SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Joe Flacco isn’t just defying Father Time; he’s fighting the entire modern NFL rulebook. The 41-year-old quarterback, fresh off a stunning Pro Bowl run with the Cincinnati Bengals, turned Super Bowl LX Radio Row into a debate stage Wednesday. His message? The league has gone soft.
While the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots prep for Sunday’s showdown at Levi’s Stadium, Flacco stole the headlines. He didn’t mince words about the state of defensive penalties, roughing the passer calls, and the physical toll of the sport.
“Let Them Hit Us”
Flacco’s resurgence in 2025—throwing 13 touchdowns against just 4 interceptions in six starts after Joe Burrow went down—proved he can still sling it. But his mindset remains stuck in 2008. Speaking on the This Is Football show, Flacco unloaded on the rules designed to protect quarterbacks.
“I don’t think anybody coming into the league these days is quite as battle-tested as guys that came into the league 15 years ago… I don’t think it should be roughing the passer when they land on us. I don’t think being slapped in the head should be roughing the passer. It honestly annoys me.” — Joe Flacco, Bengals Quarterback
The veteran argued that the constant flags for “normal hits” put defenses in impossible situations. He wants receivers laid out over the middle. He wants defenders to land on quarterbacks. In an era hyper-focused on player safety, Flacco’s take hit the media center like a linebacker unblocked off the edge.
The Concussion Comment
The most polarizing moment came when Flacco addressed CTE and head injuries directly. While the league spends millions on Guardian Caps and protocol tweaks, Flacco shrugged it off as the cost of doing business.
“I know CTE is a thing these days and all that, but it’s football. We signed up to play it,” Flacco said, doubling down. “We signed up to get concussions, we signed up to get hurt, it is what it is.”
2026 Plans: Flacco Isn’t Done
Beyond the rant, Flacco dropped a massive nugget for the offseason: he plans to play in 2026. His stint in Cincinnati wasn’t a farewell tour. It was an audition.
After stepping in for Burrow and lighting up the scoreboard—including a vintage performance that secured his Pro Bowl nod—Flacco believes he still has starter-level juice. With the salary cap set to jump again this March, a QB-needy team will likely look at his 2025 tape and see a bargain.
For now, he’s just a fan watching the Seahawks and Patriots, frustrated by every 15-yard penalty that extends a drive. But come September, expect Flacco back under center, waiting for the hit.

