The Commercial Appeal

Patriots WR Edelman retires after 11 seasons

- Lorenzo Reyes

Longtime New England Patriots wide receiver Julian Edelman is putting a cap on his football career.

After the franchise terminated Edelman’s contract Monday under the designatio­n of a failed physical, Edelman announced his retirement from football in a video posted to his Twitter account.

“Nothing in my career has ever come easy,” Edelman said in the video. “And, no surprise, this is going to be easy, either. Now I’ve always said, I’m going to go until the wheels come off, and they have finally fallen off. Due to an injury last year, I’ll be making my official announceme­nt of my retirement from football.

“It was a hard decision, but the right decision for me and my family. And I’m honored and so proud to be retiring a Patriot.”

Edelman, 34, had played all 11 of his NFL seasons in New England and currently ranks fourth on the team’s alltime career receiving yards list with 6,822. His 620 receptions rank second in franchise history.

Edelman was instrument­al in helping the Patriots win three Super Bowl championsh­ips and is perhaps best known for an improbable catch he made against the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl 51 that helped secure New England’s victory after it had trailed by 25 points in the third quarter.

He was also named Super Bowl 53 MVP after recording 10 catches for 141 yards in New England’s 13-3 win over the Los Angeles Rams.

“By any measure of what constitute­s an elite NFL career – wins, championsh­ips, production – Julian has it all,” Patriots coach Bill Belichick said in a statement. “Few players can match Julian’s achievemen­ts, period, but considerin­g his profession­al trajectory and longevity, the group is even more select. It is historic. This is a tribute to his legendary competitiv­eness, mental and physical toughness and will to excel. Day in and day out, Julian was always the same: all out. Then, in the biggest games and moments, with championsh­ips at stake, he reached even greater heights and delivered some of his best, most thrilling performanc­es.”

In 19 playoff games, he caught 118 passes for 1,442 yards, ranking second only to Hall of Famer Jerry Rice in career postseason totals for both categories.

Widely known as one of the league’s top slot receivers throughout his career with the Patriots, Edelman became one of former quarterbac­k Tom Brady’s most trusted targets during the duo’s time together.

Edelman, however, had dealt with several nagging injuries over the last few seasons, including a knee issue that had kept his future in New England in doubt. He had appeared in just six games last season, catching 21 passes for 315 yards.

Originally a quarterbac­k when he came out of Kent State in the 2009 NFL draft, Edelman converted to receiver after the Patriots selected him in the seventh round with the No. 232 overall pick.

He toiled behind former Patriots slot wide out Wes Welker during his four seasons in New England. But once the Patriots decided before the 2013 season to move on from Welker and let him walk in free agency, Edelman took on a much larger role with the team.

 ?? JAY BIGGERSTAF­F/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Patriots wide receiver Julian Edelman, seen Oct. 5, announced his retirement Monday.
JAY BIGGERSTAF­F/USA TODAY SPORTS Patriots wide receiver Julian Edelman, seen Oct. 5, announced his retirement Monday.

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