🥹VIDEO: After the Chiefs’ season-ending loss to the Raiders, rookie QB Chris Oladokun bowed his head and took the full weight of the blame while being viciously criticized and cruelly cursed
Kansas City, Missouri – January 8, 2026
The Kansas City Chiefs’ season ended in silence after their loss to the Las Vegas Raiders, but a moment after the final whistle captured the emotional weight of defeat. A video circulating Wednesday night showed rookie quarterback Chris Oladokun standing alone near the sideline, head bowed, absorbing the fallout as frustration swirled around him.
Thrust into a difficult spot late in the season, Oladokun became the focal point of criticism. He didn’t argue or deflect. He stayed still, shoulders slumped, appearing to shoulder responsibility for a loss that ended the Chiefs’ year — a harsh lesson in how quickly the NFL can turn.
Then Travis Kelce stepped in.
The Chiefs’ longtime leader walked directly to the rookie, placed a hand on his shoulder, and spoke quietly. No cameras. No spectacle. Just presence. It was a veteran recognizing a moment that could define a young player — and choosing to stand beside him.
O QUE FOI ISSO CHRIS OLADOKUN FUMBLE BIZARRO!!
— NFL Brasil (@NFLBrasil) January 4, 2026
📺: #KCvsLV ao vivo, em português, no NFL Game Pass pic.twitter.com/85WWbkz610
Later that night, Oladokun addressed the moment with raw honesty, offering words that resonated across Chiefs Kingdom:
“I know I’m the one who came up short in a moment we all fought for. I made a mistake, and the hardest part is looking at my teammates and Chiefs fans, seeing the pain in their eyes, knowing I can’t take it back. Whatever anger or criticism comes my way, I’ll accept it — because my heart belongs here. I’m truly, deeply sorry, Kansas City.”
Kelce’s gesture, brief but powerful, underscored the culture inside the Chiefs’ locker room — accountability paired with support. He’s lived the highs and lows of this league, and in that instant, he made sure Oladokun knew one play doesn’t define a career.
For a team entering an uncertain offseason, the video became more than a snapshot of defeat. It became a reminder: seasons end, criticism fades, but leadership — and humanity — endure.













