Travis Kelce has a strong reaction to the typo on the Chiefs' Super Bowl ring

The Kansas City Chiefs' latest Super Bowl ring has a typo — but the team's tight end Travis Kelce doesn't care at all.

Kelce, 34, bluntly addressed the mistake on the June 19 episode of his "New Heights" podcast, which he co-hosts with his brother, retired NFL player Jason Kelce.

"I don't give a s---," the Chiefs player said. "I like it that we didn't give a f--- about what seed Miami was."

The inside of the Chiefs' 2024 Super Bowl championship ring listed the scores of the playoff games the team won, as well as the conference seed of each team they beat. The one small typo was that the Miami Dolphins, the first team the Chiefs defeated in the postseason, were listed as the No. 7 seed in the AFC.

The issue? The Dolphins were actually the No. 6 seed. (The Pittsburgh Steelers were the No. 7 seed.)

"Yeah, they weren't the seventh. Who cares? They could have done no seeds on the side of them, I would have been fine," Kelce said, referring to the inside of the ring.

The back-to-back Super Bowl winner said he thinks the mistake makes the ring more "unique."

"Like, 'Oh, yeah, we made it really detailed and oops, we screwed up,'" he said. "That just makes it more exclusive, like, we screwed up about something that means nothing."

The Chiefs received their second Super Bowl rings in two years — and third rings in five years — at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri, on June 13.

Kelce sported a red suit, gold-and-black sunglasses and a giant gold chain with "TK" around his neck to get his latest ring, which consisted of 529 diamonds and 38 rubies, according to the team.

The tight end posed with quarterback Patrick Mahomes as they showed off the three rings they won in 2020, 2023 and 2024.

"THREE RING KINGS," the team captioned the photo, adding three ring emoji.

Kelce described the 2024 ring as "pretty damn cool" on his podcast, but said last year's ring was probably his favorite.

"The top of the ring comes off and it has a clasp so you can wear it in different ways," he explained. "I think if I would ever, like, wear the ring out in a sense, or want to, like, represent that team or that Super Bowl, I would probably wear that clasp on a necklace, before I would wear that big f------ massive ring."

The Chiefs player also shared he went up to the team's owner, Clark Hunt, and told him they want another ring, but that he wasn't sure how they would top the 2024 ring.

"I don't know how it could get any bigger," he said. "We're just going to need a brass knuckle — the Super Bowl brass knuckle."

This article was originally published on TODAY.com

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