Sunday, August 25, 2019

Andrew Luck & The Growing Trend of Early Retirement in the NFL: A Personal Perspective

Original Post: August 25, 2019
by Eric Marturano

On Saturday August 24, 2019, 29 year old Andrew Luck of the Indianapolis Colts retired from professional football. In Luck’s words, “it was the hardest decision of his life” to join the ranks of Calvin Johnson, Barry Sanders, Patrick Willis, and the growing list of other players who cut their career short at the top of their game. As a promising and successful quarterback, though, Luck stands out. Why would he walk away? Why now?
The media was shocked. Some fans booed, some understood. Luck seemed crushed during his surreal retirement press conference. This was the same guy who once congratulated those who sacked him and rallied teammates to comeback victories.
He loved the game, that much is obvious – and it’s hard to give up something you love.


An easy game to love, a hard game to give up

I loved football more than anything growing up. Playing, watching, following – all of it. It’s the most strategically fun team sport around. Deciding to stop wasn’t easy.


My parents & I on homecoming night during my senior year
I stopped playing when I was 18 years old, mainly because I wasn’t good enough to play at a big time university & didn’t see it as “worth it” to try to play at a smaller program. Doing so would come at the expense of education & other uses of my time – anyone who played high school ball knows that football is a full-time job.
I was lucky enough to attend a college where I could call color & play-by-play for the football team on the radio. It was nice to be close to the game I loved, even if it wasn’t worth trying to play anymore. I suspect Andrew Luck will find a way to be around football post-retirement.

The long term costs of playing a game you love



When I was younger, this is was the only thing I wanted
I never had a major injury due to football, likely because I only played for 10 years of my life (ages 9-18) and very fortunately had good coaches who taught me how to protect myself when blocking and tackling.
I also never played long enough or consistently enough against the caliber of athletes that could make it at the pro level – the kind of athletes that battered Andrew Luck season-after-season over his professional career, after he endured the beatings of the high school and college ranks.
When people in my life ask me if their kids should play football, I say “absolutely, it’s the most fun they’ll ever have playing team sports…just hope they don’t go pro.”
I don’t believe the human body is meant to take the kind of beating, over the amount of time, that would allow one to have a sustained pro career.
 Research has been growing in the past 10 years to support this belief.

What does the future of football look like?

The human body can only take so much punishment and that punishment gets exponentially more intense at each level of the game. It’s no surprise youth leagues are shrinking around the nation. It’s also no surprise that pro players are retiring early.
More and more players are coming to the conclusion that 20+ years of brutality is no life to live.
As a fan of the game today, it’s a conflicting realization to simultaneously:

1) Want to see the “best of the best” compete professionally

2) Know that the “best of the best” are slowly killing themselves, over time, banging their heads snap after snap over the course of 15-20 yrs (through middle school, high school, college, and pro), accumulating the head injuries that result in chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE)…on top of any body-mangling that occurs during a player’s career.
Football is an extremely hard game to walk away from. It’s fun, it builds character, it teaches hard work, and it rewards working together. It’s also killing our very best athletes mentally and physically.
What’s the solution? Eliminating the pro game and only having college teams? Forcing players to retire by age 30? No contact leagues until high school? Who knows.


I really miss playing this game. I’m also glad I stopped.
What I do know is that we’re watching a great, yet brutal, game decay. Perhaps for the best? There’s many sports to play & young athletes now choosing them instead (notably, basketball).
When the pipeline dries up, when the best we have quit for a healthier life – what’s left?
We’ll find out soon enough.

Saturday, August 17, 2019

Lots of Sun, Even More Fun: Sixers Summer Shore Tour a Big Success

Original Post: August 17, 2019
by Eric Marturano

In August, the average NBA fan’s calendar tends to drag. The excitement of the Finals, Draft, and Free Agency exist as distant memories of June and July, while the NBA preseason awaits in the ever-more distant October.
Well, unless you’re a Sixers fan.
On August 17, 2019, the Sixers put on their annual Summer Shore Tour at Pig Dog Beach Bar BQ at Morey’s Pier in Wildwood, New Jersey from 12-3pm.
Usually here at The Painted Lines, I’m giving my perspective from the stands, as a fan, but today at this free-to-the-public, family-friendly event, I got to peek into the reporting side of TPL with our stalwart Sixers and Blue Coats beatwriter, Jason Blevins. It was a hot and sunny day, but the Sixers, the players, and our local media (shout out Serena Winters) couldn’t have been cooler. Here’s how the day went:

Early On

Jason and I arrived a little early, around 11:30am, which is one of the best outcomes when you’re fighting against Saturday shore traffic. We were able to use that time to do a quick video about all kinds of topics, Sixers & otherwise:


The Beach Bash Begins!

The event was in full swing at 12pm, almost immediately, as many fans had been lining up early to secure a voucher for an autograph from either Zhaire Smith or Josh Richardson, both in attendance for the festivities today. There was a LOT to do, and this was one of the most fun events I’ve been to. Kudos to the Sixers and great venue host Pig Dog Beach Bar BQ for this one, cause it was a true bash. There was live music, food & drink, dancing, face-painting, plenty of blow-up beach games (giant horseshoes was my personal favorite), autograph stations, both “Air” Franklin and Coaty, and even a giant Ben Franklin. My wife Erin and I had a blast walking around in the sand and sun:


The Sixers Stixers were also in full effect & Sixers legend World B Free even predicted a title!


Zhaire Smith

Jason and other media members were able to get some exclusive time with Zhaire Smith post-autograph signing. Zhaire has been hard at work this offseason working back from injury last year, telling Jason that he looks forward to playing hard this season as he knows Philly “loves hard-working players.” Check it out, in full here:


Josh Richardson

When Josh Richardson arrived, he started with a chat with the media. He seemed excited for the season and is looking forward to the home opener against the Boston Celtics where he can “be part of the rivalry” that Sixers have had with them. He was also impressed with the Jersey shore venue, and explained his answer for fans looking to build him a fan club, in the spirit of the #MikeScottHive: #JosuélitosHooligans. Here’s the interview, in full:


On a lighter note, Josh is an awesome Twitter follow, but he took it to a new level today, in real life – he was willing to play me in rock-paper-scissors:


I’m gonna start challenging random ppl to Rock Paper Scissors matches. See how i stack up against the comp

107 people are talking about this


Josh Richardson – what a guy!

Winding Down

As Josh went to sign autographs and enjoy the rest of the beach festivities, my wife Erin, Jason, and I headed over to the famed Wildwood Boardwalk for a refreshing slice of Mack’s Pizza. As a fan and today, part-time media member, I was truly blown away by this event. The venue, the fun, the dancing, the atmosphere – it was awesome.

Big thanks to the Sixers for making basketball in August fun – here’s to celebrating a 2019-2020 title at the next Summer Shore Tour!