Kansas
The Kansas City Chiefs Pray And Follow God And Other Franchises Might Be Wise To Copy Them
After a short field goal attempt flew directly into one upright and, as if guided by Devine Intervention, bounded in between the posts to give the Kansas City Chiefs another victory, coach Andy Reid called up his team in a locker room speech that eventually led to prayer.
The Kansas City Chiefs Pray
“Let’s take a knee,” Reid ordered his players.
And as they have for years, the Chiefs prayed after the game.
This has been the way for the team that has won three Super Bowls in five years. In good times and bad, after wins and after losses, the Chiefs pray as a team.
And, to be honest, a lot of these players get on their knees before games as well.
No, not to protest something – although that happened to varying degrees from 2016-2020 – but to get help from God. Or thank God for help he’s already provided.
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – OCTOBER 27: Patrick Mahomes #15 of the Kansas City Chiefs knells in prayer during the NFL game against the Las Vegas Raiders at Allegiant Stadium on October 27, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The Chiefs defeated the Raiders 27-20. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
Patrick Mahomes Prays Before Each Game
So, backup quarterback Carson Wentz is praying. And starting quarterback Patrick Mahomes is praying.
Guys about to try taking an opponent’s head off (figuratively, of course) are praying. And guys hoping nobody takes their heads off are praying.
“Before every game, I walk the field and I do a prayer at the goal post,” quarterback Patrick Mahomes said before Super Bowl LV in Tampa. “I just thank God for those opportunities and I thank God for letting me be on a stage where I can glorify Him.”
That leads to questions: Why does this matter? What’s the point?
Well, maybe a full review of the Kansas City Chiefs as an organization will say they are successful because they have great coaching, great personnel management, a great quarterback in Mahomes, and supportive ownership.
But perhaps that’s an incomplete picture of the organization. Because it makes no room for the possibility the Chiefs, winners of 15 consecutive one-possession games, have the favor of God on their franchise for a time such as this.
KANSAS CITY, MO – AUGUST 24: Kansas City Chiefs players kneel in prayer before an NFL preseason game between the San Francisco 49ers and Kansas City Chiefs on August 24, 2019 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, MO. (Photo by Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Copycat NFL Should Copy Chiefs
Sound foolish? Ridiculous, even?
The NFL is an often foolish and ridiculous league for much lesser things than the presence of God.
The NFL, for example, is a copycat league. If one team is winning and having success, other teams almost reflexively copy what the winners are doing to try to increase their chances of producing similar results.
This was a thing during the New England Patriots dynasty when teams suddenly clamped down on giving out injury information because the Patriots were doing it.
Teams similarly didn’t want assistant coaches speaking with the press because the Patriots didn’t allow it for fear the coaches would inadvertently provide opponents with information that could be used against them – a practice that eventually stopped because the NFL now mandates assistants speak to the media.
If teams spent time copying something so mundane as keeping coaches from talking to reporters, you would think they might try to copy the Chiefs in the manner and frequency they talk to God.
KANSAS CITY, MO – AUGUST 16: Kansas City Chiefs players pray before a game against the San Francisco 49ers on August 16, 2013 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Peter G. Aiken/Getty Images)
The Naysayers Get Their Say
And I know what’s incoming:
The scoffers.
The cynics.
The doubters. The people who mock the very idea God exists, and more so the possibility that the Chiefs are in any way successful because of their obvious attempts to connect with Him.
Those people will point out that the Chiefs have offensive line problems. Why hasn’t God fixed that? Or the Chiefs don’t win every game. Isn’t God perfect?
Or what about the other teams that pray to God? How come they’re not making a run at a Super Bowl three-peat?
My answer: I don’t know, non-believers.
Ask God.
Chiefs Provide Church On Game Day
What I do know is the Chiefs are fully invested in their faith. Maybe not every single individual. Each person in that organization is obviously free to worship whichever way they want or whomever they want. And they’re also free to worship nothing, or no one.
But from the franchise perspective, the Kansas City Chiefs worship God and his son Jesus Christ.
It doesn’t take a well-trained investigative journalist to find this out. Not that too many investigative journalists are interested in such matters.
The Chiefs, for example, have for a decade offered non-denominational pregame Faith and Family Chapel service for fans at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium before each Sunday noon home game.
In an age when most other franchises have gotten rid of the on-field pregame invocation so common decades ago, the Chiefs have Cedric Hardimon, the lead Pastor of Life Church of East Kansas City, lead services along with team chaplain Marcellus Casey.
MIAMI GARDENS, FL – FEBRUARY 02: Kansas City Chiefs owner Clark Hunt and his family huddle for a prayer in game action during the Super Bowl LIV game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the San Francisco 49ers on February 2, 2020 at Hard Rock Stadium, in Miami Gardens, FL. (Photo by Robin Alam/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Mission: Lead People To Jesus Christ
And what are the pastor and chaplain preaching about?
“Our mission is to lead people to become fully devoted followers of Christ,” the church’s mission statement reads.
A number of Chiefs players, coaches and staff are already there.
Star defensive tackle Chris Jones, for example, told Sports Spectrum in 2021, “I play for God, Jesus Christ.
“I believe my faith is everything and that’s what I live by.”
Hunt Family Are Christians
Chiefs’ ownership is definitely on board with that.
The Chiefs are owned by the Hunt family, with Chairman and CEO Clark Hunt leading the way.
“My identity is my faith in Christ,” Hunt said prior to Super Bowl LVII. “The Lord has blessed our family in so many ways.”
The Hunt family gets a lot of publicity because of its sports, business and philanthropic initiatives.
The family also has its very own social media influencer, Gracie Hunt, who is popular because she’s young and beautiful and a former beauty pageant winner. Mother Tavia, by the way, was also a beauty pageant winner.
Gracie Hunt Spotlights Romans
Gracie Hunt has 570,000 followers on Instagram. And her biography includes her favorite Scripture – Romans 8:28.
“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to his purpose.”
Interesting, no?
God works for good for those who love Him. And that has obviously manifested for the Kansas City Chiefs.
Kansas
SW Kansas wildfires prompt evacuations, school closure, road closures
MEADE, Kan. (KWCH) – Wildfires burning in southwest Kansas prompted evacuation orders, a highway closure, and responses from agencies and task forces from across the state, including Sedgwick County.
As efforts to gain the upper hand on fires in Ford, Meade, Clark and Stevens counties continue Friday morning, there’s a piece of good news as the evacuation order for the city of Meade has been lifted. Overnight, residents were told to evacuate due to a fire burning south of town as firefighters battled to gain control of the wildfire. Meade Public Schools will not be in session on Friday.
Around 1 a.m. Friday, the NWS said the fire in Meade County was approaching the southern portion of the city of Meade. Late Thursday, KDOT closed K-23 because of the fire from U.S. 54 to the Oklahoma state line. Kansas Wildlife and Parks also announced Meade State Park had been evacuated late Thursday afternoon.
The Englewood Fire Department shared a video from Clark County that shows what firefighters were facing late Thursday night, with thick smoke billowing from scorched ground and flames still spreading.
Copyright 2026 KWCH. All rights reserved. To report a correction or typo, please email news@kwch.com
Kansas
At least seven grass fires burning in southwest Kansas; highway shut down
Posted:
Updated:
WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) — Crews are battling multiple grass fires in southwest Kansas.
There are seven active fires near Rolla in Morton County, according to emergency management.
The Kansas Department of Transportation said Kansas 51 Highway between the U.S. 56 Highway junction in Rolla and the Kansas Highway 27 junction in Richfield is closed due to the fires.
According to Storm Track 3 Meteorologist Jack Maney, the fires started as a dry thunderstorm moved through the area. But the cause of the fires hasn’t been determined yet, as crews are still working to bring them all under control.
In addition to Morton County, there are also reports of wildfires in Ford, Clark, Meade and Stevens counties.
The State Emergency Operations Center has been partially activated to help respond to the fires.
The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks said Meade State Park has not been affected but has warned visitors to reconsider coming due to multiple fires in the area.
For more Kansas news, click here. Keep up with the latest breaking news by downloading our mobile app and signing up for our news email alerts. Sign up for our Storm Track 3 Weather app by clicking here. To watch our shows live on our website, click here.
Kansas
KHP says 135 spill was human waste
WICHITA, Kan. (KWCH) -Matthew Ho likes to keep a clean car.
“I basically use my car a lot for work, with my multiple day jobs and weekend jobs,” Ho said.
However, on Tuesday, it was anything but.
“I was on 135 going northbound towards Bel Aire,” Ho said, “Right about the exit of 21st st I kind of saw this big mess of pile up that just happened right as I was blinking.”
Ho had no choice but to drive through it. Then the smell came.
“I think it took a little bit just because at first it didn’t seem like it was anything,” Ho said.
The smell continued to get worse and there was nothing he could do about it. It was a 90 degree day, and even with that intense weather he could not use the air conditioning because the air that it used was smelly itself.
“It sticks, and now that we’re downdraft winds you can just smell it all the time,” Ho said.
The company responsible for the spill, No Limit Logistics LLC, said, ‘There was no human waste’. The Kansas Highway Patrol says otherwise.
Ho has tried to wash the smell out of his car multiple times.
“It didn’t work,” Ho said, “Washed the car again, still didn’t go away.”
Now, he is looking for someone to take responsibility.
“I would really like compensations for all the car wash, especially when it was something I didn’t do personally,” Ho said, “A mechanical failure on a truck isn’t necessarily someone’s fault, but someone’s liable for it.”
Copyright 2026 KWCH. All rights reserved. To report a correction or typo, please email news@kwch.com
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