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Tribal Warfare
08-13-2020, 10:57 AM
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">As the Chiefs transition from being the hunter to becoming the hunted, I caught up with TE Travis Kelce - who has plenty at stake in 2020 - and asked him the key to handling that as he heads into one of the most important seasons of his career.<a href="https://t.co/jSki24jVNB">https://t.co/jSki24jVNB</a> <a href="https://t.co/yR4VYVxArd">pic.twitter.com/yR4VYVxArd</a></p>&mdash; Terez A. Paylor (@TerezPaylor) <a href="https://twitter.com/TerezPaylor/status/1293948969643540482?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 13, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

displacedinMN
08-13-2020, 11:00 AM
Just be the anti-pats.

ModSocks
08-13-2020, 11:06 AM
As a Chiefs fan, i'm prepared to navigate the villain role as well.

Matter of fact, i've been looking forward to it all my life.

Mecca
08-13-2020, 11:08 AM
As a Chiefs fan, i'm prepared to navigate the villain role as well.

Matter of fact, i've been looking forward to it all my life.

Funny enough to other fan bases we were already there, after the no Hill suspension we aren't a well liked team.

Deberg_1990
08-13-2020, 11:10 AM
I would absolutely hate Kelce if he played for another team.

fan4ever
08-13-2020, 11:29 AM
I would absolutely hate Kelce if he played for another team.

Well there's some total honesty...I'm sure I'd feel the same way.

DaFace
08-13-2020, 11:39 AM
Obviously things might be different if we literally won 7 Super Bowls, but it's hard to imagine that we'd ever be as much of a villain as the Pats. Belichick is a notorious ass to the media. Brady is married to a supermodel and just generally seems aloof. Cheating scandals.

But comparison, Andy may well be the most loved guy in the entire league, and Pat has the midwestern "aww, shucks" vibe about him that is really difficult to dislike. People might get really tired of them eventually, but more in the way that people got "tired" of Joe Montana back in the day.

Buehler445
08-13-2020, 11:40 AM
Well there's some total honesty...I'm sure I'd feel the same way.

Eh. Didn’t hate Gonk. I hated the goddamned buttfucking refs that let god fucking cheatriot get away with fucking everything.

Armyofme
08-13-2020, 11:53 AM
Just be the anti-pats.

It was the Pats time, now it's Pat's time...

Sorce
08-13-2020, 12:46 PM
The Royals were seen as villains a lot the year they won the WS. The team goes from being a good underdog story to other teams cheap shotting and targeting your players. You respond and now you are the bad guy. It's easy for other teams fans to root for the underdog when they are out of it, now they see you as a threat.

Gravedigger
08-13-2020, 12:48 PM
As a Chiefs fan, i'm prepared to navigate the villain role as well.

Matter of fact, i've been looking forward to it all my life.

Yeah, fuck em. It's our time.

Dante84
08-13-2020, 01:00 PM
Travis Kelce, close to contract extension, ready to help Chiefs navigate NFL villain role (https://sports.yahoo.com/travis-kelce-ready-to-help-chiefs-navigate-nfl-villain-role-and-could-set-himself-up-for-kittleesque-payday-in-doing-so-160353963.html)

The Kansas City Chiefs have been riding high since their Super Bowl victory in February, and they haven’t been shy about expressing their excitement.

The night of their 31-20 triumph over San Francisco, defensive tackle Chris Jones guaranteed a Chiefs dynasty, a refrain he has repeated since then. Recently, wide receiver Tyreek Hill mused that the Chiefs are chasing Michael Jordan, going for seven rings.

Chiefs coach Andy Reid recently noted he’s “not big on” that type of talk, though he appreciates their confidence. Patrick Mahomes recently said the bravado is fine, provided they keep putting in the work necessary to back it up.

On Wednesday, another team captain — tight end Travis Kelce — co-signed on Mahomes’ sentiments.

“As long as guys are working, and we’re not being out of control in the media, I don't think there’s anything wrong with it,” Kelce told Yahoo Sports. “And yeah, we were a little excited after the Super Bowl as we understood how many guys were coming back, the fact that our coaches and everybody were motivated to do this thing again.”

Yet Kelce has noticed that when you win a Super Bowl, things change. For Kelce, one of those changes is a contract extension that Yahoo Sports confirmed is in the works. The NFL Network reported that the potential deal will be a five-year extension. Kelce’s current deal expires following the 2021 season. San Francisco 49ers tight end George Kittle reset the market Thursday with a five-year, $75 million megadeal.

Not only are individual players’ legacies altered with a Super Bowl win, but public perception does too ... especially if you win multiple titles.

At some point, like the New England Patriots did, you become the villains as other fan bases grow tired of watching you win and thwarting their own teams’ hopes. Kelce acknowledged this, but noted that the Chiefs’ playing style may shield them from this reality for a while.

“I think right now, everybody enjoys watching us play because of how much excitement we bring and how much …. I want to say class, but we’re starting to speak out a little bit more so I don’t wanna take back my words here after this year when we start rolling and everyone’s sky high talking about how good we are,” Kelce joked.

“But no, I think we’ve definitely done it in a respectable manner and gone out there and played the game, having fun, man. You see the energy, you see how much we appreciate each other on this team and it’s contagious, it’s infectious when you see it. And I think if we stay on that track man, we’re gonna keep reeling fans in and getting everybody on the bandwagon for sure.”

The bandwagon is full now, with several Chiefs seeing their individual brands improve after the Super Bowl victory. That includes Kelce, who is not only being noticed more when he goes out — “[The fame] has definitely gone up, that’s just what the Super Bowl does for you,” he said — but also used it to to score a partnership with EA Sports as a pitchman for “Madden 21”, which will be released Aug. 25.

“It’s a game that I used in college and my early years in the league to actually help me read coverages, help me figure out and feel confident in what I’m doing out on the field,” Kelce said.

And as a long-time “Madden” gamer, Kelce was happy to make media rounds on behalf of the franchise Wednesday, pitching the game’s newest mode, “The Yard,” which reminds him of his days playing football outside with his friends as a kid.

“Just good old flag football, basically — 7-on-7, 6-on-6 games in the backyard,” Kelce said. “And you meet up as your own avatar, your own custom player, you can swag them out however you want, pick the skill set you want your player to have and obviously, with the more wins and more points you score, the more opportunity you have to swag your player out even more, getting new items, whether it’s a decal for the helmet, whether it’s a backplate message, a new jersey, new cleats, whatever it is man, you can swag your dude out to the max, as well as increase his skill. It’s cool.”

Kelce still plays the game as a means of relaxing, like most of his teammates, he estimates. But there’s less time for that during the season, when players are focused on winning and enjoying the spoils that may one day come with that … like making the Hall of Fame.

Practically every Super Bowl champion ends up getting at least a few players in the Hall, and with his impressive play in the Super Bowl and his recent inclusion into the 2010s All-Decade Team, the 30-year-old Kelce has positioned himself to be firmly in that discussion when he retires.

“Everyone dreams about it,” Kelce said. “If you don’t have a goal of eventually one day wearing that gold jacket, I think you’re in the wrong profession because striving to be the greatest at what you do is everything that I’ve been taught as a man.”

Kelce insists he doesn’t dwell on it much because he still has a lot he wants to accomplish before he retires.

“I just feel like I’m more at ease as a person and a player when I don’t think about stuff like [the Hall of Fame],” Kelce said. “All I think about is, ‘What I can do now and how I can better the team and better my play?’”

When it comes to that — as well as the Chiefs backing up their big talk — if the team wins, the rest should take care of itself.

“The biggest thing that got us to the Super Bowl last year was our ability to work, and it wasn’t just in training camp, it was the 17-week season we were working through and a good four weeks in the playoffs to get our minds right for the Super Bowl,” Kelce said. “So having that mentality and not getting complacent at all, at any point, in the roller coaster that we call the NFL season [is crucial]. So it’s definitely exciting when training camp came around this year to see everyone eager and ready to work.”.