Brian Dawkins - The Wolverine Retires

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Epidemik
    Commitment to Excellence
    • Jul 2009
    • 10276

    Brian Dawkins - The Wolverine Retires

     


    Veteran safety Brian Dawkins announced his retirement from football on his verified Twitter account on Monday.


    ENGLEWOOD, Colo. -- Brian Dawkins says his head told him to retire, not his neck.

    The veteran safety called Denver Broncos coach John Fox on Monday morning to tell him that after plenty of prayer and reflection, he'd decided that 16 seasons in the NFL was enough.

    Then, Dawkins announced his retirement on Twitter, where he quickly began trending as fans worldwide expressed their admiration for the mild-mannered family man who transformed himself into a ferocious football player on Sundays.

    Well-known by his alter ego "Wolverine," and for his passionate, energetic play for 13 years in Philadelphia and three in Denver, Dawkins was one of the greatest to ever play his position, and nobody played safety in the NFL longer than he did.

    Dawkins, 38, said he felt he had another year left in him after recovering from a serious neck injury that sidelined him for the stretch run and playoffs last season. But he instead fulfilled one final wish from his NFL bucket list: walking away from the game he loves before being betrayed by a battered body or one too many trips around the sun.

    "It's probably going to sound crazy, but you know the fact that I could play another year gave me a lot of peace to say that this is it," Dawkins said.

    Broncos boss John Elway said he wanted Dawkins to play in 2012 but never pressured him to return.

    "It's always tough to take that final step," Elway said. "He'll be missed. He did so many tremendous things for the Broncos, not only on the field, but his leadership off the field was something that we'll always be grateful for."

    Dawkins said the offseason additions of quarterback Peyton Manning and defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio forced him to pray a little longer on his future.

    He insisted his neck didn't enter the equation, though. He said the nerve had regenerated and he was fine.

    "My body feels good. It really does. My neck, that nerve area is cool, nothing's wrong with it," he said. "My strength is back where it was and my knees, things don't ache like they do during the season when I'm walking up and down the steps."

    Dawkins said he felt great peace over his decision.

    Dawkins said he wasn't sure whether he'd sign a one-day deal with his old team to ceremoniously retire from the team that drafted him in the second round out of Clemson in 1996, but one thing's for sure: He's staying in Denver, where he hopes to help coach high school football in the fall.

    "I'll raise my kids here," he said. "This is a beautiful spot."

    He also has a soft spot in his heart for Philly, where he plans to meet with the media on Saturday.

    For 13 years, he was the heart and soul of the Eagles' defense.

    "The NFL will miss a player as talented, ferocious, and determined as Brian Dawkins," Eagles coach Andy Reid said. "He was one of the most dedicated and hardest working players I have ever coached. Whether it was on the practice field, the film room or the weight room, Brian always put in the extra hours it took to become the star player that he was. And he transferred all of that and more onto the field on Sundays."

    Dawkins finished his career in Philadelphia in 2008 as the franchise's leader in games played (183) and interceptions (34) while spearheading a defense that made the Eagles perennial championship contenders.

    "Brian Dawkins is one of my all-time favorite players and one of the best to ever put on an Eagles uniform," team owner Jeffrey Lurie said. "On the field, in many ways, Brian re-invented the safety position. He had the speed and athleticism to line up against the game's best receivers, and was equally effective in the run game. His love for the game was infectious and he poured his entire heart and soul into everything he was doing from the moment he entered the stadium until he left.

    "Everyone who ever watched Brian play saw that and it was impossible not to love that about him."

    The Eagles announced they would honor Dawkins at their Sept. 30 game against the New York Giants, and the Broncos have plans to do the same at a later date.

    Longevity isn't normally associated with the position where the hardest hits are both received and delivered -- the only other safeties to log 16 seasons in the pros were Hall of Famer Paul Krause and Eugene Robinson.

    Dawkins was named to several All-Pro teams and the NFL's All-Decade team of the 2000s and he made nine Pro Bowls, including last season as an alternate. Dawkins finished his career with 17 fumble recoveries, 26 sacks, 37 interceptions, 42 forced fumbles and 98 pass breakups. His 42 forced fumbles are the most ever by a defensive back in the NFL.

    "Brian Dawkins is one of the best to ever play the game, a future Hall of Famer who changed the way his position is played," Fox said. "In many ways, he helped my job as a coach with his great leadership and preparation. He brought so much to the table and was such an enormous asset to our football team."

    As a member of the NFLPA executive committee, Dawkins pushed for new league rules that limited full contact during camp and also in the regular season. He credited those changes in the 10-year labor pact reached last summer with keeping him fresh at the beginning of what turned out to be his final season, which he played a year after laboring through sprains to both knees.

    What he was really fighting for, he said, was the next generation of players who will one day walk away from the game in better shape than he could.

    It was one last piece of his long legacy.

    "I just hope that people will remember me as someone that went out and gave everything that he could every week," Dawkins said. "Not just the weekend or the day of the game, but every week ... and that my teammates could count on me to be there all of the time. Not some of the times, not most of the times."

    NFL commissioner Roger Goodell congratulated Dawkins in an entry on Twitter Monday.

    His post read, "Congrats @BrianDawkins on a successful 16-year career. Great player, great family. More importantly, great man in community & locker room"

    Another tweet in response to Dawkins' retirement announcement came from Elway himself, who wrote, "Congratulations on a Hall of Fame career, Dawk!!!"

    He'll be eligible for enshrinement in 2017.

    "If that's something that happens, that will be a blessing," Dawkins said. "I never entered into the NFL saying that, you know, I'm going to be a Hall of Famer. I know some guys do that; I just wasn't one of them. I mean, that wasn't my mindset. I did not enter the league saying I want to play 16 years. None of these things were in my mind."

    Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

     

  • Tailback U
    No substitute 4 strength.
    • Nov 2008
    • 10282

    #2
    One of my favorite players of all time. He was a huge inspiration to me when I played football, I wanted to play safety exactly the way he played.

    Comment

    • FUSE
      Member
      • Oct 2008
      • 1204

      #3
      What a great career. It was awesome seeing him play throughout his entire career. Should be a 1st ballot HOF imo

      Comment

      • Juggernaut
        Sitting on the Sidelines
        • Dec 2008
        • 5669

        #4
        Noooo.

        Damn, this is actually pretty saddening. He was one of the old timers who still put younger guys in their place. 1st ballot imo.

        Comment

        • shag773
          Senior Member
          • Jul 2009
          • 2721

          #5
          As someone who saw him play every Sunday for 13 years, it's a sad day. If you didn't like Brian Dawkins and the way he played the game, you didn't like football. A true field general and a great example to younger players on how to approach the game like a pro. The greatest Philadelphia Eagle of all time.

          Comment

          • ralaw
            Posts too much
            • Feb 2009
            • 6662

            #6
            There isn't any doubt about his HOF worthy status.

            Comment

            • ThomasTomasz
              • Jan 2025

              #7
              No doubt of his HOF status, and despite being a Redskins fan, I enjoyed watching him when the Eagles played the Redskins. Definitely one of the best, both on and off the field.

              Comment

              • EmpireWF
                Giants in the Super Bowl
                • Mar 2009
                • 24082

                #8


                Comment

                • Berowsk
                  Fuck Bitches, Get Wawa.
                  • Oct 2008
                  • 8860

                  #9
                  He needs to play one more game for the Eagles so he can retire with us.
                  Brian Dawkins has decided to retire after 16 seasons in the NFL, he announced Monday on Twitter. But the eight-time all-pro safety still has another decision to make: Does he want to be remembered as an Eagle or a Bronco?

                  Dawkins remains undecided about whether he should retire as a member of the Philadelphia Eagles, the team with which he spent the first 13 years of his career, or the Denver Broncos, the team that showed him love when he felt spurned by the Eagles.

                  The Eagles reportedly have told Dawkins they want him to retire as member of their team.

                  "Brian Dawkins is one of my all-time favorite players and one of the best to ever put on an Eagles uniform," owner Jeffrey Lurie said.

                  "Everyone who ever watched Brian play saw that and it was impossible not to love that about him. He was one of the best leaders to ever play here."

                  The Eagles will honor Dawkins in a ceremony at Lincoln Field when they host the New York Giants in a nationally televised Sunday night game on Sept. 30.

                  Dawkins plans to return to Philadelphia for that event and also will be in town this weekend to meet with reporters, indicating that some of the wounds from his painful split with the Eagles may have healed.

                  But maybe not enough to retire as a member of the team.

                  “If I had too many bad feelings, I wouldn't be coming back at all,” said Dawkins, who has refuted the Eagles' claim that they made him an offer when his contract expired in 2008. “I grew to love the place, still love the place, and I'll just make that decision at some point.”
                  sigpic

                  Comment

                  • FUSE
                    Member
                    • Oct 2008
                    • 1204

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Berowsk
                    He needs to play one more game for the Eagles so he can retire with us.
                    Agreed, im sure he'll sign a 1 day contract with the Eagles to retire with them.

                    Comment

                    • Berowsk
                      Fuck Bitches, Get Wawa.
                      • Oct 2008
                      • 8860

                      #11
                      We were right:
                      Well played, Eagles.

                      The football team, usually not known for embracing the past and honoring its former players, did a great thing today. Brian Dawkins was honored at press conference, where he was signed to a one-day contract to retire an Eagle. Many current and former players were in attendance, including Michael Vick... and Donovan McNabb, whose personality must have hovered somewhere between jealous and fucking enraged as he watched a safety receive a sendoff that he most-likely thought should have been given to him.

                      Anyway, Dawkins inadvertently (apparently) skipped over McNabb when hugging his peers during the event, but the Eagles state media czar, Dave Spadaro, was quick to tweet out a picture of the two embracing after the press conference:

                      Cute.

                      Here is the must-watch video the Eagles put together for Dawkins (you'd think maybe they'd make these free PR clips embeddable...).

                      http://www.philadelphiaeagles.com/mu...a-d973dd255130
                      sigpic

                      Comment

                      • Senser81
                        VSN Poster of the Year
                        • Feb 2009
                        • 12804

                        #12
                        Thought he retired years ago. Is John Lynch still on the Broncos, too?

                        Comment

                        Working...