Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift visited Prime Social Rooftop in Kansas City with friends after the Chiefs’ dramatic 30-17 win over the Lions on Sunday night.
The couple celebrated at the local hotspot with Travis’ cousin, Tanner Corum, and his wife, Samantha Corum, as seen in photos Samantha shared on Instagram on Monday.
One image shows Taylor sipping a cocktail while posing with Samantha and Ally Charara.
“My best friends,” Samantha wrote, adding a stars and disco ball emoji.
The singer, who just released her 12th studio album, “The Life Of A Showgirl,” last week, wore her custom GANNI Chiefs dress and black combat boots.
Other snapshots show Chiefs running backs Kareem Hunt and Brandon Rodriguez with Travis and Taylor.
The couple attended Samantha and Tanner’s June wedding in Knoxville, Tennessee.
All eyes were on Taylor as she made her first public NFL appearance this season at Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday.
The “Opalite” singer, 35, was shown on the NBC show hugging Travis’ father Ed Kelce and speaking with WNBA superstar Caitlin Clark during the first quarter.
The Chiefs played a near perfect game with zero penalties and no turnovers against a broken down Lions defense.
Kansas City’s victory over Detroit was overshadowed by a postgame fight between the teams after Lions defensive back Brian Branch hit Chiefs wideout JuJu Smith-Schuster.
Afterward, Branch apologized and complained about the referees’ missed calls — specifically mentioning a play where Smith-Schuster hit him with an illegal backside block that wasn’t called.
“I did a really childish thing,” Branch said. “I’m tired of people doing stuff between games and the referees don’t realize it. They’re trying to intimidate me there. I shouldn’t have done it, it was childish.
“…I was blocked in the back illegally. And it was in front of the ref and the ref didn’t do anything. And just stuff like that. I could have gotten hurt from that, but I still shouldn’t have done that.”
Lions head coach Dan Campbell also apologized to Smith-Schuster and the Chiefs, calling Branch’s actions “inexcusable.”
The NFL has yet to impose any discipline.
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Smith-Schuster, who had a bloody nose after the incident, said he didn’t expect things to escalate.
“I think after the game I was expecting to shake his hand and say good game and move on, but he threw a punch…at the end of the day it’s a team sport,” Smith-Schuster said. “We came here, did our job and that’s all that matters.
“At the end of the day, it’s all about getting a double. Did I just block him? I’m just doing my job. I’m playing between the whistles and after the game he took advantage of what he did. He was definitely frustrated.”
The Chiefs (3-3) face the Raiders (2-4) at home in Missouri on Sunday.