A tweeted retirement. Definitely not something that happens frequently. Brian Dawkins, who played most of his career in Philadelphia but ended his career in Denver, announced his retirement a few days ago by tweeting it. I'm not positive if it's happened before, but I think I can say confidently that a player of this magnitude has never retired this way before. It marks the end of a great career for sure. One that was filled with great plays, leadership, and emotion. Dawkins was certainly a great player and leader to watch, because you could tell how much passion he played the game with even as he grew older. As I've mentioned in prior posts, the purity of football has certainly been tainted recent. Clearly players care about what they do, otherwise they wouldn't put their health on the line season after season, but players certainly lack the passion nowadays and are in it for the money. That's what I always liked about Dawkins; every time I watched him, you could see how hard he went on every play and how he always was mentoring his teammates trying to make them better.
Like I said earlier, retiring on twitter is a completely new occurrence to me. I've never seen it done until a few days ago. This goes to show you how truly prominent social media is in profesional athletes' lives. It is the easiest way for athletes to connect with fans and really makes the player to fan interactions easier. Perhaps more players will begin to take after Dawkins and retire through twitter of Facebook. I think personally it would be difficult to make a retirement announcement with only 140 characters, but that's besides the point. You can see the shift of the norm right off the bat in this situation. If this had happened perhaps 5-10 years ago, the player would be laughed at and probably not trusted. But the shift in how people receive their information has allowed for things like this to be taken seriously.