Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs accomplished a feat that had never been done before: Getting back to the NFL’s championship game following back-to-back Super Bowl wins.
The Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles are gearing up for a Super Bowl rematch, two seasons after the Chiefs emerged victorious in a thrilling showdown during Super Bowl LVII. Now, two years later,
No NFL team in the Super Bowl era has managed a three-peat. But these teams — from MLB, the NBA, NHL and WNBA — have.
KC used a similar concept to clinch the game just a few weeks earlier. In a Week 16 victory against the Houston Texans, the Chiefs freed up Perine on a late third-and-4, running two receivers across the field as diversions to gain 16 yards on a similar run-out-the-clock drive.
Four members from the dynasty went on to be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame: Catfish Hunter (1987), Rollie Fingers (1992), Reggie Jackson (1993), and manager Dick Williams (2008). Out of the four Hall of Famers, only Fingers and Williams were inducted with the A's logo on their plaque.
The Los Angeles Lakers are in the City of Brotherly Love Tuesday night for a road game against the Philadelphia 76ers. With LeBron James in town, there is increased attention to this particular 76ers game,
The Kansas City Chiefs overcame Buffalo Bills on Sunday, which means Pat Riley could be in line for a huge payday. The term "three-peat" has become famous among sports fans in the last three decades.
Pat Riley, the current president and former head coach of the Miami Heat, owns half a dozen trademarks related to the word "three-peat." That could affect whether it appears on Chiefs merch, as they try to become the first NFL team to win three Super Bowls in a row.
If the Chiefs hit three Super Bowl wins in a row, they may have to pay Miami Heat's Pat Riley before they can crank out T-shirts.
The Kansas City Chiefs are looking to become the first team in NFL history to win three consecutive Super Bowls.
Only two NFL teams have ever won three straight championships with Green Bay doing it from 1929-31 and again in 1965-67 seasons.
The Chiefs' 32–29 win over the Buffalo Bills in Sunday's AFC championship drew an audience of 57.4 million viewers, Austin Karp of Sports Business Journal reported Tuesday morning.