Jason Kelce needs a tracker for his Super Bowl ring.
The former Eagles center and his brother Travis recently took their popular podcast New Heights on the road for a special live taping at the University of Cincinnati – which they both attended.
The Kelce siblings finally received their college diplomas during an evening that also included the first Lombaby Games.
The Games were a series of Olympic-style challenges in which 10 Bearcat athletes competed against 10 fellow students, with the Kelces serving as commentators/referees.
One of the challenges involved contestants diving into a kiddie pool filled with Skyline Chili.
In the bathtubs were socks filled with fake Super Bowl rings as well as a sock containing Jason’s real Eagles Super Bowl ring.
The first team to find the real Super Bowl ring won, however, Jason has since revealed on the latest New Heights pod that he lost it.
“This game existed because I kept losing my Super Bowl ring,” Jason said on Wednesday’s episode.
“I don’t know if Travis knows this, but he legit lost my Super Bowl ring at that event.
“They couldn’t find him.”
The former offensive lineman said people were looking for the sock in the chili the next day, but couldn’t locate it.
“We haven’t found it yet,” he added.
“But all of that was thrown away, so I think we can assume that my Super Bowl ring is now in a landfill somewhere in the Cincinnati tri-state area.
“I didn’t think this would happen.”
“What did you expect?” » asked Travis.
“I thought we were just going to go in the pool and take the ring off afterward,” he replied.
Unfortunately for the Philly retiree, this isn’t the first time he’s misplaced his Super Bowl ring, which he won as part of the Eagles team that beat the New England Patriots 41-33 in the Super Bowl. Bowl LII.
Jason was seen searching for the lost Super Bowl LII ring in the Amazon Prime Video documentary, Kelce, but did not have much success finding it.
Luckily, he managed to get it back and revealed how on the New Heights podcast episode.
Initially, Jason’s wife Kylie found the ring in the glove compartment of one of their Tesla cars.
But it wasn’t over once Jason lost the ring for the second time.
He only realized it had been misplaced again after documentarians asked him if he had it so they could film it with it.
On his podcast, Jason revealed that he often hides the ring, but in doing so, he hides it from himself and he no longer remembers where he put it.
He then left to get the ring before Travis guessed that it was either in a sock, a shoe, a fanny pack, or wrapped in cloth.
Jason came back holding a pile of socks in front of the camera while saying, “I’m going to have to find another hiding place.”
“I called him,” Travis said before Jason unrolled the socks and explained why he chose to put the Super Bowl ring on them.
Jason says he once met a college defensive coordinator trying to recruit the guy who had “won a bunch of Super Bowls” and that he “pulled it out like a dirty sock and unfolded like four Super Bowl rings.” Bowl.”
“Since then, I’ve been waiting to hide my Super Bowl ring in a sock drawer.
“I figure no one would think that someone would hide Super Bowl rings in their socks.”
Jason Kelce needs a tracker for his Super Bowl ring.
The former Eagles center and his brother Travis recently took their popular podcast New Heights on the road for a special live taping at the University of Cincinnati – which they both attended.
The Kelce siblings finally received their college diplomas during an evening that also included the first Lombaby Games.
The Games were a series of Olympic-style challenges in which 10 Bearcat athletes competed against 10 fellow students, with the Kelces serving as commentators/referees.
One of the challenges involved contestants diving into a kiddie pool filled with Skyline Chili.
In the bathtubs were socks filled with fake Super Bowl rings as well as a sock containing Jason’s real Eagles Super Bowl ring.
The first team to find the real Super Bowl ring won, however, Jason has since revealed on the latest New Heights pod that he lost it.
“This game existed because I kept losing my Super Bowl ring,” Jason said on Wednesday’s episode.
“I don’t know if Travis knows this, but he legit lost my Super Bowl ring at that event.
“They couldn’t find him.”
The former offensive lineman said people were looking for the sock in the chili the next day, but couldn’t locate it.
“We haven’t found it yet,” he added.
“But all of that was thrown away, so I think we can assume that my Super Bowl ring is now in a landfill somewhere in the Cincinnati tri-state area.
“I didn’t think this would happen.”
“What did you expect?” » asked Travis.
“I thought we were just going to go in the pool and take the ring off afterward,” he replied.
Unfortunately for the Philly retiree, this isn’t the first time he’s misplaced his Super Bowl ring, which he won as part of the Eagles team that beat the New England Patriots 41-33 in the Super Bowl. Bowl LII.
Jason was seen searching for the lost Super Bowl LII ring in the Amazon Prime Video documentary, Kelce, but did not have much success finding it.
Luckily, he managed to get it back and revealed how on the New Heights podcast episode.
Initially, Jason’s wife Kylie found the ring in the glove compartment of one of their Tesla cars.
But it wasn’t over once Jason lost the ring for the second time.
He only realized it had been misplaced again after documentarians asked him if he had it so they could film it with it.
On his podcast, Jason revealed that he often hides the ring, but in doing so, he hides it from himself and he no longer remembers where he put it.
He then left to get the ring before Travis guessed that it was either in a sock, a shoe, a fanny pack, or wrapped in cloth.
Jason came back holding a pile of socks in front of the camera while saying, “I’m going to have to find another hiding place.”
“I called him,” Travis said before Jason unrolled the socks and explained why he chose to put the Super Bowl ring on them.
Jason says he once met a college defensive coordinator trying to recruit the guy who had “won a bunch of Super Bowls” and that he “pulled it out like a dirty sock and unfolded like four Super Bowl rings.” Bowl.”
“Since then, I’ve been waiting to hide my Super Bowl ring in a sock drawer.
“I figure no one would think that someone would hide Super Bowl rings in their socks.”