LOOK: Chiefs reveal Super Bowl LVIII patch, tease red jerseys

The #Chiefs revealed their Super Bowl LVIII patches on social media and seemed to tease that they may wear red jerseys against the #49ers.

The Kansas City Chiefs are no strangers to donning Super Bowl patches in the Patrick Mahomes era and revealed the latest update to their uniforms on Tuesday ahead of their championship matchup against the San Francisco 49ers on February 11.

The pictures of the Chiefs’ Super Bowl LVIII jerseys released on social media seem to hint that Kansas City will wear red during the highly-anticipated game against San Francisco but, as of now, nothing is known for certain.

Patrick Mahomes’ No. 15 jersey was used for the photo-op and can be seen with four distinct patches on it. At the top left is the red and purple Super Bowl LVIII patch with a football-shaped insignia under it commemorating the late Norma Hunt.

On the right, Mahomes’ gold captain patch sits above the Chiefs’ traditional AFL badge that honors the team’s founder Lamar Hunt.

This stylish look is sure to turn heads in the coming weeks as fans anticipate Kansas City’s appearance in Super Bowl LVIII.

Chiefs remember founder Lamar Hunt on what would have been his 91st birthday

The #Chiefs took to social media to memorialize their founder, Lamar Hunt, on what would have been his 91st birthday.

The Kansas City Chiefs’ rise to prominence in the late 2010s and early 2020s wouldn’t have been possible without the efforts of the team’s founder, the late great Lamar Hunt.

Hunt’s legacy touches nearly every part of the sports world in the United States, from the NFL to the MLS. His hard work was instrumental in creating both leagues as fans know them today, and Hunt’s legacy lives on through his son Clark, who is currently a Chiefs co-owner and the team’s chairman.

Lamar Hunt’s death in 2006 sent shockwaves around the football world and was mourned by owners across the NFL who recognized his instrumental role in bringing the league to relevance after the AFL-NFL merger in the 1960s.

Hunt’s impact on the NFL, but specifically the Chiefs should not be underestimated. While he was not alive for Kansas City’s recent Super Bowls, the AFC Championship trophy bears his name, and a small part of him lives on every January as the conference’s top team is crowned in the penultimate game of the NFL playoffs.

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Chiefs’ Clark Hunt inspired by father’s legacy in fight for social justice

Clark Hunt has looked back to the example set by his father, Lamar Hunt, as he works with the team to address issues of social justice.

The Kansas City Chiefs franchise has long been involved in the fight for social justice. In the 1960s, the Chiefs were at the forefront of breaking racial barriers in professional football, largely thanks founder Lamar Hunt and head coach Hank Stram.

Hunt hired Lloyd Wells, the first full-time Black scout in professional football. Wells then helped the team find and draft numerous players from Historically Black Colleges and Universities including Pro Football Hall of Famer’s Buck Buchanan and Willie Lanier. Hunt and Stram looked beyond race — they treated Black and White players equally in a time when many were not willing to do so.

Fast forward to today and Chiefs CEO and President Clark Hunt, son of Lamar, is faced with issues surrounding social justice and inequality. He has found himself looking back at the example set by his father when it comes to how he can support his players in making a difference.

“Going back to the beginning of summer, we’ve had a lot of conversations with the leadership group on the team related to the social justice issues,” Hunt told reporters. “It’s not something that’s new to the Kansas City Chiefs. Really going all the way back to the 1960s and 1970s. My dad [Lamar Hunt] really encouraged the players to get out there and use their platform to make a difference in the community. A lot of those efforts over the decades have been focused on things that benefit the minority communities and we’re certainly more focused on that than ever.”

Hunt has taken cues from the team leaders, those who’ve been out doing work in the local community.

“What I’ve really appreciated the last couple of years, is how engaged the leaders on our team are and I’ll just take Patrick (Mahomes) and Tyrann (Mathieu) as examples, that they’re very engaged, they want to make a difference, they want to do things that are going to make our country better, things that are going to help us get along as a country.”

Perhaps the greatest legacy that Lamar left behind is how he treated people with dignity. Within the context of what’s going on today, Clark is reminding people of that and how important it is.

“My dad set a great example for me and my siblings on a lot of issues. And probably his greatest strength was how he treated people,” Hunt said. “He didn’t care where you came from, what your background was, what your race was, he treated everybody he met with respect and appreciation. That’s been a lesson that we’ve all learned, and just bring it forward to what’s going on with racial equality and social injustice. I think Andy (Reid) probably said it as well as anyone—we just need to love our neighbor. And if we all do that, this world is going to be a whole lot better place.”

Mahomes, Mathieu and the rest of the Chiefs’ organization have honed in on the way they can actively work to make the local community and country a better place. The team has already done a lot according to Hunt, but they still have one last goal in mind as they look to create change. That goal, of course, is turning Arrowhead Stadium into a polling place for the November elections.

You referenced Arrowhead being a polling station,” Hunt said. “That’s one of their big issues, is voter registration and getting people out to vote. We’ve worked with them and we’re working with some organizations here locally to try to encourage people to get out to vote. We’ve made an effort to get all of our players registered to vote here. The icing on the cake would be if we could have Arrowhead be a polling station. We don’t know if that’s going to work out, but we’ve had some really good dialogue at some of the highest levels with the state and we hope it does.”

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60-year anniversary: How the Cowboys’ star formed in the universe

Everything is bigger in Texas, including the stories. But the truth behind the birth of the Dallas Cowboys is plenty wild on its own.

All heroes need an origin story. The one that goes with America’s Team is a doozy.

January 28 marks the 60th birthday of the Dallas Cowboys. On that date in 1960, the city of Dallas was granted an NFL franchise; one that would eventually evolve into a flagship enterprise for the league, the most valuable sports franchise on the planet, and one of the most recognized brands in history.

It’s difficult to imagine today’s NFL without the Dallas Cowboys.

They are a TV ratings juggernaut, a merchandising cash cow, and a year-round global empire that can often overshadow the wins and losses of the actual football season, sometimes even rendering the games themselves minor afterthoughts.

But there was a time before Jerry, Dak, and Zeke. A time before Romo and Dez. A time before Jimmy and the Triplets. A time before Staubach, Dorsett, and Doomsday. A time, even, before Tom Landry. In the 1970s, there was a popular T-shirt that read, “And on the eighth day, God created the Dallas Cowboys.”

The real story of the team’s creation is in many ways even epic and incredible.

Chapter 1: A Texas-sized flop

Before there was even a seed that grew into the idea that eventually became the Dallas Cowboys, there had to be fertile ground in which to take root. And in 1952, eight years before the Cowboys would be born, that fertile ground existed in the imagination of Clint Murchison, Jr.

Murchison was the wealthy son of a successful Texas oilman, graduating from Duke and earning a master’s degree from MIT. After Clint Sr. died, Clint Jr. and his brother took over the family business, with various moneymaking interests that included the company that manufactured Daisy BB guns, Field and Stream magazine, and, of course, oil.

A 29-year-old Murchison was one of fewer than 18,000 people in attendance on a late September Sunday at the famed Cotton Bowl, located on the Texas state fairgrounds. Taking the field were the visiting New York Giants and, for the very first time, a team called the Dallas Texans. The home team had previously been a New York club, too- the Yanks- having played in Yankee Stadium before being sold to a group of Lone Star State businessmen, relocated to Dallas, and named the Texans.

The Texans’ first game in their new home was largely unremarkable. Their only score in the 24-6 loss came after a fumbled punt return by a Giants defensive back named Tom Landry, who would go on to play a much larger role in Dallas football lore for generations.

Three more home games followed for that Texans team, all losses, and all poorly attended. The owners bailed on the club and returned control to the league. The Texans played the remainder of their 1952 schedule on the road, even their final two “home” contests. They finished 1-11 and were outscored 427-182. Almost half the roster retired for good at season’s end. The National Football League’s initial experiment in Dallas would go down in the books as a Texas-sized flop.


Chapter 2: Breaking in to the club

Everything was bigger in Texas, except the appetite for pro football. The sport itself was indeed king there, but it was played on Fridays at local high schools and on Saturdays by college kids. The NFL was a mainstay (albeit second fiddle to Major League Baseball) in Midwestern cities like Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and Philadelphia. It was the only game in town in tiny Green Bay. It had even ventured west to Los Angeles and San Francisco. Pro football simply wasn’t quite ready, however, to expand to the South.

Murchison, though, was enthralled. He attempted to buy the failing Texans franchise, but league commissioner Bert Bell had already agreed to sell the club to Carroll Rosenbloom, who would move the team to Baltimore and set up shop as the Colts. But the young Texas businessman sensed a whale of an opportunity.

“I wanted the fun of being able to see professional football in my hometown,” Murchison later said of his early infatuation. He turned his sights to other struggling NFL franchises, searching for one that he could buy and move to Dallas.

The 49ers wouldn’t sell. The Chicago Cardinals wouldn’t relocate from the Windy City. Murchison even came close to purchasing the Washington Redskins, until owner George Preston Marshall changed his terms at the eleventh hour and spoiled the deal. Murchison would hold a grudge over it for years.

But Clint Murchison Jr. wasn’t the only son of a Southern oil tycoon looking to put pro football in Dallas.

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