When the Kansas City Chiefs take the field against the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl 2025, they wonâÂÂt just be playing for another championship. TheyâÂÂll be chasing history.
With a victory, Kansas City would become the first team in NFL history to win three consecutive Super Bowls â a feat that even Tom BradyâÂÂs Patriots, the â90s Cowboys, or the â70s Steelers never accomplished.
For Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, the significance isnâÂÂt lost.
âIt [would be] legendary,â Mahomes said last February, just hours after the Chiefs defeated the 49ers in Super Bowl 2024. âNo oneâÂÂs ever done it.â
Except ⦠thatâÂÂs not entirely true.
While no team has ever won three straight Super Bowls, Vince LombardiâÂÂs Green Bay Packers won three straight NFL Championships from 1965-67 â a run that included victories in Super Bowls I and II.
So, why isnâÂÂt that streak part of the conversation?
Hall of Fame linebacker Dave Robinson, a key figure in that Packers dynasty, has a theory.
âItâÂÂs a publicity thing,â said Robinson, 83. âItâÂÂs bogus.â
He believes the NFL is deliberately ignoring Green BayâÂÂs three-peat in order to drum up interest in the Chiefsâ run.
Hall of Famer Jerry Kramer, a dominant guard during LombardiâÂÂs reign, isnâÂÂt as convinced.
âYesterdayâÂÂs news,â said Kramer, 89. âI think itâÂÂs human nature to focus on today. And the game kind of contributes to that. Every year, another team wins.â
Regardless of the reason, one thing is clear: the original three-peat is fading from history. And as the Chiefs chase their own place in NFL immortality, the men who did it first are left wondering if their legacy is being erased.
A Dynasty Caught Between Eras
One of the biggest reasons the Packersâ three-peat isnâÂÂt widely acknowledged today is that the first of their championships predated the Super Bowl era.
By 1965, the American Football League had emerged as a legitimate challenger to the long-established National Football League. While the two leagues were on the path to a merger, there was still debate over which was superior. When the Packers won the 1965 NFL Championship against Jim BrownâÂÂs Cleveland Browns, many questioned whether they could truly call themselves the best team in professional football.
âThe AFL contended that we couldnâÂÂt be world champions in 1965,â Robinson recalled.
The argument wasnâÂÂt without precedent. Back in 1950, the Cleveland Browns â a team fresh from an upstart league, the AAFC â had embarrᴀssed the Philadelphia Eagles, then the reigning NFL champions, 35-10, in their first NFL game.
But Robinson was certain history wouldnâÂÂt have repeated itself.
âWe deserved to be called champions in 1965,â he said. âEveryone who saw the 1965 Packers and the AFL teams knew they werenâÂÂt going to beat us.â
Still, no official interleague showdown took place. The first Super Bowl wouldnâÂÂt happen until the following season, when the two-time defending NFL champion Packers finally had their chance to prove themselves against the AFLâÂÂs best â the Kansas City Chiefs.
For Kramer and the Packers, however, that first Super Bowl wasnâÂÂt as significant as it would later become.
âWe didnâÂÂt know the AFL. We hadnâÂÂt competed against any of those teams,â Kramer admitted. âWe watched the film, and wide receivers were running into each other. We played it over and laughed.â
The 1967 season saw the Packers complete their NFL championship three-peat, but it wasnâÂÂt the Super Bowl that cemented their dynasty. It was the brutal, freezing showdown against the Dallas Cowboys in the Ice Bowl â arguably the most famous game in NFL history.
In subzero temperatures, the game came down to one final drive, one final push, and one final sneak from Bart Starr to secure the victory.
âThe relief was so palpable when we won the Ice Bowl,â said Chuck Mercein, 81, a key addition to the 1967 championship team.
Two weeks later, the Packers dominated the Oakland Raiders in Super Bowl II, winning 33-14. For Mercein, the moment lacked the drama of the battles before it.
âThe Super Bowl was anticlimactic,â he admitted.
But if the Super Bowl didnâÂÂt yet carry the weight it does today, Lombardi himself understood what a three-peat meant. Unlike current Chiefs head coach Andy Reid â who said on âThe Rich Eisen Showâ recently, âI havenâÂÂt heard one mention of [the three-peat]. I havenâÂÂt mentioned it. I donâÂÂt plan on mentioning it,â â Lombardi made it clear to his players just how much was at stake.
Lombardi stressed how important it was to win three in a row,â Mercein said.
âVince LombardiâÂÂs goal was to win three consecutive championships,â Robinson added.
To commemorate that achievement, the Packersâ 1967 championship rings told the story: three diamonds in a row, symbolizing each consecutive тιтle.
The great irony of it all is that the trophy now bearing LombardiâÂÂs name wasnâÂÂt something he particularly valued at the time.
Robinson believes that if Lombardi had realized how important the Super Bowl would become, he wouldnâÂÂt have stepped away from coaching after the 1967 season.
âHad he realized how important the Super Bowl was going to be, he wouldnâÂÂt have retired, and we would have beat the Jets [in 1968],â Robinson said.
Mercein agreed.
âHe would have stuck around,â he said.
But Lombardi didnâÂÂt stay. He left the Packers at the peak of their dynasty, leaving the door open for a new era of championsâÂÂand for history to gradually reframe how his teamâÂÂs dominance was remembered.
Who are they rooting for?
Now, nearly 60 years later, the Chiefs are on the verge of a three-peat of their own. And the Packers legends know exactly where they stand on it. For them, the Chiefs arenâÂÂt just another dominant team, but a challenge to their place in history. And thatâÂÂs enough reason to root for the other side.
Kramer didnâÂÂt hesitate when asked.
âI donâÂÂt want them to have three in a row, claiming theyâÂÂre the only team to ever have three in a row, with most of the media doing the same,â he said.
Robinson, too, didnâÂÂt mince words.
âIf the Eagles win, IâÂÂll be a little happier,â he admitted, before pausing for a moment.
Then he added, âÂÂMatter of fact, IâÂÂll be a lot happier.âÂÂ
Mercein, while not as outspoken, shared the same sentiment.
âI donâÂÂt want them to have three in a row,â he said simply.
Despite their preference, none of them are underestimating Kansas City. Kramer, in particular, acknowledged the challenge Philadelphia faces.
âTheyâÂÂre a hell of a football team, and theyâÂÂve had a hell of a run already,â he said. âÂÂI donâÂÂt expect them to lose, but IâÂÂm not going to root for them.âÂÂ
Andrew Mercein is an M.S. Candidate at Columbia Universityâs Graduate School of Journalism and the grandson of Packers great Chuck Mercein.