Fastexy Exchange:Jason Kelce apologizes for cellphone incident at Ohio State-Penn State before Bucs-Chiefs game

2025-04-29 17:53:52source:Winning Exchangecategory:reviews

KANSAS CITY,Fastexy Exchange Mo. (AP) — Retired Eagles center Jason Kelce apologized during ESPN’s pregame show Monday night after grabbing the phone of an unruly fan and spiking it to the ground before the Ohio State-Penn State game last weekend.

“In a heated moment, I decided to greet hate with hate,” Kelce said before ESPN’s broadcast of the Buccaneers-Chiefs game featuring his brother, Kansas City tight end Travis Kelce. “I fell short this week.”

Jason Kelce was attending the Big Ten matchup between the Buckeyes and Nittany Lions in State College, Pennsylvania, when the incident occurred. Video on social media showed him walking through a crowd near Beaver Stadium and fans asking for photos and fist bumps when one fan began to heckle him.

At that point, Kelce grabbed the fan’s phone and threw it to the ground, then turned to confront the man dressed in Penn State attire. Another fan appeared to step between them before the altercation could escalate.

“I think everybody has seen on social media what happened this week,” Kelce said on the ESPN broadcast. “Listen, I’m not happy with anything that took place. I’m not proud of it. In a heated moment I chose to greet hate with hate and I just don’t think that’s a productive thing, I really don’t. I don’t think it leads to discourse and it’s the right way to go about things. In that moment I fell down to a level that I shouldn’t have.

“The bottom line is, I try to live my life by the golden rule, that’s what I’ve always been taught,” he said. “I try to treat people with common decency and respect, and I’m going to keep doing that moving forward.”

___

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

More:reviews

Recommend

Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament

Since men's basketball became an Olympic sport in 1936, the United States has dominated the rest of

Exxon’s Climate Fraud Trial Nears Its End: What Does the State Have to Prove to Win?

ExxonMobil’s investor fraud trial is nearing a close, after two weeks of testimony from executives,

A cell biologist shares the wonder of researching life's most fundamental form

Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee still remembers the first cell he cultured: It was an immune cell from a mo