Flight No. 31 has landed for the final time.
In an episode this week of his self-titled podcast, veteran NBA swingman Terrence Ross announced he has officially retired from the league. Having gone unsigned for the 2023-24 campaign, Ross is hanging up his sneakers after 11 career seasons.
“That’s it, I got all the basketball out of me,” said Ross. “It’s official.”
The 32-year-old Ross added that a compounding of injuries and a desire to be at home with his family led him to the decision.
Here is the full clip.
Ross, a former No. 8 overall pick, played for three teams (the Toronto Raptors, Orlando Magic and Phoenix Suns) and was best known as a microwave scorer off the bench. He averaged 11.0 points per game for his career and also had plenty of hops, winning the NBA All-Star Slam Dunk Contest in 2013 – just the second Raptor to ever do so after Vince Carter in 2000.
While Ross provided plenty of priceless viral moments over the years, he can now call it a wrap after 11 seasons in the NBA and roughly $92 million in estimated career earnings.