Leominster

Meet the Chiefs TE making his Mass. hometown proud at the Super Bowl

Even with all the success, his high school coaches say Super Bowl champion Noah Gray hasn't forgotten his life in Leominster, returning every June for a football camp

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Noah Gray spent four years playing football at Leominster High School, where he’s still remembered as an all-star — on and off the field. Now he’s getting ready for his second-straight Super Bowl, and his coaches say he hasn’t forgotten where he comes from.

Sure, we all know about Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and his musically inclined girlfriend. But it's another tight end Chiefs who's been making a difference here in New England.

Noah Gray rose from a Leominster High School starter for his four years on the Massachusetts gridiron, from 2013 to 2017, and is now going for his second-straight Super Bowl ring in two years alongside Taylor Swift's boyfriend.

"You can't script it any better than that for someone who just came into the league," said Devin Gates, Leominster's head football coach.  

Gray was a great guy on the field and an even better guy off of it, his coaches say.

"We had a best buddies program at the high school with our special needs kids and he ate lunch with those kids, second lunch, every day," said David Palazzi, the school's athletic director. "He went to the prom — he was the only boy who dressed up in his three-piece suit."

The good kid was drafted by a good team. The Kansas City Chiefs selected the Duke graduate in the fifth round of the 2021 NFL Draft. Since then, he's had a front-row seat to learn from Kelce, one of the best to ever do it.

NFL Hall of Famer and Prime Video Thursday Night Football host Tony Gonzalez reacts to Travis Kelce recently breaking his Kansas City Chief's all-time receiving yards record, and praises Taylor Swift for bringing a whole new audience to the NFL.

Gray's old team in Leominster shared some insights about their reigning Super Bowl champ as the Chiefs go for two in a row.

"They are very supportive of one another, Travis and Noah, and they have a great room of tight ends," said Palazzi. "We all aspire to go to the top level, whether you are a doctor or lawyer, and it is the NFL."

This on Nov. 20, 2023, file photo shows Kansas City Chiefs tight end Noah Gray congratulates Travis Kelce for scoring a touchdown in the first half of the team's game against the Philadelphia Eagles at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri.

Even with all the success, his high school coaches say Gray hasn't forgotten his life here in Leominster, returning every June for a football camp.

"Things like this, where you can see someone who can make it to that level, it brings that pride to another level for our guys and it is a catalyst to get involved," Gates said.

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