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Sports Illustrated
Sports Illustrated
Sport
Patrick Andres

Duke’s Mayo Bowl Replies to Travis Kelce’s Conspiracy Theory About Game’s Mayo Bath

For the first two decades of its existence, Charlotte's bowl game was just another bowl game. Sure, a Nick Chubb or a Dak Prescott would come along once in a blue moon, but there was little to distinguish the contest from college football's postseason tapestry.

Enter Duke's Mayo. Now, even the most casual college football fans know the Duke's Mayo Bowl's winning coach gets doused with a bath of watered-down mayonnaise.

Or so we think, according to Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce.

"That's yellow paint, that's not mayo," Kelce told his brother and Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce on their podcast New Heights. "They knew that they couldn't f------ dump mayo on somebody 'cause they would probably throw up."

Kelce went on to accuse the Duke's Mayo Bowl of dumping "not real mayonnaise" on coach Neal Brown after West Virginia's 30–10 victory over North Carolina on Dec. 27.

The game—ever present on social media, dating back to its Belk sponsorship from 2011-19—responded by posting pictures of Duke's Mayo, complete with instructions for recreating the mayonnaise bat at home.

The bowl's administration was seemingly unmoved by Kelce's other statement toward the game.

"Also, disgusting if it was real mayonnaise," Kelce said. "So I kinda respect it."

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