It’s easy to understand why Taylor Swift’s relationship with Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs drew national notice. Kelce is among the greatest tight ends to have ever played the game, even if Swift is currently the most successful singer in the world. The Chiefs won back-to-back Super Bowls last season, making them the first team to do so in 20 years after Kelce and Swift began dating. The NFL’s only unbeaten club, Kansas City, is now attempting to become the first team to win three consecutive Super Bowls.
Swift, a 14-time Grammy winner, is breaking records everywhere she goes and with every new record she releases. Her Eras concert tour is on course to become the highest-grossing tour in history. Swift informed the sold-out audience at her debut performance in Indianapolis on November 1 that they had created history at Lucas Oil Stadium that evening.
“I was told that you guys went ahead and broke the all time attendance record ever in this stadium!” “I was told that you guys went ahead and broke the all time attendance record ever in this stadium!” the 34-year-old exclaimed to the crowd.
The 2012 Super Bowl, the first and only time the championship games were hosted in Lucas Oil Stadium, which has a maximum capacity of 70,000 people, was attended by less people than Swift’s event. Eras’s record-breaking attendance on night one isn’t shocking, given the mayor of Indianapolis stated that the city was anticipating a nine-figure gain in tourism from her performance.
Swift is dominating at Lucas Oil Stadium, but the Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes and company have strangely fallen short in one area. Kansas City last played in Indianapolis in September 2022, losing 20–17.