Before becoming a cornerstone of the Kansas City Chiefs offense, Travis Kelce almost traded his football cleats for a basketball jersey.
The 36-year-old tight end revealed on his New Heights podcast that a 2007 recruitment visit to West Virginia University nearly convinced him to pursue Division I college basketball instead of honoring his football commitment to University of Cincinnati.
“You guys treat me like family, like I had never been treated before. I was Jason Kelce‘s little brother in Cincinnati, didn’t even give me this much attention,” Travis Kelce recalled.
“I came back from the Western Virginia trip, and I told my dad, ‘I think I want to really like, give myself a chance at playing Division One college basketball, and play for Coach Huggins.’
He looked at me and said, ‘You are a man of your word. You want to be like these kids who commit to a university and then decommit. And now the integrity of your word doesn’t mean anything.'”
Despite lucrative basketball offers, Kelce honored his commitment to football, a decision that shaped the future of the Chiefs franchise.
Showing his admiration for Bob Huggins, the legendary WVU coach, Kelce said, “I fell in love with how Coach Huggins ran his program and knew he was kind of a coach that I would respect and want to play for.”
Overcoming early setbacks and finding his path
Kelce‘s path wasn’t without hurdles. He admitted that during his college career, he was suspended after failing a drug test. “I got kicked out of college because of it,” he said.
“I partied a little too much down there, got hit with a drug test and from that point on, I realized I gotta tighten the f**k up.”
Originally playing quarterback and tight end, this suspension prompted Kelce to fully embrace the tight end role.
His older brother Jason Kelce intervened, advocating with coaches to keep him on the roster. This pivotal decision allowed Travis Kelce to transition into the position where he would eventually make NFL history.
Drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs in the third round of the 2013 NFL Draft, Kelce has become a franchise legend.
Over 13 seasons, he has recorded 1,080 receptions for 13,002 yards, 82 receiving touchdowns, and an additional two rushing touchdowns.
His impact extends beyond statistics, as Chiefs GM Brett Veach emphasized: “It’s a business, and it’s cutthroat, but just uplifting people around you. You could go in there with an attitude of, ‘We’re in this together, and we’re going to uplift each other.’ He puts a smile on someone’s face every single day.”
This combination of talent, leadership, and perseverance underscores how Kelce‘s father’s insistence on integrity, combined with his brother’s guidance, ultimately preserved a football career that has become historic in NFL lore.
Without those interventions, Chiefs fans might never have witnessed the emergence of one of the greatest tight ends in league history.









