NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Patrick Mahomes said Wednesday that while he doesn't agree with all the beliefs espoused by kicker Harrison Butker during a recent commencement address, the Chiefs quarterback nevertheless respects his teammate's right to make them be known.
Butker delivered what has become a polarizing speech May 11 at Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas, where the three-time Super Bowl champ said most women receiving degrees were probably more excited about getting married and having kids, and that some Catholic leaders were ''pushing dangerous gender ideologies onto the youth of America.''
Butker also assailed Pride month, an important time for the LGBTQ+ community, and President Joe Biden's stance on abortion.
''I've known Harrison for seven years. I judge him by the character he shows every single day,'' Mahomes said after one of the Chiefs' voluntary practices in Kansas City, Missouri. ''We're not always going to agree, and there are certain things he said that I don't necessarily agree with. But I know the person he is and he's doing what he can to lead people in the right direction.''
Butker's comments were delivered the same week Mahomes offered a toast to the future of women in sports at the TIME100 Gala: ''I'd like to raise a glass to a new era in sports, an era when the women's game is finally getting the attention it deserves.''
''It was pretty bad timing, I guess you would say. I shot that a couple weeks before," Mahomes said of the film spot. ''That's what makes this country so great is you're able to get as much knowledge as you can and make your own decisions.''
But, Mahomes admitted, ''it gets a little divisive sometimes when you get to social media and outside the (practice) building.''
Earlier in the day, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell declined to expand on the NFL's statement distancing the league from Butker's comments. The league said that the comments and ''views are not those of the NFL as an organization.''