logo
Aaron Rodgers' readiness to admit his career is almost over is a reminder of how different his ending could have been

Aaron Rodgers' readiness to admit his career is almost over is a reminder of how different his ending could have been

Yahoo6 hours ago

As Aaron Rodgers was carted off the field Sept. 11, 2023, the shell-shocked crowd at MetLife Stadium wondered: Was it over?
Fans didn't wonder only about whether Rodgers would return that game or that season.
Advertisement
There was real reason to wonder, as Rodgers tore his Achilles tendon four snaps into his New York Jets tenure, whether he would ever play professional football again.
Far less had unceremoniously ended careers.
Rodgers was 39 years old, with invasive surgery and a grueling rehabilitation ahead.
After 18 great seasons with the Green Bay Packers, was there really more to come back for? Would playing for the Jets really motivate Rodgers through the stretching and the grasping of marbles between his toes, the lonely pain and the slow progress?
Aaron Rodgers had a disappointing run with the Jets but he says that isn't motivating him with the Steelers. 'I didn't need this,' Rodgers said Tuesday. 'I didn't need it at all. I don't feel the need to prove anything to anybody [and] don't have any chip on my shoulder that I need to hold onto." (Photo by)
(Michael Owens via Getty Images)
It's easy to forget, or let fade, how much peril Rodgers' career was in two years ago. Forget the much-discussed darkness retreat when Rodgers seriously considered, even before the Jets, walking off into the sunset. Retirement via Achilles injury would not have been on his timeline or in his way.
Advertisement
And Rodgers is a man who likes doing things on his timeline and in his way.
So when he said Tuesday afternoon on the "Pat McAfee Show" that he anticipates 2025 being his last season, he wasn't just agreeing to an obvious conclusion for a 41-year-old playing a younger man's game. Rodgers' admission was the closest he's come to publicly acknowledging how near the end of his career is — and that he does, very soon, envision no longer playing professional football.
'I'm pretty sure this is it,' Rodgers said of the 2025 NFL season. 'That's why we just did a one-year deal. Steelers didn't need to put any extra years on that or anything. So this was really about finishing with a lot of love and fun and peace for the career that I've had.
Advertisement
'I mean, I've played 20 freaking years.'
The plan for Rodgers' 21st year
Rodgers explained Tuesday why the Pittsburgh Steelers are his ideal destination to finish his career on his terms.
He praised head coach Mike Tomlin and a slew of defensive leaders beginning with Cam Heyward; Rodgers championed what trade-acquisition receiver DK Metcalf brings to the table, laughing at Metcalf's desire to work out with Rodgers so close to sunrise.
'He's like, 'I work out at 6 a.m. every day [and] I'm like 'OK, alrighty,'' Rodgers said. 'This guy has discipline. This guy has to drive. I said, 'How about 8 o'clock because I have to drive from Malibu to UCLA?'
Advertisement
'He's not just a specimen, but he's a really solid human being. He is a solid, solid dude and he leads by example.'
Rodgers joins the Steelers after his decorated Packers tenure included 10 Pro Bowl berths, four MVP awards and 11 playoff wins including a Super Bowl title. His Jets tenure was far shakier by team standards, New York finishing 5-12 last season and well short of the playoffs.
Rodgers completed 63% of his passes in 2024 for 3,897 yards and 28 touchdowns to 11 interceptions. His 90.5 passer rating tied Joe Flacco's for 20th among quarterbacks, just below the 92.3 league average. Rodgers ranked 20th in EPA/play among quarterbacks who played at least 250 snaps, per Sumer Sports. (The advanced efficiency metric assesses a player's contribution to the offense and that contribution's likelihood to help or hurt the team's chance at scoring. Rodgers scored 0.0, neither helping nor hurting the offense's chance to score in aggregate.)
Advertisement
No one's arguing Rodgers produced a career year in 2024. But playing all 17 games (that's 1,030 snaps, for those counting at home) at 40 years old in the first year after an Achilles injury? League wisdom says players are limited the first season after Achilles tears. It shouldn't be surprising if Rodgers is healthier and more mobile in 2025, nor should it be surprising if an acknowledgment of his age and corresponding shift in play style would grant him the ability to more effectively capitalize on his rare cerebral abilities at the line of scrimmage.
'I really want the mantle of leadership on offense, and I'm going to earn it every single day in training camp,' said Rodgers, who is scheduled to work out with Steelers teammates in California next week. 'But there's some stability I think that I can bring having played in a similar system for a long time and having just played a ton of football.
'I told the guys in the first meeting: I want to pass on my knowledge.'
What to expect from Rodgers' expected finale
After reaching personal accolades, team success and an apparent marriage this offseason, it's fair to wonder: What's still motivating Rodgers to join a new team, learn at least some degree of new terminology, and continue to take hits from some of the fastest and strongest humans around for a 21st trip around the sun?
Advertisement
Is Rodgers looking for a palate cleanser after his Jets tenure?
'I didn't need this,' he said. 'I didn't need it at all. I don't feel the need to prove anything to anybody [and] don't have any chip on my shoulder that I need to hold onto.
'It's not really, 'Can't go out like this.' I love the game and there's been a beautiful relationship.'
Rodgers values the chance to explore the next, and seemingly final, chapter of that relationship with a franchise whose winning history includes six Lombardi trophies, he said.
He values the chance to work with sixth-round rookie quarterback Will Howard, Rodgers pulling the Ohio State product aside recently to tell him: 'I want to help you as much as possible. But I'm not going to overstep my bounds. If you want assistance, I'm here, buddy.'
No, as Flacco said of his latest Cleveland Browns post with two in-house drafted rookies, Rodgers wasn't hired primarily to mentor a young player. He's primarily there to help the Steelers win games and score points. But the job is multifaceted and — at least right now — Rodgers says he wants to embrace that.
Advertisement
'I'd love to help Will and set him up to have a chance to be the guy for the next who knows how long,' Rodgers said. 'I think that's part of the opportunity. It's not the job. I've seen other veteran quarterbacks talk about it. But the opportunity to help Will out is one that I'm really looking forward to and excited about.'
And after that?
Rodgers wants to go win — for himself, and for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
'The fact that I can come back to Pittsburgh, play for Mike, get to know the organization, be a part of a special franchise that's had such an incredible success and be able to play and follow in the footsteps of the Terry Bradshaws and Franco Harris and Lynn Swan and Jack Lambert mean Joe Green, and then all the guys that played in the 90s and the 2000s and Jerome Bettis and Big Ben [Roethlisberger] — all-time greats.
Advertisement
'Just to be a guy that can put on the same uniform is pretty special for me. And that's all I need this year is just to go out there, have a chance to compete. That's why I'm working so hard.
'I want to put myself in a position to be able to play 20 games this year and 20 great ones.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

After disappointing rookie season, Colts DE Laiatu Latu wants a sack a game in 2025
After disappointing rookie season, Colts DE Laiatu Latu wants a sack a game in 2025

Indianapolis Star

time41 minutes ago

  • Indianapolis Star

After disappointing rookie season, Colts DE Laiatu Latu wants a sack a game in 2025

INDIANAPOLIS — Laiatu Latu wanted to make more of an impact as a rookie. Latu, the defensive end the Colts drafted with the No. 15 pick, was the first defensive player off the board in the 2024 draft, a player expected to transform the Indianapolis defense. When he struggled, when he beat the tackle across from him and failed to get the quarterback, it ate at Latu for days. 'It's definitely who I am, especially in the moment, on the field, you can definitely get frustrated,' Latu said. '(DeForest Buckner) always reminds me: 'Next play.'' Latu finished his rookie year with four sacks and 36 pressures, according to Sports Info Solutions, numbers that ranked him third on the Colts in both categories. Colts news: Colts CB JuJu Brents has suffered seven different injuries, his time is running out He wants much more in his second NFL season. Latu, who racked up 23.5 sacks in 25 games at UCLA, has set a lofty goal. He wants a sack a game, a pace that would give him 17 overall and almost certainly earn him a Pro Bowl berth. Indianapolis head coach Shane Steichen set the bar a little lower, saying this spring the team wants Latu to get to double-digit sacks. The expectations are still there. But everything else around Latu has changed. Indianapolis replaced former defensive coordinator Gus Bradley with Lou Anarumo, who has a lengthy history of moving his best pass rushers all over the formation, a practice that should take advantage of Latu's versatility. 'You see the God-given athletic ability as soon as you watch him,' Anarumo said. 'Anybody can see that. Now, it's just going to be the recognition of how he's about to get blocked, both in the run game and the pass game.' Anarumo's creativity will help. The rest is up to Latu, who has spent the offseason trying to improve his power. Latu's slender frame is an asset, making it easier for him to bend the corner and dip around blocks, but he has an arsenal that is varied enough that he must be stronger to be more effective at the NFL level. 'Building my strength in my upper body,' Latu said. 'That's what I focused on.' Latu's other focus is finishing rushes. There were a handful of plays last season that featured Latu beating an offensive tackle, only to miss the quarterback at the point of attack or get there a split-second late, after the ball was already on its way to a receiver. The little things will help. Young pass rushers often struggle to live up to their reputations at first in the NFL. Offensive linemen are much better, and the shift in strategy from college to the pros is a little bit like going from checkers to chess. Latu's always been a natural rusher, the sort of player with the right instincts for the job. He needs to recalibrate his instincts to the NFL level. 'My IQ on the field,' Latu said when asked what he wants to improve on next season. 'Being able to read certain keys within the offense to get off the ball better.' Latu, like a lot of second-year players, feels like it's easier to focus on the learning this season. There are no rookie symposiums. No snacks to bring for the rest of the defensive line group. None of the extra stuff that comes with being a first-year player in the NFL. 'I feel like I know what's coming,' Latu said. 'I don't have any stressors.' The Colts are counting heavily on Latu to take the next step this season. Anarumo had Trey Hendrickson, one of the best edge rushers in the NFL, in Cincinnati, and Latu seems to be the player best suited to that role. The rest of the Colts defensive ends—Kwity Paye, Samson Ebukam, Tyquan Lewis and second-rounder J.T. Tuimoloau—are a different mold of rusher, players who can stonewall blockers in the run game and typically win with power against the pass. Latu's rookie numbers were underwhelming. The Colts have reason to believe they will rise in his second season. 'He was close many times,' Anarumo said. 'This year, we feel like he'll seal the deal.'

After disappointing rookie season, Colts DE Laiatu Latu wants a sack a game in 2025
After disappointing rookie season, Colts DE Laiatu Latu wants a sack a game in 2025

Indianapolis Star

time41 minutes ago

  • Indianapolis Star

After disappointing rookie season, Colts DE Laiatu Latu wants a sack a game in 2025

INDIANAPOLIS — Laiatu Latu wanted to make more of an impact as a rookie. Latu, the defensive end the Colts drafted with the No. 15 pick, was the first defensive player off the board in the 2024 draft, a player expected to transform the Indianapolis defense. When he struggled, when he beat the tackle across from him and failed to get the quarterback, it ate at Latu for days. 'It's definitely who I am, especially in the moment, on the field, you can definitely get frustrated,' Latu said. '(DeForest Buckner) always reminds me: 'Next play.'' Latu finished his rookie year with four sacks and 36 pressures, according to Sports Info Solutions, numbers that ranked him third on the Colts in both categories. Colts news: Colts CB JuJu Brents has suffered seven different injuries, his time is running out He wants much more in his second NFL season. Latu, who racked up 23.5 sacks in 25 games at UCLA, has set a lofty goal. He wants a sack a game, a pace that would give him 17 overall and almost certainly earn him a Pro Bowl berth. Indianapolis head coach Shane Steichen set the bar a little lower, saying this spring the team wants Latu to get to double-digit sacks. The expectations are still there. But everything else around Latu has changed. Indianapolis replaced former defensive coordinator Gus Bradley with Lou Anarumo, who has a lengthy history of moving his best pass rushers all over the formation, a practice that should take advantage of Latu's versatility. 'You see the God-given athletic ability as soon as you watch him,' Anarumo said. 'Anybody can see that. Now, it's just going to be the recognition of how he's about to get blocked, both in the run game and the pass game.' Anarumo's creativity will help. The rest is up to Latu, who has spent the offseason trying to improve his power. Latu's slender frame is an asset, making it easier for him to bend the corner and dip around blocks, but he has an arsenal that is varied enough that he must be stronger to be more effective at the NFL level. 'Building my strength in my upper body,' Latu said. 'That's what I focused on.' Latu's other focus is finishing rushes. There were a handful of plays last season that featured Latu beating an offensive tackle, only to miss the quarterback at the point of attack or get there a split-second late, after the ball was already on its way to a receiver. The little things will help. Young pass rushers often struggle to live up to their reputations at first in the NFL. Offensive linemen are much better, and the shift in strategy from college to the pros is a little bit like going from checkers to chess. Latu's always been a natural rusher, the sort of player with the right instincts for the job. He needs to recalibrate his instincts to the NFL level. 'My IQ on the field,' Latu said when asked what he wants to improve on next season. 'Being able to read certain keys within the offense to get off the ball better.' Latu, like a lot of second-year players, feels like it's easier to focus on the learning this season. There are no rookie symposiums. No snacks to bring for the rest of the defensive line group. None of the extra stuff that comes with being a first-year player in the NFL. 'I feel like I know what's coming,' Latu said. 'I don't have any stressors.' The Colts are counting heavily on Latu to take the next step this season. Anarumo had Trey Hendrickson, one of the best edge rushers in the NFL, in Cincinnati, and Latu seems to be the player best suited to that role. The rest of the Colts defensive ends—Kwity Paye, Samson Ebukam, Tyquan Lewis and second-rounder J.T. Tuimoloau—are a different mold of rusher, players who can stonewall blockers in the run game and typically win with power against the pass. Latu's rookie numbers were underwhelming. The Colts have reason to believe they will rise in his second season. 'He was close many times,' Anarumo said. 'This year, we feel like he'll seal the deal.'

Ali Larter Poses in a Tiny Red String Bikini, Revealing Her Secret to Shooting Swimsuit Scenes
Ali Larter Poses in a Tiny Red String Bikini, Revealing Her Secret to Shooting Swimsuit Scenes

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ali Larter Poses in a Tiny Red String Bikini, Revealing Her Secret to Shooting Swimsuit Scenes

Ali Larter shared a mirror selfie on Instagram featuring her red string bikini. In the post, she opened up about the routine that helps her feel her best for bikini scenes. The Legally Blonde actress is currently starring in Larter is getting real on Instagram. In a new post featuring a mirror selfie, the Final Desti"nation actress opened up about body confidence and shared all of the ways she helps herself feel her best. In the photo, Larter posed in front of the mirror in a red string bikini and a cross necklace in her on-set trailer. "For all my ladies out there that work hard to be their best everyday," she wrote in the caption. "Let's hear how you do it? I had to shoot a bikini scene for my show last week." Larter is currently starring as Angela in Paramount+'s Landman alongside Billy Bob Thornton, Jon Hamm, and Demi Moore. "Playing a character that is so comfortable in her body drives me," Larter went on. The actress then explained her routine that helps her feel her best before shooting the scene. She begins by getting to bed by 11 p.m., ready for her 5:30 a.m. start. She takes magnesium and gaba before bed and starts the day with celery juice and coffee. Before heading to set, she finds time to go to the gym. "I do a 30 minute intervals run and 10 minutes of core," she wrote. After her shower, she dunks her face in ice water then "slathers" it in oil. On set, she has "another coffee, lemon water, eggs and Turkey bacon." She went on, "Put on Angela's diamond cross which is my suit of armor for this woman. 10 minutes of deep breathing to break down the BS I tell myself and redirect my energy to a calm, confident, and creative state while I look over my material. And then go walk the walk!" Larter, who turned 49 earlier this year, is best-known for her roles in Final Destination. You probably also remember her iconic turn as Brooke Windham in Legally Blonde. Larter previously told New Beauty that "getting into shape" for Angela was "huge." "I knew I needed to get there before I even got into the wardrobe fittings," she said. "I asked myself: 'How am I going to feel the most confident in my body at my age knowing that this woman's going to be wearing a lot of bikinis and she's so comfortable in it?' It was all of that." Read the original article on InStyle

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store