Six days after giving birth, Brittany Mahomes pays tribute to Patrick during the Chiefs game by wearing a red pair of pants and a ’15’ coat. Check Out Her Playoff Outfit!
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The famous WAG, who just welcomed her third 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥 with Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes, brought her style to the sidelines six days postpartum. Brittany Mahomes wasn’t going to miss a game day fit — especially during the playoffs!
Six days after welcoming her third 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥, Golden Raye, with NFL star husband, Patrick Mahomes, Brittany brought her style to the sidelines at the Chiefs game against the Houston Texans at Arrowhead Stadium on Saturday, Jan. 18.
The new mom-of-three wore a beige, belted coat embroidered at the pockets with ’15’ — Patrick’s number — and bright, Chiefs-red wide-leg pants. Her signature blonde hair was blown out with soft curls at the ends.
Brittany was seen giving her — and the Chiefs’ — star quarterback a few quick kisses and a “love you” before he headed back on the field as they start their playoff run.
Brittany has pulled out all the style stops this season, from boss lady vibes in vintage Chanel to some Brittany Spears “Oops I Did It Again” cosplay and of course, matching fits with her 3-year-old daughter, Sterling Skye.
The last time the Chiefs plays the Texans on Dec. 21, Brittany dressed to the nines in an elegant cream coat. On the back — which she showed off on her Instagram Stories — “Mahomes” is embroidered in a whimsical font, while “Kansas City Chiefs” is stitched down the lower back.
In another story, she revealed her accessory of the day: a $1,746 Burberry mini handle bag.
Brittany served pregnancy chic all season long, after announcing in July that she and Patrick were expecting their third 𝑏𝑎𝑏𝑦, joining Sterling and son Patrick “Bronze” Lavon Mahomes III, 2.
Brittany Mahomes.
Brittany Mahomes/Instagram
Patrick joked after the Chiefs’ Christmas game that all of their close wins had been worrying the pregnant Brittany.
“Brittany says I’ve been stressing her out too much this season,” he said after beating the Pittsburgh Steelers 29-10. “So I got to try to not put so much stress on her through these football games.”
Patrick added at the time that they were aiming for Brittany to give 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡 “on a bye week” of the playoffs when the Chiefs aren’t playing, “and then everything will work out perfectly” — and the couple got their wish, with Golden arriving on Sunday, Jan. 12.
Patrick and Brittany announced their youngest daughter’s arrival in a joint post on Instagram, showing their hands holding the 𝑏𝑎𝑏𝑦’s feet over a wooden sign with her name. “•Golden Raye Mahomes• 1/12/25,” they wrote in the caption.
See More: Mike Pereira blasts idea that Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs are getting special treatment from officials
Mahomes and the Chiefs drew a pair of controversial roughing calls in their win over the Texans on Saturday
Any idea that Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs are getting special treatment from officials, at least according to Mike Pereira, is just an “absolute myth.”
Pereira, a longtime NFL official and former vice president of officiating for the league, appeared on The Rich Eisen Show on Tuesday and spoke with Eisen about takes from fans who think that Mahomes and the Chiefs are receiving some sort of special treatment from officials in key games. That take erupted this past weekend when Mahomes drew a controversial unnecessary roughness call in their win over the Houston Texans — which secured a return trip to the AFC championship game.
“It doesn’t resonate with me at all. … The fact that you’re looking out for anyone, any team, any individual is a myth. It is an absolute myth,” Pereira, who is currently working as Fox Sports’ rules analyst, told Eisen on Tuesday. “You don’t have time to react and say, ‘This is Goff, I’m not going to call this because it’s Goff,’ or, ‘This is Mahomes, I’ve got to call this because it’s Mahomes.’”
Mahomes, late in the third quarter Saturday, went to scramble for a first down before giving himself up at the last second. A pair of Texans defenders collided with Mahomes, though he was barely hit. Still, officials awarded Mahomes an unnecessary roughness penalty that kept their drive alive.
Both Troy Aikman and Joe Buck, who were calling the game for ESPN, were livid.
That was one of several instances in that game where the Chiefs seemed to benefit either from a call, or the lack of a call. Will Anderson Jr. got hit with a roughing the passer penalty in the first half after he barely hit Mahomes, and the Chiefs got away with a hip-drop tackle.
“Both of those in my opinion should’ve been passed on,” Pereira said on The Rich Eisen Show. “I understand why they were called because we are in a time of protection of quarterbacks and pretty much everybody, but when the league came out and defended them … that doesn’t mean they want them to be called.”
While the penalties against the Chiefs weren’t as clear cut as they could’ve been, it doesn’t mean much now. Mahomes and the Chiefs still won the game, and will now host the Buffalo Bills on Sunday in an attempt to make it back to the Super Bowl and win a third consecutive championship.
And as for fans who think they know how to officiate while sitting at home on the couch with instant replay available to them, Pereira isn’t here for that either.
“It doesn’t bother me because those people who say that don’t know a damn thing about officiating,” Pereira said. “Until you actually put the uniform on, and until you have to make those quick judgments … if you haven’t done it, and you don’t recognize how hard it is in real time and how easy it is in super slow motion, then get out of my train. Get off my train, I mean it.”