No matter which team wins the Super Bowl on Sunday night, viewers are almost guaranteed to hear something about God.
Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes and Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts both speak openly and regularly about the role of faith in their football careers, and they can be expected to acknowledge God after this weekend’s big game.
“I give all the glory to God. He’s given me this platform to showcase my skills and play a game that I love, and so that’s always the top of the list,” Mahomes said while meeting with the press this week, as the Deseret News reported.
Hurts shared similar thoughts, noting that faith is at the center of his life.
“Through the highs and the lows, (God’s) greater than all of them, and that’s something that I can always acknowledge,” he said.
Most sports fans appreciate those kinds of comments from athletes, according to a new survey on faith and sports from Pinkston and Sports Spectrum.
Researchers found that 56% of U.S. adults who watch sports at least a few times per month are “very” or “somewhat” supportive of athletes using their platform to talk about their religious beliefs or other spiritual issues.
Just 12% said they were unsupportive.
More sports fans appreciate athletes discussing their faith than appreciate athletes discussing political issues that matter to them, according to the new survey.
While 30% of regular sports viewers are “very” supportive of openly religious athletes, just 17% feel the same about athletes who use their platform to talk about politics.
Nearly one-quarter of fans hold a negative view about political comments, the survey found.
Faith-related declarations from athletes have been part of professional sports for nearly as long as professional sports have been part of American culture.
But in the beginning, the athletes who shared their faith often did so to explain why they were walking away from their favorite game.
For example, baseball player Billy Sunday left the Chicago White Sox to become a full-time evangelist, as Paul Putz, director of Truett Seminary’s Faith & Sports Institute at Baylor University, told the Deseret News last fall.
Today, there are still some sports stars who retire in order to commit themselves to religious work, including former NBA player AJ Griffin. But it’s much more common for athletes to weave their faith into their athletic careers, speaking about God in interviews and on social media as openly and regularly as they talk about big plays.
As the new survey showed, the vast majority of sports fans are at least neutral about religious comments.
In general, viewers seem to appreciate when athletes use their platform to do good.
Nearly three-quarters of fans said they’re “very” (42%) or “somewhat” (32%) supportive of athletes talking about nonprofit causes that matter to them, making that kind of talk even more popular than talk about faith, researchers found.
Here are other notable takeaways from the survey report.
The survey from Pinkston and Sports Spectrum was conducted from Jan. 24-30, 2025, among 1,540 U.S. adults who watch sports at least a few times per month. The margin of error for the full sample is 2.3%.
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