The Kansas City Chiefs are arguably the most disappointing team of the 2025 NFL season, but that won't stop Travis Kelce's dad from taking shots at their AFC rivals. Ed Kelce (also the father of former Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce) left a comment under an Instagram post on Tuesday, December 9, that is sure to rankle fans of the Buffalo Bills. "If the Chiefs don't get in the playoffs, then the path is clear for the BILLS TO LOSE ANOTHER SUPERBOWL," wrote Ed, 74. His comment referred to the four consecutive Super Bowl losses the Bills endured from 1990 to 1993. Travis Kelce Defends AFC Championship Referees: 'I Thought It Was Fair' The jab came under a fan-made video mocking the Chiefs with a scene from the 2008 movie Step Brothers, where Dale (John C. Reilly) and Brennan (Will Ferrell) burst into tears upon learning their parents are getting divorced. In the video, Travis, 36, and other Chiefs players' likenesses are crudely added over the actors. "Chiefs fans facing their first potential missed postseason since 2014," the creator wrote in the caption. With four games remaining in the regular season, the Chiefs have just an 11 percent chance of making the playoffs, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. They are 6-7 on the season and are coming off a brutal loss to the Houston Texans, during which Travis dropped a crucial pass in the fourth quarter that led to an interception. "Obviously looking at the playoffs, this is a tough reality to be in," Travis told Jason, 38, on the Wednesday, December 10, episode of their "New Heights" podcast. "It's a s***ty f***ing feeling, especially dropping the f***ing ball late in the game like that." It should come as no surprise that Ed was mixing it up in the comments. He revealed in 2024 that he had been banned from X for violating the site's terms of service. Drue Tranquill Calls Out Bills Fans for Throwing Snowballs at Chiefs Players "Arms dealers are free to peddle their wares on X but I'm banned for life and they won't say why, just a generic 'Terms of Service' violation," Ed lamented via Facebook at the time. He went into further detail in a later post, taking aim at trolls and the site's owner, Elon Musk. "Let me try and clear something up here," he wrote. "I'm rarely on Facebook or Instagram. I get Google alerts in my email about articles mentioning the boys and remotely post them to Facebook for friends and family to see." Ed continued, "I posted the thing about arms dealers active on X because frankly, I was pissed at Elon's trolls. I rarely wrote anything on X; I just followed sports reporters. It's handy during games to hear what those guys have to say, particularly at stadiums where you don't have commentators the way you do watching on TV." He also speculated that his ban could have been a result of his account being hacked. "I was active on X/Twitter from September to February, reading others' posts," he said. "Apparently the X Twits believe I posted something contrary to their rules in May or June 2023. Never happened. I'm guessing I was hacked, as the platform isn't all that secure." Ed concluded, "My comments when I started this conversation were merely to highlight the hypocrisy of these social media turds."