Mid-way through the season,  and future Hall-of-Famer Andre Johnson is calling it quits. Tennessee Titans announced that wide receiver all-star wide-out will retire on Monday. NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport first reported the news.

“Going back to his days at the University of Miami, Andre was one of the most impressive wide receivers I’ve scouted,” Titans general manager Jon Robinson said in a statement. “He had a professional approach to the game both on and off the field and in my opinion is one of the best to have played the game. I enjoyed getting to know and work with him in his time with our team. He certainly contributed to this team — making the game-winning catch at Detroit and his daily interaction with the young wide receivers. We wish him nothing but the best moving forward in whatever endeavors he chooses.”

Johnson will finish a 14-year career with totals of 1,062 catches for 14,185 yards and 70 receiving touchdowns. Johnson who was the third-overall selection in 2003 out of Miami (Fla.) spent the majority of his years with the Houston Texans, where he was that dude. The two-time first-team All Pro posted seven seasons of 1,000-plus yards receiving and five or more touchdowns while in Houston, making seven Pro Bowls and becoming the first star in the Texans’ franchise’s history.

The future Hall of Fame wideout tired of losing in Houston — it happened fairly often, posting a 84-108 record from 2003-2014 — and the usually quiet star voiced his concerns near the end of his tenure as a Texan, expediting his exit. Johnson signed with the Indianapolis Colts in 2015 after laughing at a projection by the Texans that he would only catch 40 passes — his career low in a season in which he played 10 or more games was 63 — and finished with 41 receptions as a Colt.

Johnson signed a two-year deal with Tennessee in the offseason, caught two touchdown passes, earned praise from his younger cohorts (and heaped it on others), but appeared in just eight games before calling it quits after 14 seasons. Should he return to the Texans to retire at home? Your thoughts.