Who gets super bowl rings when a team wins

  1. Family & Relationships
  2. Teens
  3. Cheerleading

By

Kevin Ott

Kevin is a professional freelance writer with experience writing about a wide variety of topics.

Read More

Learn about our Editorial Policy.

Published April 11, 2018

Who gets super bowl rings when a team wins

Cheerleaders for the National Football League (NFL) will occasionally get Super Bowl rings, depending on the policy of the team's owner. In some cases, they might get bigger and better jewelry than the players (like a giant pendant). To better understand how the system works, it is important to understand who pays for the rings.

The Brokers of Super Bowl Rings

As this report details, the NFL gives $5,000 per ring up to 150 rings for the team who wins the Super Bowl. In today's gold and diamond market, $5,000 doesn't get you much, especially when you consider how many diamonds a Super Bowl ring has on it. (The rings for the 2013 Seahawks team each had 183 diamonds.) For this reason, the owners are given the following options by the NFL, which determines whether a team's cheerleaders will get rings:

  • The owner can choose to acquire fancier rings than what the NFL's $5,000 allotment would buy, but the owners must pay the extra costs. Owners always do pay these costs, and they tend to go wild with their rings to outdo the other owners.
  • The owner can purchase more than 150 rings, but they must absorb the extra cost incurred by the jeweler (who is usually Jostens or Tiffany and Co.).
  • This is the key point: the owner also has the freedom to give those 150+ rings to whomever the owner chooses. They're not limited to just giving rings to the players. This is why occasionally cheerleaders will get a ring.
Related Articles
  • 21 Super Bowl Party Games to Amp Up the Fun
  • 21 New Year's Eve Party Games: Cheers to Fun Times

Recent Examples of Team Policies

Examples in recent NFL history show how football team owners find creative ways to reward their cheerleaders, even when Super Bowl rings aren't in the equation. Alternatively, in some cases, the cheerleaders find their own ways to commemorate the championship, or the owner gives the cheerleaders something better than a ring (see the Patriots example for that one).

2016 Denver Broncos: Rings for Everyone

When the Denver Broncos won Super Bowl 50 in 2016, the owners gave official Super Bowl rings to the cheerleaders as well. In fact, not only did the cheerleaders get rings, but so did the trainers and the team's beat reporter. Talk about a team mentality!

2013 Baltimore Ravens: Cheerleaders Buy Their Own

The cheerleaders for the Ravens were not so lucky as the Broncos cheerleaders when the Ravens won Super Bowl 47. In an interview with Esquire, a Ravens cheerleader named Alyssa explained (in the final question) that they would not likely be getting rings (only the players and front office), but the cheerleaders would be buying rings for each other to commemorate it.

2015 New England Patriots: Something Better Than Rings

The Patriots cheerleaders didn't get rings, they got something better from the owner: huge diamond-encrusted pendants that have all the bling and symbols that the official Super Bowl ring have and more, along with a message inscribed that says "We are all Patriots." (The players were likely quite jealous.)

2010 New Orleans Saints: Rings for a Good Cause

Although the Saints cheerleaders did not get a ring when the team won Super Bowl 44 in 2010, the owner did some noble things with their rings:

  • The team gave an official ring to former special teams player Steve Gleason who had retired before the Saints had won their Super Bowl in 2010. Gleason had been diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease), and the team wanted to honor him.
  • The same year, the team gave one of their rings to a raffle to raise money for those affected by the Gulf oil spill that year. The ring raised $1.4 million for local charities.

In truth, owners agonize over who should get rings because the owners know some people closely linked to the team and its operations inevitably get left out and feelings get hurt. But every team has to draw the line somewhere.

Super Bowl Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend (Sometimes)

The final example with the Saints demonstrates how much freedom owners have with their Super Bowl rings. They can give their rings to anyone. Sometimes NFL cheerleaders get in on the Super Bowl bling, but sometimes not. In the latter case, at least they can buy unofficial replica rings if they really want to.

© 2022 LoveToKnow Media. All rights reserved.

Do both teams get a Super Bowl ring or just the winner?

Since only one Vince Lombardi Trophy is awarded to the team (ownership) itself, the Super Bowl ring offers a collectible memento for the actual players and team members to keep for themselves to symbolize their victory. There are also rings provided to the runners-up team of the Super Bowl.

Do teams get rings for bowl wins?

Many believe that only the team and coaches are given a ring but in truth, both the winning and losing team are allotted 150 Super Bowl Rings to be distributed (but not limited to) active and injured players , coaches, trainers, executives, personnel, and general staff.

Does the losing team of a Super Bowl get a ring?

You expect the winning team to get a ring, but the fact is that both teams get rings. The Super Bowl champs will have one that says Super Bowl LVI, but the losing team will get one that says Conference Champions.

What happens when a team wins the Super Bowl?

The breakdown for playoff bonuses for the 2021 season The Cincinnati Bengals face the Los Angeles Rams in Super Bowl LVI on February 13 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. Players on the winning team will each receive a $150,000 playoff bonus, while those on the losing team will continue to receive $75,000 more.