Chiefs dynasty timeline: How lovable losers became an evil empire of Taylor Swift fans and referee fortune
Podcast host Dan Dakich joined 'Fox & Friends First' to discuss his take on the theory and criticism of the New York Giants for losing Eagles running back Saquon Barkley.
Millions of American televisions will show constant shots of Taylor Swift and potentially President Donald Trump on Sunday, with a historic football game going on in between.
When Patrick Mahomes, Travis Kelce and the Kansas City Chiefs take the field at the Caesars Superdome for Super Bowl LIX, they will be the first players in NFL history to play in a third straight Super Bowl after winning the last two.
They are currently 1.5-point favorites to become the first team ever to win three straight. If they do win, it would be their fourth in an era dating back to 2020 and fifth all-time.
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They would join the Dallas Cowboys, San Francisco 49ers, Pittsburgh Steelers and New England Patriots as the only teams with at least five Super Bowls.
And they're doing it as the team with the largest following on TikTok and YouTube, as Swift's relationship with Kelce has catapulted the franchise into a pop culture phenomenon.
However, many NFL fans have had it with the Chiefs.
The constant shots and conversations involving Swift, a growing history of controversial referee decisions and the general animosity that follows any team that wins too much has made the Chiefs the NFL's "villain."
How did they get here?
On Dec. 30, 2012, the then-defending Super Bowl champion New York Giants defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 42-7. Andy Reid was fired as Eagles head coach the very next day, on New Year's Eve.
Philadelphia Eagles head coach Andy Reid, center, leaves the