Brittany and Patrick Mahomes welcome third baby — see her unique name!
Congratulations are in order for Brittany and Patrick Mahomes, they are officially parents again!
The Kansas City Chiefs quarterback and his wife have announced that they welcomed their third child, a daughter, on Sunday, January 12.
The couple are already parents to daughter Sterling Skye Mahomes, three, and Patrick "Bronze" Lavon Mahomes III, two.
In tune with little Sterling and Bronze's names, Brittany and Patrick have named their second daughter Golden Raye.
Brittany shared the happy news with a black and white photo on Instagram of her little feet, and her name was engraved on a wooden sign.
Fans were then quick to take to the comments section under the post and gush over it, with one writing: "Love the name! Congratulations," as others followed suit with: "Congratulations Mahomes family, and welcome to the world Golden," and: "Congratulations for your beautiful blessing," as well as: "Love the name!!! Congrats Mahomes."
Brittany, 29, and Patrick, also 29, are high school sweethearts, and have been married since March 2022. They welcomed their first daughter in 2021 and their son in 2022.
They announced news of their first pregnancy one month after Patrick proposed, which itself came on the day he was given his Super Bowl championship ring in 2020, and at the time, Brittany joked on Instagram: "Just taking a small detour to the wedding."
It's a busy time for the Mahomes family, as Patrick is in the middle of the NFL playoffs, with less than a month away from the Super Bowl, which the Chiefs won last year for the third time in five years.
Both kids were in attendance last year, and Brittany previously told People: "[Sterling] loves to watch her dad play football. She can see him from a mile away and pays attention and keeps up with what's going on with him."
However, Patrick has also previously said, during an episode of Football in America, that he plans to "stay out of the way" when it comes to whether his kids will want to become athletes in the future as well.
"I'm going to teach my son, my daughter all the fundamentals and whatever they want to learn. But at the same time, I want to let it be about them," he noted, and maintained: "That's what my dad did growing up, that's what my parents did. They didn't pressure me to do anything. I think that's why I'm in the position I am today."