Robert Griffin III stirred up a familiar wound on Friday, and he did it in full Washington gear.
The former NFL quarterback posted a viral Instagram video wearing his 2012 uniform - shoulder pads, No. 10 jersey and helmet - while moving his Offensive Rookie of the Year trophy off a chair before sitting down. The caption read, “The day that changed my career forever 💔.”
On the video itself, Griffin leaned into the social media trend with the line, “Preparing for my Netflix documentary about why they kept running me when I only had 1 leg against Seattle in 2012.”
That post quickly caught fire with NFL fans, many of whom immediately went back to the knee injury that altered the rest of his career. Grete Griffin, his wife, jumped into the comments with a blunt reaction of her own.
“I have personal beef with everyone involved and I didn’t even know you then 😭😭😭,” she wrote.
RGIII shot back, “You a real ride or die.”
Griffin married Estonian heptathlete Grete Šadeiko on March 10, 2018, in Miami Beach, Florida. Before that, he had been married to his college girlfriend, Rebecca Liddicoat. The two later separated and finalized their divorce in 2017.
The injury at the center of all this dates back to Dec. 9, 2012, when Griffin first hurt his right knee against the Baltimore Ravens. He briefly returned to that game, then exited after an MRI showed a serious LCL sprain.
After sitting out one game, Griffin came back with a knee brace and started Washington’s playoff matchup against the Seattle Seahawks on Jan. 6, 2013.
Washington jumped out to a 14-0 lead, but the knee worsened as the game wore on. In the fourth quarter, while trying to recover a low snap, his knee gave out and he suffered an ACL and LCL tear.
Washington lost 24-14.
Afterward, Griffin stood by his choice to keep playing.
“You respect authority, and I respect Coach Shanahan,” he told reporters. “But at the same time, you have to step up and be a man sometimes.
There was no way I was coming out of that game... I don't feel like me being out there hurt the team in any way.”
Mike Shanahan later said he kept checking on Griffin during the game and asked whether he was OK to continue.
“Hey, trust me. I want to be in there, and I deserve to be in there,” Shanahan recalled Griffin telling him.
Griffin did make it back for the start of the 2013 season, but he never found the same level again. Injuries kept piling up, and he started only 13 games in 2013 and seven in 2014.
By the next season, new head coach Jay Gruden had benched him for Kirk Cousins. Washington then released Griffin before the start of the 2016 season.
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