Former Detroit Lions All-Pro cornerback Darius Slay has announced his retirement from football, ending a 13-year NFL career after sharing an emotional social-media message on March 16. In the post, Slay thanked the game “for all you’ve done for me,” called football his “peace” and “joy,” and told fans, “BigPlay on and off the field! We Out.” The retirement closes the door on one of the best cornerback careers Detroit has developed in the last decade, and it matters now because Slay had still been part of late-career roster conversation after Buffalo claimed him off waivers in December and he chose not to report while contemplating retirement.
Key Points
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Darius Slay announced his retirement on social media after 13 NFL seasons.
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Slay was a first-team All-Pro with the Lions in 2017 and became a six-time Pro Bowler over stops in Detroit and Philadelphia.
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His NFL exit comes after the Bills claimed him late in 2025, but he did not report and instead considered retirement.
Darius Slay Took to Social Media to Announce His Retirement From Football
Slay’s announcement was direct and final. The former Lions star posted a goodbye message reflecting on a career that began when he was 5 years old and stretched to 13 seasons at the highest level, while also thanking his supporters and family.
That timing is notable because Slay’s future had remained unsettled even after his brief Steelers stint ended. NFL.com reported in December that Buffalo claimed Slay off waivers, but he informed the Bills he was contemplating retirement and would not report. Monday’s post appears to settle that question for good.
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Darius Slay Teams: Lions, Eagles, Steelers — With a Bills Twist at the End
Slay entered the NFL as the No. 36 overall pick by Detroit in the 2013 draft and spent his first seven seasons with the Lions. He later played five seasons with the Eagles, then signed a one-year, $10 million deal with the Steelers in March 2025.
The Bills are part of the story, too, but only as a footnote. Buffalo claimed Slay after Pittsburgh moved on, yet he never suited up for the team because he did not report while weighing retirement.
That career arc matters for Lions readers because Detroit got his prime years. Philadelphia got the later-chapter veteran presence and a Super Bowl-winning season, but Slay’s rise into a true national name began in Detroit.
Darius Slay Stats, Contract, Age
Slay retires at 35 years old after appearing in 187 career games. According to NFL career totals, he finished with 623 tackles, 164 passes defended and 28 interceptions.
His final contract was the one-year, $10 million agreement he signed with Pittsburgh before the 2025 season. That short-term deal always hinted that Slay was nearing the end, and his December decision not to report to Buffalo only strengthened that read.
Buffalo retained his rights when he declined to report, so the retirement announcement was the cleanest way to close that lingering transactional loose end.
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