Logo

Former Chiefs WR ‘Betrays’ His Old Team, Gloats After Loss as JuJu Smith-Schuster–Patrick Mahomes Rift Explodes and Mahomes Fires Back

8424 views

Ravens alcanzan un acuerdo de un año con el receptor DeAndre Hopkins

Kansas City, MO – October 7, 2025 The Kansas City Chiefs’ 28–31 gut-wrenching loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars on Monday night didn’t just burn on the scoreboard — it ripped open fresh scars off the field, as former Chiefs wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins took to social media to gloat and fan the flames surrounding Patrick Mahomes and JuJu Smith-Schuster.

Hopkins, who suited up for the Chiefs in 2024, mocked the team’s late-game collapse and claimed their internal chemistry woes are a recurring nightmare. “I’ve seen this script play out too many times,” he wrote on X. “The ‘star QB’ gets a pass, the WR eats the blame, and the huddle turns into a powder keg. Mahomes calls the shots — JuJu was just the latest fall guy in that red-zone disaster.”

The post exploded within hours of the Jaguars’ stunning comeback win, with fans branding Hopkins a “Judas in cleats” for “kicking KC while it’s down.” His dig hit hard, mirroring the long-simmering gripes from his own rocky one-year stint in Kansas City — where miscommunications with Mahomes plagued practices, and he pushed for a trade before being cut after the season amid whispers of locker-room friction.

Hopkins’ shot landed like a dagger because it dovetailed with fresh buzz about the JuJu-Mahomes rift bubbling over from that fateful third-quarter pick-six. The wideout, now balling out with the Tennessee Titans, hyped Jaguars linebacker Devin Lloyd’s 99-yard interception return for a touchdown — the play that flipped the game — as “poetic justice for bad reads.”

Patrick Mahomes Proved Star Status vs. Pittsburgh Steelers

Chiefs Kingdom unleashed a torrent of fury online. One viral tweet racking up 50,000 likes blasted: “Hopkins was a rental, not a legend. Now he’s dancing on our grave like he ever fit in Arrowhead. Snake.” That said, a vocal minority nodded along, pointing to the Chiefs’ offense looking disjointed since JuJu’s diminished role last year — especially after that red-zone overthrow that screamed misfire.

Patrick Mahomes, seething after the defeat dropped KC to 4-1, clapped back hard when pressed on Hopkins’ shade during the postgame presser. “You can throw wrong, you can route wrong — but don’t ever talk wrong,” Mahomes fired. “If you can’t build us up or grind through the tough spots, then stay out of our circle. The Kansas City Chiefs aren’t just a squad — we’re brothers in the trenches. Guys cycle through, but our grit doesn’t. Every call here is about winning rings, not settling scores.”

Teammates wasted no time circling the wagons around their signal-caller. Tight end Travis Kelce reposted Mahomes’ mic-drop with the caption: “QB1 — unbreakable.”

While the Chiefs licked their wounds from the rare home defeat, this fresh beef has supercharged chatter about Kansas City’s once-ironclad leadership vibe — and dredged up echoes of Hopkins’ own short-lived, stormy chapter in red and gold.

In the end, the ex-star might’ve savored his swipe of schadenfreude, but Mahomes’ rebuttal hammered home the truth: The Kingdom still bows to its king — not to its exiles.

Vikings Rookie Cut Before Season Retires to Join Military Service
The NFL is often described as the pinnacle of athletic dreams, but for one Minnesota rookie, the path to greatness has taken a turn away from the gridiron and toward a higher calling. After signing as an undrafted free agent in May, the young cornerback fought through training camp and preseason battles, hoping to carve out a roster spot on a Vikings team searching for secondary depth and identity. That player is Zemaiah Vaughn, a standout from the University of Utah who built his name as a long, competitive boundary corner with special-teams upside. Waived in late August, Vaughn stunned teammates and fans by announcing his retirement from professional football and his decision to enlist in the U.S. military, trading a Vikings jersey for a soldier’s uniform. “I lived my NFL dream in Minnesota, but being cut before the season opened another path,” Vaughn said in a statement. “This isn’t the end — it’s a higher calling. Now, I choose to serve my country with the same heart I gave the Vikings.” At 6’3” and 187 pounds, Vaughn brought elite length for a boundary role and made his mark with poise, vision, and leadership. His preseason PFF grade of 65 reflected consistency, though the roster competition proved overwhelming. For the Vikings, the move closes the chapter on a developmental project. For Vaughn, it begins a profound new journey that echoes his reputation as a “hidden gem” — a player who always found ways to rise above. Fans in Minnesota and across the college football community saluted the decision on social media, calling it “the ultimate sacrifice” and “proof that heart is bigger than the game.” Vaughn leaves the NFL, but his next mission may prove even greater.