<P> In 2011, a Super Bowl ring belonging to Steve Wright, a lineman for the Green Bay Packers in the 1960s, sold for over $73,000 at auction . Three Super Bowl rings belonging to former Raiders' punter Ray Guy brought over $96,000 at auction . In 2012, Lawrence Taylor's son sold his father's Super Bowl ring from 1990 for more than $250,000 . </P> <Ul> <Li> Seven: two people . <Ul> <Li> Bill Belichick: two as defensive coordinator of the New York Giants and five as head coach of New England Patriots </Li> <Li> Neal Dahlen: five with San Francisco 49ers (staff and player personnel) and two with Denver Broncos (general manager) </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> Six: six people . <Ul> <Li> Dan Rooney and Art Rooney II: each as an executive with Pittsburgh Steelers </Li> <Li> Chuck Noll: four as head coach and two as a team consultant with Pittsburgh Steelers </Li> <Li> Bill Nunn: each as a scout with Pittsburgh Steelers </Li> <Li> "Mean Joe" Greene: four as a defensive tackle, two as a special assistant for player personnel, all with the Pittsburgh Steelers </Li> <Li> Conditioning coach Mike Woicik: three with Dallas Cowboys and three with New England Patriots </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> Five: twenty people . <Ul> <Li> Charles Haley, five (two as a linebacker with the San Francisco 49ers and three as a defensive end with the Dallas Cowboys) </Li> <Li> Tom Brady, five as starting quarterback with New England Patriots; he has the most rings of any active player (as of the end of the 2017--18 season), he is the only player to win five playing for one team, and he has more than any other quarterback in Super Bowl history . </Li> <Li> Robert Kraft, five as owner of New England Patriots </Li> <Li> Edward J. DeBartolo, Jr., five as owner of San Francisco 49ers </Li> <Li> Keith Simon: five as CFO and Executive VP with San Francisco 49ers </Li> <Li> Bobb McKittrick: five as offensive line coach with San Francisco 49ers </Li> <Li> Ray Rhodes: five as an assistant coach with San Francisco 49ers </Li> <Li> Bill McPherson: five as defensive line coach with San Francisco 49ers </Li> <Li> Dick Hoak: each as a running backs coach with Pittsburgh Steelers </Li> <Li> Romeo Crennel: two as a defensive coach with New York Giants and three as a defensive coordinator with New England Patriots </Li> <Li> George Seifert: three as an assistant coach and two as a head coach all with San Francisco 49ers </Li> <Li> Dwight Clark: two as a player and three as a member of the front office, all with San Francisco 49ers </Li> <Li> Pepper Johnson: two as a linebacker for New York Giants and three as an assistant coach with New England Patriots </Li> <Li> Monsignor Peter Armstrong: five as chaplain for San Francisco 49ers </Li> <Li> Markus Paul: three as an assistant strength and conditioning coach with the New England Patriots, and two as an assistant strength and conditioning coach with the New York Giants </Li> <Li> Tim Rooney: Three with Pittsburgh Steelers and two with New York Giants (as Pro Personnel Director / Scout) </Li> <Li> Josh McDaniels has won five with the New England Patriots his first as personnel assistant, second as defensive coaching assistant, third as quarterbacks coach and his fourth and fifth as offensive coordinator . </Li> <Li> Ivan Fears has won five with New England Patriots his first as wide receivers coach and the remaining as running backs coach . </Li> <Li> Ernie Adams has won five with New England Patriots as a football research director </Li> <Li> Brian Daboll has won five with New England Patriots, one as a defensive coaching assistant, two as wide receivers coach, and two as tight ends coach </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> Four: at least 39 players, many coaches and staff . <Ul> <Li> The first player to win four Super Bowl rings was tight - end Marv Fleming, who got a pair with Green Bay Packers in 1966 and 1967, and another pair with Miami Dolphins in 1972 and 1973 . </Li> <Li> Twenty - two players earned four rings with Pittsburgh Steelers in the 1970s: Terry Bradshaw, Franco Harris, Lynn Swann, John Stallworth, Mel Blount, Jack Lambert, Jack Ham, Mike Webster, Donnie Shell, L.C. Greenwood, Rocky Bleier, Gerry Mullins, Larry Brown, Mike Wagner, J.T. Thomas, Loren Toews, Jon Kolb, Sam Davis, Steve Furness, Dwight White, Randy Grossman and the previously mentioned Joe Greene (who later added two more rings). At least five coaches were with the team all four years: George Perles, Louis Riecke, Woody Widenhofer and (as noted above) Chuck Noll and Dick Hoak . The list of Steelers front office staff receiving four rings during that era includes Director of Player Personnel Dick Haley . </Li> <Li> Tom Flores: First person to have rings as a player (Kansas City Chiefs), assistant coach and head coach (Oakland Raiders) </Li> <Li> Joe Montana, Keena Turner, Jesse Sapolu, Eric Wright, Mike Wilson and Ronnie Lott each won four Super Bowl rings with the 49ers . </Li> <Li> Kicker Adam Vinatieri won three with the New England Patriots and one with the Indianapolis Colts </Li> <Li> Russ Grimm won three with Washington Redskins and one with Pittsburgh Steelers </Li> <Li> Ted Hendricks won one with Baltimore Colts and three with Oakland Raiders </Li> <Li> Bill Romanowski won two with San Francisco and two with Denver Broncos </Li> <Li> Coach Charlie Weis won one with New York Giants and three with New England Patriots </Li> <Li> Matt Millen has four rings while playing for four different cities and three different teams, one with Oakland Raiders, one with Los Angeles Raiders, one with San Francisco 49ers, and one with Washington Redskins (only player to earn a ring with four different cities) </Li> <Li> Sherman Lewis won three as running backs coach with San Francisco 49ers and one as offensive coordinator with Green Bay Packers </Li> <Li> Willie Davis Won all four rings with Green Bay Packers: two as a player, one as a member of the team's board of directors, and one as an emeritus director . He is the only person to possess all four of Green Bay's Super Bowl rings . Davis also won rings as a member of the 1961, 1962 and 1965 NFL Championship Green Bay Packer teams, bringing his unofficial championship ring count to seven, as the first three were awarded prior to the creation of the Super Bowl . </Li> <Li> Mike Pope won all four of his Super Bowl rings as the long time Tight End coach for New York Giants </Li> <Li> Ken Norton, Jr. was the first member of 3 Super Bowl - winning teams in a row as a player, and gained a 4th ring as the Linebacker coach for the 2013 Seattle Seahawks </Li> <Li> Larry Izzo won three Super Bowls with New England Patriots, and one as the special teams assistant coach with New York Giants </Li> <Li> Coach Gary Kubiak won one with San Francisco 49ers as quarterbacks coach, two with Denver Broncos as offensive coordinator, and one as the head coach of the Broncos </Li> <Li> Dante Scarnecchia has won four with New England Patriots as an offensive line coach, along with being assistant head coach for three of them </Li> <Li> Brian Pariani has won four rings . One as an offensive assistant coach with San Francisco 49ers and three as the tight ends coach with the Denver Broncos </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Li> Three: many players, coaches and staff <Ul> <Li> Among the many figures with three are Bill Walsh, John Elway, Mike Ditka, Mike Shanahan, Art Shell, Jerry Rice, Steve Young, Troy Aikman, Emmitt Smith, Jay Novacek, Michael Irvin, Larry Brown, Eric Mangini, Joe Gibbs, Dave Dalby, Cliff Branch, Roger Craig, Shannon Sharpe, Ed McCaffrey, Mark Schlereth, Forrest Gregg, Herb Adderley, Tom Coughlin, LeGarrette Blount, and Matt Cavanaugh . </Li> <Li> Twenty - two players earned three rings with the New England Patriots during the early 2000s: Troy Brown, Willie McGinest, Richard Seymour, Ty Law, Mike Vrabel, Tedy Bruschi, Kevin Faulk, Matt Light, Patrick Pass, Ted Johnson, Lonie Paxton, Stephen Neal, Joe Andruzzi, David Patten, Roman Phifer, Tom Ashworth, Adrian Klemm, Je'Rod Cherry, Matt Chatham, the aforementioned Adam Vinatieri (who later added a fourth ring with the Colts), the aforementioned Tom Brady (who went on to win two additional Super Bowls with the Patriots), and the aforementioned Larry Izzo (who won a fourth with the Giants). </Li> </Ul> </Li> </Ul> <Li> Seven: two people . <Ul> <Li> Bill Belichick: two as defensive coordinator of the New York Giants and five as head coach of New England Patriots </Li> <Li> Neal Dahlen: five with San Francisco 49ers (staff and player personnel) and two with Denver Broncos (general manager) </Li> </Ul> </Li> <Ul> <Li> Bill Belichick: two as defensive coordinator of the New York Giants and five as head coach of New England Patriots </Li> <Li> Neal Dahlen: five with San Francisco 49ers (staff and player personnel) and two with Denver Broncos (general manager) </Li> </Ul>

Who has the most super bowl rings in nfl history