
New York Giants guard with iconic SNF intro adored by fans retires from football at 35
The offensive guard and Pennsylvania native, who turns 35 in mid-August, announced his intentions to retire from the sport as a member of the team that picked him.
Pugh, who gained popularity for his humorous 'Sunday Night Football' intro in October 2023, admitted he wanted to come back for one more season.
'I've played here six of my 11 years in the NFL,' Pugh said. 'Not many players get to go out on their terms, and after 11 years playing in the NFL, I am officially retiring from the league.
'I thought I was going to do another one, but just didn't have it in the tank. I started losing weight and started feeling good, and didn't want to do a 12th year.
'But like every little boy, I always dreamed of playing in the NFL ... I definitely never planned on making a block so Eli (Manning) could throw the ball down the field.
Justin Pugh keeping it real in his first game back 😂 @JustinPugh
📺: #NYGvsBUF on NBC
📱: Stream on #NFLPlus https://t.co/7gJiGANIor pic.twitter.com/tDnrvHpEHP
— NFL (@NFL) October 16, 2023
'I never dreamed of being an offensive lineman. I don't think any little boys are out there right now being like, 'Let me pass set and block in the playoffs to make something happen.'
'What I realized, offensive line was the position that was for me. I was built perfectly for it, and it's something that you don't choose.
'Everyone wants to be that star position, but it's something that really defined me as a man, as a father and as a teammate.'
Pugh last took the field in the 2023 season - taking part in 12 games after overcoming a significant knee injury.
In that 'Sunday Night Football' matchup in Orchard Park, New York against the Buffalo Bills, Pugh greeted the audience by saying he came from 'straight off the couch'.
Pugh was picked by the Giants 19th overall in the 2013 NFL Draft after a four-year tenure at Syracuse University.
He played five years with the Giants before spending his next five seasons with the Arizona Cardinals. His last season with the Cardinals ended after five games due to a torn ACL.
Pugh then returned to the Giants for one more season in 2023 and did not take the field in 2024.
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It would go on to sell more than a million copies worldwide and provide a launchpad for an incredible run of early success for the baby-faced Carter. By the time he was 18, the singer had already recorded four multi-platinum albums, but his departure from Jive Records - the label responsible for launching his career - would prove to be the catalyst for a dramatic commercial decline. Indeed, there would be a 16-year wait for his fifth album, Love, in 2018, but the popularity Carter enjoyed during the early years of his career had long since waned as his young fan base inevitably grew up. Falling fortunes: By the time he was 18, the singer had already recorded four multi-platinum albums, but his departure from Jive Records would prove to be the catalyst for a dramatic commercial decline Five years earlier, the singer had filed a bankruptcy petition to free himself of a $3.5 million debt, accrued through outstanding unpaid taxes in 2003, at the height of his career. But despite his financial struggles, Carter - who battled mental health and substance abuse issues throughout his adult life - insisted he wasn't desperate for money. 'I'm not broke. I mean, I don't make all the money in the world right now, but I'm doing the best that I can,' he told Oprah Winfrey during an appearance on Oprah: Where Are They Now - Extra. 'I do a lot of shows and I write a lot of music. I'm rebuilding my life. Over the last 10 years, my story's been really difficult.' He added: 'No disrespect to my brother, but when Nick was 18 years old and I was 10 years old, I was just kind of starting to make lots of money. 'I made over $200million in my career before I even turned 18 years old. 'We had this massive compound, with, like, 12 houses on it. It was worth over $10million, and I had paid a lot of that money. 'I had done a lot of that stuff, and I never got any of those returns back or anything like that… Even at this point, I've never even owned my own home.' In the red: In 2013, the singer filed a bankruptcy petition to free himself of a $3.5 million debt, accrued through outstanding unpaid taxes in 2003, at the height of his career Thrown to the wolves: Aaron (right) with older brother Nick in 2004. The singer claimed his parents mishandled his money and neglected his finances Carter also claimed his parents mishandled his money and neglected his finances. 'There was a lot of neglect on my parents' part,' he said. 'They didn't do a lot of things right.' The singer revealed he was only given $2million when he became an adult, despite the Coogan law - which is designed to safeguard a portion of child performers' earnings - stating he should have been given about $20million. Carter died of accidental drowning aged 34 in 2022, after inhaling difluoroethane - a colorless gas - and taking Xanax. His estate, valued at $550,000, was reportedly insolvent after debts and other financial commitments were met following his death.