Eagles Warrior OT Refuses to Back Down: “I Still Bleed Green”
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He’s 34, his knees have taken hits most linemen wouldn’t survive, and younger challengers are waiting in the wings. But he doesn’t see a reason to walk away. Not yet. Not when there’s still fight left in him—and not when the jersey still means everything.
For over a decade, he has anchored the right side of the Eagles’ line with a rare mix of power and poise. He’s been to five Pro Bowls, earned four All-Pro honors, and helped lift the Lombardi in Super Bowl LII. But in recent years, a string of lower-body injuries and restructuring deals to relieve cap space have led some to wonder: how much longer can he hold?
The answer, if you ask Johnson, is simple.
“People think it’s time to move on,” he told a team source this week. “But Philly built me. I owe this city more than one last block. I still bleed green, and as long as I’ve got breath in me, I’ll fight for that logo.”
The statement hits harder considering the context. Johnson missed time in 2023 and 2024 with knee and ankle issues, and though still elite when healthy, his availability has been tested. The team restructured his contract more than once to stay under the cap. And behind him, younger talent like Tyler Steen is emerging.
Still, in the locker room, Johnson is more than a starter—he’s a standard. Teammates describe him as the soul of the offensive line, a quiet enforcer whose presence is felt every snap, every rep, every meeting. His loyalty to Philly is unquestioned, and his desire to end his career on his own terms—wearing midnight green—has never burned brighter.
Retirement can wait. So can doubt.
Lane Johnson isn’t done. He’s here, still swinging, still bleeding green. Just like he always has.