List of Every Super Bowl Winning & Losing Head Coaches

List of Winning & Losing Head Coach From Every Super Bowl, History, Most Appearances.





Winning a Super Bowl is almost every NFL player's ultimate dream. The head coaches are not exempt from this. It's a similarly difficult feat. especially given the short leash these guys are currently on.

The matchup for Super Bowl LVII is set, with the Philadelphia Eagles taking on the Kansas City Chiefs. The Eagles are the early favorites, and beyond that, there is no shortage of storylines heading into the big game:


Any discussion about the Super Bowl Head coaching would be incomplete without the namesake himself; Vince Lombardi had leads the Green Bay Packers to victory in the first two Super Bowl games ever played.








Super Bowl Winning & Losing NFL Head Coaches List in NFL History 1967-2025.




Who are the Winning and Losing Head Coaches in Every Super Bowl in History

Super Bowl History of winning and losing coaches as well as the final scores of each game (1967-2025).



1967 I — Vince Lombardi Packers — Chiefs Hank Stram 35–10

1968 II — Vince Lombardi (2) Packers — Raiders John Rauch 33–14

1969 III — Weeb Ewbank Jets — Colts Don Shula 16–7

1970 IV — Hank Stram Chiefs — Vikings Bud Grant 23–7

1971 V — Don McCafferty Colts — Cowboys Tom Landry 16–13

1972 VI — Tom Landry Cowboys — Dolphins Don Shula 24–3

1973 VII — Don Shula Dolphins — Redskins George Allen 14–7

1974 VIII — Don Shula(2) Dolphins — Vikings Bud Grant 24–7

1975 IX — Chuck Noll Steelers — Vikings Bud Grant 16–6

1976 X — Chuck Noll (2) Steelers — Cowboys Tom Landry 21–17

1977 XI — John Madden Raiders — Vikings Bud Grant 32–14

1978 XII — Tom Landry (2) Cowboys — Broncos Red Miller 27–10

1979 XIII — Chuck Noll (3) Steelers — Cowboys Tom Landry 35–31

1980 XIV — Chuck Noll (4) Steelers — Rams Ray Malavasi 31–19

1981 XV — Tom Flores Raiders — Eagles Dick Vermeil 27–10

1982 XVI — Bill Walsh 49ers — Bengals Forrest Gregg 26–21

1983 XVII — Joe Gibbs Redskins — Dolphins Don Shula 27–17

1984 XVIII — Tom Flores (2) Raiders — Redskins Joe Gibbs 38–9

1985 XIX — Bill Walsh (2) 49ers — Dolphins Don Shula 38–16

1986 XX — Mike Ditka Bears — Patriots Raymond Berry 46–10

1987 XXI — Bill Parcells Giants — Broncos Dan Reeves 39–20

1988 XXII — Joe Gibbs (2) Redskins — Broncos Dan Reeves 42–10

1989 XXIII — Bill Walsh (3) 49ers — Bengals Sam Wyche 20–16

1990 XXIV — George Seifert 49ers — Broncos Dan Reeves 55–10

1991 XXV — Bill Parcells (2) Giants — Bills Marv Levy 20–19

1992 XXVI — Joe Gibbs (3) Redskins — Bills Marv Levy 37–24

1993 XXVII — Jimmy Johnson Cowboys — Bills Marv Levy 52–17

1994 XXVIII — Jimmy Johnson (2) Cowboys — Bills Marv Levy 30–13

1995 XXIX — George Seifert (2) 49ers — Chargers Bobby Ross 49–26

1996 XXX — Barry Switzer Cowboys — Steelers Bill Cowher 27–17

1997 XXXI — Mike Holmgren Packers — Patriots Bill Parcells 35–21

1998 XXXII — Mike Shanahan Broncos — Packers Mike Holmgren 31–24

1999 XXXIII — Mike Shanahan (2) Broncos — Falcons Dan Reeves 34–19

2000 XXXIV — Dick Vermeil, St.L Rams — Titans Jeff Fisher 23–16

2001 XXXV — Brian Billick,   Ravens — Giants Jim Fassel 34–7

2002 XXXVI — Bill Belichick,    Patriots — St.L Rams Mike Martz 20–17

2003 XXXVII — Jon Gruden,  Buccaneers — Raiders Bill Callahan 48–21

2004 XXXVIII — Bill Belichick (2),  Patriots — Panthers John Fox 32–29

2005 XXXIX — Bill Belichick (3),  Patriots — Eagles Andy Reid 24–21

2006 XL — Bill Cowher,  Steelers — Seahawks Mike Holmgren 21–10

2007 XLI — Tony Dungy,  Colts — Bears Lovie Smith 29–17

2008 XLII — Tom Coughlin,  Giants — Patriots Bill Belichick 17–14

2009 XLIII — Mike Tomlin,   Steelers — Cardinals Ken Whisenhunt 27–23

2010 XLIV — Sean Payton,  Saints — Colts Jim Caldwell 31–17

2011 XLV — Mike McCarthy,  Packers — Steelers Mike Tomlin 31–25

2012 XLVI — Tom Coughlin, (2) Giants — Patriots Bill Belichick 21–17

2013 XLVII — John Harbaugh,   Ravens — 49ers Jim Harbaugh 34–31

2014 XLVIII — Pete Carroll, Seahawks — John Fox, Broncos, 43–8

2015 XLIX — Bill Belichick (4), Patriots — Pete Carroll, Seahawks, 28–24

2016 50 — Gary Kubiak, Broncos — Ron Rivera, Panthers, 24–10

2017 LI — Bill Belichick (5), Patriots — Dan Quinn, Falcons, 34–28 (OT)

2018 LII — Doug Pederson, Eagles — Bill Belichick, Patriots, 41-33

2019 LIII — Bill Belichick (6), Patriots — Sean McVay, Rams, 13-3

2020 LIV — Andy Reid, Chiefs — Kyle Shanahan, 49ers, 31-20

2021 LV — Bruce Arians, Buccaneers — Andy Reid, Chiefs, 31-9

2022 LVI — Sean McVay, Rams — Zac Taylor, Bengals, 23-20

2023 LVII — Andy Reid (2), KC Chiefs — Nick Sirianni, Eagles, 38-25

2024 LIX —  Nick Sirianni, Eagles 
—    Andy Reid (3), KC Chiefs  40-22

Upcoming year 2026 Su-er Bowl LX (60) will be held at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California.



Which NFL Head Coaches have the Most Super Bowl Wins.



NFL Coaches with the Most Super Bowl Wins: Thirteen of the 32 different head coaches who have won a Super Bowl have done so more than once.

Each coach who won multiple championships did so while leading the same team, but only four of them were able to do so more than once.

With six Super Bowl victories, Bill Belichick leads all coaches, four more than former Steelers coach Chuck Noll.

New England has won the Super Bowls XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX, XLIX, LI, and LII under Belichick's direction. Additionally, he led the team to Super Bowls XLII, XLVI, and LII, which they all lost by a single point.



Noll was unbeaten in championship games and helped Pittsburgh win Super Bowls IX, X, XIII, and XIV.



Which Head Coaches Have Appeared in the Most Super Bowls, Most Super Bowl Appearances.?



Head Coach --   Super Bowls Appearances  --   Team(s)



Bill Belichick,  9 — XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX, XLII, XLVI, XLIX, LI, LII, LIII — New England Patriots

Don Shula,  6 — III, VI, VII, VIII, XVII, XIX — Baltimore Colts, Miami Dolphins

Andy Reid,  5 — XXXIX, LIV, LV, LVII, LVIII — Philadelphia Eagles, Kansas City Chiefs

Tom Landry,  5 — V, VI, X, XII, XIII — Dallas Cowboys

Chuck Noll,  4 — IX, X, XIII, XIV — Pittsburgh Steelers

Joe Gibbs,  4 — XVII, XVIII, XXII, XXVI — Washington Redskins

Bud Grant,  4 — IV, VIII, IX, XI — Minnesota Vikings

Marv Levy,  4 — XXV, XXVI, XXVII, XXVIII — Buffalo Bills

Dan Reeves,  4 — XXI, XXII, XXIV, XXXIII — Denver Broncos, Atlanta Falcons

Bill Walsh,  3 — XVI, XIX, XXIII — San Francisco 49ers

Bill Parcells,  3 — XXI, XXV, XXXI — New York Giants, New England Patriots

Mike Holmgren,  3 — XXXI, XXXII, XL — Green Bay Packers, Seattle Seahawks

Vince Lombardi,  2 — I, II — Green Bay Packers

Tom Flores,  2 — XV, XVIII — Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders

Jimmy Johnson,  2 — XXVII, XXVIII — Dallas Cowboys

George Seifert,  2 — XXIV, XXIX — San Francisco 49ers

Mike Shanahan,  2 — XXXII, XXXIII — Denver Broncos

Tom Coughlin,  2 — XLII, XLVI — New York Giants

Hank Stram,  2 — I, IV — Kansas City Chiefs

Dick Vermeil,  2 — XV, XXXIV — Philadelphia Eagles, St. Louis Rams

Bill Cowher,  2 — XXX, XL — Pittsburgh Steelers

Pete Carroll,  2 — XLVIII, XLIX — Seattle Seahawks

Mike Tomlin,  2 — XLIII, XLV — Pittsburgh Steelers

John Fox,  2 — XXXVIII, XLVIII — Carolina Panthers, Denver Broncos




Q. Who has won the most Super Bowls?

Bill Belichick has won the most Super Bowls as a head coach with 6. He is 
followed by Chuck Noll (4), Bill Walsh (3), and Joe Gibbs (3).


Q. How Many Coaches Have Won Multiple Super Bowls?

There are 13 head coaches who have won multiple Super Bowls.


Q. How many people have won a Super Bowl as a player and head coach?

There are only three coaches who have won the Super Bowl as both a player and head coach: Tom Flores, Mike Ditka, and Tony Dungy.




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4 Comments

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  2. Any discussion about the Super Bowl Head coaching would be incomplete without the namesake himself; Vince Lombardi had

    ReplyDelete