{"id":50108,"date":"2019-06-21T04:30:39","date_gmt":"2019-06-21T04:30:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sportscroll.com\/?p=50108"},"modified":"2023-07-07T10:26:23","modified_gmt":"2023-07-07T10:26:23","slug":"top-nfl-players-who-didnt-win-a-super-bowl","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/develop.sportscroll.com\/top-nfl-players-who-didnt-win-a-super-bowl\/","title":{"rendered":"Top NFL Players Who Didn’t Win A Super Bowl"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
The Super Bowl is the biggest single-day sporting event in the United States, as fans plan an entire weekend around the season-ending big game each winter.<\/p>\n
However, it’s not just there for parties, as many top NFL players’ career legacies are predicated on whether or not they were able to win a Super Bowl There’s a much more defining aspect to each Super Bowl as a result. Many of these players are legendary Hall of Famers; some are even all-time greats.<\/p>\n
But for whatever reason, be it bad play or bad luck, they were simply unable to get over the hump and win the biggest game in pro football. We broke down the biggest names to fall short. Some you’ll recognize instantly, while others may be a bit more unknown. Others still have a chance to right the ship and win a Super Bowl.<\/p>\n
Here are the greatest NFL players to never win the Super Bowl:<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Rivers is arguably the greatest quarterback in Chargers history, surpassing a first ballot Hall of Famer also on this list. Indeed, Rivers has posted Hall of Fame numbers in his career with 4,518 pass completions for 54,656 yards, 374 touchdowns, and 178 interceptions.<\/p>\n
However, he’s also yet to make it to the biggest game in the sport. His closest chance was following the 2007 season when his Chargers lost to the Patriots in the AFC title game. In fact, New England has been his kryptonite of sorts as he’s 0-8 against the ageless Tom Brady in his career. The Chargers were surging last year until they ran into New England again. The arguably have the most talented roster in the NFL heading into the 2019 season, so Rivers still has time to win his first Super Bowl.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Fouts is a Chargers legend who made it into the Hall of Fame on his first try thanks to his gaudy statistics. He played his entire 15 years in the league with San Diego, leading the NFL in passing yards from 1979-1982. He was also the first passer in history to throw for 4,000 yards three straight years when throwing for 4,000 yards was considered a large feat.<\/p>\n
But he was never able to even play in the Super Bowl. For various reasons, the Chargers just didn’t have the overall team to make it there. Fouts now makes his living as an NFL analyst on CBS during the fall.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The most prominent Charger on this list isn’t Philip Rivers or Dan Fouts. No, it’s Rivers’ longtime running mate LaDainian Tomlinson. The TCU product is without a doubt one of the finest running backs in NFL history, and it’s a shame he never even played in a Super Bowl let alone won one.<\/p>\n
He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2017 after rushing 3,174 times for 13,684 in his legendary career. ‘LT’ produced one of the best seasons in running back history when he rushed for 1,815 yards and 28 touchdowns, adding 56 receptions for 508 yards and three more scores and passing for two more touchdowns in 2006. But he never made it to the biggest game, falling short in frustrating fashion when his Chargers were trounced by the Patriots in the 2007 AFC title game.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Like LT, Sayers is another all-time great back who never won the big game. It remains unknown how good he could have been, as significant knee injuries limited to roughly five full seasons in the league. But when he played, he was one of the greats. Sayers stormed into the NFL from the outset of his career, setting the league record for touchdowns in his rookie season. He rushed for 14 touchdowns, caught six more, and scored on both kickoff and punt returns as well.<\/p>\n
It’s a travesty that Sayers never got to summit pro football’s highest peak, as he was truly one of the greats ever. It could be argued he was the greatest on pure talent alone, as most of his opposition believed him the toughest player to tackle in the NFL at the time. ‘The Kansas Comet’ is a legend, yet one who never achieved the league’s top achievement.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Former Bills star Thomas is one of the most heart-wrenching instances where a great football player never won the Super Bowl. It wasn’t for lack of trying, as his Buffalo Bills made four straight Super Bowls in the 1990s. Unfortunately, they lost all four.<\/p>\n
He’ll go down as a Hall of Famer, yet you can’t help but imagine that his career would have been so much more fulfilling and respected had Buffalo won only one of those four Super Bowl defeats. You need only look at the fact that Thomas set some truly great NFL playoff records to see how good he was. He had the playoff touchdowns with 21 and the most career points with 126, and even scored a touchdown in nine straight playoff games – another record.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The controversial “Juice” is more known for his infamous murder trial of the early 1990s and his criminal acts that followed than his actual football accomplishments these days. But there was a time when Simpson was the greatest running back in the NFL.<\/p>\n
Putting that in perspective, Simpson was the first player to rush for over 2,000 yards when he tallied 2,003 in 1973, breaking Jim Brown’s record. Several running backs have done it since, but he was the only one to do it under the old 14-game format. He still holds the NFL record for average rushing yards per game from that season with an unreal 143.1 yards per game. He never made or won a Super Bowl, however, appearing in just one playoff game in his pro career. The Bills lost to the Steelers 32-14 in that contest.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The perennially underrated Martin ended his decorated career as the fourth-leading rusher in NFL history and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2012. He did make it to one Super Bowl with the Pats, but they dropped Super Bowl XXXI to Brett Favre and the Green Bay Packers.<\/p>\n
He won the NFL rushing title with 1,697 yards in 2004, but a serious knee injury led to his retirement the following season. He had been an iron man up until that point in his career, missing only six games due to injury – an unheard of number for a running back. Martin ended his career as one of the greats with 3,518 carries for 14,101 yards and 90 touchdowns, but he never won the Super Bowl.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
The always-controversial “T.O.” is certainly one of the best wide receivers in NFL football history with the third-most receiving yards and touchdowns of all-time. Overall, Owens caught 1,078 passes for 15,934 yards and 153 touchdowns. He was still another Hall of Fame-caliber player who never won the Super Bowl despite making it there. Playing for the Philadelphia Eagles in 2004, Owens famously came back from a broken ankle that required surgery to insert a screw in his lower leg. He was stellar, with nine receptions for 122 yards.<\/p>\n
Yet his team fell short to the New England Patriots juggernaut like so many other players on this list. Owens bounced around to several other teams like the Dallas Cowboys, Buffalo Bills, and Cincinnati Bengals but never won a Super Bowl. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2018.<\/p>\n