Veteran defensive end Michael Bennett, a three-time Pro Bowl selection who has 69.5 career sacks and won a Super Bowl ring during his career, is retiring after 11 seasons in the NFL, he announced Tuesday on Instagram.
“Retiring feels a bit like the death of oneself, but I look forward to the rebirth, the opportunity to reimagine my purpose,” Bennett published. “I would like to thank my wife and children, who have sacrificed so much for me to be successful. I hope to support them in the same way that they have done to me in the last 11 years. I have never been more at peace in my life.
“As the great Toni Morrison said: ‘Liberation was one thing, claiming the property of that liberated being was another.’
In an article published Tuesday, Bennett told The New Yorker that in addition to spending more time with his family, he wants to help athletes be heard when it comes to social and racial injustice.
Bennett, 34, was traded from the New England Patriots to the Dallas Cowboys last season in exchange for what eventually became a sixth-round pick in 2021. He finished the season with 6.5 sacks and 32 tackles.
In addition to the Cowboys and Patriots, Bennett has played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2009 to 2012), Seattle Seahawks (2013 to 2017), and Philadelphia Eagles (2018) during his career. He has 359 tackles and 10 forced fumbles.
Bennett was named to the Pro Bowl in each of his last three seasons with Seattle and was a member of the Seattle Super Bowl XLVIII Championship team.
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