Sports agent Leigh Steinberg: Why can't athletes retire gracefully?
- Created on Sunday, 12 February 2012 14:29
- Last Updated on 17.05.2012
- Published Date
Peyton Manning has been a dominant player in the NFL since 1998. He has led his team to a Superbowl appearance, gone to multiple Pro Bowls, earned League MVP honors and set multiple passing records. His critical importance to his team was highlighted in his absence this year as the Colts lost virtually every game. He has earned enough money in his player contracts and endorsements to last multiple lifetimes. He has a wife and kids and a loving extended family. He is a sure first ballot inductee for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He can write his own ticket in respect to post-career broadcast and business possibilities. He has a severely damaged neck which puts him at risk for long term health. Why is he contemplating playing more seasons instead of simply retiring?
An ideal scenario for leaving sports has been painted. A professional athlete plays for one team in his career and walks away from the sport on his own terms. He gracefully retires with his health and welfare intact. In reality this idealized scenario virtually never occurs. In forty years of athletic representation I have rarely seen an athlete voluntarily retire from his career. They may be injured to the point that teams don't want to risk employing them. Their talent may have degraded to the level that finds no employer. Or their conduct and rules violations may have excluded them from competition. They almost never leave sports willingly.Team sport athletes come to treasure the comeraderie of the locker room.
It is hard to replicate the intense friendships forged out of the shared experience of team sports. Pro football is not dissimilar from the military (except in the risk) with players facing danger, trusting each other to watch their backs, and working for a shared goal. They love the teasing banter, ridiculous nicknames, and hilarious stories they share every day. They love the profile and intensity that playing before thousands of spectators and millions of viewers provides. It is hard to find another activity that infuses them with an adrenalin rush on every play. Our society venerates successful pro athletes and adulation, endorsements and staggering income follow.
They loved to play the game and were not ready to give it up.Athletes are in denial about their physical health. They are taught from Pop Warner and Little League to ignore pain and play with injury. They don't want to be a "training room" player isolated from their peers. They don't want to lose their positions. So they conciously blot injury off their radar. I've had a player play a game with a collapsed lung, broken ribs, even a broken leg. Most people value long term health as their first priority--followed by the ability to play a pro career, play a given season, play a given game, and play a given play--in descending order.
The athlete turns list on its' head and focuses on the current all important play as the priority. The fact that they are young athletes makes long term health an abstraction. Since their peers follow the same thinking, it seems normal. And that is why athletes warned by doctors that a proclivity towards concussions or a knee that is disintegrating threaten their health after sports, simply ignore the advice.
And what about the John Elway example, the quarterback who walks into the sunset?
Only someone who represents athletes could tell you how many times the athlete who retires with "everything" is like a sick child with his nose pressed up against the window, yearning to be out playing with his friends. So many of my retired clients constantly phoned during their early years of retirement asking about potential opportunities to play some more. It's their nature.

Leigh Steinberg is the CEO of Steinberg Sports and Entertainment in Newport Beach, California. He spent his career as the first Super Agent with clients like Hall of Fame QBs Troy Aikman, Warren Moon, Steve Young and more. Leigh was the inspiration for Tom Cruise's character in the movie "Jerry Maguire." He is a member of the SportsConcussions.org advisory board.
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Leigh Steinberg, Sports Agent
CEO Steinberg Sports and Entertainment
Clients included Troy Aikman, Warren Moon and more
Concussions Occur...
...in Any Sport
REMOVE athlete from play
REFER to medical provider
REST no sports, no texting/TV
RETURN only with doctor's OK
Source: Children's Hospital Boston, Sports Concussion Clinic




















