Travis Kelce paused to take in what might have been his final introduction at Arrowhead Stadium before Thursday's game and the Kansas City Chiefs' star tight end admits emotions are heavy these days.
"You
know it's -- you only get a few of those where you just get to stand there and appreciate 60-70,000 Chiefs fans screaming for you. I always embrace that moment, man," Kelce said Thursday night. "It's fun. Hopefully I got everybody fired up for it."
Kelce joined Jerry Rice as the only players in NFL history with at least 12 consecutive seasons producing at least 800 receiving yards this month, but hasn't publicly confirmed speculation his next step is retirement.
"It's a Christmas game, baby! There's a whole lot of emotion, man. Have everybody in the world watching you," Kelce said.
A four-time All-Pro who went to five Super Bowls with the Chiefs, the 36-year-old Kelce is not certain about next year.
His future has been a topic of debate and rumors the past two years. It was late February 2025 when Chiefs general manager Brett Veach put to rest questions about Kelce retiring before the draft. Kelce spent the offseason working to make certain he could be a productive part of the offense this season, and he leads the team in receptions (73), yards (839) and touchdowns (five, tied with Rashee Rice and Hollywood Brown) with one game to play.
Continuing to produce might keep retirement from crossing Kelce's mind, especially since he didn't win the nearly $2 million Powerball lottery last week.
"The only time it every crossed my mind, as I was driving in the other day and I saw how much the Powerball was and I was like, 'Man, if I could just win that. I wouldn't have to work another day in my life,'" Kelce joked. "Honestly, I've been just focused on trying to win football games. I'll let that be a decision that I make with my family, friends (and) the Chiefs organization when the time comes."
Kelce was the final player introduced on Christmas night in a signal the team might already know it was his last time on that field.
Chiefs coach Andy Reid is rooting for Kelce to pull down seven more receptions -- he caught five passes for 36 yards in Thursday's 20-13 loss to Denver -- in the regular-season finale at Las Vegas on Jan. 4. That would put Kelce at 80 catches, a mark he cleared in each of the past nine seasons.
"It was great to see him get a couple of those catches (Thursday). Those are big, big catches," Reid said, shaking off any talk of Kelce's retirement. "We'll talk another time about all of that."
Kelce is the Chiefs' all-time leader in receptions (1,077), receiving yards (12,990) and touchdown receptions (82).
--Field Level Media








