The Pilot News

Luck finds cost of football too pricey to continue career

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INDIANAPOL­IS (AP) — Andrew Luck was unique.

He loved football. He loves life even more.

So when the 29-year-old Luck thought another long, laborious comeback journey jeopardize­d his future plans, he believed walking away from the sport and potentiall­y hundreds of millions of dollars was the only logical choice.

“For the last four years or so, I’ve been in this cycle of injury, pain, rehab — injury, pain, rehab — and it’s been unceasing, unrelentin­g, both in season and off season,” Luck said following Saturday night’s loss to the Chicago Bears. “I felt stuck in it, and the only way I see out is to no longer play football. It’s taken my joy of this game away.”

The announceme­nt and the timing — two weeks before the Indianapol­is Colts’ season opener against the Los Angeles Chargers — shocked the football world.

But this was not a spur of the moment decision.

After three injury-plagued seasons, Luck returned last year with a new perspectiv­e about the physical pain, mental fatigue and emotional agony it took to keep fighting his way back. Late last summer, he described his state of mind throughout the continual rehab with words such as ‘sad,’ ‘miserable’ and ‘scared.’

Last month, as the lingering pain in his lower left leg forced him off the practice field yet again, Luck told reporters he promised himself after playing through the shoulder pain in 2016 and missing the entire 2017 season, he would be honest with himself, his coaches, teammates and the organizati­on about how his body felt.

At the time, Luck said he thought even limited practices were detrimenta­l to himself and the team.

While some fans booed Luck as he left the field Saturday night, other players supported him. They understand how dangerous and debilitati­ng the sport can be, which is why some are quitting at earlier ages.

Luck just happens to be the biggest name yet on that expanding list.

Colts owner Jim Irsay estimates

Luck could have made as much as $500 million if he lasted as long as Brett Favre, Tom Brady or Peyton Manning, Luck’s predecesso­r.

But Luck was never in it for the money or the fame — like others who left the game on their terms and in their prime.

“We all expect we’re going to play this game forever,” Seattle quarterbac­k Russell Wilson said. “The reality is for most players, it’s not very long. No matter how good we are, or whatever it may be, there’s life after this game, too. I think that’s a thing we always have to balance and always have to weigh.”

Luck is the sixth quarterbac­k of the 11 selected in 2012 out of football.

Wilson and Nick Foles, both third-round picks that year, own Super Bowl rings. Kirk Cousins, a fourth-rounder, is the starter in Minnesota.

The other two still around — Robert Griffin III and Ryan Tannehill — had promising careers derailed by injuries, too. Griffin, the No. 2 pick who played high school football in Texas like Luck and beat Luck out for the 2011 Heisman Trophy award, is fighting for a roster spot in Baltimore. Tannehill, the No. 8 pick, is the backup to Marcus Mariota in Tennessee.

Luck didn’t want to spend more countless hours in the training room now that he’s married and will soon become a father.

He’d rather travel the world, watch soccer, put his architectu­ral degree from Stanford to use and suggest good reads for the Andrew Luck Book Club. Perhaps he will come back to football one day. Or maybe he’ll choose a new career.

“To step back away from this thing, I honor him. I think a lot of his family, I think a lot of his father, I think a lot of what he’s brought to football and wish him nothing but the very best.” Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said. “I hope he becomes President of the United States.”

But after throwing 171 touchdown passes and for nearly 24,000 yards, Luck found football simply wasn’t worth the cost.

“I’m exhausted — and quite tired,” he said during an emotional farewell speech. “The only way forward is to remove myself from this cycle.”

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