The NFL playoffs have a funny way of turning nobodies into household names. When the lights shine the brightest, it’s often the unsung guys—the backups, the specialists, the afterthoughts—who steal the show.
These 14 players weren’t stars when the postseason began, but they ended it as legends. They didn’t need Pro Bowls or fat contracts to make history—they just needed the moment.
14. Larry Brown

No one expected a cornerback with two career interceptions to win Super Bowl MVP. But Larry Brown picked off Neil O’Donnell twice and became the Cowboys’ unexpected hero.
13. James White

Tom Brady may have gotten the glory, but James White was the engine behind the greatest Super Bowl comeback ever. He scored three touchdowns and the game-winner in overtime, all while never acting like the moment was too big.
12. Corey Webster

Webster wasn’t a lockdown corner, but he made playoff quarterbacks look foolish. He iced the Packers in the 2007 NFC Championship and helped spoil the Patriots’ perfect season.
11. Tracy Porter

All it took was one pick-six on Peyton Manning for Tracy Porter to cement his place in Saints lore. His timing couldn’t have been better, shutting the door on the Colts and sealing New Orleans’ only Super Bowl win.
10. Timmy Smith

Timmy Smith wasn’t a household name going into Super Bowl XXII—and he never really was after. But for one glorious night, he ran for over 200 yards and looked like a Hall of Famer.
9. David Tyree

One helmet catch, infinite immortality. Tyree wasn’t even a regular part of the Giants’ offense, but he made the most unforgettable grab in Super Bowl history.
8. B.J. Raji

Defensive tackles aren’t supposed to score touchdowns in the playoffs—but B.J. Raji didn’t care. His NFC Championship pick-six was part ridiculous, part amazing, and 100% unforgettable.
7. Chris Hogan

Hogan went from lacrosse player to playoff flamethrower. In the 2016 AFC Championship, he torched the Steelers for 180 yards and two touchdowns like it was nothing.
6. Raheem Mostert

Mostert was on his seventh NFL team before he even got a real shot. Then he dropped 220 yards and four touchdowns on the Packers in the NFC title game like he’d been doing it for years.
5. Malcolm Smith

Most people remember the Legion of Boom, but Malcolm Smith was the one who walked away with Super Bowl MVP. He had a pick-six, a fumble recovery, and a knack for being in the right place at the right time.
4. Ricky Proehl

Ricky Proehl was the definition of dependable, and in the playoffs, he somehow always came up clutch. He caught massive late-game touchdowns for both the Rams and Panthers during their Super Bowl runs.
3. Santonio Holmes

Holmes was solid during the regular season, but his toe-tapping Super Bowl catch made him a legend. It was pure sideline magic and the kind of moment kids recreate in the backyard.
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2. Julian Edelman

He was a converted quarterback who didn’t even start his career as a wide receiver. But Edelman turned into one of the most clutch playoff performers ever, including his gravity-defying catch in Super Bowl LI.
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1. Malcolm Butler

He had never started an NFL game before the Super Bowl. Then he read the play, jumped the route, picked off Russell Wilson, and gave the Patriots one of the wildest finishes in history.