VEGAS MYTHS BUSTED: A Kansas City Chiefs Flag is Buried Under Allegiant Stadium

On Dec. 29, 2017, the Las Vegas Review-Journal ran a story proclaiming that “a piece inhumed a Sunflower State City Chiefs flagstone near what is expected to follow the 30-yard rail line of the unexampled Raiders arena going upwardly on the Strip.”

Construction worker and diehard Chiefs buff Chris Scherzer had posted a photo to Facebook of a coworker holding the flag, which read, “Chiefs Kingdom.” The photo’s legend declared: “Flag buried in dirt, encased in concrete, with a sports stadium reinforced on top side of it … Chiefs 1, Raiders 0.”

The Las Vegas Review-Journal‘s 2017 story featured the Facebook photo taken by building worker Chris Scherzer at the bowl site. (Image: Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Scherzer had long secret the identity operator of the piece he photographed, claiming that “People are trying to catch him fired o'er it.”

The man supposedly interred the signal flag as a bad-luck good luck charm for the Raiders, whose rivalry with the Chiefs dates to the AFL and is single of the NFL’s bitterest, trace rearward to their foremost meeting of the 1970 season.

In that game, Chiefs full receiving system Elisha Graves Otis Joseph Deems Taylor attacked Raiders justificative oddment Ben Davison for diving into Chiefs quarterback Len Dawson with his helmet as he strike down to the earth during a 1st down.

A bench-clearing wrangle ensued.

Since the new home of the Raiders opened on July 31, 2020, superstitious members of Raider Nation hold had the flagstone to pick for their team up losing all quatern of their games against the Chiefs at home, whereas the Raiders went 2-2 in KS City during the same period.

As before long as it came knock down to the Chiefs v. the San Francisco 49ers inwards Super Bowl LVIII at Allegiant Stadium, worry over the buried flagstone reached new heights — primarily among 49ers fans. Even USA Today ran an clause repeating the story on January 29.

False Flag

The myth was finally busted by KLAS-TV/Las Vegas on January 30.

It turns out, the expression worker’s gens was Gerard DeCosta, and he and his friend lied well-nigh burying the flagstone he held upwardly inward the photo.

Tommy White, the local fag sum leader who oversaw building of Allegiant Stadium, holds the flagstone presumption to him by one of the pranksters. (Image: KLAS-TV)

Local labor jointure leader Tommy White, who oversaw expression of the stadium, told KLAS that he’s known around the play a joke on for years. He tracked down feather DeCosta as before long as former Raiders president Marc Badain called him, demanding to know if the Facebook station was true.

White said DeCosta admitted to the prank and gave him the flag, proving his story.

“He simply told me the good story virtually it,” White person told  KLAS, posing with the flag. “This is his flag. It’s ne'er been buried.”

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