Posted on 01/29/2010 12:09:23 PM PST by My Favorite Headache
Warner calls it quits
Cardinals QB Kurt Warner, a two-time league MVP and former Super Bowl MVP, will retire after 12 seasons.
(Excerpt) Read more at sports.yahoo.com ...
In my lifetime, I am 41, the greatest rags to riches story in sports history. He will be missed. He should be a first ballot Hall-of-Fame. Took two of the most wretched franchises in the NFL to the Super Bowl. He could of won 3 Super Bowls if the defenses did their job.
One of the nicer people in all of sports. What a great announcement also.
He left while still on top. I agree that he should be first ballot HOF.
he had a good run.
Back up QB winning the SuperBowl was an awesome thing
Enjoy you retirement, Kurt. You earned it...................BIGTIME............
I think that hit on Kurt after he threw the interception had a lot to do with it and the concussion he sustained earlier in the year.
He basically gave up $10m for his family. Wow!
Good for him. Well done, Mr. Warner.
What the odds the Cards bring in a veteran QB to start since they are still loaded at the skill positions? How about Donovan McNabb? Leinart has showed nothing.
From bagging groceries to the super bowl. Will never forget it as well. Will be very excited to see if he winds up coaching. There was a story earlier last week saying that the Rams were interested in getting him to possibly coach up there.
Doubt it.
Kurt Warner has called an end to one of the great storybook careers in NFL history.
The 38-year-old quarterback announced his retirement from the game on Friday after a dozen years in a league that at first rejected him, then revered him as he came from nowhere to lead the lowly St. Louis Rams to two Super Bowls, winning the first of them.
Written off as a has-been, he rose again to lead the long-suffering Arizona Cardinals to the Super Bowl a year ago.
Warner walked away with a year left on a two-year, $23 million contract, knowing he still had the skills to play at the highest level.
He had one of the greatest postseason performances ever in Arizonas 51-45 overtime wild card victory over Green Bay on Jan. 10, but sustained a brutal hit in the Cardinals 45-14 divisional round loss at New Orleans six days later.
Warner leaves the game with a legacy that could land him in the Hall of Fame even though he didnt start his first game until he was 28.
In a comparison with the 14 quarterbacks to make the Hall of Fame in the last 25 years, Warner has a better career completion percentage, yards per pass attempt and yards per game. Only Dan Marino had more career 300-yard passing games.
In 124 regular-season games, Warner completed 65.5 percent of his passes for 32,344 yards and 208 touchdowns. He and Fran Tarkenton are the only NFL quarterbacks to throw for 100 touchdowns and 14,000 yards for two teams.
Warner, who grew up in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and played collegiately at Northern Iowa, ranks among the career leaders in a variety of passing statistics.
He was also the fastest player in NFL history to 10,000 yards passing and tied Dan Marino as fastest to reach 30,000.
He has the top three passing performances in Super Bowl history. His 1,156 yards passing in the 2008 playoffs broke the NFL record of 1,063 he set with St. Louis in 1999.
Warners rise from obscurity seems the stuff of sports fiction.
He played three seasons in the Arena Football League and one in NFL Europe, mixed in with a sting stocking grocery shelves back in Iowa.
Warner made the Rams as a backup in 1998, then was thrust into the starting role in 1999 when Trent Green was injured.
What followed was a masterful and wholly unexpected season, when he led the Rams to a 13-3 regular-season record, then a Super Bowl triumph over Tennessee. He was named the league and Super Bowl MVP.
St. Louis was upset in the first round of the playoffs the following season, but Warner had them back in the big game in 2001, where The Greatest Show on Turf lost a squeaker to New England. The season earned him a second NFL MVP award.
But after an injury-plagued 2002 season, he was sacked six times and suffered a concussion in a 2003 season-opening loss to the New York Giants. He never started for St. Louis again.
He signed a free agent contract with the Giants for 2004, but was replaced by rookie Eli Manning after nine games. Warner came to the Cardinals in 2005 and was an off-and-on starter before replacing the injured Matt Leinart part way through the 2007 season.
Warner had to beat out Leinart the following spring, then led the Cardinals to the NFC West crown and playoff victories over Atlanta, Carolina and Philadelphia before the narrow loss to Pittsburgh in last years Super Bowl, where he threw for 377 yards.
Off the field, Warner has been just as impressive.
He and his wife operate the First Things First Christian charitable foundation. Last year, he was named the NFLs Man of the Year for his off-field and onfield accomplishments.
Warners departure leaves Leinart the presumed replacement. The former Heisman Trophy winner has started 17 games for Arizona but only one in the last two years.
Maybe he’ll “un-retire” and play for the Jets! (sarc)
Been there done that!
So long Kurt. Spent most of your career playing for dome teams that I don’t like, but I still enjoyed watching you.
Watching this now on ESPN News.
And, he was an Arena Football QB before THAT. More amazing.
Yup, I want to think of him as a Hall of Famer, right up there with the likes of Unitas, Tarkenton, Griese, Stauback, Elway, Namath, Montana, Marino, Aikman, Bradshaw, Jurgenson and Kelly BUT he's more like a Ken "Snake" Stabler as far as fame and I wonder if he'll make it.
One of the great classy guys in professional sports. Enjoy your retirement.
We need to remember that sports is just that, it’s just a game. It’s not worth it to scramble your brains for the rest of your life and die of early Alzheimers or Parkinsons’. As for Warner, he has a special calling after football, and Godspeed on his ministry.
Not only one of the best QBs to ever play the game, but one of the classiest guys ever.
I’m watching his presser right now and he is classy, humble, gracious and appreciative.
I watched another presser earlier today and saw arrogance, disdain, narcissism and one big jerk.
Thanks for the memories, Kurt.
And yeah, he should have 2 or 3 rings if his defense held on.
In each Super Bowl, he led his team to a go-ahead or tying TD on each of his last possessions, but as mentioned, the Defense couldn’t hold the lead.
Perhaps more SB’s if not for being injured for nearly half of his career.
His numbers says it all, especially in the post season where he played even better than in the regular season.
1st ballot HOFer and when healthy, there was no better QB
The ability to read Defenses, his quick release, accuracy, fearless in the pocket, smart and as tough as they come.
http://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/W/WarnKu00.htm
Thanks again, Kurt.
A great player, a great man, a great father, a great role model.
Hollywood should make a movie about his life, but the religious aspect of it would not allow them to do so.
Warner’s life story is one of the most amazing stories ever and how he resurrected his career several times after everyone wrote him off.
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