How Travis Kelce and brother Jason helped a Team USA Olympian make history

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The 2026 Winter Olympics have kicked off in Italy with Team USA’s women’s hockey team winning their first game against the Czech Republic.  On the team was Laila Edwards, who in 2023 became the first Black woman to play for the United States women’s national hockey team. 

NFL star Travis Kelce gave her a shoutout on his “New Heights” podcast at the time – and now it has been revealed that Travis and his brother Jason contributed $10,000 to help her family travel to Italy to watch her in action.

© Getty Images
Hockey player Laila Edwards of the United States

Laila and her family are from the Kelces’ hometown Cleveland Heights, OH., and launched a GoFundMe to help her family “support her in her Olympic dream”.

“This just isn’t something that we can afford to do on our own. So many communities have supported Laila throughout her years of hockey. We are asking for your help now so that we can be there to cheer Laila, to surround her with the love and support of family,” it read, and after it emerged the Kelce’s had donated, Travis called Laila to tell her that “everyone’s got my back”.

“He’s rooting for me,” Laila told the Associated Press. “They didn’t have to do that, but they did. And I’m really grateful.”

Jason Kelce and Travis Kelce attend The New Heights Party with Jason & Travis Kelce on February 04, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for Wondery)© Getty Images
Jason and Travis donated $10,000

“Obviously, my name’s on the roster, but I feel like my whole family made it to the Olympics,” she added. “All the sacrifices they’ve made, the things they’ve done to get me here, my parents, my siblings, I’m so grateful. And for them to get to come and share the experience is going to be really special.”

“Oh my goodness,” Laila’s mother Charone Gray-Edwards said. “I was going to find words to describe the gratitude and appreciation. But I haven’t yet.”

Edwards Laila (USA) and Cajanova Sara (CZE) participate in the Winter Olympic Games at the Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena in Milano, Italy, on February 5, 2026© NurPhoto via Getty Images
Laila (L) made her debut on February 5

Laila made her Olympic debut on February 5, and AP reported that 14 members of her family – including her 91-year-old grandmother, Ernestine Gray – were in the stands cheering her on and watching as Team USA won 5-1.

“Two years ago, when Kelce first gave a shout-out to Laila, I thought it was huge and cool for him to acknowledge her,” Charone added. “And then when she said ‘thank you’ to him, he responded. He’s been kind. So this is exciting that his kindness even went further.”

The GoFundMe has now raised over $60,000, and any additional funds after the trip will be given back to the Cleveland Heights community through hockey equipment or free ice time at local rinks. “We really want to honor the money that’s been given to us,” said Laila.

Laila Edwards #10 of Team United States skates in the first period during the Women's Preliminary Round Group A match between the United States and Czechia on Day minus one of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena on February 05, 2026© Getty Images
Laila Edwards #10 of Team United States

Donations have also come in from friends and fans of the Wisconsin Badgers, the University of Wisconsin’s hockey team, where Laila is in her senior year.Ice Hockey in Harlem donated $1,500 to the GoFundMe.

“We don’t have much, but what we do have, we’re willing to provide because she’s not only representing Cleveland Heights, she’s not only representing her family,” said JJ Velez, president of IHIH’s board of directors. “She’s representing every Black and brown young lady who’s ever put on some skates and a helmet to defy the odds.”

It’s not the first time Travis has made donations to change the local community.

In 2015, he established the Eighty-Seven and Running organization, a charitable foundation that “empowers disadvantaged youth to achieve success by providing resources and support to their communities and broadening their exposure to areas like STEM, entrepreneurship, and the arts”.

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