Complete List of Every Super Bowl MVP in History, Walker 2026 MVP

All-Time Super Bowl MVP winners List: from Biletnikoff to Young, Mahomes to Walker in 2026..





The winner of the Super Bowl MVP LVII award will carry that distinction into the rest of his career, even his life. From contract negotiations to speaking appearances to even Hall of Fame debates, being voted on as the best player on the game’s biggest stage carries with it huge rewards.


The Seattle Seahawks are Super Bowl champions for the second time in franchise history following a 29-13 win over the New England Patriots. Neither team’s offense scored a touchdown until two were scored on consecutive possessions to open the fourth quarter – and then only once more.

The Seahawks showed why they ended the regular season with the No. 1 scoring defense in the NFL on Sunday, holding the Patriots scoreless over the first three quarters of action.

Seattle forced three turnovers and sacked Maye six times. On offense, Kenneth Walker III earned Super Bowl MVP honors by rushing for 135 yards on 27 carries. He also caught two passes for 26 yards.



Last Year WINNERJalen Hurts is a Super Bowl MVP. The Philadelphia Eagles quarterback was named MVP after the team obliterated the Kansas City Chiefs in a 40-22 romp to win the franchise’s second Super Bowl..

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Full List of NFL Super Bowl MVPs by year, SB I to LX, (1967-2026).






Who won the 2025 Super Bowl MVP.?

— Kenneth Walker III is running into free agency with a Super Bowl MVP.

Walker capped a prolific postseason with another big performance on the ground to help the Seattle Seahawks beat the New England Patriots 29-13 on Sunday night for a championship.

While the defense carried Seattle for much of the postseason, Walker was once again the engine of the offense by rushing for 135 yards and adding 26 receiving for his third straight 100-yard game from scrimmage in the postseason. He became the first running back since Terrell Davis 28 years ago to win Super Bowl MVP. 

Who won Super Bowl MVP in 2024?



Mahomes won the award for the third time in his career. He now is tied with Hall of Famer Joe Montana for the second-most Super Bowl MVPs in NFL history, trailing only Tom Brady, who won five.

Mahomes also becomes the third player ever to win the award in consecutive seasons after also claiming it in the Chiefs' Super Bowl 57 win over the Philadelphia Eagles.

On Sunday night, he went 34-of-46 passing for 333 yards and two touchdowns with one interception, adding a team-high 66 rushing yards on nine carries. His 3-yard touchdown pass to Mecole Hardman in overtime sealed the victory.


Super Bowl MVP 2023: After appearing to re-aggravate an ankle injury late in the second half, Mahomes went on to win the Super Bowl MVP award for the second time in his career.



Who has won the most Super Bowl MVPs of all time, multiple Super Bowl MVPs winners?



Chiefs' Mahomes became the sixth player to win multiple Super Bowl MVP trophies and the first since Eli Manning in 2012.

Just getting to the Super Bowl is difficult enough, never mind winning the match. But to win the football's biggest game's award for Most Valuable Player? That's amazing. To win MVP three times in a row? almost unheard of


Like most things in the NFL, the quarterback is the centre of attention. That holds true for Super Bowl MVPs as well.

The only player who won multiples MVPs, Tom Brady has won the five Super Bowl MVP trophies in his showcase than any other player in NFL history. Quarterbacks are the only players to have ever won multiple SB MVP awards.


Here’s the full list of those with multiple MVP trophies:



  • Tom Brady – 5
  •  Patrick Mahomes  –  3
  • Joe Montana – 3
  • Terry Bradshaw – 2
  • Bart Starr – 2
  • Eli Manning – 2

Super Bowl MVPs by position


  • Quarterback: 34
  • Running back: 8
  • Wide receiver: 8
  • Linebacker: 4
  • Defensive end: 2
  • Safety: 2
  • Cornerback: 1
  • Defensive tackle: 1

  • Kick returner: 1 (Desmond Howard, who returned a kickoff 99 yards for a touchdown and celebrated by dancing the robot)


Full List of NFL Super Bowl MVPs by year, SB I to LIX, (1967-2026).




There have been a total of 57 Super Bowl MVPs handed out in the history of the NFL, yet only 48 players have actually received a Most Valuable Player trophy given out after the league championship game takes place.

Here is the Complete list of NFL players to ever win Super Bowl MVP honor from SB I to LIX ( 1967-2026).



Super Bowl I (1967) – Bart Starr, QB, Green Bay — Two touchdown passes

Super Bowl II (1968) – Bart Starr, QB, Green Bay — 202 yards passing, 1 TD

Super Bowl III (1969) – Joe Namath, QB, NY Jets — 206 yards passing

Super Bowl IV (1970) – Len Dawson, QB, Kansas City — 142 yards passing, 1 TD

Super Bowl V (1971) – Chuck Howley, LB, Dallas — Two interceptions, fumble recovery

Super Bowl VI (1972) – Roger Staubach, QB, Dallas — 119 yards passing, 2 TDs

Super Bowl VII (1973) – Jake Scott, S, Miami — Two interceptions

Super Bowl VIII (1974) – Larry Csonka, FB, Miami — 33 carries, 145 yards rushing, 2 TDs

Super Bowl IX (1975) – Franco Harris, RB, Pittsburgh — 158 yards rushing, 1 TD

Super Bowl X (1976) – Lynn Swann, WR, Pittsburgh — 4 catches, 161 yards, 1 TD

Super Bowl XI (1977) – Fred Biletnikoff, WR, Oakland — 4 catches, 79 yards

Super Bowl XII (1978) – Harvey Martin & Randy White, DL, Dallas — Led Dallas defense that forced eight turnovers

Super Bowl XIII (1979) – Terry Bradshaw, QB, Pittsburgh — 318 yards passing, 4 TDs

Super Bowl XIV (1980) – Terry Bradshaw, QB, Pittsburgh — 309 yards passing, 2 TDs

Super Bowl XV (1981) – Jim Plunkett, QB, Oakland — 261 yards passing, 3 TDs

Super Bowl XVI (1982) – Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco — 157 yards passing, 1 TD

Super Bowl XVII (1983) – John Riggins, RB, Washington — 166 yards rushing, 1 TD

Super Bowl XVIII (1984) – Marcus Allen, RB, Los Angeles Raiders — 20 carries, 191 yards rushing, 2 TDs

Super Bowl XIX (1985) – Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco — 331 yards passing, 3 TDs

Super Bowl XX (1986) – Richard Dent, DE, Chicago — 2 sacks, 2 forced fumbles

Super Bowl XXI (1987) – Phil Simms, QB, New York Giants — 268 yards passing, 3 TDs

Super Bowl XXII (1988) – Doug Williams, QB, Washington — 340 yards passing, 4 TDs

Super Bowl XXIII (1989) – Jerry Rice, WR, San Francisco — 11 catches, 215 yards, 1 TD

Super Bowl XXIV (1990) – Joe Montana, QB, San Francisco — 297 yards passing, 5 TDs

Super Bowl XXV (1991) – Ottis Anderson, RB, New York Giants — 102 yards rushing, 1 TD

Super Bowl XXVI (1992) – Mark Rypien, QB, Washington — 292 yards passing, 2 TDs

Super Bowl XXVII (1993) – Troy Aikman, QB, Dallas — 273 yards passing, 4 TDs

Super Bowl XXVIII (1994) – Emmitt Smith, RB, Dallas — 30 carries, 132 yards, 2 TDs

Super Bowl XXIX (1995) – Steve Young, QB, San Francisco — 325 yards passing, 6 TDs

Super Bowl XXX (1996) – Larry Brown, CB, Dallas — Two interceptions

Super Bowl XXXI (1997) – Desmond Howard, KR, Green Bay — 244 all-purpose yards, 99-yard kick return TD

Super Bowl XXXII (1998) – Terrell Davis, RB, Denver — 30 carries, 157 yards, 3 TDs

Super Bowl XXXIII (1999) – John Elway, QB, Denver — 336 yards passing, 1 TD

Super Bowl XXXIV (2000) – Kurt Warner, QB, St. Louis — 414 yards passing, 2 TDs

Super Bowl XXXV (2001) – Ray Lewis, LB, Baltimore — Led a dominant Ravens defense

Super Bowl XXXVI (2002) – Tom Brady, QB, New England — 145 yards passing, 1 TD

Super Bowl XXXVII (2003) – Dexter Jackson, CB, Tampa Bay — Two first-half interceptions

Super Bowl XXXVIII (2004) – Tom Brady, QB, New England — 354 yards passing, 3 TDs

Super Bowl XXXVIV (2005) – Deion Branch, WR, New England — 11 catches, 133 yards

Super Bowl XL (2006) – Hines Ward, WR, Pittsburgh — 5 catches, 123 yards, 1 TD

Super Bowl XLI (2007) – Peyton Manning, QB, Indianapolis — 247 yards passing, 1 TD

Super Bowl XLII (2008) – Eli Manning, QB, New York Giants — 255 yards passing, 2 TDs

Super Bowl XLIII (2009) – Santonio Holmes, WR, Pittsburgh — 9 catches, 131 yards, 1 TD

Super Bowl XLIV (2010) – Drew Brees, QB, New Orleans — 32-of-39, 288 yards, 2 TDs

Super Bowl XLV (2011) – Aaron Rodgers, QB, Green Bay — 24-of-39, 304 yards, 3 TDs

Super Bowl XLVI (2012) – Eli Manning, QB, New York Giants — 30-of-40, 296 yards, 1 TD

Super Bowl XLVII (2013) – Joe Flacco, QB, Baltimore — 22-of-33, 287 yards, 3 TDs

Super Bowl XLVIII (2014) – Malcolm Smith, LB, Seattle — INT for TD, fumble recovery, 10 tackles

Super Bowl XLIX (2015) – Tom Brady, QB, New England — 37-of-50, 328 yards, 4 TDs

Super Bowl 50 (2016) – Von Miller, LB, Denver — Six tackles, 2.5 sacks, one pass defended

Super Bowl LI (2017) – Tom Brady, QB, New England — 43-of-62, 466 yards, 2 TDs

Super Bowl LII (2018) – Nick Foles, QB, Philadelphia — 28-of-43, 373 yards, 3 TDs, 1 TD reception

Super Bowl LIII (2019) – Julian Edelman, WR, New England — 10 catches, 141 yards

Super Bowl LIV (2020) – Patrick Mahomes, QB, Kansas City — 26-of-42, 286 yards, 2 TDs

Super Bowl LV (2021) – Tom Brady, QB, Tampa Bay — 21-of-29, 201 yards, 3 TDs

Super Bowl LVI (2022) – Cooper Kupp, WR, Los Angeles Rams — 8 catches, 92 yards, 2 TDs

Super Bowl LVII (2023) – Patrick Mahomes, QB, Kansas City — 21-of-27, 182 yards, 3 TDs

Super Bowl LVIII (2024)   – Patrick Mahomes, QB, Kansas City — 34-of-46 for 333 yards, 2 TDs, 1 interception. —

Super Bowl LIX ( 2025). - Jalen Hurts, QB, Philadelphia - 3 TD, 17-of-22 passes for 221 yards, 1 interception.

Super Bowl LX (2026) — Kenneth Walker, rushing for 135 yards on 27 carries. He two passes for 26 yards.


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3 Comments

  1. Great topic to cover keep sport alive

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  2. Behind Hurts and a dominant defensive performance, the Eagles flew out to a 24-0 lead in the first half.

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  3. Very interesting site about the NFL. I have learned a lot here.

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