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Ex-NFL lineman Russell Okung shows off dramatic weight loss since retirement: 'Reborn'

KANSAS CITY, MO - DECEMBER 13: Los Angeles Chargers offensive tackle Russell Okung (76) on the line during the NFL AFC West game against the Kansas City Chiefs on December 13, 2018 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by William Purnell/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Russell Okung was a formidable figure on the offensive line in his NFL career. (Photo by William Purnell/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

Few, if any professional athletes put their bodies through the wringer like NFL players.

Russell Okung provided the latest example Sunday. The two-time Pro Bowl left tackle retired from the NFL after the 2020 season. In his prime, he protected Russell Wilson and blocked for Marshawn Lynch en route to a Super Bowl win.

He posted an image of himself on social media Sunday afternoon after two-plus years away from football.

That is not the body of a man who belongs anywhere near an NFL offensive line.

Okung's listed playing weight was 310 pounds. He didn't include a weigh-in with the image, but it's safe to venture that he's carrying far fewer than 310 pounds on his 6-foot-5 frame. Here's a picture of Okung with the Los Angeles Chargers in 2018:

COSTA MESA, CA - JULY 28: Tackle Russell Okung smiles during the Los Angeles Chargers' first day of training camp at the Jack Hammett Sports Complex in Costa Mesa on Saturday, July 28, 2018. (Photo by Kevin Sullivan/Orange County Register via Getty Images)
Russell Okung at his playing weight in 2018. (Kevin Sullivan/Orange County Register via Getty Images)

Okung isn't the first lineman to show off dramatic weight loss in his post-playing days. In 2019, now-Hall of Fame left tackle Joe Thomas did the same. The 10-season NFL veteran showed off side-by-side images of himself as a member of the Cleveland Browns and in street clothes a year-plus after retiring.

He was truly unrecognizable. As is Okung in his image shared Sunday.

More than anything else, offensive linemen depend on body mass and strength to do their jobs. This requires unnatural eating habits and intense caloric intake. For Thomas, that meant consuming 6,000-7,000 calories a day.

Thomas told GQ in 2019 that his typical breakfast previously consisted of "a big bowl of oatmeal, a big thing of Greek yogurt with berries, granola, flax seed, honey, and then maybe 8-10 scrambled eggs and 4-5 pieces of bacon."

That was all before a pre-lunch snack that might be a "high-calorie smoothie" before two more massive meals and ending his day with a bedtime snack of "a sleeve of Girl Scout cookies and a bowl of ice cream, or sometimes a freezer pizza in the oven. ... and a big Casein protein shake before bed with some milk."

Okung didn't go into those kinds of details with his post. But it's safe to assume that he was on a similar calorie-dense diet that he has since abandoned because he doesn't have to block Von Miller anymore. Judging from the "Reborn" caption on his post, he's happy with the changes.