29. 1974 Pittsburgh Steelers
The Pittsburgh Steelers, despite being one of the NFL’s most time-honored franchises, have endured a seemingly endless amount of drama with former superstars Antonio Brown and Le’Veon Bell in recent years. This Super Bowl season that actually kicked off their historic dynasty of the 1970s may have had more but of a different kind.

For starters, the year began with a players’ strike. Quarterback Joe Gilliam refused to stop working and kicked off the season for the Steelers. He went 4-1-1 through the first six games, yet was still sent to the pine in favor of a young quarterback named Terry Bradshaw. He would obviously go on to become arguably the greatest quarterback in Steelers’ history, but he was also sent to the showers that season in favor of Terry Hanratty. Luckily for Pittsburgh, they still had a dominant defense led by “Mean” Joe Greene that allowed only 13.5 points per game. Although the volatile Greene threatened to leave the team midseason, he ultimately stayed and led them to a 16-6 victory over Super Bowl punching bag Minnesota. The first Super Bowl of the “Steel Curtain” dynasty was a bit of a messy one.