The shooting at Wednesday’s Super Bowl parade has left members of the Kansas City Chiefs and their families shaken.
Brittany Mahomes described the shooting as “traumatizing” after one person died and at least 22 were injured in the shooting near Union Station in Kansas City.
“Highly embarrassed and disappointed in this. Super Bowl wins will never be the same because of this, it’s devastating,” Mahomes wrote on her Instagram Story Wednesday evening.
“Lives lost and people injured during something that was suppose[d] to be a celebration. Horrible and traumatizing. So many prayers going to the families involved.”
Three people were taken into custody Wednesday in connection to the shooting, Kansas City Police chief Stacey Graves said.
Nine children were among the 22 injured.
Chiefs fan Lisa Lopez-Galvan, a mother of two and a local DJ, died during surgery after being shot in the abdomen, according to the Kansas City Star.
Mahomes traveled to the parade with husband Patrick Mahomes and the two celebrated on top of a bus that drove along the parade route.
Follow The Post’s coverage of the mass shooting at the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl parade and the arrest of the shooting suspect:
- Lisa Lopez-Galvan, Kansas City Chiefs superfan and mom of 2, killed in Super Bowl parade shooting: ‘Most wonderful, beautiful person’
- Heroic Kansas City Chiefs fans tackle fleeing suspected gunman after Super Bowl Parade shooting, wild video shows
- Revelers recall terrifying moment gunfire erupted at Kansas City Chiefs parade: ‘Felt like a sitting duck’
- All 12 children injured in Kansas City Chiefs parade shooting discharged from hospital: ‘Great news’
- Two adults charged with murder in deadly Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade shooting
- Alleged KC Chiefs parade shooter told cops he was ‘just being stupid’: court docs
- COLUMN: Super Bowl parade shooting turning celebration into crime scene changes everything
The Chiefs quarterback wrote “praying for Kansas City” on X after the shooting.
The parade began at 11 a.m. central, and after roughly 90 minutes a rally was held at Union Station, where Chiefs players went on stage to address fans gathered for the celebration.
Shots were fired shortly after the rally ended, causing the crowd to flee in panic.
Video showed one fan bravely tackling one of the alleged shooters to the ground.
The fan, Trey Filter, recalled hearing “Get him!” and springing into action.
“I literally remember when I was tackling him, ‘I sure hope this is who they were yelling at me to get.’ Because I just went, ‘Boom!’ … I really don’t recall seeing him coming,” Filter told The Post.
All members of the Chiefs and their families were “safe and accounted for,” the team said Wednesday.