Former NHLer Sean Avery recently shared his thoughts on the romance between Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce. In a candid video on Instagram, Avery explained why he believes the couple’s relationship is thriving.
Avery claimed that after spending a year trying to understand the relationship, he concluded that Swift is happier now than with her previous partners because she and Kelce are having “great sex.”
“Taylor Swift dated a bunch of limp-wristed bitch boys over the years. Now she's with a man who's got high testosterone. He's a football player. He likes to party. And they're having a lot of sex,” Sean Avery said.
He claimed that their youth, wealth and fame make it easier for them to enjoy life together. Avery even went on to joke about wanting to take off his shirt mid-rant.
“She's having great sex. She loves the amount of sex that she's having with Travis. And he probably likes the sex too. They're having great sex. Young, rich, famous. Having fun. Slipping and sliding. Sex. Sex sells. I should just take my fucking shirt off right now,” Avery joked.
Sean Avery calls sports romance category scene ‘tragic’
Since hanging up his skates, Sean Avery has tried his hand at the creative industry as a model, actor and author. On Tuesday, Avery posted a picture of some popular books in the sports romance genre from a bookstore, followed by a video, where he mentioned co-authoring a sports romance book.
The former New York Rangers forward called out the current state of the genre and labeled it as ‘tragic’.
“I'm in a bad mood and I need some help. The previous slide that I posted, I posted that because I wanted to show you the landscape, the current landscape in the sports romance category for books. It's, it's, it's, it's tragic. It's fucking tragic.
“All right. I, along with my co-writer Leslie, we are writing our Magna Opus. We're gonna break open the category. We're gonna revolutionize it. It's so good, but we're having creative differences at this moment over one specific thing,” he added.
He joked they are currently having creative disagreements over minor details, like whether a dish is called "egg in a nest" or "egg in a hole." Avery also claimed that their book will ‘revolutionize’ the sports romance category.