Players who have been named a team captain typically wear a "C" patch on their jerseys. There is a standard design used by all teams participating in the captaincy program. The patches are in team colors and are worn on the front left or right breast (depending on other patches, etc. worn by the specific team). The number of gold stars on the patch represents the number of years that player has been named captain by a team. If he has been named captain for longer than four years, the "C" on the patch is gold. On some teams'
color rush jerseys, plus the
Cincinnati Bengals' white uniforms, the stars (and "C", for captains with over four years of service) use team colors. During special recognitions, the patch may be a different color such as pink for breast cancer awareness or camouflage for military service recognition. In 2018, NFL began a partnership with the
American Cancer Society using a multi-color captain patch. Some teams (e.g. Pittsburgh and New England under former head coach
Bill Belichick) do not use the patch on their jerseys but still designate captains. The decision to wear or not wear patches can come from the coach or a team vote. Pittsburgh has never used captains patches during the lengthy tenure of head coach
Mike Tomlin, although they have named permanent captains. To date, they are the only team to have never worn patches. Baltimore had never worn patches either until the 2025 postseason. Other teams who do not use the patch designate captains weekly.
John Harbaugh has followed this practice in the regular season since becoming head coach of the
Baltimore Ravens, however, he surprisingly switched to using playoff captains in 2024, and the Ravens donned patches for the first time in franchise history. This is the same practice as the
Green Bay Packers have often followed: the team named weekly captains during the regular season, but would switch to assigning captains (who wore patches) for the entire postseason whenever they qualified.
Mike McCarthy kept this up when he became coach of the
Dallas Cowboys in 2020. With the hiring of head coach
Matt LaFleur in 2019, the Packers began assigning three weekly captains alongside three permanent captains, but in 2023 they reverted back to weekly captains for the regular season and individual playoff games, with no patches. The
Kansas City Chiefs also only name captains for their playoff runs. By and large, teams do not adorn the jerseys of weekly captains with patches. However, in 2019 the
Carolina Panthers voted
Gerald McCoy as a captain for their Week 2 matchup with the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers and affixed a patch to his jersey. He continued wearing the patch as the season continued in light of an injury to
Kawann Short. Similarly, London native
Efe Obada was voted a team captain for the Panthers' game there in 2019. In 2019, the NFL changed captains' patches slightly, removing the white outline at the patch's edge. Also, instead of stars "filled-in" with gold coloring to indicate years as a captain alongside "unfilled-in" white stars (i.e. a player who was in his second year as a captain would have 2 gold stars and 2 white stars on his patch), the patch now simply has gold stars indicating years served. ==Designation==