Gronk says he'd retire if forced to decide now - 4 minutes read
TAMPA, Fla. -- Buccaneers tight end Rob Gronkowski said Wednesday that while he will need some time to weigh a return for next season, if he had to made a decision right now, he would not return to play in the NFL in 2022.
"If they're like, 'Rob, you've got to decide right now, right this second if you're playing next year,' I would say no right now. 'It's two days after the season. I'd be like, 'No I'm not playing,'" an animated Gronkowski said to TMZ Sports. "You've gotta give it some time, you've gotta rest to see how everything goes, to see how everything plays out, how I feel. I just wanna heal completely, see where my thoughts are from there then."
Gronkowski, who played on a pair of one-year deals over the last two seasons, said Monday, during his final Bucs availability for the season, that he would need about three to five weeks to decompress and assess how he's feeling before making a decision, and he echoed that in the interview, which had a playful tone throughout, as he was in good spirits.
"If I had to answer right now, it would, 'No,'" said Gronkowski, who was very upbeat throughout the entire conversation. "But you never know. In three weeks, it might be 'Yes!'"
When asked if he would have answered the same way in previous years the day after his season ended, Gronkowski laughed and said, "Yeah, probably."
Health-wise, Gronkowski said Monday that he has no major injuries, but "minor bumps and bruises." He did, however, miss five games during the regular season due to cracked ribs and a punctured lung. He also said Monday he wouldn't rule out a return even if quarterback Tom Brady doesn't. But considering he's never played with another quarterback in his 11-year career, and it's natural to assume Gronkowski will wait and see what Brady does.
"It will factor into the situation," Gronkowski said. "He's gotta do what he's gotta do for himself and his family, no doubt about that. But then for myself, I gotta do what I gotta do, ya know, what's best for myself, see where I'm at, how I'm feeling -- all that type of stuff. So then once I make that personal decision, then we'll see what his decision is, what goes on, and then from there, you take it from there. You can't really read it or anything until it happens, but every situation could basically be on the plate for sure. But I gotta do what's best for myself first and then once I make that decision, that's when I can go from there."
When asked if Antonio Brown's release had anything to do with the Bucs' early exit from the postseason -- they fell to the Rams 30-27 on a last-second field goal by Matt Gay in last Sunday's divisional round - Gronkowski said no.
"I would say in the locker room, it didn't. There's so many experienced pros in our locker room. It's not like a young locker room or anything like that, where it's just all young guys and never been in an adverse situation before, so we have a lot -- we've got Tom, he's seen many situations in sports before, we have many experienced coaches that been in a lot of things before," he told TMZ.
The Bucs had gotten to a point in that game where they not only were without Brown, and wide receiver Chris Godwin, who had gone to Injured Reserve after suffering a torn ACL in Week 15, but also Cyril Grayson (hamstring), Breshad Perriman (hip, abdomen), Jaelon Darden (concussion) and Tyler Johnson played just one snap in the fourth quarter due to a rib injury. Tight end Cameron Brate had to line up in the slot because they had no more healthy receivers.
"When things like that happen, it's a big story, but you've just gotta focus on what you've gotta focus on and that's what a lot of guys did in the locker room," Gronkowski said. "A lot of professionals in the locker room just stayed focused on what you've gotta do, and that's basically what I did too. The outside noise -- it can affect you if you let it get to you. But if you just block it out -- that's one thing I learned in New England big time in the nine years I was there -- block out the outside noise, and I gotta agree with that."
Source: www.espn.com - NFL