Getty Images
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Chiefs chairman Clark Hunt offered his condolences Sunday to the families affected by the murder-suicide involving one of his players, calling it "an incredibly difficult 24 hours for our family."
Hunt spoke to The Associated Press on the field before the Chiefs' game against the Carolina Panthers. He said the Chiefs consulted with the league about whether to play the game as scheduled, but ultimately left it up to coach Romeo Crennel and the team captains to decide.
AP
Kansas City Chiefs owner Clark Hunt
Crennel and general manager Scott Pioli were in the parking lot of the Chiefs' practice facility Saturday morning when linebacker Jovan Belcher shot himself in the head. Belcher had shot his girlfriend multiple times at a nearby residence just minutes earlier.
CHIEFS LB FATALLY SHOOTS GIRLFRIEND, KILLS SELF IN FRONT OF COACH & GM
BELCHER MOURNED BY LONG ISLAND HOMETOWN
VACCARO: MURDER-SUICIDE LEAVES COUNTLESS QUESTIONS
BELCHER DEATH STUNS CHIEFS, NFL COMMUNITY
Hunt said Pioli called him from the parking lot immediately after the shooting, and that he flew from his home in the Dallas to Kansas City on Saturday afternoon.
"I spent the evening last night at the team hotel with them," Hunt said. "I wanted to be there with the team, with the coaches, to let them know I love them and support them and know what they're going through, and particularly the guys who were present in the parking lot when Jovan took his life. I know this has to be incredibly difficult."
The Chiefs had several counselors on hand at the team hotel Saturday night. The NFL and the players' association have also pledged their support to the team.
Hunt said that Belcher was "a player who had not had a long concussion history."
Belcher was in his fourth year with the Chiefs after making the team as an undrafted free agent out of Maine, and team officials said he was particularly close to Pioli.
"We have a lot of players who were struggling, people who had spent countless hours with Jovan over the last several years, the linebacking group in particular," Hunt said. "I know it's going to be difficult for them today. I told them all we can do in a situation like this is pull together as a family and support each other."
Kansas City police have not released a motive for the shooting of 22-year-old Kasandra M. Perkins, other than to say the couple had been arguing in recent days.
They left behind a 3-month-old daughter, Zoe.
"We lost two members of the Chiefs family," Hunt said. "Kasandra was part of our Chiefs women's organization, and had done things in the community with the CWO group. They have a daughter now, Zoe, who is an orphan. I can't imagine how difficult that's going to be for her."
Hunt said that he had a number of conversations Saturday with Commissioner Roger Goodell on whether to play the game against Carolina as scheduled. Ultimately, Hunt asked Crennel to discuss with team captains how they wanted to proceed.
"Of course, the captains had been in conversation with their teammates," Hunt said, "and they unanimously believed the right thing to do was play the game."
Chiefs take field vs. Panthers as owner calls the past 24 hours 'incredibly difficult'
This article
Chiefs take field vs. Panthers as owner calls the past 24 hours 'incredibly difficult'
can be opened in url
http://newsmanaged.blogspot.com/2012/12/chiefs-take-field-vs-panthers-as-owner.html
Chiefs take field vs. Panthers as owner calls the past 24 hours 'incredibly difficult'