Andrew Luck is a father. NFL Network's Andrea Kremer reported Thursday night that Luck's wife, Nicole, gave birth to a daughter named Lucy on Nov. Luck married Nicole Pechanec in March in. He stunned the NFL when he announced his retirement at age 29, just weeks before the start of the regular season. Everyone knows Andrew Luck was one of the sport’s most cerebral stars.
The Indianapolis Colts are officially on the search for their starting quarterback in 2021 after Philip Rivers called it a career on Wednesday, retiring from the NFL after 17 illustrious seasons.
With Rivers retiring, he recorded the second-most passing yards in a final season for a quarterback at 4,169, per Elias Sports Bureau. The quarterback with the most passing yards in a final season? Andrew Luck in 2018.
Luck and Rivers are the only players to finish their careers with over 4,000 passing yards in their final season. While Rivers’ retirement was not all that shocking coming at the age of 39 and after 17 seasons in the league, Luck’s shocked the world.
But we don’t have to travel down that painful road again.
Though many expected Rivers to be back for another season with the Colts in 2021, he seems to be at peace with his decision. He will now be moving on to coach high school football in Alabama while he awaits a potential enshrinement into Canton.
If anything, he and Luck share a unique stat in both of their final seasons in the NFL.
In the most shocking development of the NFL offseason, Indianapolis Colts star quarterback Andrew Luck will retire from the NFL. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports that there will be a press conference on Sunday where the 29-year-old will announce his decision. NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero confirmed that Luck has informed the Colts of his decision.
Luck was seen on the sidelines of the Colts’ preseason game Saturday night, where he was savagely booed by Colts fans, against the Chicago Bears when the news broke, and confirmed the reports during a postgame press conference. The injuries he battled throughout the past few seasons had simply taken too big a toll on his psyche, he said.
“I felt stuck and the only way out of it is to no longer play football,” Luck said. “It’s taken my joy away from the game.”
Andrew Luck’s shocked the world, so Will Brinson, John Breech, Ryan Wilson and Sean Wagner-McGough fired up an emergency Pick Six NFL Podcast to break down ever conceivable angle from the news. Can Luck be considered a bust? Who is to blame here? What does this mean for the Colts in fantasy and their win total for 2019? Listen in the player below and subscribe to the podcast here.
Luck appeared overcome with emotion as he read prepared remarks, visibly bearing the weight of both his words and his decision, which he called the hardest of his life. He singled out former teammates such as Robert Mathis, who he noted was the best teammate he ever had, and Jacoby Brissett, who he called an awesome dude with a bright future. Luck also said that he was jealous of how happy and content Brissett appeared at the facility when they returned for the offseason program. He later apologized to his mother for wearing a ratty t-shirt during the press conference, and noted that he at times had to pinch himself last season due to how much fun it was to play for Colts coach Frank Reich.
The No. 1 overall pick in the 2012 NFL Draft, Luck has battled injuries throughout his seven NFL seasons, most recently a lingering calf issue that held him out for much of the offseason. Luck led the Colts to the playoffs in each of his first three seasons before the injury issues began in earnest. He battled rib and shoulder issues for much of 2015 and 2016, then sat out the entire 2017 season after undergoing offseason shoulder surgery. Luck returned in 2018 and, after a slow start, looked very much like his former self for much of the year.
The calf issue cropped up earlier this offseason, but the Colts had been insisting that Luck would get back on the field at some point. It instead appears that he will not play another game for the team.
Luck at times lived up to his billing as a star quarterback, and at others came up short of that status. At his best, he was an electric talent who could make any throw on the field, and also use his legs to create plays outside the pocket and down the field. But he took a lot of punishment throughout his career, playing behind one of the league’s most porous offensive lines early in his tenure.
He battled through a lot of hits early on and seemed indestructible at times due to his size and strength, but he eventually wore down both physically, and apparently, mentally.
In the wake of Luck’s retirement, the Colts’ starting quarterback will presumably be Jacoby Brissett, who was acquired from the New England Patriots in a trade prior to the 2017 season. Brissett started 15 of Indianapolis’ 16 games in 2017, completing 59 percent of his passes at an average of 6.6 yards per attempt, while throwing for 13 touchdowns and 7 interceptions. The Colts went 4-11 in those games, eventually landing the No. 3 overall pick in the draft.
Outlooks on the Colts obviously dim considerably without Luck in the picture. Most sports books had the Colts expected to win the AFC South, with a win total over-under set at 9.5 at Westgate Superbook. However, while many books closed betting for the night on the Colts because of the news, FanDuel released an updated win total number of 6.5. SportsLine data scientist Stephen Oh expects the team to drop, but perhaps not that low. Here are Oh’s projections:
WINS | LOSSES | RANKING | PLAYOFF% | |
with Luck | 9.1 | 6.9 | No. 6 | 59.4% |
without Luck | 7.3 | 8.7 | No. 22 | 24.7% |
Meanwhile, CBS Sports fantasy analyst Chris Towers offered analysis of the injury’s impact on fantasy football teams:
The last time the Colts played without Andrew Luck, things fell apart. It won’t be that bad this time around, with Jacoby Brissett having spent a few more years in the system and by all accounts developing into a solid option. Still, you have to downgrade the likes of T.Y. Hilton and Marlon Mack, who fall into the No. 2 range at their respective positions. Eric Ebron, already a regression candidate, joins the crew of touchdown-or-bust options at the end of the No. 1 tier at tight end, with a quarterback who isn’t going to get the team into the end zone nearly as much. As for the rest of the supporting cast? There probably isn’t much reason to worry about Devin Funchess, Parris Campbell, or Jack Doyle outside of deeper leagues.
For a more detailed look at how this news affects the fantasy season, Fantasy Football Today’s Dave Richard has a full column here and recorded a new podcast with Heath Cummings here.
As for Luck, he ends his career with 23,671 passing yards, 171 touchdowns, and 83 interceptions, as well as a 53-33 record as a starter and four Pro Bowl appearances, including last year. The 2018 season was perhaps Luck’s best yet, as he completed 67 percent of his passes while setting career highs in passing yards, quarterback rating, and QBR. His 39 touchdown passes were also one off the career high he set in 2014.
Andrew Luck Return
Despite that performance, his decision to retire was not entirely unpredictable. Outlook on the calf injury had been muddled by seemingly contradictory comments from team officials in recent weeks, and Saturday night reports indicate the Colts were not stunned by the turn.
Andrew Luck Retiring
Once billed as the best quarterback prospect since Peyton Manning, Luck eventually was the reason the Colts franchise moved on from the legendary passer. After Manning missed the entire 2011 season due to injury, the Colts landed the No. 1 pick and elected to take Luck and waive Manning, who went on to star and win a Super Bowl for the Denver Broncos.