The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Freeney ends career after 16 NFL seasons

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INDIANAPOL­IS — Dwight Freeney mastered the art of spinning long before he reached the NFL.

He kept his body low, his head up and his eyes focused on the quarterbac­k. It made him different, and it made him one of the NFL’s great pass rushers.

On Monday, after 16 seasons of chasing quarterbac­ks and making offensive linemen look silly, the former Indianapol­is Colts star from Bloomfield returned to his adopted hometown to sign a one-day contract to retire with the Colts.

“I used to get called for traveling all day (in basketball), so I couldn’t really do the basketball thing,” Freeney said, explaining why he started using his trademark move.

“So I got on the football field and the coach said, ‘Dwight, I don’t care how you get there, just get there.’ So I started using the spin move and kept going with it and it became a natural thing.” Now, he can finally stop. Freeney didn’t shed tears or make some long, laudatory speeches. He kept it simple and down to earth — the same way he emerged as a leader in a locker room full of offensive stars.

Instead, his parents, his fiancee, Colts owner Jim Irsay and some former teammates and coaches celebrated the 38-year-old who outlasted and outperform­ed most of his contempora­ries.

He leaves the game with one Super Bowl ring, having played in two other Super Bowls, seven Pro Bowls selections and three firstteam All-Pro selections. His 1251⁄2 sacks are tied for No. 17 in league history and his 47 forced fumbles rank fifth.

What made Freeney unique, though, was a move so daunting that teammate Robert Mathis incorporat­ed it into his pass rush repertoire and Colts’ coaches actually asked Freeney to teach other linemen how it worked. “The disrupter, the hurricane whatever you want to call him,” Irsay said. “With Dwight it was like you turn on the film and it was just mayhem. It was like you were instantly drawn to that side of the field. It was like an instant firefight.”

Not everyone appreciate­d the move.

Defensive coaches outside the organizati­on sometimes scoffed at it, calling it unconventi­onal.

The league’s offensive linemen, meanwhile, feared it because they had to deal with the combinatio­n of Freeney’s speed as well as that darned spin. The only thing they lamented more was Freeney’s post-sack military salute.

“People ask me who’s the best defensive lineman you ever played against and it was always Dwight Freeney in practice,” longtime left tackle Anthony Castonzo said during a short highlight film that played before Freeney spoke.

And Freeney believes the Colts’ speed-rushing tandem changed the game.

“I think we created a whole new blocking scheme,” he said. “Before us (Mathis and I), it was just kind of like there’s a running back in the backfield and sometimes the running back would chip us.

“But I don’t remember what team it was, maybe

( Jeff ) Fisher or (Bill) Belichick and they started bringing a receiver or a tight end to chip us. We weren’t paying attention to a receiver or a tight end and I remember the first time I got chipped by a receiver, my feet were above my head because I did not know he was going to come and chip me.”

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