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Numbers retired by the Detroit Red Wings of the NHL, displayed at the former Joe Louis Arena in December 2015. Retiring the number of an athlete is an honor a team bestows upon a player, usually after the player has left the team, retires from the sport, or dies, by taking the number formerly worn on their uniform out of circulation.
Johnny Unitas' #16 was retired by Louisville in 2003 Roger Staubach's #12 was retired by the Naval Academy in 1965 Dan Marino's #13 was retired by Pittsburgh Brett Favre's #4, retired by Southern Miss in 2015 Troy Aikman's #8, retired by UCLA John Elway has his #7 retired by Stanford Peyton Manning's #16 was retired by Tennessee in 2005 Michigan retired #11 in honor of Whitey Wistert (photo ...
The number 0 was made legal in 2022, although it remains banned as the first digit of a two-digit number. [7] In forms of the game that have fewer than 11 men (most notably eight-man football and six-man football) a player can wear any number. In eight-man, there are only three ineligible receivers and in six-man, all players are eligible ...
The number was retired by the Giants in 1935, coinciding with the retirement of end Ray Flaherty. The Giants announced Wednesday that Nabers will wear No. 1 this season.
The Iowa Hawkeyes will retire Caitlin Clark's jersey No. 22 in February, honoring one of the most accomplished careers in college sports history.
Magic Johnson's #33 was retired by Michigan State Michael Jordan's #23 was retired by North Carolina Larry Bird's #33, retired by Indiana State in 2004 Bill Russell's #6 was retired by San Francisco Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's #33, retired by UCLA in 1990 Julius Erving's #32, retired by UMass Jerry West's #44, retired by West Virginia Charles Barkley's #34, number retired by Auburn in 2001 John ...
You will be the last to wear No. 22.“ Clark will join Megan Gustafson and Michelle Edwards as the only retired numbers in program history. There will never be another @CaitlinClark22 & there ...
The number 10 he wore was retired by Napoli in 2000. [ 1 ] This practice, long established in the major North American sports , is a recent development in football elsewhere, since squad numbers for specific players were not widely used until the 1990s.