Russell Wilson Just Retired – Moments That Made Him A Legend
Russell Wilson Just Retired – Here Are The Moments That Made Him A Legend - Page 3
After 14 NFL seasons, Russell Wilson has retired from the NFL. Check out the instances that made him a future Hall of Famer!
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Russell Wilson’s football story never really fit the mold, which is part of what made it special. Before he became “Danger Russ,” a Super Bowl champion, a 10-time Pro Bowler and one of the most productive quarterbacks of his era, he was a kid from Richmond, Virginia, who grew up with football, baseball, faith and family all pushing him toward something bigger. His father, Harrison Wilson III, helped shape that competitive edge, and Russell carried that foundation everywhere he went.
His college career was already different before the NFL ever got involved. Wilson started at NC State, where he showed early flashes of the poise and playmaking that would later define him, then transferred to Wisconsin for one unforgettable 2011 season. In Madison, he led the Badgers to a Big Ten title and a Rose Bowl appearance, threw for 31 touchdowns, and became one of the most intriguing quarterback prospects in the country.
Still, when the 2012 NFL Draft came around, teams questioned whether he was too short to be a franchise quarterback. Seattle took him in the third round, and that “too small” label got buried almost immediately. Wilson won the starting job as a rookie, helped power the Seahawks into a new era, and by his second season, he had already led the franchise to its first Super Bowl championship.
Now, after 14 NFL seasons, Wilson is officially walking away from the game. He retires with 46,966 passing yards, 353 passing touchdowns, 5,568 rushing yards, 31 rushing touchdowns, a Super Bowl ring, two Super Bowl appearances, 10 Pro Bowl selections and a 2020 Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year honor. He spent most of his prime in Seattle before later stops with the Broncos, Steelers and Giants, and he now heads into a broadcasting career with CBS Sports.
But whatever people want to say about how the final years looked, the full résumé is the full résumé. Russell Wilson changed what people thought a franchise quarterback could look like, made off-script magic feel routine, and stacked enough moments to make his football legacy hard to deny.
His One-Year Takeover At Wisconsin
Before the NFL, Wilson’s 2011 season at Wisconsin showed just how quickly he could walk into a new situation and command it. He led the Badgers to a Big Ten title and a Rose Bowl appearance, throwing for 31 touchdowns and giving Wisconsin one of the best quarterback seasons in school history.
Winning The Seahawks’ Starting Job As A Rookie

Seattle drafted Wilson in the third round in 2012, but he did not move like a developmental project. He beat out veteran competition, took over the offense immediately, and helped the Seahawks become one of the scariest young teams in football.
The “Fail Mary” vs. The Packers
The play was controversial, messy and still gets Packers fans heated, but it became one of the first truly viral Russell Wilson NFL moments. On Monday Night Football in 2012, Wilson’s last-second throw to Golden Tate gave Seattle a 14-12 win over Green Bay and made sure the rookie quarterback was part of NFL history early.
Tying Peyton Manning’s Rookie TD Record

Wilson did not just survive as a rookie — he produced. He threw 26 touchdown passes in 20122, tying Peyton Manning’s then-rookie record and proving that his size was not going to stop him from being a real problem in the league.
Winning Super Bowl XLVIII

This is the one that sits at the top of the legend list. Wilson threw for more than 200 yards and two touchdowns as the Seahawks crushed the Denver Broncos, 43-8, to win the first Super Bowl in franchise history.
Becoming One Of The Youngest Super Bowl-Winning QBs Ever
Winning a Super Bowl in Year 2 put Wilson in rare air before he was even close to his prime. At a time when many still wanted to call Seattle a defense-first team, Wilson kept making the case that he was not just along for the ride.
The 2014 NFC Championship Comeback

Wilson had a rough day for most of the 2014 NFC Championship Game against Green Bay, but the ending became classic Russell. Seattle erased a late deficit, Wilson ran for a touchdown, then hit Jermaine Kearse for the walk-off overtime score, sending the Seahawks back to the Super Bowl. The NFL later ranked that game among its “100 Greatest Games.”
Back-To-Back Super Bowl Appearances
Getting to one Super Bowl is hard enough. Wilson led Seattle to back-to-back Super Bowl appearances after the 2013 and 2014 seasons, cementing the Seahawks as the team of that era and making him one of the faces of the league.
Five Touchdowns Against The Steelers In 2015

Wilson’s 2015 shootout against Pittsburgh was one of those games where every big throw felt bigger than the last. He threw for 345 yards and five touchdowns in a 39-30 win, marking the first five-touchdown passing game of his NFL career.
His 2015 Second-Half Heater
That Steelers game was also part of a ridiculous late-season run where Wilson started playing some of the cleanest football of his career. The Seahawks leaned more on his arm, and he responded by turning Seattle’s offense into something far more explosive than people were used to seeing from that team.
The “Moon Ball” Era With Tyler Lockett & DK Metcalf
At his peak, Wilson’s deep ball was one of the prettiest throws in sport. Whether it was Tyler Lockett toe-tapping in the corner or DK Metcalf running under bombs, Wilson made backyard football look like an art form.
Throwing 40 Touchdowns In 2020

Wilson’s 2020 season was one of the biggest statistical statements. He threw for 4,212 yards and a career-high 40 touchdowns, reminding everybody that even years after the Legion of Boom era, he could still carry an offense with the best of them.
Winning Walter Payton NFL Man Of The Year

Wilson’s legacy is not just about throws, wins and playoff moments. In 2020, he was named Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year for his work on and off the field, including his long-running commitment to community service and Seattle Children’s Hospital.
Becoming The First 40,000/5,000 Quarterback

One of the craziest parts of Wilson’s résumé is how balanced it became over time. He retired as the first NFL player to pass for more than 40,000 yards and rush for more than 5,000 yards, a stat that captures exactly why defenses hated chasing him around for more than a decade.
Walking Away As A 10-Time Pro Bowler & Super Bowl Champion
The ending may not have been as clean as the beginning, but the total body of work is legendary. Wilson retires as a 10-time Pro Bowler, a Super Bowl champion, one of the best dual-threat quarterbacks ever, and one of the defining Black quarterbacks of his generation.
RELATED: Russell Wilson Retires From NFL To Join CBS Sports Instead Of Playing For NY Jets
Russell Wilson Just Retired – Here Are The Moments That Made Him A Legend - Page 3 was originally published on cassiuslife.com
