leaving fans questioning the reason behind the incident. And now the truth has been revealed…
Travis Kelce was frustrated with Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs offense on Sunday.
Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) runs for a first down as Philadelphia Eagles defensive back Cooper DeJean (33) defends(AP)
Travis Kelce was frustrated with Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs offense on Sunday. At one point in the blockbuster Chiefs vs Eagles game, with the home team trailing 10-7, the tight end was spotted mouthing at the sideline. He even went on to throw his helmet.
Coming off an upset loss to the Los Angeles Chargers in their Brazil opener, the Chiefs were desperate to bounce back. However, Jalen Hurts and co dominated Mahomes’ side throughout the Week 2 matchup.
Emotions were pretty high in the first quarter. Cameras from Fox Sports caught Kelce boiling over on the sideline, tossing his helmet and even saying, “I am sick of this s**t.”
Chiefs TE Travis Kelce on the sideline after the Mahomes TD:
“I’m sick of this sh!t.” pic.twitter.com/77YjhxWzVc— Rob Collins (@RobCollinsTV) September 14, 2025
At the time of writing this story, the Eagles led 20-10. Kelce, himself, was not at his usual best. The TE dropped a potential touchdown into the hands of Andrew Mukuba in the end zone, who returned it 41 yards before he was wiped out by Josh Simmons.
Kelce’s drop-turned-interception was worth negative-7.1 points, per rbsdm.com. It moved the Chiefs’ winning probability from 53% to 24%.
Chiefs coach Andy Reid was also visibly upset on the sidelines. After the loss against the Chargers, he had said: “It’s an emotional game. That’s part of it. The guys pull for each other, they get after each other. That’s all part of it. When guys do good, they jump around. It’s all part of it. Time and place for everything.”
“There are no excuses, for any of us, what took place,” Reid added. “We’ve got to do better bringing energy for sure.”
Mahomes, too, was frustrated.
“You have to learn from the mistakes you make. That’s part of playing the game,” he said after the Chargers game. “You learn from your failures, just like you learn from the positive things you do, and then you come back and play better football this week, and it’s going to take our best football to go out there and get a win.”
News
What Navy SEALs Saw SAS Do in Mosul That They Never Talked About Again
5 November 2016, East Mosul, Iraq. The compound sat in near total darkness, fog. Chief Petty Officer Marcus Reeves pressed his back against concrete still warm from the day’s heat, and watched the street through night vision that turned the…
What CIA Operators Said After Working With British SAS In Baghdad
March 2006, Sadr City, East Baghdad. The Toyota Land Cruiser rolled through checkpoint Bravo at 2:17 in the morning with no headlights and no escort. Inside sat three men wearing local dress, dishdasha robes, keffiyeh scarves, faces darkened with theatrical…
“You Yanks Are Pathetic” — 6 SAS Did What 200 US Marines Couldn’t
October 2010, Nad-e-Ali District, Helmand Province, Afghanistan. Six men moved through a maze of dried mud walls in absolute silence. They wore no identification patches. Their weapons were customized beyond recognition. Each man carried exactly what he needed and nothing…
What US Marines Said After Watching a British SAS Sniper Work in Helmand
August 2010, forward operating base, Edinburgh, Helmond Province, Afghanistan. Marine Corporal Marcus Delaney stood at the observation post, watching the treeine 800 m south, where the Helmond River carved through farmland that had killed three Americans in the past week….
What Spetsnaz Soldiers Said After Encountering British SAS in Afghanistan
October 2008, Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The Russian special forces officer sat on a folding chair inside a prefabricated container at Camp Bastion, staring at a map of terrain he thought he understood. Colonel Dmitri Volkov had spent 7 years fighting…
The Yanks Brought $5 Million Worth of Equipment to the Exercise. The SAS Brought What They Carried.
The Yanks brought $5 million worth of equipment to the exercise. The SAS brought what they carried. The American contingent arrived at the multinational exercise facility in a convoy that took the better part of an afternoon to unload….
End of content
No more pages to load