the Indianapolis colts
Yes, because the Super Bowl is played between the AFC champion and the NFC champion, the winner of the Super Bowl would be entitled to both rings.
The NFC. Since Super Bowl XLII the NFC has 20 Super Bowl wins and the AFC has 18.
NO. Always AFC v. NFC
AFC NFC NFL Super Bowl and Pro Bowl- How it all works: The NFL is the National Football League.The NFL is broken down into two conferences (set of teams)The AFC -American Football Conferenceand the NFC -National Football ConferenceThe Super Bowl:The winning team of the AFC Championship plays the winning team of the NFC Championship at the Super Bowl.The Pro Bowl:The Best players from all the AFC teams play the Best players from all the NFC teams at the Pro Bowl ( excluding players on the two teams that go to the Superbowl) If you play in the Super Bowl-you don't play in the Pro Bowl.The pro Bowl takes place a week before the Super bowl (it used to occur after the Super Bowl, but this custom changed 2 years ago).For the 2011 YearAFC Championship- Jets Vs Steelers (Jan 23 2011)-The Steelers wonNFC Championship- Bears Vs Packers (January 23 2011)The Packers wonPro Bowl- (January 30th 2011)Super Bowl -(February 6th 2011)Steelers Vs Packers
For Super Bowl XLVIII the AFC is considered the home team. For the tv broadcasts, the away team plays Saturday and the home team plays Sunday.
The home team will be the AFC.
Yes. (Giants are NFC, Jets are AFC) The Super Bowl consists of one team from the NFC and one from the AFC.
No #6 seed AFC team has every played a #6 seed NFC team in the Superbowl.
the Indianapolis colts
Pittsburgh steelers
A team qualifies for the Super Bowl by winning either the AFC or NFC Conference Championship game.
The Colts were a member of the NFL when they played in Super Bowl III and a member of the AFC when they played in Super Bowls V and XLI.
Somewhere before the super bowl.
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Baltimore Colts
pats I think