The '' Gridiron Grandpa '' thrilled both young and old alike with his return to the NFL 1,800 days after last throwing a touchdown pass.
Philip Rivers nearly helped the injury-riddled Colts (8-6) pull off the upset at Seattle, completing 18 of 27 passes for 120 yards and a touchdown with one sack and an interception in an 18-16 loss to the 11-win Seahawks.
''I was just thankful — grateful — that I was out there,'' said Rivers, whose pick came on his final pass as he tried to force the ball down the field in the closing seconds. ''And it was a blast — it was a blast — but obviously the emotions now are disappointment. This isn't about me. We have a team scrapping like crazy to try and stay alive and get into the postseason.''
For much of the NFL, it was all about Rivers, who admitted he wasn't even sure how he'd play coming out of retirement as a Pro Football Hall of Fame semifinalist.
''There is doubt, and it's real,'' Rivers said. ''The guaranteed safe bet is to go home or to not go for it, and the other one is, ‘Shoot, let's see what happens.' I hope in that sense that can be a positive to some young boys, or young people.''
The high school team that Rivers coaches in his native Alabama, the St. Michael Catholic Cardinals, who finished 13-1 this season, gathered at a local restaurant in Fairhope for a watch party and went wild when Rivers threw a touchdown pass to Josh Downs that put Indianapolis ahead 13-3.
And you can bet plenty of gray-haired football fans were just as thrilled as those teen-agers to see ''Old Man Rivers'' slinging it again and joining other sports greats who returned from retirement with less hair or more gray, including the likes of Michael Jordan, George Foreman, Mario Lemieux and Magic Johnson.
Rivers definitely has a dad bod, and last week he couldn't even tell reporters what his weight was, only that it was certainly higher than when he walked away after the 2020 season.