The success of "The Super Bowl Shuffle" initiated numerous imitations from numerous
NFL teams from across the league, making their own songs, but none achieving sales, a
Billboard chart position, or
Grammy Award nomination and recognition near what was accomplished by the
Chicago Bears. Even a fan group from
Chicago, called Da Superfans, performed a version of the song in early 2007 to celebrate the
Bears' return to the
Super Bowl that year.
NFL teams Cincinnati Bengals • In ,
Cincinnati Bengals rookie
Ickey Woods garnered some attention for his dance the "
Ickey Shuffle"; that was the name of the dance, there was no actual song that was released. The Bengals also lost in
Super Bowl XXIII.
Green Bay Packers • Spoofing the "
Macarena" song, the
Green Bay Packers created and released the song "Packarena" in , during their
Super Bowl XXXI run. The song received some local airplay, but never charted on the
Billboard Hot 100.
Los Angeles Raiders • During the season, two teams tried to repeat the pattern. The
Los Angeles Raiders released "The Silver and Black Attack", based on "
The Yellow and Black Attack" by
Stryper, but the Raiders finished 8–8 that season and were out of the playoffs.
Los Angeles Rams • The
Los Angeles Rams recorded "Let's Ram It" during the
1986 season; however, they eventually lost the
NFC Wild Card game to the
Washington Redskins. Despite this, the song regained popularity on the internet prior to several high-profile playoff appearances following their return to Los Angeles in 2016. The Rams embraced the popularity of the song once again as they reintroduced it much to the humor of fans, including their appearances in both
Super Bowl LIII and
Super Bowl LVI, with them winning the latter.
Miami Dolphins • In , the
Miami Dolphins created a song spoofing the
MC Hammer song "
U Can't Touch This" called "U Can't Touch Us". Minnesota would lose the following week to the eventual
Super Bowl XLIV champion
New Orleans Saints in the
NFC Championship Game. The song was not initially commercially available, but nine years later, in April 2019, it was released as a 7" vinyl single and distributed to some attendees of a
Minnesota Timberwolves NBA game. It was also made available digitally.
New England Patriots • In early 1986, before the Super Bowl as a response to the Bears hit song "The Super Bowl Shuffle", the
New England Patriots recorded their own team song, "New England, The Patriots, And We", whose lyrics recounted their success in the playoff brackets and predicted victory against the Bears in
Super Bowl XX. Its music video featured appearances by several Patriots, Boston-area celebrities (including
Robert Urich) and local media personalities. Unlike the Bears' song, the Patriots' song was not commercially available and thus never charted on the
Billboard Hot 100. The song itself received some airplay on Boston radio stations. Despite the Patriots' optimistic prediction, the Bears went on to beat the Patriots in
Super Bowl XX, 46–10.
New York Giants • After winning
Super Bowl XXI, the
New York Giants released "Walk Like a Giant", based on "
Walk Like an Egyptian" by
the Bangles.
Philadelphia Eagles • Also in 1988, the
Philadelphia Eagles recorded the song "Buddy's Watching You", referring to Eagles head coach and former Bears defensive coordinator
Buddy Ryan. The song was not commercially available as a single, but was released as a video on the VHS format. The Eagles
Hall of Famer Reggie White, an ordained minister, made a reference in the song to his faith with the line "I hit quarterbacks like they committed sin."
Pittsburgh Steelers • During the season, the
Pittsburgh Steelers reportedly were planning to create a similar song, likely with some help from backup quarterback
Mike Tomczak, who was a member of the '85 Bears and participated in the successful "Super Bowl Shuffle." Reportedly, coach
Bill Cowher vetoed the idea. The Steelers lost the
1994 AFC Championship game 17–13 to
the San Diego Chargers. That same season, local Pittsburgh artist Roger Wood created the "
Here We Go" song, which has since become the Steelers unofficial fight song and is updated almost annually to account for roster turnover.
San Francisco 49ers • The 49ers had been the first team during the 1980s to attempt a group song, predating that of the Bears. In 1984, safety
Ronnie Lott and running back
Roger Craig convinced numerous members of the team to write and record their own rap song, simply entitled "We're the 49ers". It was produced by
Narada Michael Walden, who became known for his work with
Whitney Houston and
Aretha Franklin. The song was commercially available, but did not chart on the
Billboard Hot 100.
Seattle Seahawks • During the 1985 season, the
Seattle Seahawks recorded "The Blue Wave Is on a Roll", a jazz-themed song with various vocal harmonies, a saxophone solo, as well as various blooper-style sound effects. The song was not commercially available but instead was an internal production and video that circulated among fans. The Seahawks would ultimately have an 8–8 win-lose record and miss the playoffs.
Other parodies • In 1985, the
Kansas Wesleyan football team won a conference title in the
NAIA. They made the "KCAC shuffle" and showed it on the local access channel for
Salina, Kansas, Channel 6. • During the 1985–86 season, the
Boston College men's ice hockey team recorded the "Beanpot Trot" prior to their participation in the famed
Beanpot Tournament. The Eagles placed second, losing 4–1 to rival school
Boston University in the championship game on February 10, 1986. • The
Houston Rockets, with the aid of Dynomite III, had a rap song in 1986 titled "Rocket Strut". They made it all the way to the
NBA Finals that year, but lost to
Boston in 6 games. • Also in 1986, the
New York Mets released their own rap song called “Get Metsmerized”. The Mets won 108 games that season, advanced to the
World Series, and defeated the
Boston Red Sox in seven games to win their second world championship. • In 1987, "Super Bowl Shuffle" producer
Richard E. Meyer created a similar music video starring Chicago Bears coach
Mike Ditka, titled "The Grabowski Shuffle." The video, about "working hard to get what you want", was inspired by a comment Ditka had made about his team's reputation: "There are Smiths and there are Grabowskis; we're the Grabowskis." • Also that year, the
MLB World Champion
Minnesota Twins released a music video called "The Berenguer Boogie", honoring their relief pitcher
Juan Berenguer (whom they nicknamed "El Gasolino") and his victory celebration after striking out opposing batters. The video enjoyed a resurgence of popularity in the 21st century via the internet. • Soon after the
1986–87 NHL season, the
Calgary Flames recorded a music video for the original song "Red Hot" for charity, which featured Flames players pretending to play instruments and lip-syncing to the song. • Prior to the
1988 NCAA Division I-A football season, the preseason No. 1
Florida State Seminoles, starring future
Pro Football Hall of Fame cornerback
Deion Sanders, made a video known as the "Seminole Rap," promising the school's first national championship would result from the season. They lost their first game to the rival
Miami Hurricanes (the defending National Champions) 31–0. The Noles would finish the season 11–1 and ranked No. 3 in the nation, behind No. 1
Notre Dame and No. 2 Miami. •
Verne Gagne and personalities from his
American Wrestling Association promoted a
major event with a song known as "The WrestleRock Rumble." •
Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling had a "Super Bowl Shuffle"-like song as part of its weekly program. Each wrestler's recorded part preceded the match that she was involved in. Even the
referees were part of the tune. • On the 17th Episode of the 30th season of "
Saturday Night Live" hosted by Tom Brady, the show parodied the Super Bowl Shuffle and another show called "
Behind the Music" with a short sketch. It told a fictional story of what happened to the Bears Shufflin' Crew as a band after their song, including a sequel song and a solo run by Bears quarterback Jim McMahon. • On the 3rd Season premiere of the
FX television show
The League, one of the main characters did a parody of this with
Maurice Jones-Drew,
Brent Grimes and
Sidney Rice entitled "The Shiva Bowl Shuffle" as a reference to their fantasy league's Super Bowl. •
Key & Peele did a sketch called the "East/West Bowl Rap". •
Saturday Night Live did a sketch called the "Establishment Shuffle", using the Shuffle style to parody the GOP and the
2015–16 Republican presidential primary season. •
Scott Gairdner created a viral spoof entitled the "Sex Offender Shuffle", which parodies "The Super Bowl Shuffle" music video with actors portraying sex offenders who rap about the crimes they committed and how they've changed their ways in a "Super Bowl Shuffle"-styled song. To date, the video has received over 56 million views. ==2010 reprise==