Jacksonville Jaguars center Mitch Morse, who spent five seasons with the Buffalo Bills and four with the Kansas City Chiefs, will retire from the NFL, he announced Thursday.
Jacksonville Jaguars center Mitch Morse announced his retirement from the NFL on Thursday. Morse, 32, played 10 seasons in the NFL, first with the Kansas City Chiefs, and then with the Buffalo Bills.
Following his announcement, the Bills shared a message for him on social media. "Congrats to Mitch Morse on a great career," they wrote. "Wishing you all the best in your next chapter! 👏 #BillsMafia.
Mitch Morse announced his retirement from the NFL on Thursday, spending time with the Kansas City Chiefs (4), Buffalo Bills (5) and Jacksonville Jaguars (1) during his professional career.
The Buffalo Bills offensive line underwent some changes ahead of the 2024 season. Buffalo moved on from veteran center Mitch Morse. The interior of their line was altered, as O’Cyrus Torrence and David Edwards took on the guard position while Connor McGovern took the helm as the center.
During his five-year run with the Buffalo Bills from 2019-2023, starting center Mitch Morse not only reached his first Pro Bowl with the organization but showed a kind of consistency the team failed to have along the offensive line for decades.
Mitch Morse announced his retirement via an Instagram post on Thursday morning. Morse started every game for the Jaguars in 2024.
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The reigning NFL MVP paid his tributes to one of the men who blocked for him for years in Buffalo. Mitch Morse and Josh Allen were teammates for five seasons with the Bills.