Super Bowl celebration continues for Chiefs’ offense in Las Vegas

The Super Bowl festivities continued for several members of the #Chiefs’ offense with a Las Vegas vacation.

The Super Bowl celebration hasn’t quite stopped for several members of the Kansas City Chiefs offense, but it has changed locations.

Just as they did after their Super Bowl LIV victory, the Chiefs took the party to Las Vegas after their Super Bowl LVII win. Members of the offense such as Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce, Orlando Brown Jr., Creed Humphrey, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Marquez Valdes-Scantling, Jody Fortson, Skyy Moore and others flocked to Las Vegas for a little postseason getaway. They joined The Chainsmokers who headline at XS Nightclub in The Wynn Las Vegas. The Chainsmokers, of course, headlined the Chiefs’ Super Bowl afterparty at the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale Resort.

Travis Kelce posted some videos of the excitement on his Instagram page, which FOX 4 Kansas City’s PJ Green captured.

Kelce reportedly addressed the nightclub before grabbing a 6-liter bottle of Armand de Brignac Ace of Spades Gold Brut, which he doused the crowd with. Our friend Farzin Vousoughian shared the clip of it from Wynn Las Vegas.

The hotel even shared some photos of the party on Instagram, which were shared by FOX 4 Kansas City reporter Harold R. Kuntz.

After a long season, these players certainly deserve the opportunity to unwind and celebrate their achievements. Before they know it, it’ll be back to work for the 2023 NFL season with OTAs in May.

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Chip ‘n sip, floating greens, bands and more; Par-Tee Tour’s golf and music festival might start a movement

The company has aspirations of doing Par-Tee Tour festivals in more locations across the country.

Music festivals have long been the rage with big-name headliners, food, drinks and more. Par-Tee Tour is combining golf with a next level entertainment experience. This new event will take place at the Palm Beach National Golf & Country Club on Feb. 26.

This event invites golfers of all skill levels to participate in golf challenges, tournament play and a diverse concert experience. This festival is for those who love outdoor events, enjoy a multi-sensory stimulating setting or just looking for something to do with friends.

All purchasers will can participate in a putting course for all skill levels, golfing dunk tanks, floating island greens challenges, long drive contests, chip ‘n sip contests, and a golf vending village. Complimented by delicious local food and beverage vendors, the event is sure to be a party to remember.

Par-Tee 2022 Flyer. (Par-Tee)

Fun Golf International is a company composed of various backgrounds from EDC and Ultra Music Festival to participants in PGA tournaments and World Long Drive competitions.

The company has aspirations of doing Par-Tee Tour festivals in more locations across the country.

For 10% off tickets for the golf tournament, afternoon festival and more visit the Par-Tee tour website and use code “Averee” at checkout.

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Report: NFL considering ‘significant discipline’ for Saints after postgame celebration

The NFL is considering penalties for the New Orleans Saints after a postgame celebration in their locker room, a breach of COVID-19 protocol

Here’s your weekly Sunday morning splash report: ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports that the New Orleans Saints are facing harsh penalties from the league for breaches of COVID-19 protocol after Week 9’s blowout win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, in which Saints coach Sean Payton joined his players for a brief celebration before showering and changing minutes after the game.

Per Schefter’s report — which follows days of dialogue between the league office and the Saints legal team — the bigger issue is that the Saints would be considered repeat offenders, similarly to the Las Vegas Raiders. Both teams and their head coaches were fined after failing to properly wear face coverings during their Week 2 prime-time game, but the similarities in their offenses fall apart after about two minutes’ consideration.

The second break in protocol for the Raiders was the admittance of a non-credentialed employee to their locker room following Week 2’s win over the Saints. Additionally, the NFL went after the Raiders for repeated breaches of protocol, including a charity fundraiser appearance by ten players in which none of them wore masks, and for right tackle Trent Brown’s failure to wear contact tracing devices at the team facility.

Brown later tested positive for COVID-19, forcing the other four starting offensive linemen to self-quarantine out of an abundance of caution. It resulted in a Raiders-Buccaneers game getting flexed out of Sunday night’s time slot to accommodate the losses, and substantial penalties to the Raiders organization: $500,000 in fines and a loss of a 2021 sixth-round draft pick.

To be clear: what the Saints have done doesn’t compare to this. Not even a little bit. To suggest as much would be an awful false equivalence. The Raiders were negligent inside and outside their home facility, breaching the “mini-bubble” of the locker room, and they’ve rightfully had the hammer drop down on them. They’ve also been without several players as they recover from infection, directly caused by that negligence.

The Saints have had two positive cases all season: backup running back Dwayne Washington spent nearly three weeks on the reserve list to start the season, and wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders missed two weeks after catching COVID-19 at home. Neither situation resulted in an outbreak like what the Raiders and other teams (like the Tennessee Titans, who gathered for practices away from the facility when it was closed because of infections) have experienced.

Saints owner Gayle Benson has rented out entire hotels for the team to isolate themselves in during road games, including this visit to Tampa Bay, and they’ve chartered private flights on oversized aircraft to allow for more social distancing in transit. They’ve taken this more seriously than most, and a few minutes of dancing and shouting in celebration — after hours of playing a high-contact sport — doesn’t change that.

And, yeah: the Saints weren’t the only team to celebrate like this recently. The Denver Broncos, Kansas City Chiefs, Buffalo Bills, Pittsburgh Steelers, and Detroit Lions have all shared videos of shenanigans exactly mirroring what the Saints have done. If the NFL is going to point to the Raiders’ serious offenses as enough precedent to dock future draft picks and cash from the Saints, they’ll be doing so off of a very, very flimsy argument. But when has the league office made an example out of the Saints before?

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WATCH: Saints party in the locker room after beating Bucs 34-23

The New Orleans Saints defeated the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and celebrated with their signature dance battle amid a locker room party.

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Well that was an exciting one, wasn’t it? The New Orleans Saints players certainly thought so, taking time to celebrate a hard-fought Week 1 win over the upstart Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Saints wideout Emmanuel Sanders shared a look at their postgame antics in the locker room, complete with a D.J. and all the energy fans have gotten used to seeing in recent years.

Sure, it’s not the same as watching Teddy Bridgewater revive “Choppa Style” after decades at the bottom of party playlists. But there’s some real charm in seeing Jameis Winston awkwardly mimic Bridgewater’s signature “bike life” celebration while Alvin Kamara and Craig Robertson are locked in a dance-off.

This is a sign of what is meant when analysts refer to locker room culture; the ease everyone has in sharing camaraderie, and how eager they are to cut loose are leaving it all out on the field. These sort of locker room celebrations have become a staple of Saints postgame activities, and it’s great to see them return for 2020. Maybe next time their music choices will echo a little more cleanly into Sean Payton’s media conference call.

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New Bear Cole Kmet Treated to Social Distance Celebration

Saturday saw suburban Arlington Heights, along with people from plenty of surrounding towns as well I’m sure, celebrate Cole Kmet from a safe, social distance.

How would you describe Chicago and the surrounding area to folks that have never been there?

Winters are brutal, nobody does summer better, deep dish is great but we have our fair share of excellent tavern style pizza as well and just remember the lake is to the east and you’ll always no which way you’re going.

Chicago and the surrounding area, actually the majority of the midwest that I’ve seen loves when a local kid does something big.  That was the case Friday night as Cole Kmet was selected by the Chicago Bears with the 43rd overall pick.

Saturday saw suburban Arlington Heights, along with people from plenty of surrounding towns as well I’m sure, celebrate Cole Kmet from a safe distance.

This is the least surprising thing I’ve seen for a Chicago suburb.  I know Illinois doesn’t get the love nationally for producing high school football talent that Florida, Texas or California and nor should they but the state knows how to celebrate their own as well as anyone.