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How many Cincinnati Bengals were in both Super Bowl 16 and 23?

In the 1980s, the Cincinnati Bengals lost two Super Bowls by a total of nine points. On Jan. 24, 1982, in Super Bowl XVI, the San Francisco 49ers beat them 26-21 at the Pontiac Silverdome outside of Detroit.

On Jan. 22, 1989, the Bengals fell to those same 49ers, 20-16, in Super Bowl XXIII at Joe Robbie Stadium outside of Miami, Florida. In both cases, the opposing quarterback was Pro Football Hall of Famer Joe Montana. The coach was another Hall of Famer, Bill Walsh.

More:The last time the Bengals were in the AFC Championship game: Jan. 8, 1989 vs. the Bills

More:Just joining the Bengals bandwagon now? Here's everything you need to know

As fate would have it, Walsh was a member of Paul Brown's original Cincinnati Bengals staff where the "West Coast offense" originated. When Brown retired as coach in 1975 and chose Bill "Tiger" Johnson as his successor, Walsh resigned. In 1979, he became San Francisco's head coach winning two of his three Super Bowl titles against his old employer.

Seven former Bengal players and three former coaches were part of both contests. Where are they now?

Jim Breech

Breech kicked three extra points in Super Bowl XVI and field goals of 34, 43 and 40 yards in Super Bowl XXIII. He was in line to be the game's MVP until Joe Montana spotted John Taylor open in the end zone with 34 seconds left. Breech has been active locally in sales, with the local chapter of NFL alumni and with the Kicks for Kids charitable organization with his placekicking successor, Doug Pelfrey. 

Cris Collinsworth, wide receiver for the Cincinnati Bengals, practices his pass-catching during the teams' workout at the Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich., Jan. 20, 1982.

Cris Collinsworth

The former Florida Gator started in Super Bowl XVI catching five passes for 107 yards. In Super Bowl XXIII, he caught three passes, which would be the last of his career. Moving on successfully to broadcasting, he took over 700 WLW Sports Talk from former Bengal Bob Trumpy and began a successful color commentary career. Recently, he's been known for the "Collinsworth Slide" as he comes into the shot on NBC's Sunday Night Football with former Reds play-by-play man Al Michaels. He also is the majority owner of Pro Football Focus.

Bengals 50:Cris Collinsworth, the Pro Bowler and media mogul

Bruce Coslet

The former Bengals tight end was the team's wide receivers coach in Super Bowl XVI and offensive coordinator in Super Bowl XXIII. He later became head coach of the New York Jets from 1990-93 before returning to the Bengals. After being named interim coach after Dave Shula's firing, he later got the full title and coached until 2000 when he resigned after an 0-3 start. He last coached in the NFL as offensive coordinator of the Dallas Cowboys in 2002. Now 75, Coslet last year saved a man from drowning in Collier County, Florida.

Bengals 50:Bruce Coslet saw it all with the Bengals 

Eddie Edwards

Edwards was the starting left defensive end in Super Bowl XVI and was on the roster for Super Bowl XXIII. The former Miami Hurricane held the Bengals' all-time record for sacks which was threatened by Carlos Dunlap. The NFL didn't recognize sacks as a stat until 1982. Now 67, Edwards is in the University of Miami Hall of Fame. 


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