The team arrived at the Great Game of the Season headquarters, with just hours before the event due to COVID-19
The Kansas City Chiefs arrived at the Tampa headquarters Super Bowl LV where they get the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Bee Raymond James Stadium.
Chiefs team in accordance with protocols COVID, did not arrive in the Great Game host city last weekend to spend the entire week Super Bowl at headquarters, as is traditional, they waited until the Saturday before the game – the league allowed teams to travel from Friday, but not before.
The help allowed for the Super Bowl 25,000 fans, 7,500 of whom were health workers who received their tickets in gratitude for their efforts during the pandemic COVID-19 – all these health workers will have to be vaccinated.
Chiefs left Kansas City a day after the news that the coach from outside the linebackers and the son of head coach Andy Reid had a serious car accident.
Britt Reid was involved in a multiple car accident Thursday night in which a 5-year-old boy was seriously injured, according to a team statement and the police report.
According to an incident report from Kansas City, Missouri police, a vehicle ran out of gas on a driveway to Interstate 435 in Kansas City. After asking the next of kin for help, the driver brought a second car with him, which was also in the driveway.
According to police information, a third car operating the Kansas City television station KSHB, points out that being driven by Britt Reid, approached and hit first the left front decommissioned vehicle and then the rear of the second vehicle, where the 5-year-old boy was sitting in the backseat along with a 4-year-old. old boyhood, who was also taken by ambulance to a hospital in the area, but without serious injuries.
The station reported that, according to a search warrant, Reid had admitted to the police that he was driving the third vehicle. The police report shows that the driver of the third car suffered non-serious injuries and was investigated for possible intoxication.
Arrived in TB 🛬 pic.twitter.com/QAaWELWmTf
– Kansas City Chiefs (@Chiefs) February 6, 2021