The Super Bowl began using Roman numerals in 1971 with Super Bowl V, introduced by Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt for added prestige. Roman numer
The system of using roman numerals for each Super Bowl started over 50 years ago – but why is it used and not the year it is staged?
Some super Eagles question marks: Sirianni vs. Reid; Roman numeral nonsense; Nolan Smith for MVP? Let's take a closer look at some of the biggest questions ahead of the Super Bowl on Feb. 9.
Unlike the other major American sports leagues, the NFL uses Roman numerals to denote its title decider — the Super Bowl.
Millions of fans know they will be sitting down to watch the Philadelphia Eagles and the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LIX. What they may not know is that the color of the ever-prominent field goal posts isn’t what they think it is.
Pardon me for my timing, but from a Bostonian to Buffalonians: Once your team wins the big one, all past debts are paid in full.
The NFL had used unique, original logos for each Super Bowl in the past that often pertained to the game’s host city. That only
The Kansas City Chiefs have shared a quick snap-shot of their third-straight Super Bowl jerseys, and they are pretty cool, to say the least
Buffalo-Washington would have been the fun, underdog Super Bowl we hoped for — but Kansas City-Philadelphia is bigger. Chiefs-Eagles are the teams we love to hate in the matchup we hate to love.
Super Bowl LIX has the potential to be a ratings bonanza for FOX, but can it crack the list of most-watched Super Bowls of all time?
From straightforward simplicity to sleek and modern, the logos for the Super Bowl are incredibly recognizable.