made an AFC title game. The '92 team bottomed out by blowing the biggest lead in playoff history, and a Round 2 loss to the Chiefs a year later ended the Oilers' charge and paved the way for the franchise's relocation.

 
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11. Luv Ya Blue Houston Oilers

Luv Ya Blue Houston Oilers
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As the Raiders regrouped, the Steelers' main late-'70s AFC competition came from the division rival Oilers. The upstarts won two games to reach the 1978 AFC championship game, but probably the best Steelers edition walloped the Oilers 34-5. However, Bum Phillips' team was back after two 1979 playoff conquests — including an upset in San Diego without MVP Earl Campbell or quarterback Dan Pastorini. Aided by officials appearing to cost the Oilers a touchdown, the Steelers stopped Houston again. The revived Raiders routed the Oilers in the 1980 wild-card round to end the Luv Ya Blue stretch.

 
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10. Josh Allen's Buffalo Bills

Josh Allen's Buffalo Bills
Gregory Fisher-USA TODAY Sports

The Sean McDermott-Brandon Beane regime traded up twice to land Allen in 2018; the dual-threat QB has become one of the NFL's best players. Buffalo accelerated Allen's rise by trading for Stefon Diggs in 2020, and the team has two 13-3 seasons since. Though Allen and a highly ranked defense powered the Bills to five straight playoff berths, the team has hit a wall. The Chiefs eliminated the Bills in three of the past four years. The second of which denied a championship-caliber team via one of the most crushing losses in NFL history; No. 3 came in Buffalo and involved the words "wide right." Injuries have plagued these Bills, who became only the third team in NFL history to lose back-to-back divisional-round home games.

 
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9. 1980s Los Angeles Rams

1980s Los Angeles Rams
Peter Brouillet-Getty Images

Much like in the 1970s, the Rams persisted in their pursuit of a Super Bowl title in the '80s. They still hold NFL records (Eric Dickerson's rushing mark and Flipper Anderson's single-game receiving standard), but John Robinson's teams came up short. That said, his top two squads ran into arguably the two best teams ever. The 1985 Bears and '89 49ers beat the Rams by a combined 55-3 margin in NFC championship games. The Rams, who finally found a quarterback (Jim Everett) during this span, made the playoffs six times from 1983-89 and won four postseason games. But they are a footnote in the NFC's premier era. 

 
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8. Late-2000s San Diego Chargers

Late-2000s San Diego Chargers
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The Chargers won four AFC West titles from 2006-09 and twice earned playoff byes. They carried four top-five offenses — headlined by fantasy warlord LaDainian Tomlinson — into second-round games but played for only one AFC championship. That game featured Tomlinson injured and Philip Rivers playing on a torn ACL. The then-unbeaten Patriots eliminated the Bolts after upsetting their 14-2 team a year earlier. After the 13-3 2009 group's upset loss to the Jets, the Charger nucleus splintered. The Bolts did not play another playoff game in San Diego, moved to Los Angeles in 2017, and won 10 games just once in Rivers' final 10 SoCal seasons.

 
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7. Killer B's Pittsburgh Steelers

Killer B's Pittsburgh Steelers
Geoff Burke-USA TODAY Sports

The exits of Troy Polamalu and others from Steelers Super Bowl defenses ushered in an offense-geared era. Le'Veon Bell, a top-tier offensive line, and a historically dominant wideout enabled Ben Roethlisberger to post career-best numbers from 2014-18. But the Ben-Bell-Antonio Brown Steelers ran into frequent bad breaks — from Bell or Brown playoff unavailability to the Jesse James replay review that denied them home-field advantage to Ryan Shazier's career-ending injury that gutted their 2017 defense. The Steelers went 45-19 from 2014-17 and won three playoff games, but a Round 2 loss to the Jaguars, Bell's holdout and Brown's chaos defined this era more than the success.

 
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6. Matt LaFleur's Green Bay Packers

Matt LaFleur's Green Bay Packers
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LaFleur's 2019 arrival is a good line of demarcation for the modern Packers. While a few Mike McCarthy teams fell just short during the mid-2010s, connective tissue remained from the Super Bowl XLV squad. LaFleur's club booked three straight playoff byes from 2019-21, going 39-10 in that span and seeing Aaron Rodgers win two more MVPs. The Pack qualified for back-to-back NFC title games, but a blowout loss to a 49ers bunch that has dominated this rivalry and a Bucs upset — with a smattering of fans at Lambeau Field due to COVID-19 — continued a run of January misery. All-Pro left tackle David Bakhtiari's injury issues have been a microcosm of the team's crunch-time shortcomings during this period.

 
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5. Late-1980s Cleveland Browns

Late-1980s Cleveland Browns
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Known for agonizing near-misses, these Browns had strong teams. "The Drive" and "The Fumble" do not need rehashing, but the 1985 Browns led the No. 1-seeded Dolphins 21-3 in a divisional game and lost. A 12-4 season and Bernie Kosar's 489-yard outing in a Round 2 comeback over the Jets preceded "The Drive," and Earnest Byner totaled 187 scrimmage yards and two TDs before his defining moment. The '88 Browns started four QBs and still went 10-6, but they watched a Bengals Super Bowl. Even after Marty Schottenheimer's exit, John Elway beat the Browns for the AFC crown in 1989 (though at least that game is unnamed). One playoff game has occurred in Cleveland since.

 
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4. 1990s Kansas City Chiefs

1990s Kansas City Chiefs
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Marty Schottenheimer's Chiefs made seven playoff berths from 1990-97. They started five QBs in the playoffs during this span, which included just one AFC title game cameo. Joe Montana and Marcus Allen's 1993 arrivals helped the Chiefs to the '93 title game — after comeback wins over the Steelers and Oilers — but a Montana injury keyed a Bills romp. Derrick Thomas-led defenses ranked first in 1995 and '97, but the Colts and Broncos upset the top-seeded Chiefs. Lin Elliott missed three field goals in the 10-7 Colts loss, and Schottenheimer's decision to reinstate Elvis Grbac as QB1 over future MVP Rich Gannon proved costly against Denver two years later.

 
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3. Michael Thomas-Alvin Kamara New Orleans Saints

Michael Thomas-Alvin Kamara New Orleans Saints
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Sean Payton and Drew Brees own Super Bowl rings, but these Saints were otherwise overhauled from the 2009 team. Thomas' 2016 arrival and a historic 2017 draft haul — headlined by Kamara and Pro Bowlers Marshon Lattimore and Ryan Ramczyk — reopened a championship window. From 2017-20, the Saints went 49-15. Payton and GM Mickey Loomis built elite rosters to back Brees, who thrived into his 40s. Like the early-2010s Saints nucleus, this one ran into brutal playoff fortune. The Minneapolis Miracle and a cataclysmic pass interference error cost the Saints in 2017 and '18. Denied a rightful Super Bowl berth, the Saints soon saw the Brees and Payton exits close the door on a quality run.

 
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2. Dennis Green's Minnesota Vikings

Dennis Green's Minnesota Vikings
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The Vikings have a vast history of near-misses. Their worst letdown came in the 1990s. A string of above-average Green-led teams (eight playoff berths from 1992-2000) would not rank this high were it not for a January 1999 sequence. Setting the single-season scoring record — after rookie Randy Moss turbocharged an already-potent offense — the 15-1 Vikings saw Gary Anderson's only missed kick of the season trigger a Super Bowl-denying OT loss to the Falcons. Minnesota made it back to the playoffs the next two years, but a 41-0 loss to the Giants in the 2000 NFC title game forced the Vikings to regroup. Minnesota has since lost two more NFC championship games.

 
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1. Air Coryell San Diego Chargers

Air Coryell San Diego Chargers
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Don Coryell arrived with a cutting-edge blueprint in the late 1970s, but his pass-happy teams fell short in January. Dan Fouts' five INTs doomed the '79 Chargers against a depleted Oilers team; the Bolts regrouped to deploy a then-unprecedented three 1,000-yard receivers (John Jefferson, Kellen Winslow, Charlie Joiner) in 1980. The Raiders then secured a Super Bowl XV berth in San Diego. Air Coryell's peak and low point occurred in January 1982. After an epic OT win in Miami, the Chargers played in the NFL's coldest game (wind chill: minus-59 degrees). The Bengals' "Freezer Bowl" rout nixed a tantalizing Coryell-Bill Walsh Super Bowl. San Diego's run ended soon after.

Sam Robinson is a Kansas City, Mo.-based writer who mostly writes about the NFL. He has covered sports for nearly 10 years. Boxing, the Royals and Pandora stations featuring female rock protagonists are some of his go-tos. Occasionally interesting tweets @SRobinson25.

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