A championship ring or premiership ring is a ring presented to members of winning teams in North American professional sports leagues, and college tournaments.
Several Super Bowl rings on display, with the Baltimore Ravens Super Bowl ring from 2000 visible in the left foreground
Gene Monahan, an athletic trainer for the New York Yankees waves to the crowd at Yankee Stadium after receiving his 2009 World Series ring
Photograph of the Montreal Hockey Club in 1893. The team ordered championship rings after winning the 1893 Stanley Cup championship
A 1980 New York Islanders Stanley Cup ring, with a diamond in the centre of it. Championship ring designs became more intricate in subsequent years.
A ring is a round band, usually made of metal, worn as ornamental jewelry. The term "ring" by itself denotes jewellery worn on the finger; when worn as an ornament elsewhere, the body part is specified within the term, e.g., earrings, neck rings, arm rings, and toe rings. Rings fit snugly around or in the part of the body they ornament, so bands worn loosely, like a bracelet, are not rings. Rings may be made of almost any hard material: wood, bone, stone, metal, glass, jade, gemstone or plastic. They may be set with gemstones or with other types of stone or glass.
Ruby ring
Henig II rings from the Snettisham Jeweller's Hoard
Episcopal rings for bishops and archbishops. (Musée national du Moyen Âge, hôtel de Cluny, Paris)
Image: Regards acrostic ring