In 2014 former Pittsburgh Steelers and Arizona Cardinals running back Rashard Mendenhall retired
at age 26, walking away from millions in potential earnings. While Mendenhall may no longer be playing,
he's still drawing on his NFL experience as a part of his new job. Since retiring Mendenhall, who made
more than $13.8 million during his six-year career, joined the Writers Guild of America and worked as a
writer on the first season of HBO's "Ballers," which aired its series premiere June 21.
"Ballers" is about an ex-NFL player who transitions to life as an agent. It stars Dwayne The Rock Johnson,
and has been widely compared to "Entourage." While a former NFL player seamlessly transitioning
from football to screenwriting may come as a surprise, Mendenhall told USA Today's Lindsay H. Jones
he knew this is what he always wanted to do once his career ended: "I've always known I wanted to write.
It was always a passion of mine it was peace, a getaway. It was also, even while I was playing, it was
kind of an artist mentality. You have a day job, but the art that you're working on is what you really want
to do. I knew that when I was done playing, that's what I was going to do."
Many athletes have a hard time transitioning to their new lives once they retire, but Mendenhall wrote
in a blog post for The Huffington Post that hasn't been the case for him: "I wasn't supposed to walk away
from the NFL, but I did. I wasn't supposed to be writing television, but I am. I'm supposed to be lost after
football. I'm not. I've reinvented myself. This is my first transformation. I'm supposed to be broke right now,
or maybe the statistics say five years from now. Either way, I'm not even close. I'm not supposed to be
anything but a football player. But really, I'm just a guy who used to play football. There's a reason I'm
doing this."
Mendenhall is a part of a trend of under-30 players retiring in their primes. Jake Locker, Chris Borland,
Anthony Smith, Patrick Willis, Anthony Davis, and Jason Worilds all retired this offseason.
Source: Business Insider
at age 26, walking away from millions in potential earnings. While Mendenhall may no longer be playing,
he's still drawing on his NFL experience as a part of his new job. Since retiring Mendenhall, who made
more than $13.8 million during his six-year career, joined the Writers Guild of America and worked as a
writer on the first season of HBO's "Ballers," which aired its series premiere June 21.
"Ballers" is about an ex-NFL player who transitions to life as an agent. It stars Dwayne The Rock Johnson,
and has been widely compared to "Entourage." While a former NFL player seamlessly transitioning
from football to screenwriting may come as a surprise, Mendenhall told USA Today's Lindsay H. Jones
he knew this is what he always wanted to do once his career ended: "I've always known I wanted to write.
It was always a passion of mine it was peace, a getaway. It was also, even while I was playing, it was
kind of an artist mentality. You have a day job, but the art that you're working on is what you really want
to do. I knew that when I was done playing, that's what I was going to do."
Many athletes have a hard time transitioning to their new lives once they retire, but Mendenhall wrote
in a blog post for The Huffington Post that hasn't been the case for him: "I wasn't supposed to walk away
from the NFL, but I did. I wasn't supposed to be writing television, but I am. I'm supposed to be lost after
football. I'm not. I've reinvented myself. This is my first transformation. I'm supposed to be broke right now,
or maybe the statistics say five years from now. Either way, I'm not even close. I'm not supposed to be
anything but a football player. But really, I'm just a guy who used to play football. There's a reason I'm
doing this."
Mendenhall is a part of a trend of under-30 players retiring in their primes. Jake Locker, Chris Borland,
Anthony Smith, Patrick Willis, Anthony Davis, and Jason Worilds all retired this offseason.
Source: Business Insider