Andrew luck deserved to be booed off the field
September 22, 2019
Professional athletes retire all the time. When well-known and accomplished athletes decide to hang up their uniforms for good, the fan base usually shows great respect and gratitude for the player. When lesser-known athletes retire, the fans usually shrug their shoulders and sweep it under the rug. But what happens when the retirement angers the fans?
The news that Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck was retiring leaked during the Colts vs Bears preseason game, prompting Colts fans to boo the 29-year-old quarterback off the field.
Luck later explained in a press conference that he was retiring because he was “mentally exhausted” from constant rehab that was prompted by a long list injuries throughout his career.
For a man who takes hits from 300-pound defensive linemen, you’d expect a thicker skin, but according to Luck, he said hearing the fans boo him “hurt, I’ll be honest, it hurt.”
Football players across the league rose up in support of Luck’s surprising decision to retire and condemned the fans for their actions.
But were the fans justified? Absolutely!
Put yourself in the shoes of a Colts fan for a moment. You finally have a team that could make a legitimate run to the Super Bowl after years of poorly timed injuries. You’re supporting your team in a preseason game against the Bears just two weeks before the start of the regular season when you see the notification on your phone that Andrew Luck, the biggest star on your team, is retiring.
You watch your quarterback, whom you have supported for seven years through all of his struggles, walk off the field. In a moment of frustration and raw emotion, you boo him.
Those critical of the fans’ reaction miss why they’re outraged. It’s not that Luck decided to retire from football; it’s the timing of his decision to retire.
Two weeks before the season begins is not an acceptable time to call it quits. Luck left the most important position on the team, setting the Colts back on their heels. You can’t tell me that Luck wasn’t pondering retirement when he said during the offseason to the media that the Colts were going to make a strong Super Bowl run. If Luck wanted to retire, he should have done it at any point before July to give the Colts enough time to find a replacement.
Senior Jake Newman agreed. “Luck should have retired at the end of last season to give the Colts time to find a new quarterback. He left the Colts hanging by retiring when he did,” he said.
Many try to justify Luck quitting football so suddenly by mentioning his injuries. Although he’s had his fair share of medical issues, including a shoulder injury that caused him to miss the entire 2017 season, every player in the NFL suffers injuries, many far worse than Luck’s hurt shoulder, and yet they are still able to make it on the field. For example, Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Ryan Shazier, who was temporarily paralyzed after a hard hit during a game in 2017, has said he is working every day for a chance to play football again.
“Everyone is feeling bad for Andrew Luck like he is a martyr, but what martyr gets paid over $97 million,” senior Harrison Wood said.
Luck can’t ignore what his decision to retire will do to his team and the city. For example, the Colts odds to win the Super Bowl dropped from 12:1 all the way to 60:1, according to CBS Sports.
The Colts will probably not make the playoffs for at least the next two or three seasons after starting the preseason as a Super Bowl favorite. Luck can handle 15 seconds of booing.