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Cameron Saffle Announces Medical Retirement

January 30, 2018
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BERKELEY – Cameron Saffle announced his medical retirement from football Tuesday but will continue as a UC Berkeley student and remain involved with the Cal football program.

"Cameron Saffle is one of the finest individuals I have had the pleasure of coaching,” Cal head coach Justin Wilcox said. “It is unfortunate that he will not be able to continue playing football, but he has an incredibly bright future and will continue to be an important part of our program as he works towards his Cal degree. We will support him in achieving that goal and are looking forward to his ongoing contributions in a new role."

“Team sports have always been a part of my life since I was a child,” Saffle said. “Thankfully, I have had outstanding supportive teammates and coaches throughout my life and those relationships have truly helped define me as a person. I love Cal and the academic/athletic family, along with the amazing fans and alumni. I love this storied institution encouraging me to be my best. I am proud to be a Golden Bear and my passion for this school will continue to flourish.”

Saffle played in 21 games with 13 starts over three seasons for the Golden Bears from 2015-17. He finished with career totals of 73 tackles, 10.5 tackles for loss (-42 yards), 5.5 sacks (-26 yards) and four pass breakups.

Saffle registered all of his single-season career highs as a 2016 sophomore when he started all 12 games and recorded 57 tackles, 8.5 tackles for loss (-36 yards), 4.0 sacks (-22 yards) and all four of his career pass breakups.

He was on the 2017 preseason watch list for the Lott IMPACT Trophy that honors college football’s best in character and performance but due to injury played in only the season-opener at North Carolina.

Saffle earned Cal’s Frank Schlessinger Award for outstanding athletic and academic success during his sophomore campaign while he picked up the team’s Clint Evans Award for the Most Intense Freshman Competitor in 2015 when he was one of only three true freshman to play on the defensive side of the ball.

Here are Saffle's thoughts on his medical retirement:

My Journey Will Continue

Cameron Saffle announced his medical retirement from football on Tuesday.

Never underestimate the abilities you have and the opportunities that are in front of you. Fortunately, through some remarkable personal life experiences, I learned this quite young in life.

Growing up, all I wanted to do was have fun and be happy when it came to playing sports. To this day I still live by these simple principles.

I started to develop a sense of passion and motivation about football not only from playing it but watching it as a kid. I admit I am a Seattle Seahawks fan, and watching my hometown team play and compete hard only fueled my imagination of what was possible for me. What I didn’t know was that such yearning imaginations could drive me to turn it into something real. 

My journey started at the end of my high school football career. I was never one of the highly recruited student-athletes you’d read about in the media. The people that knew my athletic and academic abilities were my parents, coaches, friends and teammates. I didn’t have a plethora of offers from schools around the country, but I was convinced there was a school for me, and I was determined to find it. I mean that, literally.

As most traditional football recruiting goes for those who don’t know, a school will contact you if it thinks you can benefit the institution, athletic program and, of course, its football team. Each school has its own set of criteria, and it can vary based on what type of positions they need that year.

I found myself in a hard place during my senior year of high school with my season cut short due to a meniscus tear and a second ACL tear. I was appreciative of the few offers I had, but I was worried that my opportunity had passed to receive an offer from a Pac-12 school. I decided if those schools weren’t going to find me, then I would actively recruit myself to them. For example, I had a list on my phone of the names of every defensive coach in the Pac-12 and their office numbers that I got off each university’s website. I would sit down during lunch and call a new school every day and repeat this every week in hopes of getting my name out there.

When I reached the coaches at Cal, I introduced myself and gave them my personal journey “elevator pitch” – about 60 seconds. They told me if I sent them my film, they would watch it. Soon after, I had a scholarship offer and committed to the University of California, Berkeley.

That’s what it took for me to start my journey of becoming something I had always dreamed of – a Pac-12 college football player.

The best part is that it only got better from there, even when more adversity was in my future.

I not only fulfilled my dream but exceeded it. I created an opportunity for myself that I will remember forever and one that nobody can take away from me. I worked hard on my recovery, and was one of only three true freshmen to play on the defensive side of the ball during the 2015 season followed by a very successful sophomore campaign in 2016.

But with any sport, there is risk for injury and my knee injuries have taken a toll on me over time. It is with sadness yet immense gratitude to all those that have supported me over my career that it is time to step off the field to protect myself from any potential further debilitating injuries. This decision was initially difficult to make, but with the support of my parents, brothers, coaches, fellow student-athletes and the athletic department at Cal, the decision was quite simply the logical one to make. 

I love Cal and the academic/athletic family, along with the amazing fans and alumni! I love this storied institution encouraging me to be my best! I am proud to be a Golden Bear and my passion for this school will continue to flourish. I am working with the coaches to help define a role where I can still be an active and positive contributor to our athletic teams, and a representative for Cal. I am confident that even though my contributions on the field will no longer exist, my contributions off of it will be just as impactful. 

Team sports have been a part of my life since I was a child. Thankfully, I have had outstanding supportive coaches and teammates throughout my life and those relationships have truly helped define me as a person, a collaborator and a leader. I have made lifelong friendships and wonderful memories. 

Any sports accolades I have received pale in comparison to the life lessons and lifelong friendships I have from being a student-athlete. I value the friends I have made, and any personal physical adversities have only made me stronger and more thankful.

Find love in the process of overcoming a challenge, and in return you will gain life experiences and perspectives that will stay with you – and help you for a lifetime.

Roll on you Bears! 

Discussion from...

Cameron Saffle Announces Medical Retirement

59,293 Views | 24 Replies | Last: 6 yr ago by Bear19
going4roses
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Wish him the best.

Tell someone you love them and try to have a good day
bonsallbear
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Wishing you the best in life. A Bear forever.
NYCGOBEARS
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His statement was incredibly thoughtful. Whatever is next, I have faith that he'll be very successful
bross
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Cam is a great representative of Cal on and off the field. I'm glad to hear he will still be around the program.
Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/benrosssports
socaliganbear
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Sebastabear
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Sad to hear the news but not shocked. A great golden bear. Best wishes to him for the future.
TheSouseFamily
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That's a shame. But very classy, intelligent message. He's gonna kill it no matter what he chooses to do after school. He's exactly the kind of person I think we all want representing the university. And this is exactly why education matters when choosing a school.
Econ141
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Now we lose players for the season before it even begins.

Feel really bad for the guy - showed a lot of potential. Best wishes to him.
OdontoBear66
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Wish CS the very best, but seeing this as a tweet first my first reaction was "Oh S**t, it's Cal, here we go again."
grumpybear
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Go Cameron-sempre avanti(always forward)
71Bear
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fat_slice said:

Now we lose players for the season before it even begins.

Feel really bad for the guy - showed a lot of potential. Best wishes to him.
Why do Bear fans think that Cal is the only school to have players with medical issues? Every school has guys who experience physical problems. It is all part of the deal when you are dealing with 85 guys on a football scholarship.

The "woe is us" stuff is getting rather tiresome....
XXXBEAR
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A blow. But most important is that Cameron move on with our support. Go Cameron!
MinotStateBeav
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dang this sucks for football..but I'll always support kids to get out when health is risked. Best of luck to him..if he had stayed healthy I thought he had a real future in the sport.
NVBear78
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Best wishes to Cameron, a true Bear
BearNIt
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Good Luck, thanks for hard work and the memories.
clipman
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Really bummed that he won't be playing for the Bears next season but love his high character and passion! Good luck Cameron!
FloriDreaming
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An outstanding representative of Cal. Thank you, Cameron, and good luck in the next phase of your journey. Go Bears!!
OdontoBear66
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71Bear said:

fat_slice said:

Now we lose players for the season before it even begins.

Feel really bad for the guy - showed a lot of potential. Best wishes to him.
Why do Bear fans think that Cal is the only school to have players with medical issues? Every school has guys who experience physical problems. It is all part of the deal when you are dealing with 85 guys on a football scholarship.

The "woe is us" stuff is getting rather tiresome....

Been around since 1959 and even before that as a fan. DEPTH has always been the difference between Cal and the rest. Tis not Saffle's problem, but for Cal, a replay. Sucks.
71Bear
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OdontoBear66 said:

71Bear said:

fat_slice said:

Now we lose players for the season before it even begins.

Feel really bad for the guy - showed a lot of potential. Best wishes to him.
Why do Bear fans think that Cal is the only school to have players with medical issues? Every school has guys who experience physical problems. It is all part of the deal when you are dealing with 85 guys on a football scholarship.

The "woe is us" stuff is getting rather tiresome....

Been around since 1959 and even before that as a fan. DEPTH has always been the difference between Cal and the rest. Tis not Saffle's problem, but for Cal, a replay. Sucks.
Agree re: depth. People ask me, "How come Cal has so many players in the NFL but never wins anything"? The answer has always been the same - tissue paper depth. If the #1 goes down, they have nothing to back him up.

However, I would disagree with anyone who suggests the injury bites Cal more frequently than other teams. It is the nature of the beast - football is a brutal game.......
MoragaBear
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Staff
There are seasons where that's not true, like 2013 and 2017, but in general, most teams experience similar levels of injury. Just not every team at the same time.

When Cal had less injuries in 2014-2016, there were quite a few teams with more injuries so it evens out. That doesn't make it any easier to cope with or less debilitating than when you lose basically double digit starters for much or all of a season like those two years, though.
Big C
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MoragaBear said:

There are seasons where that's not true, like 2013 and 2017, but in general, most teams experience similar levels of injury. Just not every team at the same time.

When Cal had less injuries in 2014-2016, there were quite a few teams with more injuries so it evens out. That doesn't make it any easier to cope with or less debilitating than when you lose basically double digit starters for much or all of a season like those two years, though.
Seems like we also had a lot of injuries in 2014 and 2016 (just the DBs alone, for gosh sakes), but less so in 2015.

Anyway, Cameron, sorry to hear you won't be playing anymore, but your future still looks very bright!
Go Bears!
calumnus
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71Bear said:

OdontoBear66 said:

71Bear said:

fat_slice said:

Now we lose players for the season before it even begins.

Feel really bad for the guy - showed a lot of potential. Best wishes to him.
Why do Bear fans think that Cal is the only school to have players with medical issues? Every school has guys who experience physical problems. It is all part of the deal when you are dealing with 85 guys on a football scholarship.

The "woe is us" stuff is getting rather tiresome....

Been around since 1959 and even before that as a fan. DEPTH has always been the difference between Cal and the rest. Tis not Saffle's problem, but for Cal, a replay. Sucks.
Agree re: depth. People ask me, "How come Cal has so many players in the NFL but never wins anything"? The answer has always been the same - tissue paper depth. If the #1 goes down, they have nothing to back him up.

However, I would disagree with anyone who suggests the injury bites Cal more frequently than other teams. It is the nature of the beast - football is a brutal game.......

The one thing I will say is it seems like Cal, more than most, takes a lot of guys who had major injuries their senior year in high school. I think that would come from 1) we generally hire coaches with integrity so we honor our scholarship offers even if a player gets injured 2) we offer players who sustain injuries in high school because we are more willing to take a risk to potentially get a great player than some of our competitors who don't have to take that risk and 3) players who suffer major injuries in high school are more likely to value the academics offered by Cal since they see how easily their football careers can end and so they are more likely to pick Cal.
Looperbear
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Thanks CS, a great Bear.
Bear19
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Uthaithani said:

An outstanding representative of Cal. Thank you, Cameron, and good luck in the next phase of your journey. Go Bears!!
+1. Cameron, nothing is more important than your health. Good decision not to risk further injury. Thanks much for your playing at Cal. Will always be a Bear!
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