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Ravens center Birk walks away after 15 NFL seasons, first Super Bowl triumph

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BALTIMORE โ€” After a 15-year NFL career and finally winning a Super Bowl earlier this month, Ravens center Matt Birk figured it was the perfect time and setting to reveal he was walking away from the game.
In lieu of a fancier press conference at the teamโ€™s Owings Mills facility next week, the 36-year-old offensive lineman announced his retirement on Friday morning while dedicating a literacy center at Battle Grove Elementary School in Dundalk. Wearing a t-shirt with the slogan โ€œFinish Everything,โ€ Birk couldnโ€™t specify a time when he made his final decision but spoke to head coach John Harbaugh for roughly an hour last weekend and said he hadnโ€™t made up his mind at that point. He phoned the coach and general manager Ozzie Newsome on Thursday afternoon to reveal his decision.
Taking questions from the Battle Grove students before opening up to the gathered media, Birk was asked why he was retiring. The quick-witted center didnโ€™t disappoint in laying out his answer.
โ€œWhy am I retiring? Iโ€™m old, I have six kids, and itโ€™s just time. I really enjoyed football. I got to play for a long time. Iโ€™ve been very fortunate, but I just feel like itโ€™s time to do something else.โ€
Birk spent the last four seasons with the Ravens after playing for his hometown Minnesota Vikings for the first 11 years of his career. Named to six Pro Bowls in his career, the Harvard University graduate was selected in the sixth round of the 1998 draft and earned his first championship in being part of the Ravensโ€™ 34-31 win over the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII on Feb. 3.
It was the perfect ending for a career that began with Birk struggling to make the Vikingsโ€™ 53-man roster in 1998 and ended with the grizzled veteran celebrating with teammates and his family on the turf of the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans after finally reaching the pinnacle of the NFL for the first time.
โ€œYou canโ€™t ask for anything more,โ€ said Birk, who went to work out at the Ravensโ€™ practice facility a final time Friday morning. โ€œIt is a great way to end it, but like I said, no oneโ€™s entitled to a Super Bowl. Certainly not me. I was just so grateful and fortunate that I was able to be part of this team. It is a special team and the run that we made โ€” the championship that we won โ€” is something that Iโ€™ll never forget. I was telling [Harbaugh], you get a reason to come back and get together and relive those days. Youโ€™re forever linked, and thatโ€™s pretty cool.โ€
Despite playing well this past season, Birk was expected by many to retire to spend more time with his family as the father of six children. He said Friday that his wife Adrianna had offered her blessing for him to continue playing if he wanted to return next season. Birk signed a three-year, $8.525 million contract after contemplating retirement last offseason, but the deal was structured in a way that many expected the longtime lineman to either retire or be released after the first year of the deal.
Asked whether he thought he had anything left in the tank to continue playing if he desired, Birk quipped that no one would be able to find out the truth.
โ€œIt doesnโ€™t matter what I think,โ€ said Birk as he laughed. โ€œAnyone who wants to challenge me, yeah, Iโ€™ll tell them [I can still play] because thereโ€™s no way youโ€™re going to find out. It was great. Last year, I felt great and that was a blessing. Itโ€™s a physical game; itโ€™s a violent game. I was able to feel good about what I put out there on the field. It was just a good way for me to end.โ€
The Ravens will save $2.05 million in salary cap space with Birkโ€™s retirement, which will provide some relief as they deal with limited space and hope to work out a long-term contract with quarterback Joe Flacco. Baltimore drafted Delawareโ€™s Gino Gradkowski in the fourth round of last yearโ€™s draft with the intention that heโ€™d eventually take over for Birk.
The retiring center expressed confidence that Gradkowski would be ready to take over at center in his second professional season.
โ€œGino will be fine. The biggest thing about football is itโ€™s a character game because itโ€™s hard,โ€ Birk said of his 2012 understudy. โ€œItโ€™s different from other sports. Ginoโ€™s got that. Heโ€™s a great guy. Gino will do whatever it takes to be successful.โ€
Birk was named the NFLโ€™s 2011 Walter Payton Man of the Year for his work in the community, which includes his HIKE foundation to improve literacy. His foundationโ€™s goal is to โ€œimpact the lives of at-risk children by providing interactive programs and resources needed to guide a child through the key educational transitions between elementary, middle, high school and college.โ€
Several teammates expressed congratulations to Birk via social media on Friday morning as the veteran was considered one of the leaders in the locker room in a different way from the demonstrative and vocal leadership of Ray Lewis, who was the first member of the championship team to announce his retirement back in January.
Birk was touched by messages posted on Twitter from several teammates including Vonta Leach, Jameel McClain, and Torrey Smith.
โ€œThat means a lot,โ€ Birk said. โ€œYou play the game for a lot of reasons, but the respect of your opponent and more so the respect of your teammates is probably the biggest thing youโ€™re shooting for.โ€
Cognizant of player safety concerns in the NFL, Birk has said he will donate his brain to Boston Universityโ€™s School of Medicine for research into concussions.
His post-football intentions remain unclear, but the Minnesota native predicted Baltimore hasnโ€™t seen the last of him by any shot.
โ€œIโ€™ll continue to advocate for player safety and retired playersโ€™ rights โ€” now that I am a retired player,โ€ Birk said. โ€œWeโ€™ll see. I donโ€™t have any plans for whatโ€™s next. I certainly didnโ€™t plan on playing football for 15 years. Kind of not having a plan has worked out for me so far. Iโ€™m going to stay with it.โ€
Making the difficult decision to leave the hometown team he grew up rooting for following the 2008 season certainly wasnโ€™t part of any plan, but he was immediately impressed with Harbaughโ€™s vision for the Ravens despite the coach having only finished his first season in Baltimore.
Itโ€™s safe to say the gamble paid off in choosing a new football home after 11 seasons in Minnesota.
โ€œAt the time, I just said, โ€˜[With] the limited information I have about the Ravens, Iโ€™m going to bet on this guy and Iโ€™m going to come here,'โ€ said Birk, who labeled Harbaugh a friend first and foremost. โ€œIโ€™m sure glad I did. From the beginning, the organization and the city just welcomed us with open arms.
โ€œI donโ€™t need to tell anybody what this team means to this city. Itโ€™s definitely a special connection. To have the honor of playing here for four years and playing under coach Harbaugh and his staff, it was truly an honor.โ€
 

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