Report: Amari Cooper informs Las Vegas Raiders of intention to retire from football

Amari Cooper has opted to hang up his cleats after a decade in the NFL rather than attempt one more comeback in Las Vegas this season, according to NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport. Cooper reportedly informed the Raiders brass “he no longer has the desire to play and intends to retire,” according to Rapoport.
The 31-year-old Cooper signed a one-year, $3.5 million deal with the Raiders — the franchise that originally drafted him with the No. 4 overall pick in the 2015 NFL Draft out of Alabama — in late August to play what would be his 11th season in the NFL. Alas, the Crimson Tide legend is now calling it a career after 10 years in the league.
Cooper caps his NFL career as a five-time Pro Bowl selection with 711 career receptions, 10,033 receiving yards and 64 receiving touchdowns in 154 games. That came across 10 seasons with the Raiders, Dallas Cowboys, Cleveland Browns and briefly the Buffalo Bills for the final half of the 2024 season.
Amari Cooper’s tale of the tape
Cooper’s best season came in 2023 when he tallied 1,250 receiving yards on 72 receptions and five scores in his second-to-last year with the Browns. The year before, Cooper had a career-best nine receiving touchdowns while starting all 17 games in a season for the first time in a career that was repeatedly derailed by injuries. He also posted a career-high 92 receptions in 2020 with the Cowboys, the franchise with which he found the most production.
Across three seasons at Alabama between 2012-14, Cooper helped rewrite the program record book for receivers, including setting numerous single-season and career records with the Crimson Tide. As a junior in 2014, Cooper set single-season receiving records with 124 receptions for 1,727 yards and 16 touchdowns, becoming the school’s all-time leader in career receptions (228), receiving yards (3,463) and receiving touchdowns (31).
Top 10
- 1New
JP Poll Top 20
Big shakeup after Week 2
- 2
Heisman Odds shakeup
Big movement among favorites
- 3Hot
Eli Drinkwitz comes clean
Knew rule was broken
- 4
Deion Sanders
Fires back at media
- 5Trending
Big 12 punishes ref crew
Costly mistake in Kansas-Mizzou
Get the Daily On3 Newsletter in your inbox every morning
By clicking "Subscribe to Newsletter", I agree to On3's Privacy Notice, Terms, and use of my personal information described therein.
Cooper was expected to provide the Raiders a valuable veteran presence in a relatively young Las Vegas receivers room in which second-year tight end Brock Bowers out of Georgia is the unquestioned No. 1 target for new quarterback Geno Smith. Smith was acquired in an offseason trade to lead the Raiders’ offense in the program’s first season under 73-year-old veteran NFL head coach Pete Carroll.
Jakobi Meyers, Las Vegas’ top wideout, requested a trade in late August. Entering the final year of his three-year, $33 million contract, Meyers wants out after failing to reach an agreement with the Raiders on a new deal. According to Rapoport, Las Vegas doesn’t plan on honoring the request with this season still being left on Meyers’ deal.
Behind Meyers, the Raiders are stocked with unproven receiver depth. Tre Tucker is a third-year pro, while Dont’e Thornton Jr. and Jack Bech are rookies.
— On3’s Nick Geddes contributed to this report.