Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs are looking to make NFL history this Sunday with a win over the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl 59. Should they pull off the victory, the Chiefs will become the first franchise in NFL history to win three straight Super Bowls.
Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Eagles are looking to get back to the mountaintop once again, with quarterback Jalen Hurts looking to bounce back from his loss to Mahomes and the Chiefs two years ago in Super Bowl 57 and finally get a ring.
For either franchise, a win on Sunday would be monumental, not only for the players on the roster and their careers, but for the team as a whole in the scope of NFL history. A Chiefs win would give Kansas City its fifth Super Bowl in franchise history, while an Eagles win would give Philadelphia its second Super Bowl in franchise history.
Here's a look at the 10 winningest NFL franchises in Super Bowl history:
XXXVI — New England 20, St. Louis 17 (2002)
XXXVIII — New England 32, Carolina 29 (2004)
XXXIX — New England 24, Philadelphia 21 (2005)
XLIX — New England 28, Seattle 24 (2015)
LI — New England 34, Atlanta 28 (2017)
LIII — New England 13, Los Angeles Rams 3 (2019)
IX — Pittsburgh 16, Minnesota 6 (1975)
X — Pittsburgh 21, Dallas 17 (1976)
XIII — Pittsburgh 35, Dallas 31 (1979)
XIV — Pittsburgh 31, Los Angeles Rams 19 (1980)
XL —Pittsburgh 21, Seattle 10 (2006)
XLIII — Pittsburgh 27, Arizona 23 (2009)
VI — Dallas 24, Miami 3 (1972)
XII — Dallas 27, Denver 10 (1978)
XXVII — Dallas 52, Buffalo 17 (1993)
XXVIII — Dallas 30, Buffalo 13 (1994)
XXX — Dallas 27, Pittsburgh 17 (1996)
XVI — San Francisco 26, Cincinnati 21 (1982)
XIX — San Francisco 38, Miami 16 (1985)
XXIII — San Francisco 20, Cincinnati 16 (1989)
XXIV — San Francisco 55, Denver 10 (1990)
XXIX — San Francisco 49, San Diego 26 (1995)
I — Green Bay 35, Kansas City 10 (1967)
II — Green Bay 33, Oakland 14 (1968)
XXXI — Green Bay 35, New England 21 (1997)
XLV — Green Bay 31, Pittsburgh 25 (2011)
XXI — New York Giants 39, Denver 20 (1987)
XXV — New York Giants 20, Buffalo 19 (1991)
XLII — New York Giants 17, New England 14 (2008)
XLVI — New York Giants 21, New England 17 (2012)
IV – Kansas City 23, Minnesota 7 (1970)
LIV – Kansas City 31, San Francisco 20 (2020)
LVII — Kansas City 38, Philadelphia 35 (2023)
LVIII — Kansas City 25, San Francisco 22 (2024)
XXXII — Denver 31, Green Bay 24 (1998)
XXXIII — Denver 34, Atlanta 19 (1999)
50 — Denver 24, Carolina 10 (2016)
XVII — Washington 27, Miami 17 (1983)
XXII — Washington 42, Denver 10 (1988)
XXVI — Washington 37, Buffalo 24 (1992)
XI — Oakland 32, Minnesota 14 (1977)
XV — Oakland 27, Philadelphia 10 (1981)
XVIII — Los Angeles Raiders 38, Washington 9 (1984)
Should they win on Sunday, the Eagles would crack the top 10, getting in a tie for 8th place with their third Super Bowl win. Meanwhile, the Chiefs would move further up the list, joining the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers in a tie for the second most Super Bowls in NFL history with five.
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