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ward63
04-12-2007, 01:00 AM
Bledsoe retires, ends 14-year careerBy Michael Smith
ESPN.com


Rather than spend a 15th season standing on a sideline as a backup, quarterback Drew Bledsoe has decided to walk away from pro football.

Drew Bledsoe
Quarterback
Dallas Cowboys

Profile
2006 SEASON STATISTICS
Att Comp Yds TD Int Rat
169 90 1057 7 8 69.2


Bledsoe, 35, retires fifth in NFL history in pass attempts (6,717) and completions (3,839), seventh in passing yards (44,611), and 13th in touchdown passes (251).

The No. 1 overall selection in 1993 by the New England Patriots out of Washington State, Bledsoe spent his first nine seasons with the Patriots, the next three with the Buffalo Bills, and his last two with the Dallas Cowboys.

"I feel so fortunate, so honored, to have played this game that I love for so long, with so many great players, and in front of so many wonderful fans," Bledsoe said in a statement released through his representatives at Athletes First. "I fulfilled a childhood dream the first time I stepped on an NFL field, and the league did not let me down one time. I retire with a smile on my face, in good health, and ready to spend autumns at my kids' games instead of my own. I'm excited to start the next chapter of my life."

A four-time Pro Bowler, Bledsoe backed up Tony Romo for the Cowboys' final 11½ games last season and had no interest in continuing his career in that role. Cincinnati and Seattle are said to have had interest in Bledsoe as a backup to Carson Palmer and Matt Hasselbeck, respectively.

"This is something I've been thinking about for quite a while," Bledsoe said last night from his home in Bend, Oregon. "I felt like this was the way I was going to go late in the season. I wanted to spend some time with it and not make a rash decision."

Being benched at halftime of Dallas' sixth game -- the third time Bledsoe lost his starting job though the first time he'd been outright replaced during the season -- did not rob Bledsoe of his confidence. He says he isn't leaving the game because he feels he's finished. As a matter of fact he says he feels as good as he did a decade ago. "The reason for the decision is not because I don't want to play anymore," he said. "The reason is there's a lot of other stuff I'm excited about doing. The positives of retiring outweighed the positives of returning and my desire to still play."

Bledsoe, who led New England to an appearance in Super Bowl XXXI and earned his lone championship ring with the Patriots in 2001, listed among his proudest accomplishments the respectable manner in which he carried himself on and off the field and the fact that he never literally had to be carried off the playing field.

"Looking back, I wish some things had gone differently," Bledsoe said, "but throughout 14 years in a very high-profile position in some high-profile places that I represented myself and my family well in terms of how I conducted myself on the field and off."

Though he took plenty of hits and sacks, Bledsoe, a prototypical pocket passer, almost always got up. He started all 16 games nine times.

"Nobody ever had to come and get me off the field," he said. "Even in New England [in '01 after Mo Lewis of the Jets leveled him with a hit that sheered a blood vessel] I went back out there and they had to tell me to stay out. I never once stayed down."

Bledsoe was unable to regain his starting job from Tom Brady -- he did, however, get a relief win in the AFC title game -- and the following offseason the Patriots dealt him to Buffalo. Three years later his run with the Bills ended when the team decided to hand the starting job over to first-round pick J.P. Losman.

His signing with the Cowboys prior to 2005 reunited him with Bill Parcells, the coach who drafted him in New England. With Dallas headed toward a disappointing 3-3 start, Parcells benched Bledsoe in favor of Tony Romo at halftime of a nationally-televised game against the Giants. The Cowboys released Bledsoe in March.

Bledsoe, however, says he harbors no ill will toward Parcells, Belichick, the Bills, anyone.

"I'm not leaving the game with any hard feelings," he said. "I had a great career and I enjoyed all of it, with the exception of losing. I enjoyed the time I had with all the teams I played for. I played with a ton of great players and a ton of great people.

"[Last season] was hard. Very hard. Nobody said life was fair but that was a tough pill to swallow. I'm happy for Tony who's a good guy and a good player. It was sad for him the way the season ended. It's just that I felt like that team had a chance to do some things and I wanted to be on the field with those guys. It didn't work out. But there's no bitterness toward anyone over anything that happened."

A Bledsoe comeback later in '07 or in '08? Not happening, he says. Money certainly is not a source of motivation -- from 1993 through 2003 Bledsoe received more than $62 million in compensation, most in the league. Bledsoe is leaving the game not because the right opportunity isn't available but to take the opportunity to spend more time with his wife, Maura, and their four children while pursuing business endeavors and continuing his charitable work through his foundation, Parenting with Dignity.

"That's why I waited this long to make an announcement," he said. "I wanted to be very sure. I needed to get some emotional separation from last season to make sure I wasn't making a decision I would regret. I wanted to make sure it was the right thing and it is. I would say this is a definite."

maven
04-12-2007, 01:19 AM
He's played 14 seasons as an NFL QB. Good for him to retire. He's had a long NFL career. The QB of the 21st century requires some athleticism. I doubt you'll see Bledsoe clones in the future.

ZachKC
04-12-2007, 01:26 AM
I always liked the guy, best of luck to him.

Crushaholic
04-12-2007, 02:03 AM
Bledsoe, 35, retires fifth in NFL history in pass attempts (6,717) and completions (3,839), seventh in passing yards (44,611), and 13th in touchdown passes (251).

Yes or no on Hall of Fame?

shaun514
04-12-2007, 02:27 AM
He's played 14 seasons as an NFL QB. Good for him to retire. He's had a long NFL career. The QB of the 21st century requires some athleticism. I doubt you'll see Bledsoe clones in the future.

Not true. A QB doesn't need much athleticism if he has a quick release.

The MVPlaya
04-12-2007, 02:29 AM
I believe his Super Bowl appearances will help him greatly for a HOF decision.

MechanicalBull
04-12-2007, 07:44 AM
I think he might be mentioned for consideration but he will not get into the hall of fame. He was a good QB but I think his long career helped out on those stats.

Testaverde wasn't as good as Bledsoe but Vinny is 6th all time in attempts, completions, passing yds, and 9th all time in passing TDs. Bledsoe was definitley the better QB and didn't play as long as Vinny I'm just saying that playing a long time will make you look like a great QB on paper.

fontaine
04-12-2007, 08:22 AM
I don't think he makes the Hall.

For better or worse he'll always be known as the QB which Brady replaced and took the same team to win the SuperBowl.

WoodMan
04-12-2007, 08:44 AM
I don't think he makes the Hall.

For better or worse he'll always be known as the QB which Brady replaced and took the same team to win the SuperBowl.

Brady replaced him because he was injured. That is all part of the Brday myth. He won the playoff games to get them to the super bowl as a back-up and then beat the Rams, who most thought were invincible.
It was Brady's job then and Bledsoe moved on to Buffalo.

BroncoInferno
04-12-2007, 08:55 AM
For his first five or six seasons, Bledsoe looked on the path to a certain HOF career. But, for whatever reason, he fell into an abyss of mediocrity that he never got out of. Doubt he will get in the hall; his prime did not last long enough.

Circle Orange
04-12-2007, 09:01 AM
Drew Bledsoe is a classic example of a talented qb who was always in the wrong place at the wrong time, and never took advantage of his opportunities to the fullest. As a thrower and passer he was more talented than some guys still out there now. But he never improved on his weaknesses in his game (panic decisions late, lead footwork) at least Peyton Manning worked on these weaknesses and made a conscious effort to train and have motion in the pocket.

I saw his dad...dude looks like a straight up cowboy from an old Marlboro ad.

cousinal11
04-12-2007, 09:49 AM
Hall of Famer or not I have always liked and respected Drew Bledsoe. He could have been a big baby during the Patriots first Super Bowl season when he wasn't getting his job back but he kept his mouth shut and was a good teammate. He even got his chance in the AFC Championship that season when Brady got hurt, completed first 3 passes including a TD.

DomCasual
04-12-2007, 10:38 AM
I think he was on pace to be a sure-bet Hall of Famer, at one point. Heck, for awhile, his stat pace was nearly Marino-esque. The two things that will keep him from the Hall of Fame? A ruptured spleen and Tom Brady. Had he stayed there and continued putting up the numbers, I think he'd be in.

No matter what, I will always respect him for the class with which he handled his demotion after the spleen injury - the year they won their first Super Bowl.

Billy Clyde Puckett
04-12-2007, 11:11 AM
Good luck Drew. Pretty much a class act throughout his career and threw a pretty ball, but I don't think he really stood out enough to be HOF material.

telluride
04-12-2007, 12:08 PM
Damn, he seems so old -- like he's been around for ever. And yet he's only 35.


A good career with a few great moments. Good on him. Enjoy the time off.

smalltowngrll
04-12-2007, 12:30 PM
Hmmm, wonder where he'll retire to?? ;)

Good for him! Good luck Drew...now you can enjoy football season with the family!

watermock
04-12-2007, 12:56 PM
As they say on PFT, Happy Trails.

He was never the same player after the cheap shot and Brady. You have to admire his toughness to stand in the pocket and take the hit, but damn. He won't make the HOF.

Orange_Beard
04-12-2007, 01:02 PM
NNNNOOOOOO WWWWWWWWWWAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYYY! This guy makes it to the HOF.

The guy was above average at best.

Circle Orange
04-12-2007, 01:04 PM
Hmmm, wonder where he'll retire to?? ;)

Good for him! Good luck Drew...now you can enjoy football season with the family!

*pssst*

The RAY-DUHS...:pimp:

Atwater His Ass
04-12-2007, 01:09 PM
Good QB but certaintly not HoF material, imo.

Beantown Bronco
04-12-2007, 01:17 PM
NNNNOOOOOO WWWWWWWWWWAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYYY! This guy makes it to the HOF.

The guy was above average at best.

This from someone who obviously didn't watch Bledsoe's early years....and is relying on just what the media showed him the past few years.

maven
04-12-2007, 01:23 PM
This from someone who obviously didn't watch Bledsoe's early years....and is relying on just what the media showed him the past few years.

He's not HOF. But, since the HOF is a joke anyway I wouldn't be surprised if he's in.

Beantown Bronco
04-12-2007, 01:28 PM
He's not HOF. But, since the HOF is a joke anyway I wouldn't be surprised if he's in.

I don't believe he's HOF material either. I was just responding to the part of the prior email which stated he is "above average, at best". That is the statement with which I have a problem...

DomCasual
04-12-2007, 01:36 PM
This from someone who obviously didn't watch Bledsoe's early years....and is relying on just what the media showed him the past few years.

Statistically, he was awfully close to Marino through eight seasons (he was hurt in his ninth). The only stat in which Marino was clearly leading was TDs, where he had 241 to Bledsoe's 164. Otherwise, INTs were even at 136 each, and yards were almost even, 31,416 for Marino to 29,257 for Bledsoe. Compare those numbers to Elway's (24,721 yards, 135 TDs, 128 INTs) through eight seasons, and Bledsoe was on pace to far surpass Elway's career numbers.

That being said, the Hall of Fame is about a career body of work, and I don't think there's any question that Bledsoe will fall short there. But for awhile, he was almost as good as there was in the NFL.

I just wish his little brother would have performed as well - at least in college. :)

Kaylore
04-12-2007, 01:41 PM
He has to be careful that pigeons don't land and poop on him all the time.

smalltowngrll
04-12-2007, 01:47 PM
*pssst*

The RAY-DUHS...:pimp:

ROFL! ewwwww

Nahh, it'll be a little further north... probably! :wave:

Orange_Beard
04-12-2007, 03:22 PM
This from someone who obviously didn't watch Bledsoe's early years....and is relying on just what the media showed him the past few years.

I have seen plenty of his early games.
Guy is/was an above average QB.

DomCasual
04-12-2007, 03:31 PM
I have seen plenty of his early games.
Guy is/was an above average QB.

Man, he was a top three QB in his prime. That's not "above average."

Kaylore
04-12-2007, 03:43 PM
Man, he was a top three QB in his prime. That's not "above average."

Yeah, but he was the third in that top three and his prime was like two years.

DomCasual
04-12-2007, 03:56 PM
Yeah, but he was the third in that top three and his prime was like two years.

That's crazy talk, Khan. I was going to summarize this, but I found this on Wikipedia. I couldn't have put it better. These are not the numbers of an above average QB. Again, he was playing at a Marino stat pace before he got hurt. And it was for eight years, not two. Plus, after he left, he came back and had one of his best years, statistically, with the Buffalo freakin' Bills - a team that had gone 3-13 the year prior to his arrival. And they ended up a game short of making the playoffs, in a division where everyone finished .500 or better.

From Wikipedia: "He currently ranks fifth all-time in career attempts and completions, and is seventh all-time in career passing yardage. He is tied with John Hadl and Peyton Manning for 13th all-time in career touchdown passes. Among active quarterbacks, he stands second behind only Brett Favre in career completions, attempts and passing yards. He and Manning are tied for second behind Favre in career touchdowns. In 2000, he became just the fourth quarterback in league history to have seven consecutive 3,000-yard passing seasons. In 2005, he recorded his ninth career 3,000-yard passing season, tying him with Warren Moon for fourth in NFL history. In 2005 he also became just the 10th player in NFL history to reach the 40,000 passing yard plateau, reaching the mark in his 172nd career game, the fifth fastest player to reach that milestone. Bledsoe holds the NFL record for pass attempts in a season with 691 in 1994 and also has the third best mark with 636 in 1995, those marks coming during a three-year span (1994-96) that he led the league in pass attempts. He also holds the league record for pass attempts (70) and completions (45) in a game, setting the mark against Minnesota on Nov. 13, 1994. In that game, he also threw no interceptions, setting a league mark for pass attempts in a game without an interception. His 400 completions in 1994 are the third best total in league history, and he is also tied for fourth in NFL history with six 400-yard passing games. In 1993-94 he had a string of four-straight 300-yard passing games, the sixth longest streak in league history. In his career, Bledsoe has four overtime touchdown passes, the most in NFL history."

Crowpointer
04-12-2007, 03:59 PM
Drew Bledsoe along with Bill Parcells and Bob Kraft are the 3 men responsible for turning the Patriots ship in the right direction. You must remember that that from 1990 (my first as a season ticket holder) through 1992 the teams record was 9 -39. There was the very real chance of the team moving to St Louis. All three of these men came on in 1993 and relegitimized the franchise. The team had a Boston owner and wasn't going anywhere, Parcells was a real coach and Bledsoe was a real quarterback. The turning point (and the best non Belichick/Brady game I have ever been to) was against the Vikings on November 13th 1994. The team was 3-6 and losing to the Vikings 20-3 at halftime. For whatever the reason the team decided no more. Bledsoe put up the ball 70 times (an NFL record) with 45 completions (an NFL record) and they won in overtime. They won the rest of their games to go 10-6 and made the playoffs only to lose to the (ironically) Belichick coached Browns. From that point on the team was competitive again (going to the SB a few years later) until Belichick and Brady put us over the top. But Bledsoe was definitely part of the original turnaround and for that a lot of us Pats fans will always be thankful.

Orange_Beard
04-12-2007, 04:04 PM
Yeah, but he was the third in that top three and his prime was like two years.

Amen.

Beantown Bronco
04-12-2007, 04:22 PM
Yeah, but he was the third in that top three and his prime was like two years.

So by your reasoning, if you are the third best out of around 50 (approximate number of regular starting QBs in the mid 90s), then that makes you "above average, at best".

You and Beard are on crack with this one.

HorseHead
04-12-2007, 04:39 PM
Drew is a good guy. You never heard him bitc-'in in regrads to what happened. Great arm, great leader, good team mate. Unfortunately he had the mobility of Herman Muenster.

Side note to all Madden Playstation aficionados: Back in the earlier versions of that game.(early to mid 90's). Bledsoe to Ben Coates was an awesome combo. I would play of course with the Broncos, and my buddy tore me up with that connection. Coates was a beast, within that game, and on the field.

Kaylore
04-13-2007, 02:37 AM
So by your reasoning, if you are the third best out of around 50 (approximate number of regular starting QBs in the mid 90s), then that makes you "above average, at best".

You and Beard are on crack with this one.

No. By my logic he was the third best QB in the league for two to three years and then he slid and never recovered. He was always a pretty good QB that would kill you if you gave him more time than a QB is expected to have in the pros. He was prolific and had a great arm, but he didn't dominate his position for long periods of time the way the truly great ones did.

Bob's your Information Minister
04-13-2007, 02:58 AM
http://www.realfootball365.com/nfl/articles/2007/03/nfl-endfor-drewbledsoe020307.html