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Eagles All-Pro center Jason Kelce wants to announce his retirement on his own terms

Eagles center Jason Kelce walks off the field following a loss to the Buccaneers.
Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce walks off the field following an NFL wild-card playoff game loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Monday.
(Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press)
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No wonder Jason Kelce looked impossibly forlorn sitting on a bench behind the Philadelphia Eagles’ sideline as the final minutes ticked away in a 32-9 wild-card playoff loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Monday night.

Not only was the Eagles’ once-promising season coming to a tortuous though predictable end, but also Kelce knew this would be his last NFL game. The six-time All-Pro center, careerlong Philadelphia icon and brother of Taylor Swift’s boyfriend and fellow likely Hall of Famer Travis Kelce, was about to deliver a message to his teammates in the locker room afterward, indicating that retirement was on his mind.

On the “New Heights” podcast he shares with his brother Travis, Jason Kelce explained Wednesday that reports that he’d decided to retire after 13 seasons weren’t exactly erroneous, but that a decision of that importance shouldn’t be made — or announced — after a devastating playoff loss.

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“I just don’t think you are in a position after a game like that to really make that decision, I really don’t,” he said. “There is too much emotion in the moment like that to fully grasp that decision.

“I’m not trying to be dramatic and continue to draw this thing out. I’m really not. It’s just something I think when it’s time to officially announce what’s happening in the future, it’ll be done in a way that’s definitive and pays respect to a lot of people and individuals that have meant a lot to me and has led to the career I’ve had.”

When the game ended, Kelce hugged longtime Eagles offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland, jogged over to acknowledge his family in the stands and politely told reporters he wasn’t ready to talk to them.

He’d contemplated retirement for at least two years. After rumors swirled that the 2021 season would be his last, Kelce put a video on social media of him pouring a beer from a keg Eagles coach Nick Sirianni had dispatched to help induce him to return.

“I’m definitely not retiring from playing for the Philadelphia Eagles,” he said, as beer foam splattered his beard. “I’m having way too much fun doing that. Looking forward to another year, Philadelphia. To all my teammates, let’s go dominate.”

Kelce again contemplated retirement a year ago after the Eagles lost the Super Bowl to Kansas City (and his brother), talking about how emotional that experience was on his immensely popular podcast.

“The moment I saw Mom is when I got really emotional, because man, it was so awesome,” Jason said. “She was on top of the world for a week. ... It was just so cool, man, to see her get to celebrate in that with us. It was an awesome moment. So just happy for her and so happy that she got her moment, Dad got his.

“Ironically, you lose the Super Bowl, and you’re crying after the game, and they’re not tears of sadness. They’re tears of joy.”

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Kelce’s popularity soared in 2022 in part because of his documentary “Kelce” in which he wrestled with retirement, captured the emotions of his wife, Kylie, giving birth to their third child, and launching the podcast with Travis.

Kelce, 36, played in 193 regular-season games and helped the Eagles defeat New England in Super Bowl LII, one of his 12 postseason games and Philadelphia’s only Super Bowl win.

“He’s a legend in the city — really in the league,” Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts said after Monday’s game. “His journey to where he is now didn’t come easy. It’s been a long, long time coming for him, and every year since I’ve been here it’s been, ‘Are you going to come back?’ But he knows how much I love and appreciate him. He knows how much I’ve learned from him. He’ll forever have a special place in my heart.”

Hurts certainly had Kelce to thank for his NFL-leading 11 touchdowns inside the two-yard line. He followed his center’s block while getting a boost from behind from teammates during the famed “Tush Push” (a.k.a. the “Brotherly Shove”) fourth-and-short play that became especially popular this season. The Eagles led the NFL with a 73.1% fourth-down conversion rate.

Kelce was an exceptional blocker on all sorts of plays, leading all offensive linemen who played at least 1,000 snaps with a 1.1% blown block rate. He also will be remembered for delivering one of the funniest, most poignant Super Bowl parade speeches ever.

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Despite playing the least glamorous position in football, Kelce undoubtedly will remain in the public eye, his everyman persona a function of his ability to toggle between hilarious and authentically emotional. To wit: The 6-foot-3, 295-pound Kelce was a finalist for People’s Sexiest Men of the Year last year along with (eventual winner) Patrick Dempsey, Pedro Pascal, Timothée Chalamet, Usher, Jamie Foxx and Lenny Kravitz.

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He responded with a tweet that said, “Beauty is in the eye of the beholder ... “ and said on a radio show, “I’m not even the sexiest man in my family, let alone the sexiest man alive.”

Travis Kelce, 34, ended speculation about whether he plans to retire when the season concludes, saying ahead of the Chiefs’ 26-7 wild-card win over the Miami Dolphins on Saturday: “I have no reason to stop playing football. I love it. I just love the challenge it gives me every single day to try and be at my best.”

It appears his older brother, though, is done playing. Kelce choked up on the podcast Wednesday when explaining that he addressed his teammates after the game, telling them, “I’ve got belief in every single one of you guys. Cherish the moments you have with this league.

Kelce drew a breath to collect his emotions and continued: “A lot of guys were like, ‘If that is your last game, I feel sorry for you.’ Don’t feel sorry for me, M— F—.”

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