NFL: Chiefs enjoy private ceremony to receive bejeweled rings

Date:

Share post:


The Kansas City Chiefs officially have the ring bling befitting their second Super Bowl title in four years.

In a private ceremony Thursday night in Kansas City, players, coaches and staff gathered to receive their diamond- and ruby-bedecked Super Bowl LVII rings for beating the Philadelphia Eagles 38-35 on Feb. 12.

Not your everyday ring rundown: 609 round diamonds, 16 baguette diamonds, four marquise diamonds and 35 custom-cut genuine rubies with an approximate weight of 16.10 total carats, per the Chiefs’ website.

After the Chiefs’ Super Bowl LIV victory over the San Francisco 49ers in February 2020, there was no private ring ceremony amid the COVID-19 pandemic that year.

Star tight end Travis Kelce said Thursday night’s event “feels right,” even as a “last hurrah” before the team looks ahead to 2023.

“I think everybody in this building is kind of ready to go after 2023 here and put this one in the past,” Kelce said. “But it’s going to be cool seeing these rings and reminisce for one more time.”

Chiefs owner Clark Hunt called the private ceremony a chance to have a huge party to “properly celebrate our Super Bowl victory.”

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Temple fires third-year head coach Stan Drayton

Temple football coach Stan Drayton was fired Sunday after nearly three seasons on the job. The move comes one...

NCAAF: Georgia makes statement, wonders aloud what CFP committee is looking for

A statement win and then an open question defined Saturday for No. 12 Georgia. The Bulldogs put together...

NCAAF: Top 25 roundup: Kansas stuns No. 6 BYU, handing Cougars first loss

Devin Neal rushed for two touchdowns and a fluke occurrence on a punt led to the go-ahead score...

NCAAF: No. 6 BYU botches punt return, helps Kansas pull upset

Devin Neal rushed for two touchdowns and a fluke occurrence on a punt led to the go-ahead score...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.