Frank Ragnow breaks his silence: the retirement he wrestled with and the comeback that almost was
One year after stepping away from football with a social media post, the four-time Pro Bowl center opens up about the failed physical that ended his attempt to return to the Lions mid-season.
Frank Ragnow retired abruptly in June 2025, posting to social media without the fanfare his seven-year career had earned. He said little at the time. A year later, he is finally talking - about the physical toll that pushed him out, the mid-season attempt to come back, and the Grade 3 hamstring strain that made one of the NFL's best centers fail a physical two days after he thought he was ready to play again.
Why did Ragnow retire in the first place?
Frank Ragnow described an internal conflict that wore him down over the 2024 season and into the offseason. He was trying to will himself through the physical demands of playing center at an elite level while his body was sending a different message. As a father of two, the calculation about what he was putting himself through stopped adding up the way it once had. The retirement announcement came via social media in June 2025 - no press conference, no formal farewell - and Ragnow largely went quiet after that, leaving fans and teammates to piece together what had happened.
What happened when he tried to come back?
By late November 2025, with the Lions struggling on the offensive line and out of the playoff picture they had grown accustomed to, Ragnow was reinstated from the retired list. The move generated real excitement in Detroit. He reported to the facility on a Friday, and the Lions were preparing to run him through a physical. Then, one or two days before that exam, he strained his hamstring. He showed up anyway. "I got hurt a day or two before I got there, and it's unfortunate," Ragnow said. "I should've listened to my body probably, but it is what it is." The physical on November 29 revealed a Grade 3 hamstring strain - a significant soft-tissue tear - and his return was over before it started.
How did the Lions handle his absence?
Detroit shifted Graham Glasgow from guard to center to fill Ragnow's spot after the June retirement. Rookie Tate Ratledge stepped into Glasgow's guard position. The patchwork showed. The Lions ranked 20th in run-block win rate and 30th in pass-block win rate during the 2025 season, a stark drop from the offensive line standard Ragnow had anchored for years. Detroit missed the playoffs after back-to-back division titles, and the line's struggles were a central reason. Glasgow himself was then ruled out with a knee injury for the Thanksgiving game against Green Bay, a loss that underscored how thin the depth had become.
Where does Ragnow stand now?
A year removed from the retirement and months past the failed comeback attempt, Ragnow says he is completely fine physically and has found peace with how things played out. The support of his wife Lucy and a warm reception from Lions fans helped him work through the initial guilt and second-guessing. He maintains positive relationships with his former teammates. The comeback attempt, even though it failed, seems to matter to him. "It's a learning experience, and at least I can say I laid my head on the pillow at night and said I tried," Ragnow said. "I tried for the team. I tried for the fans. And it just wasn't meant to be."
Players in this story
Sources
- ESPN: Frank Ragnow reflects on abrupt Lions retirement, aborted return
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