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Report: Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker's clothes went missing after Super Bowl LIX

Nick Profile Picby:Nick Geddes02/10/25

NickGeddesNews

Harrison Butker
Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Kansas City Chiefs had a bad Sunday night in New Orleans, and kicker Harrison Butker‘s somehow got worse in the aftermath of the 40-22 Super Bowl LIX defeat to the Philadelphia Eagles.

Per a report from the Daily Mail, Butker made his way back to the locker room at the Caesars Superdome only to find his suit missing. The publication noted that Bucker’s locker was positioned near that of quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who also wears a suit to the game. Butker reportedly speculated that a team staffer must have mistaken his suit for Mahomes’.

The 29-year-old took the mishap in “good spirits.”

Butker, the three-time Super Bowl champion, didn’t get the opportunity to make an impact in the blowout loss. The Chiefs attempted the two-point conversion after each of their three second half scores and never lined up for a field goal try.

Harrison Butker a non-factor in Chiefs’ Super Bowl LIX defeat

It was that kind of game for Kansas City, who failed to become the first team in NFL history to win three consecutive Lombardi trophies. The Eagles were dominant, led by a standout effort from their No. 1 ranked defense. Without sending a single blitz, Philadelphia sacked Mahomes six times across 42 dropbacks.

Mahomes finished 21-of-32 for 257 yards, three touchdowns and two interceptions. The Eagles held tight end Travis Kelce to just four receptions for 39 yards in what could have been the final game of his Hall of Fame career.

“I’ll let Travis make that decision on his own,” Mahomes said after the game when asked about Kelce’s future. “Man, he’s given so much to this team, to the NFL, and been such a joy, not only for me to work with, but for people to watch. And so, he knows he still has a lot of football left in him. You can see it. He always makes plays in the biggest moments, but it’s if he wants to put in that grind. It takes a grind to go out there and play 20 games, whatever it is, and get to the Super Bowl, and he’s done enough to be a gold jacket guy and first-ballot Hall of Famer.

“I know he shows love for the game, and he’ll get to spend some time with his family and make that decision on his own. But he knows he’ll come back here with welcome arms. We love that guy, not only for the football player, but the person that he is every single day.”