Yes. Peyton Manning quarterbacked the 2006 Indianapolis Colts in Super Bowl XLI (beat Chicago Bears 29-17), and quarterbacked the 2015 Denver Broncos 9 years later in Super Bowl 50 (beat Carolina Panthers 24-10). Manning also lost one Super Bowl on each team (Super Bowls 44 and 48).
Other quarterbacks have played for two different teams (with Morrall and Rutledge each on two winning teams). Earl Morrall, notably, won 9 regular season games in Miami's "perfect season" in 1972, while Bob Griese returned to win Super Bowl VII (1973). Jeff Rutledge was also on the LA Rams team for Super Bowl XIV, but did not play.
QB on 2 Super Bowl teams:
Earl Morrall, Baltimore (III, V won), Miami (VII won, VIII won)
Jeff Rutledge, New York Giants (XXI won), Washington (XXVI won)
Craig Morton, Dallas (V), Denver (XII, lost to Dallas)
- first QB to start, lose a Super Bowl for two different teams
Kurt Warner, St. Louis (XXXIV won, XXXVI), Arizona (XLII)
- second QB to start, lose a Super Bowl for two different teams
The following were on the roster, but did not play 1 or 2 of the games:
Matt Cavanaugh, San Francisco (XIX), New York Giants (XXV)
Jim McMahon, Chicago (XX), Green Bay (XXXI)
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No quarterback has won the Super Bowl with different teams. The only starting quarterbacks to take two separate teams to the Super Bowl are Craig Morton and Kurt Warner. Morton led the 1970 Dallas Cowboys to the big game, but lost to the Baltimore Colts 16-13. He later led the 1977 Denver Broncos to the Super Bowl, but lost the game to the Dallas Cowboys 27-10. Warner took the Rams to Super Bowls XXXIV and XXXVI, winning one and losing one, and the Cardinals to Super Bowl XLIII, losing to the Steelers.
Ken Norton Jr., who won Super Bowls XXVII in 1993 and XXVIII in 1994 with Dallas, went to San Francisco and won Super Bowl XXIX in 1995. Deion Sanders did it with San Francisco, Super Bowl XXIX in 1995, and Dallas, Super Bowl XXX in 1996.
Is this a trick question? Jim Plunkett won in 1981 with the Oakland Raiders and again in 1984 with the LA Raiders.
As of the 2008 season, Kurt Warner becomes the 2nd quarterback to lead two different teams to the Superbowl. The 1st was Craig Morton, with the Cowboys (1970) and Broncos (1977).