FYI.

This story is over 5 years old.

Sports

It Seems Like the Marshawn Lynch Comeback Might Actually Happen

Maybe. Probably. We think.
When you're eyeing the quality of Skittles in Oakland. Photo by Joe Nicholson, USA Today Sports.

There was precedent when Marshawn Lynch retired from the NFL after the 2015 season, but the timing was jarring. Beast Mode was only 30, ergo a steady drip-feed of talk that a comeback was inevitable.

But Robert Smith left the game at 29 after leading the NFL in rushing the previous season. Barry Sanders walked away at 30 in the midst of arguably the greatest career a running back has ever known. There are plenty of examples of a running back leaving relatively near his peak and staying away. And it's a growing trend across the league. More and more players are opting to cut their careers short, with wide receiver Calvin Johnson and linebacker Chris Borland the most recent examples of note.

Advertisement

So if you, like me, presumed that the talk of Lynch coming out of retirement to play for his hometown Oakland Raiders was little more than the NFL rumor mill working a pinch too hard to churn its blades, well, it may be time to adjust our perspective.

On Wednesday, Lynch met officially with the Raiders after the Seahawks—his former team, who still owns his contract rights—greenlit the move. Apparently, it went well:

On Marshawn Lynch: My understanding is that meeting with Jack Del Rio is the final hurdle. If the #Raiders coach signs off, dominoes fall.
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) April 5, 2017

Like, really, really well:

Retired RB Marshawn Lynch did, in fact, tell #Raiders he intends to un-retire and play again, I'm told. It's a long process, tho #BeastMode.
— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) April 5, 2017

As Rapaport notes, this involves a bit more paperwork than a standard free agent signing due to Lynch still being under contract with Seattle. If the Seahawks demand compensation, then there's potential for a drawn-out standoff a la the one Dallas just ended with Tony Romo. And, if it does get ugly, would Lynch play for anyone besides the Raiders, who are based a short drive from his home in Oakland?

That's several steps away, though. For now, there's serious smoke that Marshawn Lynch could be enhancing both the ambience and the décor of an NFL backfield again in very short order.