Former Lions defensive end Tracy Scroggins is dead at 56, family blames the NFL and CTE
Tracy Scroggins, who spent his entire ten-year NFL career rushing quarterbacks for the Detroit Lions, has died at the age of 56. His family announced his passing in a statement provided to TMZ on Monday, Feb. 9, attributing his death to the long-term effects of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
Fifty-six years old. A man who clawed his way out of poverty in Checotah, Oklahoma, played a decade of professional football, and then spent his retirement fighting a disease that can only be confirmed after you're already gone.
His family's statement carried the weight you'd expect and a pointed accusation:
"Playing in the NFL gave Tracy the opportunity to pursue his lifelong dream and to rise from poverty. However, unfortunately, the NFL was also ultimately the cause of his untimely demise. Tracy spent every moment of retirement courageously battling the devastating effects of CTE."
That is a family's grief — raw, direct, and aimed squarely at the league that made Scroggins famous. Whether it holds up medically is another question entirely.
A Career Built on Relentlessness
According to People, Scroggins was drafted 53rd overall in the second round of the 1992 NFL Draft after playing at Coffeyville Community College and then the University of Tulsa, where he helped lead the Golden Hurricane to a 10-2 record and a victory in the 1991 Freedom Bowl.
He never played for another franchise. From 1992 to 2001, Scroggins anchored the Lions' pass rush, racking up 60.5 career sacks — third on the franchise's all-time list behind Robert Porcher (95.5) and Michael Cofer (62.5). He was part of the Lions teams that, alongside Hall of Fame running back Barry Sanders, made the playoffs three consecutive seasons from 1993 to 1995.
The Detroit Lions acknowledged one of their own in a statement posted to X:
"We join the NFL community in mourning the loss of Lions Legend Tracy Scroggins, who played his entire 10-year career in Detroit (1992-2001)."
Ten years in one city. That kind of loyalty barely exists in the modern NFL. Scroggins was a Lion, period.
The CTE Question
Here's what matters and what too often gets lost in these stories: CTE cannot be diagnosed in a living person. It is confirmed only through a neuropathological autopsy performed after death. The family's statement did not indicate whether Scroggins will undergo the necessary testing to confirm the diagnosis they've attributed to him.
That's not a reason to dismiss their grief or their suspicion. The pattern across former NFL players is well-documented enough that a family watching a loved one deteriorate in retirement would naturally draw the connection. But there is a difference between a family's belief and a confirmed medical finding, and honest reporting requires noting it.
The broader CTE conversation in football sits at a difficult intersection of real human suffering and institutional accountability — two things that don't always produce clean answers. The NFL has paid billions in settlements to former players. Awareness has changed the way the game is played, coached, and officiated. Whether any of it is enough remains an open question that each new death reopens.
What Gets Lost
The instinct in media coverage of stories like this is to fast-track the narrative: football did this, the NFL is guilty, another life destroyed by the sport. And sometimes that framing captures something real. But it also flattens the man into a cautionary tale.
His family pushed back against exactly that impulse, even in the same statement that blamed the league:
"While many knew him for his career as a professional football player in the NFL, those closest to him knew him as a kind-hearted and generous man who cared deeply for his family and friends."
Scroggins rose from poverty in small-town Oklahoma, bet on himself through junior college and a mid-major university, and earned a decade in the most physically punishing sport on the planet. That trajectory — grit, persistence, self-reliance — is the kind of American story worth telling on its own terms, not just as a prelude to tragedy.
The family also described him as "a devoted father, cherished family member, and loyal friend whose life was marked by remarkable strength and perseverance." Those aren't the words of people who see their loved one as a victim. They're the words of people who watched a strong man fight something he couldn't beat.
The Tension That Won't Resolve
Millions of Americans love football. It's woven into community, tradition, Friday nights, and fall Saturdays in a way that defies easy political categorization. That love doesn't require ignoring what the sport costs some of the men who play it.
But it also doesn't require accepting every activist framing of the NFL as a uniquely predatory institution. Players make choices. They're compensated — often extraordinarily well — for the risks they assume. That's not callousness. It's the same respect for individual agency that governs how we think about miners, soldiers, and roughnecks. Dangerous work done by men who understood the stakes.
Tracy Scroggins understood. He played the game, earned his living, and by every account gave everything he had to the Lions and to his family.
He was fifty-six. That's not enough time.




