For the second time in three seasons, the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles are set to square off in the Super Bowl, which obviously means that Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts are once again set to duke it out for the right to hoist the Lombardi Trophy.
As such, this marks just the fourth time in Super Bowl history that the game will feature a rematch of starting quarterbacks.
So, what exactly does this have to do with the Dallas Cowboys? Well, the answer to that question is quite simple.
Of the previous three instances in which this rarity took place, the first two featured America's Team and the two most legendary quarterbacks in franchise history, those, of course, being Roger Staubach and Troy Aikman.
The two most recent quarterbacks to meet twice in the Super Bowl were Tom Brady and Eli Manning, who battled in Super Bowl 42 and then again in Super Bowl 46. Manning's New York Giants famously upset Brady's New England Patriots both times.
But you didn't come here for Brady-Manning recaps, so let's have a look back at how Staubach and Aikman fared in their respective Super Bowl rematches.
Roger Staubach vs. Terry Bradshaw
During the 1975 NFL season, four years after leading the Cowboys to victory in Super Bowl 6, Roger Staubach led Dallas back to the Big Game for a matchup with Terry Bradshaw and the defending champion Pittsburgh Steelers.
While Staubach completed 15 of 24 passes for 204 yards and two touchdowns, he also threw three interceptions, the last coming on a Hail Mary attempt on the final play of a 21-17 loss. Bradshaw completed only nine of 19 passes but still threw for 209 yards and two scores with zero picks.
The Cowboys and Steelers met again following the 1978 campaign in Super Bowl 13, a game which many believe is one of the greatest championship battles in NFL history.
Staubach and Bradshaw each completed 17 of 30 passes, but Bradshaw threw for 318 yards and four touchdowns against one interception, while Staubach threw for 228 yards with three touchdowns and an interception.
It was once again a close contest, but it was the Steelers who came out on top with a 35-31 victory, thus giving them Super Bowl wins in five years. Pittsburgh went on to add a fourth title the following year.
Troy Aikman vs. Jim Kelly
After 13 seasons of failing to reach the Super Bowl following Staubach's second loss to Bradshaw, the Cowboys returned to the title game at the conclusion of the 1992 season.
In just his fourth season after Dallas made him the No. 1 overall pick in the 1989 draft, Troy Aikman had become one of the NFL's best quarterbacks and led the Cowboys into a Super Bowl 27 matchup with Jim Kelly and the Buffalo Bills.
The Bills, of course, were making their third consecutive appearance in the title game, taking losses in the first two, respectively, to the New York Giants and the team now known as the Washington Commanders.
And behind a dominant performance from Aikman, who earned Super Bowl MVP honors after completing 22 of 30 passes for 273 yards with four touchdowns and no interceptions, Dallas handed Buffalo its worst defeat yet, taking a 52-17 victory.
One year later, the Cowboys and Bills squared off in Super Bowl 28, and while this contest was a little more competitive, Dallas emerged victorious yet again, this time by a score of 30-13.
Aikman wasn't nearly as sharp, throwing for 207 yards with no touchdowns and an interception, but Emmitt Smith, who'd already won NFL MVP, picked up the slack with 132 rushing yards and two touchdowns en route to winning Super Bowl MVP.
You may have noticed that in the first three Super Bowl starting QB rematches that the signal-caller who won the first also won the second. So, if the Eagles want to add a second Lombardi to their trophy case, Jalen Hurts will have to make a little history.
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