USA TODAY Sports Weekly

NFL columnist Peter King decides to retire

- Steve Gardner

Legendary pro football columnist Peter King has announced his retirement from full-time writing.

King broke the news to readers in his weekly “Football Morning in America” column for NBC Sports, calling himself “the luckiest man on the face of the earth.”

King has spent 44 years as a sports writer, covering the last 40 Super Bowls and writing his weekly column – which was originally called “Monday Morning Quarterbac­k” when it began at Sports Illustrate­d – for 27 years.

In his farewell column, King listed several factors that led to his decision to retire – among them his declining interest in the day-to-day news cycle, a desire to try something new, his unsuccessf­ul attempts to scale back the scope of his 10,000-word columns, and a need to spend more time with family.

King said he’d been thinking seriously about his decision ever since asking Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid, after he won the Super Bowl last season, if he was going to retire ... and Reid shot back, “Are you?”

During his career covering the NFL, King broke several major stories such as Lawrence Taylor’s drug suspension in 1988 and Brett Favre going into rehab for painkiller­s in 1996, not to mention informing his legion of readers that the game-winning play in Super Bowl 58 was called “Corn Dog.”

King held the door open for writing down the road. (“I may find myself jonesing to do something when I’m bored in three months,” he wrote.)

At least one more “FMIA” column will be forthcomin­g. King said he will publish a collection of correspond­ence from readers next week.

He said he remains optimistic about the future of sports writing and coverage of the NFL, but it’s not a given.

“I hope the pipeline doesn’t dry up,” King wrote. “One fear I have is that enough strong young writers and imaginativ­e media people won’t have the entrée into this business that I had. The business that was once majority reporter has now shifted to majority analyst/opinionist­a. We need more storytelle­rs to emerge.”

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