
Syreeta Gapelu, a women's football player, tackled a car thief in Kansas City after catching him mid-break-in. Security footage shows her using her defensive skills to subdue the suspect.
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Image Credit: KOCO 5 News / Facebook.
After a nice Sunday brunch, the last thing Syreeta Gapelu expected was to find herself staring down a thief with his hands in her car. But she did not hesitate. And the thief? He probably wishes she had.
What unfolded next was part action movie, part public service announcement for criminals everywhere: do not steal from someone who plays defensive tackle. Gapelu, a player for the KC Glory women's football team in Kansas City, Missouri, spotted the man mid-break-in and immediately went into game mode. No huddle necessary.
Security footage captured her sprinting toward the suspect with the kind of decisive energy that only comes from actual training. The man scrambled, ran into a pole, ran into a gas meter, and tried to ditch her bag to buy himself some time. None of it worked. Gapelu grabbed him by the hoodie and took him straight to the ground.
The takedown was clean. The suspect ended up in handcuffs. And when police searched him, it turned out he was carrying stolen jewelry from other victims, including someone's engagement ring. What started as one woman defending her belongings turned into a much bigger catch than anyone expected.
Image Credit: KOCO News / Facebook.
Gapelu plays defensive tackle for the KC Glory, a women's full-contact football team based in Kansas City. That position, for those unfamiliar, is quite literally designed around stopping people from getting past you. The irony of a thief picking her car is almost poetic.
She has spoken openly about how much the team means to her, describing the experience as empowering and crediting the community of women who share her love for the sport. That empowerment, it turns out, has real-world applications beyond the field.
Syreeta Gapelu tackled the thief using her football skills after she spotted him breaking into her car.
Syreeta Gapelu is a player for the KC Glory women's football team in Kansas City, Missouri.
The footage captured Gapelu sprinting towards the thief and successfully tackling him after he attempted to escape.
The thief ran into a pole and a gas meter while trying to ditch her bag, but ultimately failed to escape.

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This was not luck. This was muscle memory.
Gapelu had just wrapped up brunch with friends and was being dropped off at her car when she and her best friend noticed something was wrong. A man had broken into her vehicle and was actively grabbing her belongings.
Her first instinct, by her own description, was immediate: tackle him. She did not pause to weigh options or wait for someone else to step in. She ran.
The suspect grabbed her bag, shut the car door, and bolted, but he was already in trouble. After bouncing off a pole and a gas meter, he threw her bag in a last-ditch effort to slow her down. It did not slow her down. Gapelu snagged him by his hoodie and brought him to the ground.
The whole sequence happened fast, just the way a good defensive play does.
What made this story hit differently was what happened after the tackle. When authorities arrived and searched the suspect, they found jewelry that had been stolen from other people, including an engagement ring. Gapelu's quick action did not just protect her own property. It helped bring stolen items back to people who may not have otherwise seen them again.
For Gapelu, that detail mattered most. Knowing the man had been stealing from others beyond just her was what pushed her from feeling defensive to feeling resolved. She made clear that her goal was not just personal. She wanted to make sure he was not going to keep victimizing people.
Her friend Ericka Davis put it well, noting that the caring side of Gapelu is even bigger than the protector people saw on camera that day.
Image Credit: KOCO 5 News / Facebook.
There are a few things worth taking away from this beyond the obvious "do not steal from athletes" lesson, though that one stands on its own.
First, community sports programs like the KC Glory are building more than just athletes. They are building confident, physically capable women who know how to act under pressure. That has value far beyond any scoreboard.
Second, bystander paralysis is real, and stories like this are a reminder that decisive action can make a meaningful difference. Gapelu did not freeze, and because of that, stolen property was recovered, a suspect was arrested, and other victims may get their belongings back.
Third, and perhaps most importantly, the engagement ring made it home. Someone out there had a very good reason to be grateful for a defensive tackle they had never met.
The KC Glory may want to update their marketing materials.
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