Bob Griese; Bob Griese started the season as the primary quarterback but suffered a fractured leg and dislocated ankle in Game 5 of the 1972 season against the San Diego Chargers. Griese was replaced by Earl Morrall who started all of the games up to and including the AFC championship game against the Steelers. Morrall was replaced by Griese in the second half of the game and was the starter in the Super Bowl.
Bob Griese started the season as starting QB but suffered a fractured ankle early in the season. Earl Morrill took over and quarterbacked the team through the AFC championship game when Griese took over in the second half of that game. Griese was the starting QB in the Super Bowl (VII) when they defeated the Washington Redskins to complete their undefeated season.
Earl Morrall of the Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl V. Morrall entered the game in the second quarter with the Colts trailing the Dallas Cowboys, 13-6, when starter John Unitas suffered a rib injury. Morrall played the rest of the game and the Colts won, 16-13, on a last second field goal.
Griese was injured in the 5th game of the season, against the Chargers, and did not play again until the 14th and final game, against the Colts, in a mop up role. He did not play in the divisional playoff game against the Browns but was called on in the second half of the AFC championship game against the Steelers. He started and played the entire game in Super Bowl VII.
Derek Jeter won his second championship ring in 1998.
Only four QBs have won three rings as starters: Bradshaw, Montana, Aikman and Brady. Each of them trailed at some point during their Superbowl wins, so I suppose that makes Bradshaw the first. The answer is Earl Morrall of the Baltimore Colts who replaced John Unitas who was knocked out of Super Bowl V in the second quarter and played the rest of the game. The Colts entered the 4th quarter trailing 13-6 and wound up scoring 10 points to win the game 16-13. Morrall then went on to the Miami Dolphins where he won two more Super Bowls as a backup to Bob Griese. So, he was the first to engineer a come from behind victory and he won three rings.
2001
second. Example 1: If a team wins they get aggregate, if a team comes second they get reserveaggregate. Example 2: In seniors the top division is Championship and the second top division is Championship reserve
For a QB that was truly a backup (second string), that would be Earl Morrall who was second string for the 1970 Baltimore Colts that won Super Bowl V and the 1972 and 1973 Miami Dolphins who won Super Bowls VII and VIII. Morrall started 11 games (9 regular season, 2 playoff) in the 1972 season when Bob Griese went down with leg and ankle injuries but went back to second string when Griese was declared the starter for the Super Bowl. Morrall also took over for John Unitas in Super Bowl V when Unitas went down with a rib injury. Many QBs have won two rings as a backup. Steve Young of the San Francisco 49ers won rings in Super Bowls XXIII and XXIV as a backup and Super Bowl XXIX as a starter. Zeke Bratkowski of the Green Bay Packers won rings in Super Bowls I and II. Joe Gilliam and Terry Hanratty of the Pittsburgh Steelers won rings as backups in Super Bowls IX and X. Cliff Stoudt and Mike Kruczek won rings as backups for the Steelers in Super Bowls XIII and XIV. Jason Garrett of the Dallas Cowboys won rings as a backup in Super Bowls XXVIII and XXX. Gary Kubiak of the Denver Broncos won rings as a backup in Super Bowls XXXII and XXXIII. Rohan Davey of the New England Patriots won rings as a backup in Super Bowls XXXVIII and XXXIX.
1926
1925
The Rockets won the championship in 1995. It was the second of two championships.