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Doug Williams, first Black Super Bowl-winning QB, likens this year's big game to Barack Obama's election

Super Bowl LVII will be the first in which both starting quarterbacks are Black. Doug Williams said he became emotional when he first learned of the matchup.

Super Bowl LVII will be the first to feature two Black quarterbacks facing one another.

Patrick Mahomes, one of three African Americans to win the Super Bowl, will go against Jalen Hurts, and one will go home with the Lombardi Trophy.

Doug Williams became the first Black quarterback to win a ring when he won Super Bowl XXVII with the Washington Redskins in 1988 over the Denver Broncos.

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The 67-year-old said he got emotional when the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles clinched their spots in Glendale next Sunday.

"When something like this happens, you gotta get excited about it," Williams said of two Black quarterbacks reaching the big game. "It's so unfortunate that everybody don't look at it that way. … It's easy for somebody to say, ‘Why you gotta bring color into it?’ if you don't understand what we as Black quarterbacks and Blacks as a whole have been through …

"It's a big deal. It's a really big deal."

Williams said he had "tears of joy in my eye," a feeling he had when Barack Obama was elected president and when Tony Dungy and Lovie Smith faced off in Super Bowl XLI.

"Things like that give me joy, give me cheer that make me think we made some steps. We have made a few steps," he said, "but there's a lot of steps we haven't made. 

NFL HALL OF FAMER DETAILS ADVICE HE GAVE TO EAGLES' JALEN HURTS HEADING INTO SUPER BOWL

"There's a lot of firsts when you talk about African Americans. You go all the way to Wilma Rudolph, Jesse Owens, Jackie Robinson, Michael Jordan. You got so many Black people — women and men — that have done something first that don't get the recognition. … We're talking about something that happened in America that should be celebrated all the time."

Super Bowl LVII kicks off at 6:30 p.m. ET Feb. 12

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