Justin Watson already boasts quite the collection of championship rings.

If his Kansas City Chiefs win Sunday night, the South Fayette native can make a claim no player in the history of the game can top.

Watson can be part of a Super Bowl-winning team for a fourth time in a five-year span if the Chiefs beat the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl LIX.

No player has won so many championships in such a short time span.

Not bad for a humble local kid who entered the NFL as a fifth-round pick a few years after getting bypassed in recruiting by every power-conference football program en route to a college career at the Ivy League’s University of Pennsylvania.

“At that point, we were thinking ‘OK, get a great education, and then you also get to play four more years of football before you get on with your life,’” Watson’s father, Doug, said this week. “And here we are, seven years later.”

“Here” for the Watson family during the second weekend of February — again — is at the site of the Super Bowl. For the fourth time over the past five seasons, Watson’s parents have joined him in the host city with a ticket to the game, including this weekend in New Orleans.

“I could never afford to go to the Super Bowl to see the Steelers (because of) the ticket prices,” Doug Watson said by phone. “And now this is now my fourth one in five years.

“The thing is, this doesn’t get old. I am as excited about this one as I was for the first one.”

Each of the four Super Bowls Watson will have been a part of have featured the Chiefs … but, ironically, the first of which had Watson on the other side.

As a third-year receiver at that point who had played in 12 games (one in the playoffs) and had seven receptions for the 2020 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Watson was inactive when Tom Brady and Co. beat Kansas City in Super Bowl LV.

While Watson isn’t the only Chiefs player gunning for a fourth Super Bowl ring (and third in a row) on Sunday, he is the only one who can win a fourth since that day. Patrick Mahomes and four others can win a fourth Super Bowl in a six-season span. Guard Joe Thuney can become just the third player to win five Super Bowl rings — but his first two came as a member of the New England Patriots starting in 2016.

And while Watson would join the aforementioned five teammates in what would then be a group of 43 men to win at least four Super Bowl rings, he’d be one of only four at his position to pull that off.

Steelers legends Lynn Swann and John Stallworth — both Pro Football Hall of Famers — join Mike Wilson of the 1980s San Francisco 49ers as the only receivers currently part of the “four-ring club.”

And even throwing in the pre-Super Bowl era, no player (at any position) has won four NFL championships in a five-year span.

That is only part of a championship haul for Watson that also includes one PIAA and two WPIAL titles in high school and two Ivy League titles in college.

All that winning, in part, taught Watson not to sweat the more trivial matters such as depth chart or pecking order at his position. He is part of a crowded receivers corps that includes standout rookie Xavier Worthy, former Steelers star JuJu Smith-Schuster, three-time former first-team NFL All-Pro DeAndre Hopkins and former first-round pick Hollywood Brown, among others.

“I just try to control what I can control,” Watson said to Kansas City’s WHB during Super Bowl media availability this week. “I know you hear that a lot, but good things happen when you’re in the right place at the right time. In our position, receiver, you never know who’s going to get the ball, so just try to run ever route like I am the only guy out there, and it seems like a lot of times the big play finds a way (to strike) at the right moment.”

They have for Watson, who has an impressive career 15.2 yards-per-reception average and 16 catches of at least 20 yards (four gaining at least 40) and seven touchdowns — including one on Christmas Day against the Steelers in Pittsburgh — over his three seasons with the Chiefs.

Since Watson first was part of a Super Bowl in February 2021, he’s gotten married and welcomed a son into the world while his wife, Erica, is due to deliver the couple’s first daughter this spring.

Quite the anthology of memorable life events. And over that same span of time, by late Sunday night, Watson could earn a championship haul like no other NFL player ever has.