Corey Linsley spent most of this season on the reserve/NFI list, stripping the Chargers’ offensive line of an All-Pro talent. Exiting his abbreviated age-32 season, Linsley is not likely to come back.
A heart-related issue prompted the Chargers to move Linsley off the roster in September, and the 10-year veteran center said Monday he is “99%” likely to retire, per The Athletic’s Daniel Popper. Linsley has spent the past three seasons with the Chargers, coming to Los Angeles after a long run with the Packers.
A first-team All-Pro in 2020 and a second-teamer in 2021, Linsley has done well for himself in terms of accolades and career earnings. But he is now expected to prioritize his health and walk away. Although the Chargers played without Linsley for much of the season, this will create a major need for the now-retooling team up front.
During an offseason in which the Chargers overhauled their offensive line, Linsley signed a five-year, $62.5MM deal. At the time of signing, that represented an AAV record for centers. The Chargers signed Linsley and Matt Feiler to go with first-round pick Rashawn Slater that year. Building up their front around Justin Herbert‘s rookie contract, the Bolts assembled an intriguing O-line. The group has been unable to stay healthy, however. Slater missed much of the 2022 season, while Linsley’s non-emergent heart condition kept him off the field for all but three games in 2023.
Linsley did much better as a free agent than he did on his first extension. The 2014 fifth-round pick signed a three-year, $25.5MM extension with the Packers in 2017. Green Bay used the Ohio State alum as an immediate starter, and he operated as the team’s snapper during three seasons that ended in the NFC championship game (2014, 2019, 2020). Pro Football Focus rated Linsley as a top-10 center from 2018-20. Centers are almost never franchise-tagged, with all O-line positions being grouped together on the tag, so Linsley hit the market rather than sign a second Packers extension in 2021.
PFF rated Linsley as the NFL’s No. 2 overall center in ’21 and kept him as a top-10 snapper last season, a Bolts playoff year. The Chargers used Will Clapp as their primary center following Linsley’s move off the roster this season, deploying the ex-Saints blocker as a first-stringer in 11 games. Clapp, however, ended the season on IR. Former fifth-round pick Brenden Jaimes finished the season as the Bolts’ snapper. PFF rated Clapp 28th among centers. Clapp is due for free agency in March, while Jaimes’ rookie contract runs through 2024.
Unless Linsley changes his mind, he will conclude his career with 132 starts. Linsley’s 99 starts as a Packer are the fifth-most by a center in franchise history. The Ohio native stands to finish his career with more than $66MM in earnings.
Smart decision by Linsley. Walk away and take care of your health.
Well wishes to Lindsey and Chargers probably drafting a C