Linebacker Shaquille Leonard Is Retiring After 6 NFL Seasons
Sometimes in sports, the stars align perfectly. Other times, they crash and burn like a meteorite hitting Earth. For Shaquille “The Maniac” Leonard, it’s been a little bit of both – but mostly, it’s been one hell of a ride that’s coming to an emotional end in Indianapolis.
Leonard Returns Home To Retire As a Colt
The Indianapolis Colts announced that their former All-Pro linebacker is signing a one-day contract to officially retire as a member of the blue and white. Leonard will make his retirement official during halftime of Sunday’s game against the Las Vegas Raiders at Lucas Oil Stadium, and honestly, if you’re not getting goosebumps thinking about this moment, you might want to check your pulse.
You know what makes this even more special? The man they call “The Maniac” will also strike the pregame anvil before kickoff. Talk about coming full circle – from a second-round pick that analysts questioned to the guy getting the honor of firing up 70,000 screaming Colts fans one last time.
The Rise Of a Football Maniac
Let’s rewind to 2018 for a minute. The Colts grabbed Leonard with the 36th overall pick, and plenty of draft experts scratched their heads. A linebacker from South Carolina State? Really? Well, those same experts probably had to eat some serious crow by December.
Leonard didn’t just make an impact – he made a statement. His rookie season was absolutely bonkers: 163 tackles (leading the entire NFL), two picks, six pass breakups, four forced fumbles, seven sacks, and 12 tackles for loss. Those aren’t just good numbers; they are video game numbers.
The kid from a small school became the 2018 AP Defensive Rookie of the Year and earned first-team All-Pro honors. Suddenly, that “questionable” draft pick looked like highway robbery.
Leonard’s Legendary Peak Years
If 2018 was Leonard’s coming-out party, then 2019-2021 was his absolute prime. The man was a tackling machine with a nose for the football that defied logic. In 2019, he snagged five interceptions while still bringing the heat with five sacks. Not many linebackers can do both at an elite level.
But 2021? That was Leonard’s masterpiece. Eight forced fumbles (leading the NFL), four interceptions, 122 tackles – the guy was everywhere at once. By the end of that season, Leonard had done something that sounds made up: he became the only player in NFL history to record 15+ sacks, 15+ forced fumbles, and 10+ interceptions in a 60-game span. Read that again. That’s not human.
When Bodies Break Down
Here’s where Leonard’s story takes a heartbreaking turn. Football is a brutal sport, and even the most talented players aren’t immune to its physical toll. Leonard battled through ankle injuries that would’ve sidelined lesser men, often joking with that dry sense of humor, “it’s attached” when asked about the pain.
The injuries caught up to him in 2022, limiting him to just three games after undergoing multiple procedures. He fought back in 2023, appearing in nine games, but it wasn’t the same Leonard who had terrorized offenses for years. The Colts made the difficult decision to release him midseason, and Leonard finished his career with five games in Philadelphia.
Leonard’s Legacy Beyond the Stats
Sure, the numbers are impressive – 637 total tackles, 16 sacks, 17 forced fumbles, and 12 interceptions across 75 games. Three first-team All-Pro selections, three Pro Bowls, and that Defensive Rookie of the Year award tell the story of an elite player.
But Leonard’s impact went deeper than statistics. He was the Colts’ Walter Payton Man of the Year nominee in 2022 and received the team’s Ed Block Courage Award. The guy who could strip a football with surgical precision also helped families in need both in Indianapolis and his hometown.
The Perfect Farewell
At just 30 years old, Leonard’s career feels like it ended too soon. But there’s something beautiful about a player getting to retire where his legend was born. The Lucas Oil Stadium crowd that watched him dominate for six seasons will get to say goodbye properly.
Leonard’s retirement ceremony represents everything that makes sports special – the connection between a player and a city, the memories that last forever, and the respect earned through blood, sweat, and an ankle that was barely “attached.”
“The Maniac” is hanging up his cleats, but his legacy in Indianapolis is permanent. Sometimes the best stories don’t have Hollywood endings – they have real ones, where a small-school kid becomes a legend and gets to walk away on his own terms, in the place where it all began.
Terry Bradshaw shares why Cowboys were ‘smart’ to trade Micah Parsons

The Dallas Cowboys traded arguably the best player on their roster a week before the start of the 2025 season, and Terry Bradshaw thinks that was the right decision.
Bradshaw shared his thoughts on the Micah Parsons trade during the Week 1 edition of the “FOX NFL Sunday” pregame show. The Hall of Fame quarterback said he believes Cowboys owner Jerry Jones “did the right thing” by trading Parsons to the Green Bay Packers for two first-round draft picks and Pro Bowl defensive tackle Kenny Clark.
“I don’t blame (Jones) one bit. I would have unloaded him,” Bradshaw said. “It saves me a ton of money on the salary cap, number one. He’s automatically getting two more first-round picks to go with the two he’s already got, and who’s to say that at the end of this year, if things don’t work out, somebody’s gonna get traded and pick up another one.
“Jerry Jones is sitting in the driver’s seat. I think it was a smart decision. … Whether or not Parsons was a difference-maker or not with the injury to the back, and you tell me that’s no big deal, I disagree.”
“I think Jerry Jones did the right thing.” 👀
— FOX Sports: NFL (@NFLonFOX)
Terry Bradshaw shares his thoughts on the Cowboys’ decision to trade Micah Parsons to the Packers. pic.twitter.com/ZxFuD1Wrn6September 7, 2025
As Bradshaw mentioned, Parsons has been nursing a back injury in recent weeks. Many people thought the injury was fabricated so he could justify sitting out practices with the Cowboys, but the star pass-rusher has been receiving treatment for it. He is expected to be limited in Green Bay’s Week 1 game against the Detroit Lions.
Jones has said he believes the Cowboys will be a better team in 2025 after trading Parsons — not just in the long term. The 82-year-old thinks unloading Parsons will solve one big issue that Dallas’ defense has had in recent years.
Parsons is a four-time Pro Bowl defensive end who has had at least 12 sacks in every one of his NFL seasons. You simply can’t replace production like that. It is reasonable to debate whether the return for Parsons was sufficient, but very few people actually believe the Cowboys will be better off in the short term without him.