Charles Woodson
Definition
Charles Woodson is an American former professional football player, primarily known as a cornerback and later safety, who played 18 seasons in the NFL with the Oakland Raiders and Green Bay Packers, amassing 65 interceptions and winning Super Bowl XLV.
He is the only primarily defensive player to win the Heisman Trophy, awarded in 1997 during his time at the University of Michigan, where he also contributed to a national championship.
Post-retirement, Woodson became a college football analyst for Fox Sports, a limited partner in the Cleveland Browns ownership group in 2025, and founded Intercept Wines, a winery producing award-winning blends.
Examples
Charles Woodson turned interceptions into an art form, making quarterbacks wish they had stuck to dodgeball.
After retiring from the NFL, Charles Woodson swapped shoulder pads for wine barrels, proving he can age gracefully in any vintage.
Watching Charles Woodson cover receivers was like seeing a human lockdown mode activate before video games made it cool.
Charles Woodson joined the Browns as a limited partner, ready to intercept bad decisions from the sidelines.