Deep search
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
Chiefs, Pat Riley
If the Chiefs three-peat, NBA legend Pat Riley stands to get paid
On Sunday, the Kansas City Chiefs can become the first team in NFL history to win three straight Super Bowls. But if they do, the NFL will have to pay a company owned by an NBA legend for its use of “three-peat” or variations such as “threepeat,” “three peat” and “3 peat.”
If Chiefs win Super Bowl 'three-peat,' they'll have to pay this Florida sports legend to use it
If the Chiefs hit three Super Bowl wins in a row, they may have to pay Miami Heat's Pat Riley before they can crank out T-shirts.
Chiefs reach agreement with Heat's Riley for 'Three Peat' trademark
The Kansas City Chiefs struck a deal with Miami Heat president Pat Riley over the use of the term "Three Peat" ahead of Super Bowl LIX.Riley's trademark attorney, John Aldrich, told Darren Rovell of cllct that there's an agreement in place with the NFL for the Chiefs to use "Three Peat" on merchandise if they win the Big Game for the third straight year.
Miami Heat's Pat Riley Gives Blessing For Chiefs Three-Peat
Outside of the Chief's players, coaches, their families, and Chiefs Kingdom, no one is rooting for a Kansas City victory in Super Bowl LIX more than Miami Heat
If Chiefs win Super Bowl LIX, Pat Riley will allow “three-peat,” reports say
The franchise will be able to sell merch using the trademarked phrase, according to ESPN. Miami Heat president Pat Riley owns several trademarks for various versions of the catchy phrase. The sports network cites a report from collectible media site cllct. According to the report, Riley reached an agreement with the Chiefs use the phrase.
Eagles could cost Pat Riley millions by preventing a Chiefs Three-Peat in Super Bowl LIX
Peat” in the event the Chiefs win their third straight Super Bowl, and the Eagles could cost the Hall of Fame coach millions
Pat Riley's trademarked 'Three-Peat' OK'd to use for Chiefs
Pat Riley's trademark attorney told collectible media site cllct that there is an agreement between the Heat president and the Chiefs to use the phrase "Three-Peat" if Kansas City wins a third straight Super Bowl on Sunday night.
Kansas City Chiefs are going for a Super Bowl 'three-peat,' but that phrase is trademarked
Pat Riley, the current president and former head coach of the Miami Heat, owns half a dozen trademarks related to the word "three-peat." That could affect whether it appears on Chiefs merch, as they try to become the first NFL team to win three Super Bowls in a row.
Pat Riley Graciously Allows NFL to Use Three-Peat on Merchandise if Chiefs Win
Pat Riley successfully trademarked the phrase “three-peat” when he and the Lakers were trying to win their third-straight NBA title in 1989. The NFL has just struck a deal with Riles & Co. to use the phrase on merchandise if the Chiefs win Super Bowl LIX. pic.twitter.com/DMyrCWRSyR
Heat’s Pat Riley, Chiefs Discuss Possible ‘Three-peat’ License
Miami Heat president and minority owner Pat Riley could see his wealth expand if the Kansas City Chiefs, which won Super Bowls 2023 and 2024, defeat the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday and become the first team to pull off a Super Bowl “three-peat.
2d
on MSN
How Heat’s Riley stands to benefit from a Chiefs win. And the Highsmith mystery lingers
Riley owns six trademarks to various forms of “Three-Peat” and has the rights to use that on merchandise, including apparel ...
11h
Which Super Bowl run is more impressive: These Chiefs or 1972 Miami Dolphins?
The Kansas City Chiefs are playing for their third straight Super Bowl title. The Miami Dolphins played three straight in the ...
3d
on MSN
NBA Insider Ponders If Miami Heat Could Satisfy "Decade-Long Obsession" For Hall Of Famer
The Miami Heat have chased Kevin Durant since the LeBron James era ended in 2014. Could this be the year they finally ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results
Trending now
143K jobs added in January
22 states sue New York
Passenger breaks window
Former Dolphins WR dies
Announces run for MI gov.
Changes transgender policy
Plane with 10 missing in AK
House passes fentanyl bill
FAA to slow arrivals at DCA
DOGE staffer resigns
Trump meets US Steel CEO
FEC commissioner removed
Possible tornado in TN
US on Hezbollah's inclusion
Shuts down poultry markets
LeBron James makes history
Rejects US nuclear talks
Unions sue Trump admin
EV charging program halt
NBA All-Star Game '25 draft
Steelers to play in Dublin
Passengers evacuated safely
Rear-view camera recall
UNC removes DEI courses
Court on WI election chief
ICC condemns sanctions
Tapped to secure TikTok deal
Largest radio jet ever seen
Lawmakers denied entry
DOJ won't release names
Named FIU interim president
Feedback