Organizing a super bowl means a boost for the local economy and an influx of thousands of football fans.
The NFL was very selective with regard to the locations and places of the Super Bowl. This results mainly from the 1967 NFL championship match between Green Bay’s Packers and Dallas Cowboys with Field Lambeau, also known as “Ice Bowl”, or simply the coldest game in the history of the NFL.
No rule is officially in place, but, since the Super Bowl is challenged in early February, the outdoor stadiums of cold cities are out of the equation. The notable exception came to the Super Bowl XLVIII, which was held at Metlife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
So, without further delay, it is the five cities that were a host of the Super Bowl most at the same time:
Miami, Florida
Welcomed 11 Super Bowls: 1968, 1969, 1971, 1976, 1979, 1989, 1995, 1999, 2007, 2010, 2020
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Florida’s lights have always been too brilliant for one of the biggest sporting events so as not to take a breakthrough. Miami hosted the second edition of the NFL-AFL World Championship match in 1968, a victory by Green Bay 33-14 against the Oakland Raiders.
In total, 11 Super Bowl clashes were organized on the market, including five at the Orange Bowl and six others on the site now known as Hard Rock Stadium. The 2020 season ended with Miami organizing his 11th Super Bowl.
New Orleans, Louisiana
Hosted 10 Super Bowls: 1970, 1972, 1975, 1978, 1981, 1986, 1990, 1997, 2002, 2013, (2025)
Like Miami, New Orleans welcomed 10 Super Bowls in two different stadiums and has an eleventh planned for 2025.
The Super Bowls in 1970, 1972 and 1975 took place at the Stadium in Tulane, which houses the green wave of the University of Tulane. In 1975, Louisiana Superdome, located in the central affairs district of Nola and known as Mercedes-Benz Superdome after 2011, became the new house of Saints. This was followed by the first Super Bowl in the dome between cowboys and broncos in 1978.
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The last big match held in New Orleans was the victory of Baltimore Ravens 2013 against the 49ers of San Francisco. One of the notable things in the victory of the 34-31 Ravens was a breakdown of electricity that delayed the game – so much for a good impression.
Los Angeles, California
Hosted 8 Super Bowls: 1967, 1973, 1977, 1980, 1983, 1987, 1993, 2022, (2027)
The monumental the Coliseum Memorial was where it all started. Los Angeles was the Green Bay 35-10 victory site against the Kansas City chiefs in what was known as the first world championship match, or simply the Super Bowl I.
However, the Colosseum did not last long as the place of the Super Bowl. Miami Dolphins beat the Redskins of Washington, 14-7, to finish the only undefeated season in the League in 1973 in the Super Bowl VII.
The Los Angeles region should only wait until an additional four years to accommodate another edition of the Big Game. The five times the next southern California saw a clash of the Super Bowl that he was at Rose Bowl, located in Pasadena, 17 miles northeast of the city center. It was despite the fact that no NFL team calls her home.
The Super Bowl XXVII, marked by a third of the four consecutive defeats of the Bills and the half-time performance of Michael Jackson, called by some the best in the history of the Super Bowl, was the last time that the great match was held in the Grand Los Angeles region. It has experienced a frequentation of 98,374 – a record that is still loud to date.
The 55th edition of the Super Bowl took place at the Sofi stadium, which opened its doors for Rams and the loaders at the start of the 2020 season.
Tampa, Florida
Hosted 5 Super Bowls: 1984, 1991, 2001, 2009, 2021
The Tampa stadium became the second place in Florida’s state to welcome a Super Bowl in 1984, a 38-9 Raiders victory against the favored Redskins.
In 1999, the Buccaneers of Tampa Bay would begin to play in their current home at the Raymond James Stadium, who welcomed the Big Game in 2001, 2009 and 2021. Tampa Bay beat the chiefs in their home stadium.
Phoenix, Arizona
Hosted 4 Super Bowls: 1996, 2008, 2015, 2023
A Super Bowl took place in Arizona for the first time in 1996 when the Cowboys won their fifth title of the Super Bowl, beating the Steelers 27-17 during the first defeat of Pittsburgh on this scene. The Arena was Sun Devil Stadium, which houses Arizona State in Temple, Arizona. From 1988 to 2005, the Cardinals of Phoenix / Arizona also played home matches, the registered office of the organization still in Temple.
In 2006, the cardinals opened a modern installation in Glendale called the Stade of the University of Phoenix, State Farm Stadium after the 2018 season. No other place was as coherent to obtain historically large super bowls – one of them was the upheaval of the Giants 17-14 against the Patriot and the famous “Catch Helmet” by David Tyree. The other – a Patriots’ victory over the Seahawks, sealed by Seattle’s decision to throw the line of a yard and the interception of Malcolm Butler.