10. John Fox
Regular-season record: 133-123-0
Postseason record: 8-7
Carolina Panthers, 2002-2010
Denver Broncos, 2011-2014
Chicago Bears, 2015-2017
John Fox isn’t often mentioned when the greatest head coaches of all time are discussed, but he is one of a handful of head coaches to lead two different teams to the Super Bowl. The 2003 Panthers made it to Super Bowl XXXVIII in Fox’s second year with the team, only to lose to the Patriots, 32-29, on a last-second field goal from Adam Vinatieri — after an out-of-bounds kickoff by Carolina kicker John Kasay gave New England the ball at its own 40-yard line for that final drive. Fox piloted the 2013 Broncos to Super Bowl XLVIII on the strength of Peyton Manning’s 55 touchdown passes and a 606-point season, but the incendiary Denver offense was snuffed by Seattle’s Legion of Boom in a 43-8 laugher. Following a 2014 season in which the Broncos went 12-4 and lost in the divisional round to the Colts, Denver decided to replace Fox with Gary Kubiak. The Broncos returned to the Super Bowl in Kubiak’s first season and earned a 24-10 win over Ron Rivera’s Panthers. Both Kubiak and Rivera had replaced Fox.