Donald Retires

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  • #149917
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    Good God.

    #149918
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    #149919
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Aaron Donald announces retirement

    THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. – It is the end of a dominant era.

    Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald on Friday announced his retirement from the NFL, marking the conclusion of one of the most decorated careers in franchise and league history.

    “We are so grateful for Aaron’s dedication to greatness and for leading our franchise on and off the field for the past decade,” Rams Owner/Chairman E. Stanley Kroenke said. “He has left his mark on generations of football fans and his accomplishments, coupled with his work ethic and passion, continue to inspire his teammates, coaches and athletes across the globe. It is a privilege to have witnessed one of the greatest players of all time and we are proud that Aaron Donald will forever be part of NFL history as a member of the Rams.”

    One of only three players in league history to earn three NFL Defensive Player of the Year awards, the Super Bowl LVI champion leaves the game after registering 111 sacks in 10 seasons. He recorded at least eight sacks in 8 of his 10 seasons, and was one of six unanimous choices for the NFL 2010s All-Decade Team.

    When Donald hit 100 career sacks in Week 3 of the 2022 season, he became the fastest defensive tackle to reach the mark in NFL history. Since individual sacks were first tracked in 1982, Hall of Famer John Randle (137.5) is the only member of the 100-plus sacks club who played the majority of his career as a defensive tackle.

    Donald set the Rams’ career sacks record in 2021 when he hit 88.5 against the Seahawks in Week 5 that season, surpassing Leonard Little’s 87.5. He also owns the Rams’ franchise record for sacks in a single season with 20.5 in 2018, a mark that was also an NFL single-season record for a defensive tackle.

    Donald registered double-digit sacks in 6 of his 10 NFL seasons, including five-straight from 2017-2021. He was named to the Pro Bowl in each of those 10 seasons, with seven consecutive First-Team All-Pro selections from The Associated Press from 2015-2021 and eight overall after receiving that recognition for the 2023 season. He was also named Defensive Rookie of the Year for the 2014 season.

    In addition to those 111 career sacks, he also amassed 790 pressures, 543 total tackles (176 for loss), 256 QB hits, 24 forced fumbles and 21 passes defensed across 154 career games (150 starts). Donald also appeared in 11 playoff games, including two Super Bowls, and notched 34 tackles (19 solo), 6.0 sacks, 10 tackles for loss, 51 pressures, 16 quarterback hits, 34 hurries and one pass defended.

    “The great players in our league elevate the people around them and Aaron has modeled the way for our team as long as I’ve been with the Rams,” head coach Sean McVay said. “He’s an elite competitor, someone who leads by example in a way that’s authentic to him, and an exceptional teammate who inspires everyone around him to be the best version of themselves. As great of a player he is, he’s an even better person. He is truly one of one and epitomizes everything that’s right about sports. I will forever cherish the memories we’ve made and will always be grateful for how he poured everything into this game and into our team. He’s meant a lot to me personally and to my family.”

    “There will never be another Aaron Donald,” general manager Les Snead said.

    Off the field, Donald was involved in multiple causes and community efforts throughout the Los Angeles area, from engagements with the Watts Rams, character development sessions with Operation Progress, to WalkUnited LA with United Way of Greater Los Angeles to combat homelessness, and much more.

    Additionally, he has given back to youth in his hometown of Pittsburgh through AD99 Solutions, which aims to change the trajectory of under-resourced youth by providing education and resources in supportive environments to empower young individuals academically, socially, and athletically.

    More to come on theRams.com.

    #149922
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    well that is a huge bummer for sure.

    #149923
    Avatar photoEternal Ramnation
    Participant

    I’m happy for him and I think it’s going to work out for the team as well. Draft picks cap space solid FA pickups it’s going to be okay!

    #149924
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator
    Kevin Demoff@kdemoff
    There is not much one can add when the world is celebrating the greatest defensive player of all time. Simply put he changed our franchise, the NFL & always led with his work ethic, humility and grace. A bittersweet day for @RamsNFL fans but we were blessed for a decade

    Jourdan Rodrigue@JourdanRodrigue
    They did restructure him. Retirement doesn’t change the restructure. To my knowledge, they knew as free agency began (but as I reported a few times, heading into FA much needed clearing up)
    .
    Peter Schrager@PSchrags
    The Aaron Donald retirement news was not a shock or big surprise to the Rams front office brass and coaching staff. Much love and mutual appreciation from both sides for one of the greatest to ever put on a @RamsNFL uniform.
    .
    Donald retires as an 8-time first team All Pro… in 10 seasons. The only two years he didn’t earn All-Pro honors was his first season and his injured 2022 season.
    .
    Adam Grosbard@AdamGrosbard
    There will be no Aaron Donald retirement press conference, I’m told. Fitting for one of the NFL’s most private superstars.
    .
    Gregg Rosenthal@greggrosenthal
    it is extremely rare in sports for the recognized best player in the sport at what he does to win the championship with one decisive play, but Aaron Donald did that
    .
    trey wingo@wingoz
    Aaron Donald was a flat out BEAST. At his best he was simply unblockable and he essentially sealed the deal for the
    .
    Albert Breer@AlbertBreer
    I hate casually referring to guys as “Future Hall of Famer” because the voters have a hard enough job as is. But Aaron Donald’s an easy one …

    • 2017, 2018, 2020 Defensive Player of the Year.
    • Eight-time first-team All-Pro.
    • 10-time Pro Bowler.
    • Super Bowl LVI champion.

    #149925
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Glad for AD that he’s getting out healthy and at the top of his game.   How many players have walked away in that condition? Jim Brown.  Barry Sanders.   A few others maybe.

    Merlin and AD.   Both spent their whole careers as Rams.

     

    I’m nonplussed, though.  Still in shock.  Thought sure he’d stick around two more years.

    Certainly a big challenge for the Rams, now.   Changes expectations, for me, anyway.

    Big challenge.  How do they manufacture pressure, now?    Sigh.

     

    w

    v

     

    #149926
    Avatar photoRamsMaineiac
    Keymaster

    If he retired with a year left on his contract, why would he have any cap hit this year?

    Is the restructure essentially costing the Rams now in the 2024 season, whereas the retire would not have impacted them? I am struggling to understand the why for the Rams if they new both these were going to happen.

    https://www.spotrac.com/nfl/los-angeles-rams/cap/

    #149927
    Avatar photoRamsMaineiac
    Keymaster

    Okay from here:

    Player

    Contract Notes

    Aaron Donald signed a 3 year, $95 million contract extension with the Rams according to Mike Florio of PFT. Donald received $65 million in guarantees of which $46.5 million is guaranteed at signing. The full guarantee includes Donald’s 2022 base salary, a $5 million 2022 roster bonus, a $15 million 2023 roster bonus and a $25 million signing bonus. If Donald is on the roster on the third day of the 2023 league year his 2023 salary will be fully guaranteed as will a $5 million roster bonus in 2024. If Donald is on the roster on the 5th day of the 2024 league year he will earn a guarantee on his $30 million salary. The contract contains two void years for salary cap purposes.

    Donald restructured his contract for salary cap relief in 2024. The Rams converted $13.79 million of salary into a signing bonus. The move saved the Rams $9.2 million in cap room for 2024. That mones is added into the final two void years of the contract.

    #149928
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    well.  defensive line all of a sudden shoots to the very tippy top of the list.  and maybe even above that as well.  all of a sudden i’m looking at darius robinson.

     

    but i’m happy for donald.  i guess.  give me some time.  i’m just numb right now.

    #149929
    Avatar photoRamsMaineiac
    Keymaster

    https://en.as.com/nfl/what-happens-when-an-nfl-player-retires-under-contract-does-he-still-get-paid-n/

    Retirements
    Just like teams can end contracts, players can also decide to do this, but in their case, it’s called retiring. When a player retires, it’s similar to being cut by the team, and the same rule about June 1 applies here too.

    For example, if the player we talked about earlier chose to retire instead of being cut, the money would be treated the same way as if the team cut him. If he officially retires on or after June 1, the money is counted as if he was cut on or after June 1.

    There are two “buts” for this rule as well, though, just like in many things in the NFL. If a player retires with time left on their contract and then decides to return to the league later, they don’t become a free agent. Contracts usually count based on a player’s seasons, not just the calendar years. So if the player doesn’t play, they don’t add a season to their contract. This means they would still be under the same team’s control if they decide to return unless that team chooses to cut them.

    Additionally, when a player retires, the team can ask for part of the signing bonus back, equal to the parts of the contract that the player didn’t play. This money doesn’t count against the salary cap anymore. An arbitrator usually decides on this. It’s known as the “Barry Sanders Rule” because that’s what happened in his case – he had to give back part of his bonus. The difference now is that there are clear rules written in the CBA to handle this kind of situation.

    So, do the rams now have the ability to ask for “the signing bonus back, equal to the parts of the contract that the player didn’t play”?
    and would they?  I would think that is a millions in cap space implication no?

    #149931
    Avatar photonittany ram
    Moderator

    Sad day.  I thought for sure he would play this season and then retire. Try for that second ring…

    The Rams *were* back in the Super Bowl bubble.  The pass rush sucked last year but with Donald it wouldn’t be too difficult to fix that in a single offseason.  They didn’t need to find the next Lawrence Taylor to turn the pass rush around with AD occupying two or three o-linemen every pass play.  Now it’s going to be a much harder  fix.

    Donald was my favorite player of the past couple decades.  I wish him well and hope he sticks around the team like Whit has done.

    #149932
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #149934
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #149935
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #149939
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #149950
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    Rodrigue: Lessons learned from Aaron Donald, greatness personified

    Jourdan Rodrigue
    .
    .
    I remember this like it happened just yesterday.

    It was my first week of Los Angeles Rams practice in 2020 — really, a first week back for many after COVID-19 lockdowns, but for me it also was my first real week on the beat.

    Of course I wanted to see Aaron Donald in person. He was already a legend many times over who was whispered about in awed tones in other NFL buildings I’d covered. I had already heard plenty of gripes about how long it took to game plan for him. A coach tipped me off: Spend your first days watching him practice. If I did that, I’d understand everything there was to know about Aaron, and so too what the Rams were all about.

    So I stood behind the hit sled as defensive line drills began. He was smaller than I thought — mythological beings usually are, when you meet them — and as he took his stance in the lead spot of the drilling line, I held my phone up and started to record. Thud. Thud. Donald didn’t hit the sled, that’s not the right way to describe it. He assessed its physics with fluid, assertive movements. In his hands, the sled wasn’t a sled. It was a tool, and also it was doomed.

    Aaron Donald retired Friday. He is a three-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year, eight-time first-team All-Pro, 10-time Pro Bowler and a Super Bowl winner. (Mark J. Rebilas / USA Today)

    Suddenly, he flicked his arms and wrists to swipe across the pad and he burst to the side of the drill. Watching my video later, I laughed. He moved too fast, my camera pan was too slow.

    I did learn what I needed to know about Donald while watching practice that day, and every single day for the next four seasons.

    He announced his retirement Friday morning, a bittersweet moment because he is at peace with his choice and we are selfish.

    I don’t like the idea of a practice field without him on it. I am also so happy for Donald because he soaked up every single moment of joy he could in 2023, and he is walking away to a beautiful growing family that dissolves him completely from an architect of defensive destruction into a giggling, face-pulling, tag-playing proud dad. He is walking away healthy, so he can be healthy for them. So few get that chance, and they entrap themselves in an unending cycle of physical ruin to play the sport they love. I am so proud of Aaron Donald, as humble a voice as mine is to add to the chorus of Hall of Famers and current stars who showed their respect for his 10-year, 111-sack career, for making this decision with clarity.

    “There will never be another Aaron Donald,” Rams GM Les Snead said, and while his simply phrased comment was a homage to Donald’s trademark succinctness, Snead is understating it.

    Because here’s what you should know about Donald, and what I understood as a permanent truth the first time I saw him do a drill in a practice: He showed up.

    Nobody outworked Donald, even when he reached his illustrious prime years and got his $135 million contract extension. In the grueling days of summer practices, he’d get there first and hit the tackling dummies. He’d be drenched with sweat by the time others arrived. If you thought you were working hard, somewhere out there on the field was Donald, working even harder and showing you what it looked like to reach the extra gears — the ones that click toward “special.” A few years ago, the Rams created “veteran rest days” for Donald so that their offensive line could string a real practice together, as catalytic a force as he could be even in that setting. He didn’t need the rest.

    He showed up for his teammates. Donald didn’t miss a game to injury until 2022, and he still played through a high ankle sprain that needed surgery in Week 12. The season had long imploded, but Donald kept going until he got pulled. He played through torn ribs cartilage in freezing temperatures in Green Bay, and his misery in that playoff loss turned into a white-hot fuel that helped the Rams win Super Bowl LVI. In the Super Bowl, famously, when two game-sealing plays had to be made — Donald made them on third- and fourth-and-1. When the Rams started their sprint rebuild in 2023 and gutted their defense, they left Donald much to carry. All he asked of the front office is that it found players who cared. He showed up for the young guys the Rams brought in, and in many ways found new joy in being around them. Watching Donald soak in this last year of football through the eyes of those who were so fresh and new and full of excitement was a beautiful thing.

    He showed up for his family and his community. I’ll never forget the moment I saw Donald, mid-production of a super-sized pregame video shoot at SoFi Stadium complete with Hollywood director and production crew, pulling faces at his kids between takes as they laughed. His “AD99 Solutions” foundation (based in his home city of Pittsburgh) has provided resources, camps and mental/physical programming to youth in vulnerable populations since 2019. The organization cites 450 hours of annual programming at no cost to families across 34 states. He never asked for promotion or fanfare or awards or honors or nominations — he just showed up, and he did the work.

    Aaron Donald: A Hall of Fame career
    YEAR AGE G SACKS TFL QB HITS FF
    23
    16
    9
    18
    13
    2
    24
    16
    11
    22
    37
    0
    25
    16
    8
    17
    31
    2
    26
    14
    11
    15
    27
    5
    27
    16
    20.5*
    25*
    41
    4
    28
    16
    12.5
    20*
    24
    2
    29
    16
    13.5
    14
    28
    4
    30
    17
    12.5
    19
    25
    4
    31
    11
    5
    10
    11
    1
    32
    16
    8
    16
    23
    0
    150
    111
    176
    260
    24

    Donald showed up for himself. His NFL career was a constant push toward the next move, the next edge, the next level of greatness. Watching Donald restlessly, relentlessly hone his technique even if it looked perfect already — repping again, again, again — was a marvel. Donald has been an all-time great for a long time, but because he so loved the process of getting great, he falls into an entirely separate category.

    For those who got to see it — including his head coach since 2017, Sean McVay — it was altering. To this day, Donald has no idea he helped McVay through one of the worst points of his life by sharing a simple phrase: “Work works.” He showed up for McVay, right then and there, and then went about his day as naturally as breathing.

    I have no doubt in my mind I am a better reporter, journalist and writer for having covered Donald — who for all he is and forever will be in the sport, is also just a nice dude who is great to talk with about football. To watch Donald show up in all of these ways for years and not strive to work harder would be to not have a pulse.

    #149951
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #149954
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I am not okay, btw. Someone should send out some mental health experts to check on me.

    Tell them to bring a handle of vodka and, I dunno, I guess a couple of hookers. I don’t know what else to do. I guess I’ll just wake up in a bathtub somewhere, and assume I had a good time.

    #149955
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    I had a full day today, but I caught about 5 minutes of the SF station that carries the 9ers, and the conversation was all about if any teams out there had one guy whose retirement (or without whom) would completely change the team. I’m guessing the 5-10 minutes prior to my getting in the car was all about AD.

    They said they think the Rams are still a strong #2 in the division. But I’m guessing a lot of teams are relieved.

    #149956
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    #149957
    Avatar photoZooey
    Moderator

    #149958
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #149960
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #149963
    Avatar photoInvaderRam
    Moderator

    there’s certain guys who were just on a different level compared to their peers.  lawrence taylor, jim brown, barry sanders…  i always wondered what it would be like to have a guy like that on the rams who reached a kind of mythical status.  there was marshall faulk, but half his career was spent with the colts.  it never felt quite the same.  i always would get a little envious when old rams heads would talk about deacon jones and merlin olsen.  but that’s where i would place aaron donald.  i got to witness one of the greatest nfl careers ever.  at any position.  and all of it was with the rams.

     

    it went by way too fast.

    #149967
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    there’s certain guys who were just on a different level compared to their peers. lawrence taylor, jim brown, barry sanders… i always wondered what it would be like to have a guy like that on the rams who reached a kind of mythical status. there was marshall faulk, but half his career was spent with the colts. it never felt quite the same. i always would get a little envious when old rams heads would talk about deacon jones and merlin olsen. but that’s where i would place aaron donald. i got to witness one of the greatest nfl careers ever. at any position. and all of it was with the rams. it went by way too fast.

    +1

    #149979
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    Has he said anything about ‘why’ he retired now?    Just curious.

     

    w

    v

    #149983
    Avatar photowv
    Participant

    #149986
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    #149997
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    I get why so many say AD is the greatest defender to ever play the game, but I personally can’t rank it that way. I put him on the same unranked elite tier with the greatest defenders plural of all time–Olsen, Jones, Lilly, Page, Greene, Taylor, Reggie White. It’s very select company.

    Rams always had a chance when AD played. Needless to say, they won’t be able to replace him with one guy. They will need 2-3 great ones for their defense to have the same luster again.

     

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