After 13 seasons, Robert Woods has decided to sign a one-day contract with the Los Angeles Rams, and retire from the NFL.
Across the league, Woods may be remembered as a journeyman and veteran wide receiver presence, though “Bobby Trees” spent the bulk of his NFL career between the Buffalo Bills and the Los Angeles Rams.
For the Bills, Woods may be remembered as someone who didn’t quite live up to the second-round pick they used on him. For the Rams, he should be remembered as one of Sean McVay’s first major free agent acquisitions, and one of the leaders of the McVay Era.
Woods didn’t have one 1,000-yard season in four years with Buffalo. He had two such campaigns in L.A., and earned a Super Bowl victory.
After his time in L.A., Woods went to the Houston Texans, then the Tennessee Titans, followed-up by the Pittsburgh Steelers, but he wound up on their practice squad, and didn’t get the chance to contribute during their 2025 season.
Now, for one day, Woods is back with the Rams as he says “Goodbye” to the NFL, and “Hello” to whatever comes next for the current 33-year-old.
Woods retires from the NFL with 683 career catches, 8,233 receiving yards to go along with 38 touchdowns. The semi-dual threat also racked up another 514 yards on the ground to pair with five scores.
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