New England's Drake Maye and Seattle's Sam Darnold will join an exclusive club on Super Bowl Sunday.
Only 67 men have ever started at quarterback in football's biggest game, and Maye and Darnold will join the ranks of those who have played the most pressure-packed position in sports in front of a TV audience expected to top 125 million viewers.
As the Patriots and Seahawks prepare to clash in Super Bowl LX (6:30 p.m. ET on NBC) in Santa Clara, California, cllct decided to rank all the Super Bowl quarterbacks ... by their collectibility.
So, we dug into Card Ladder and found the top sale for every QB who has ever started a Super Bowl ... plus the two newbies in 2026.
Let's check out the list:
1. Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs: $4,300,000

Super Bowls started: LIV, LV, LVII, LVIII, LIX
Top card: 2017 National Treasures Platinum Shield 1/1 Rookie Patch Autograph
Notes: With five Super Bowl appearances in his first seven seasons, Mahomes has placed himself among the all-time greats with three MVP performances in the big game. Mahomes' 2017 National Treasures Platinum Shield 1/1 Rookie Patch Autograph became the most valuable football card of all time in a July 2021 sale.
2. Tom Brady, Patriots and Bucs: $3,800,000
Super Bowls started: XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX, XLII, XLVI, XLIX, LI, LII, LIII, LV
Top card: 2000 Playoff Contenders Championship Ticket Autograph /100
Notes: Brady might be the undisputed GOAT when it comes to championship success, having won seven Super Bowls and started 10, but he ranks No. 2 on the all-time card list behind Mahomes.
3. Joe Burrow, Bengals: $1,700,000
Super Bowl started: LVI
Top card: 2020 Panini National Treasures Rookie Patch Autograph Platinum NFL Shield 1/1
Notes: Burrow took the Bengals to the Super Bowl at just 25, but the four seasons since that 2022 game have ended in frustration for the former Heisman Trophy winner.
4. Terry Bradshaw, Steelers: $430,500
Super Bowls started: IX, X, XIII, XIV
Top card: 1971 Topps
Notes: Always at his best in Super Bowls, Bradshaw went 4-0 as Pittsburgh won four titles in six seasons. The list takes a big drop after starting with three seven-digit sales, but it's still nice to see a vintage card such as Bradshaw's rookie come in at No. 4.
5. Bart Starr, Packers: $288,000
Super Bowls started: I, II
Top card: 1957 Topps
Notes: A five-time NFL champion, Starr led the Packers to victory in the first two Super Bowl games — before the NFL-AFL Championship was even officially called the Super Bowl. His 1957 Topps rookie card is one of the hobby's real beauties.
6. Joe Namath, Jets: $264,000
Super Bowl started: III
Top card: 1965 Topps
Notes: While he only made one Super Bowl appearance, Namath's victory in the 1969 game ranks as one of the most memorable and meaningful in football history. Not only did Broadway Joe famously guarantee his Jets of the AFL would upset the NFL's mighty Baltimore Colts, the result helped lead to a merger between the two leagues. His 1965 Topps rookie card is a grail worth of Namath's flash.
7. Aaron Rodgers, Packers: $225,000
Super Bowl started: XLV
Top card: 2005 SP Authentic Gold Rookie Patch Autograph /25
Notes: Rodgers owns four NFL MVP awards, trailing only Peyton Manning with five, but his title in 2011 still ranks as the only championship of his career.
8. Peyton Manning, Colts: $207,400
Super Bowls started: XLI, XLIV, XLVIII, 50
Top card: 1998 Playoff Contender Rookie Ticket Autograph
Notes: Manning went 2-2 in his four Super Bowl appearances, but he surely would have reached the big game more often if he hadn't played in Tom Brady's era.
9. Brock Purdy, 49ers: $186,000
Super Bowl started: LVIII
Top card: 2022 National Treasures Rookie Patch Autograph Platinum Shield 1/1
Notes: Certainly not a bad number for the rookie card of Mr. Irrelevant from the 2022 NFL Draft. In his first full season as the starter, Purdy went 12-4 in 2023 and took San Francisco all the way to Super Bowl LVIII, where the Niners lost in overtime to Mahomes' Chiefs.
10. Johnny Unitas, Colts: $167,300
Super Bowl started: V
Top card: 1957 Topps
Notes: Considered by many one of the greatest QBs in NFL history, Unitas started the Colts' Super Bowl V victory and made a relief appearance in their stunning Super Bowl III loss. His 1957 Topps rookie is as good as a vintage football card can get.
11. Drake Maye, Patriots: $164,700
Super Bowl started (projected): LX
Top card: 2024 Panini National Treasures NFL Shield Rookie Patch Autograph 1/1
Notes: Maye will become the second-youngest QB in history to start a Super Bowl when he leads the Patriots against the Seahawks on Feb. 8. At 23 years, 162 days, Maye is only 35 days older than Dan Marino was when he started his only Super Bowl in 1985. His 2024 National Treasures RPA is a good bet to grow in value.
12. Jalen Hurts, Eagles: $144,000
Super Bowls started: LVII, LIX
Top card: 2020 Panini Prizm Black Finite 1/1
Notes: Hurts has started two Super Bowls in the last four seasons and was the MVP of last year's game. One of his most sought-after cards is his 2020 Prizm Black Finite 1/1 rookie card.
13. Brett Favre, Packers: $125,000
Super Bowls started: XXXI, XXXII
Top card: 1999 Metal Universe Gem Masters 1/1
Notes: Favre was 28 when he started his second Super Bowl in 1998, but after his Packers were upset by John Elway's Broncos, the three-time MVP never made it back to the title game.
14. Steve Young, 49ers: $120,000
Super Bowl started: XXIX
Top card: 1986 Topps
Notes: Young's first card as a professional was his 1984 Topps USFL No. 52 for the Los Angeles Express. His top sale, however, comes in a Tampa Bay Buccaneers jersey from 1986 Topps. Young backed up Joe Montana in two Super Bowls before finally producing his MVP performance as a starter in XXIX in 1995.
15. Dan Marino, Dolphins: $108,000
Super Bowl started: XIX
Top card: 1998 Skybox E-X2001 Essential Credentials Now /8
Notes: The Hall of Famer reached the Super Bowl in the record-setting second season of his career, but he never made it back after the Dolphins' loss to Joe Montana and the Niners.
16. Joe Montana, 49ers: $103,200
Super Bowls started: XVI, XIX, XXIII, XXIV
Top card: 1981 Topps
Notes: Considered by many as the GOAT before Tom Brady came along, Joe Cool was at his best in Super Bowls. Not only did Montana go a perfect 4-0 in his starts in the title game, he famously did not throw an interception in the four games while piling up 11 TD passes. His 1981 Topps rookie card is one of the essential 1980s grails, and it ranks as the last card to top six digits on the list.
17. Russell Wilson, Seahawks: $72,500
Super Bowls started: XLVIII, XLIX
Top card: 2012 National Treasures Rookie Patch Autograph Gold /49
Notes: Wilson won a Super Bowl in his second NFL season and reached the title game again in his third campaign, being denied a repeat with a disastrous interception at the goal line in the final minute.
18. Ben Roethlisberger, Steelers: $67,200
Super Bowls started: XL, XLIII, XLV
Top card: 2004 UD Ultimate Collection Rookie Jerseys Logo Autos 1/1
Notes: At age 23, Roethlisberger became the youngest QB to ever win a Super Bowl when he led the Steelers past the Seahawks in Super Bowl XL in 2006. Big Ben added another title three years later, but he lost his third appearance in the title game against Aaron Rodger's Packers in 2011.
19. Matthew Stafford, Rams: $55,000
Super Bowl started: LVI
Top card: 2009 Bowman Chrome Superfractor 1/1
Notes: After toiling in Detroit, where the Lions reached the playoffs just three times in his 12 seasons at the helm (2009-20), Stafford found the promised land in his first season with the Rams. He led Los Angeles past Cincinnati 23-20 in Super Bowl LVI and has reached the postseason in four of his five seasons in L.A. The presumptive 2025 NFL MVP, Stafford's Rams fell just short of Super Bowl LX, falling at Seattle in the NFC title game.
20. John Elway, Broncos: $50,000

Super Bowls started: XXI, XXII, XXIV, XXXII, XXXIII
Top card: 1984 Topps
Notes: Few players have ever reversed their Super Bowl legacy like Elway. Three times in the 1980s, the Broncos reached the big game behind Elway's individual brilliance. Three times, Denver was blown out in the Super Bowl by an NFC power. Finally, in his 15th NFL season, Elway got that long-awaited ring with an upset of the defending champion Packers in Super Bowl XXXII. He made it a repeat the next year, turning in a Super Bowl MVP performance as Denver routed Atlanta in his final NFL game. His 1984 Topps rookie is one of football's most sought-after cards.
21. Ken Stabler, Raiders: $42,000
Super Bowl started: XI
Top card: 1973 Topps
Notes: The Snake epitomized the swashbuckling Raiders of the 1970s, and he was at the helm when John Madden's squad finally broke through and won its first Super Bowl in 1977 with a 32-14 rout of the Vikings at the Rose Bowl.
22. Drew Brees, Saints: $40,800
Super Bowl started: XLIV
Top card: 2001 Playoff Contenders Rookie Ticket Autograph
Notes: Although he is one of only two QBs to ever throw for 80,000 yards (Brady is the other), Brees reached the Super Bowl only once. His Saints made the most of the appearance, winning the franchise's only championship in an upset of Peyton Manning's Colts.
23. Eli Manning, Giants: $37,000
Super Bowls started: XLII, XLVI
Top card: 2004 UD Ultimate Collection NFL Shield Rookie Patch Autograph 1/1
Notes: Manning might own a .500 career record (117-117), but he has an arguable Hall of Fame case based just on his two Super Bowl appearances. Peyton's younger brother twice got the better of Brady in the big game, most famously ruining the Patriots' quest for an undefeated season in Super Bowl XLII.
24. Roger Staubach, Cowboys: $25,676
Super Bowls started: VI, X, XII, XIII
Top card: 1972 Topps
Notes: Captain America was the poster boy for the mighty Cowboys of the 1970s, starting four Super Bowls for Dallas and winning two. If it hadn't been for Bradshaw's Steelers, Staubach might have been a perfect 4-0. His 1972 Topps rookie card is another vintage classic.
25. Jared Goff, Rams: $24,000
Super Bowl started: LIII
Top card: 2016 Panini National Treasures NFL Shield Rookie Patch Autograph 1/1
Notes: Before he was traded to Detroit, Goff led the Rams to the Super Bowl in his third season in Los Angeles. Unfortunately for Goff, they ran into Bill Belichick's stifling defense in Super Bowl LIII and failed to reach the end zone in a 13-3 defeat.
26. Kurt Warner, Rams and Cardinals: $22,000
Super Bowls started: XXXIV, XXXVI, XLIII
Top card: 2025 Panini Absolute Purple Kaboom Super Bowl Horizontal
Notes: One of four QBs to start Super Bowls for two different teams (joining Brady, Peyton Manning and Craig Morton), Warner fell just short of winning his second title with the Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII. He will always be remembered for the "Greatest Show on Turf" Rams who burst onto the scene in 1999, a magical season in which Warner won the NFL MVP and lifted the Rams past the Titans in Super Bowl XXXIV.
27. Colin Kaepernick, 49ers: $20,910
Super Bowl started: XLVII
Top card: 2011 Topps Platinum Red Refractor Rookie Patch Autograph 1/1
Notes: In his first season as the 49ers starter, the dynamic Kaepernick carried the 49ers to Super Bowl XLVII, where they fell just short against Ray Lewis' Ravens in New Orleans. In the 2016 season, Kaepernick began kneeling during the national anthem before games to protest racial injustice. He was a free agent after the 2016 season and was never signed by an NFL team again.
28. Troy Aikman, Cowboys: $17,500
Super Bowls started: XXVII, XXVIII, XXX
Top card: 1998 Metal Universe Precious Metal Gems /50
Notes: Along with fellow "Triplets" Emmitt Smith and Michael Irvin, Aikman was part of the nucleus of the Cowboys dynasty of the 1990s. The Hall of Famer led Dallas to three championships in four seasons, winning Dallas' last Super Bowl in 1996.
29. Steve McNair, Titans: $15,100
Super Bowl started: XXXIV
Top card: 2007 Topps Chrome Blue Refractor
Notes: In one of the most dramatic finishes in Super Bowl history, McNair and the Titans fell just a yard short of a magical comeback against the high-scoring Rams in Super Bowl XXXIV. Although he was co-MVP with Peyton Manning in 2003, McNair failed to get back to the big game in his 13-season career with Tennessee and Baltimore.
30. Jim Kelly, Bills: $10,980
Super Bowls started: XXV, XXVI, XXVII, XXVIII
Top card: 1984 Topps USFL
Notes: Kelly's Bills remain the only team to ever reach four consecutive Super Bowls. Unfortunately, Buffalo's remarkable achievement in the early 1990s is tarnished because the Bills lost all four games. The Hall of Famer's most expensive card is from the famed 1984 USFL set.
31. Len Dawson, Chiefs: $10,750
Super Bowls started: I, IV
Top card: 1963 Fleer
Notes: The starter for the AFL's Chiefs in the first Super Bowl — which produced one of football's most iconic photos at halftime — Dawson skillfully "matriculated" the ball down the field as K.C. smashed the Vikings for the franchise's first title in Super Bowl IV.
32. Sam Darnold, Seahawks: $10,300
Super Bowl started (projected): LX
Top card: 2018 Panini Gold Kaboom /10
Notes: The No. 3 overall pick of the 2018 NFL Draft, Darnold beat out Josh Allen, Baker Mayfield and Lamar Jackson as the first member of his draft class to start a Super Bowl. Once considered a bust with the Jets, Darnold will lead the Seahawks into Super Bowl LX on Feb. 8. Darnold was a backup for the 49ers in Super Bowl LVIII.
33. Bob Griese, Dolphins: $8,400
Super Bowls started: VI, VII, VIII
Top card: 1968 Topps
Notes: The quarterback of the only NFL team to go undefeated in the Super Bowl era, Griese led Miami to a 17-0 mark in the 1972 season, including a Super Bowl VII triumph over Washington. The Dolphins repeated the following year to win the franchise's only two championships.
34. Jimmy Garoppolo, 49ers: $8,000
Super Bowl started: LIV
Top card: 2014 Topps Chrome Superfractor 1/1
Notes: Garoppolo led the Niners to a 13-3 record with 27 TD passes in 2019. It might have been good enough for the franchise's sixth Super Bowl title if his deep pass in the final two minutes had connected with a streaking Emmanuel Sanders. Instead, the ball was just overthrown, and Mahomes' Chiefs emerged with a 31-20 victory.
35. Earl Morrall, Colts: $7,665

Super Bowl started: III
Top card: 1957 Topps
Notes: Morrall was the NFL's ultimate relief pitcher, starting just 102 of the 255 games in his 21-year career. With Unitas injured entering the 1968 season, Morrall made all 14 regular-season starts as the powerful Colts rolled to the NFL title. When Namath's Jets jumped into the lead in Super Bowl III, Morrall ironically was benched for Unitas in the second half as the AFL champs made history.
36. Fran Tarkenton, Vikings: $7,500
Super Bowls started: VIII, IX, XI
Top card: 1962 Topps
Notes: When he retired in 1978, Tarkenton led the NFL in all-time pass attempts, completions, TD passes and rushing yards by a quarterback. Sadly, he is probably more remembered as the QB who couldn't get Minnesota over the hump in three Super Bowl defeats.
37. Drew Bledsoe, Patriots: $7,000
Super Bowl started: XXXI
Top card: 1998 Metal Universe Precious Metal Gem Masters 1/1
Notes: The first pick in the 1992 NFL Draft, Bledsoe was a four-time Pro Bowler and New England's franchise quarterback before some kid named Brady came along. He led the Pats to their second Super Bowl appearance, but fell to Brett Favre and the Packers in New Orleans. His record-setting card comes from the popular Precious Metal Gems set.
38. Cam Newton, Panthers: $6,750
Super Bowl started: 50
Top card: 2011 Panini National Treasures Rookie Patch Autograph Gold /49
Notes: Newton had a storybook season in 2015, winning the NFL MVP as Carolina went 15-1 and rolled to Super Bowl 50. The last chapter against Denver's vaunted defense ended in disappointment, however.
39. Matt Ryan, Falcons: $6,379
Super Bowl started: LI
Top card: 2008 Upper Deck Exquisite Collection Rookie Patch Autograph 1/1
Notes: In an alternate reality, the Falcons held their 28-3 lead, and Ryan is known as the QB who led Atlanta to its only Super Bowl championship. Unfortunately for the Falcons, the Patriots' dramatic rally happened in this reality and ended with New England winning the first overtime game in Super Bowl history.
40. Ken Anderson, Bengals: $6,180
Super Bowl started: XVI
Top card: 1973 Topps
Notes: Anderson was named NFL MVP in the 1981 season and led the Bengals to Super Bowl XVI, where he would set a then-record by completing 73.5% of his passes in a 300-yard performance. His heroics weren't enough, however, as Montana and the Niners won their first title.
41. Craig Morton, Cowboys and Broncos: $4,688
Super Bowls started: V, XII
Top card: 1968 Topps
Notes: Morton ranks as one of four QBs to start in a Super Bowl with two different teams.
42. Joe Theismann, Washington: $4,530
Super Bowls started: XVII, XVIII
Top card: 1975 Topps
Notes: Theismann led Washington to back-to-back Super Bowls following the 1982 and 1983 seasons, winning the title in the first trip, but then running into a red-hot Raiders team in the bid for a repeat.
43. Nick Foles, Eagles: $4,500
Super Bowl started: LII
Top card: 2012 Topps Chrome Superfractor 1/1
Notes: Taking over for the injured Carson Wentz, Foles' playoff run after the 2017 season was straight out of a Disney movie. He capped it off by outdueling Tom Brady in Super Bowl LII, throwing for 373 yards and three TDs in an MVP performance.
44. Joe Kapp, Vikings: $4,270
Super Bowl started: IV
Top card: 1969 Topps
Notes: Kapp led the Vikings to a 12-2 regular-season record and a win in the NFL Championship Game in the 1969 season (the last non-Super Bowl NFL Championship). However, the Vikings were soundly beaten by the AFL's Chiefs in Super Bowl IV, further paving the way for the merger of the two leagues.
45. Donovan McNabb, Eagles $4,250
Super Bowl started: XXXIX
Top card: 1999 SkyBox Premium Shining Star Rubies /30
Notes: After leading the Eagles to four consecutive NFC title games, McNabb finally broke through and got Philadelphia to the Super Bowl after the 2004 season. That run was spoiled by Brady and the Patriots in Jacksonville as New England became the only team to repeat in the 2000s.
46. Brad Johnson, Buccaneers: $3,480
Super Bowl started: XXXVII
Top card: 1997 Metal Universe Precious Metal Gems /15
Notes: Backed by one of the most dominant defenses of the era, Johnson and the Bucs crushed the Raiders in Super Bowl XXXVII in San Diego.
47. Jim Plunkett, Raiders: $3,300
Super Bowls started: XV, XVIII
Top card: 1972 Topps
Notes: Plunkett authored one of the great late-season career revivals in football history, winning two Super Bowls with the Raiders after being dismissed as a bust in New England. He is one of the few QBs with multiple Super Bowl wins to not reach the Hall of Fame.
48. Phil Simms, Giants: $3,250

Super Bowl started: XXI
Top card: 1980 Topps
Notes: Simms famously played a near-perfect game in Super Bowl XXI, connecting on 22 of 25 passes for 268 yards and three TDs as the Giants routed the Broncos.
49. Ron Jaworski, Eagles: $3,200
Super Bowl started: XV
Top card: 1976 Topps
Notes: Jaws threw 27 TD passes in leading the 1980 Eagles to a 12-4 record and the franchise's first Super Bowl. The party stopped on Bourbon Street, however, as the Raiders rolled to a 27-10 victory in Super Bowl XV.
50. Daryle Lamonica, Raiders: $3,161
Super Bowl started: II
Top card: 1965 Topps
Notes: Known as the Mad Bomber, Lamonica threw 30 TD passes as the Raiders won the AFL in 1967 to earn a date with Vince Lombardi's Packers in the second Super Bowl. Oakland was no match for Green Bay, falling 33-14 as Lamonica threw for just 208 yards with an interception.
51. Doug Williams, Washington: $2,880
Super Bowl started: XXII
Top card: 1979 Topps
Notes: No player has ever performed in a single quarter of the Super Bowl like Williams did in the second quarter of Super Bowl XXII. The QB threw four touchdown passes to lead a 35-point onslaught as Washington turned a 10-0 deficit into a 35-10 halftime lead. He finished with 340 yards and was named the game's MVP.
52. Joe Flacco, Ravens: $2,562

Super Bowl started: XLVII
Top card: 2008 Panini National Treasures Rookie Patch Autograph /99
Notes: Flacco's playoff performance in the 2012 Ravens' run to the franchise's second title remains among the best in the history of the game. In four games, Flacco threw for 1,140 yards with 11 TD passes and no interceptions. He was named Super Bowl MVP after throwing for 287 yards and three TDs in Baltimore's victory over San Francisco.
53. Rich Gannon, Raiders: $2,400
Super Bowl started: XXXVII
Top card: 2024 Panini Eminence MVP Platinum Bar 1/1
Notes: A career journeyman, Gannon put it all together in 2002, being named NFL MVP after throwing for nearly 4,700 yards and 26 TDs for a high-powered Oakland attack. Former Raiders coach Jon Gruden and his Bucs ended Gannon's dream season in Super Bowl XXXVII.
54. Boomer Esiason, Bengals: $1,499.95
Super Bowl started: XXIII
Top card: 1986 Topps
Notes: Esiason was named NFL MVP in a stellar 1988 season as he guided the Bengals all the way to the second Super Bowl appearance in franchise history. That campaign would have been even more memorable if Montana had not led the Niners on a dramatic 92-yard drive in the game's final minutes.
55. Jim McMahon, Bears: $1,400
Super Bowl started: XX
Top card: 1983 Topps
Notes: The "punky QB" was arguably the most dynamic personality on a team filled with them as the 1985 Bears authored one of the most memorable NFL seasons in history. Chicago went 15-1 as McMahon led an efficient offense that leaned on one of the best defenses ever. Chicago's 46-10 rout of New England in New Orleans — in a game that was played 40 years ago this week — was never even remotely in doubt.
56. Kerry Collins, New York Giants: $1,362
Super Bowl started: XXXV
Top card: 2000 Ultra Masterpiece 1/1
Notes: Collins led the Giants on a magical run to Super Bowl XXXV, which included an overwhelming 41-0 victory over the Vikings in the NFC Championship. That party ended against Baltimore's dominant defense, which picked off Collins four times.
57. Billy Kilmer, Washington: $1,068
Super Bowl started: VII
Top card: 1962 Topps
Notes: The leader of George Allen's "Over the Hill Gang," Kilmer led Washington to its first Super Bowl — where the undefeated Dolphins blocked their path in a tight 14-7 loss.
58. Matt Hasselbeck, Seahawks: $1,033
Super Bowl started: XL
Top card: 2007 Topps Finest Superfractor 1/1
Notes: A three-time Pro Bowler, Hasselbeck steered the Seahawks to the first Super Bowl appearance in franchise history after a 2005 season in which they led the NFL in scoring.
59. Stan Humphries, Chargers: $950
Super Bowl started: XXIX
Top card: 1998 Metal Universe Precious Metal Gems /50
Notes: It was Humphries — not Hall of Famer Dan Fouts or future Hall of Famer Phil Rivers — who led the Chargers to their only Super Bowl appearance in 1995. Alas, the Bolts were no match for Steve Young's high-powered Niners.
60. Trent Dilfer, Ravens: $901
Super Bowl started: XXXV
Top card: 1998 Metal Universe Precious Metal Gems /50
Notes: Although many considered Dilfer as just "along for the ride" when the Ravens' historically dominant defense claimed the franchise's first Super Bowl title, the quarterback played mistake-free football in a 34-7 rout.
61. Neil O'Donnell, Steelers: $788
Super Bowl started: XXX
Top card: 1997 Metal Universe Precious Metal Gems /150
Notes: O'Donnell had the Steelers on the verge of upsetting the heavily favored Cowboys in Super Bowl XXX, but two late interceptions sealed their fate.
62. Rex Grossman, Bears: $599
Super Bowl started: XLI
Top card: 2003 SP Authentic Gold Rookie Patch
Notes: In the best NFL season of his nine-year career, Grossman took the Bears to the Super Bowl in the 2006 campaign. Although Devin Hester's game-opening kick-return TD gave Chicago early hope, Super Bowl XLI in Miami is most remembered for Peyton Manning's long-waited coronation and Prince's incredible halftime performance.
63. Jake Delhomme, Panthers: $550
Super Bowl started: XXXVIII
Top card: 2005 Leaf Limited Hardware NFL Shield Autograph 1/1
Notes: Delhomme took the Panthers to the first Super Bowl in franchise history, and Carolina held the lead over New England midway through the fourth quarter before Brady rallied the Pats to their second championship.
64. Chris Chandler, Falcons: $461

Super Bowl started: XXXIII
Top card: 1999 Metal Universe Precious Metals Gems /50
Notes: A journeyman QB who played for eight teams in 17 NFL seasons, Chandler reached the pinnacle of his career when he steered Atlanta's "Dirty Birds" to the Super Bowl, including a stunning upset of the 15-1 Vikings in the NFC Championship Game.
65. David Woodley, Dolphins: $355
Super Bowl started: XVII
Top card: 1982 Topps
Notes: Just 24, Woodley was the youngest QB to start a Super Bowl at the time when he got the nod for Miami in its Super Bowl XVII loss to Washington.
66. Vince Ferragamo, Rams: $350
Super Bowl started: XIV
Top card: 2024 Panini Prizm Black Finite 1/1
Notes: Ferragamo took over the starting job when Pat Haden was injured midseason, and the Cal product took the 1979 Rams to the Super Bowl, where they ran into the Steelers dynasty.
67. Tony Eason, Patriots, $315
Super Bowl started: XX
Top card: 1985 Topps
Notes: A first-round pick out of Illinois in 1983, Eason traded off the starting job with Steve Grogan during New England's surprising 1985 season. Eason started Super Bowl XX against the dominant Bears defense, but was replaced by Grogan after misfiring on all six of his passes.
68. Mark Rypien, Washington: $265
Super Bowls started: XXVI
Top card: 2024 Panini Flawless Super Bowl NFL Shield Platinum 1/1
Notes: Leading Washington's explosive offense to a 14-2 record in 1991, Rypien threw 28 TD passes that season and was named Super Bowl MVP in the victory over Buffalo.
69. Jeff Hostetler, Giants: $150
Super Bowl started: XXV
Top card: 1996 Collector's Edge Super Bowl Game-Used Ball
Notes: Hostetler started just two games in the 1990 season, but he took over the Giants' starting job when Phil Simms was injured late in the season and led New York on a title run that included a victory over the high-powered Bills in the Super Bowl.
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Kevin Jackson is the chief content officer for cllct. He spent 25 years at ESPN Digital Media, where he was the founding editor of Page 2, and nearly four years as the Executive Director for Digital Content at FOX Sports.
cllct reporters Matt Liberman, Ben Burrows and Will Stern contributed to the research for this story.

