Detroit Lions defensive tackle Damon “Snacks” Harrison has given the NFL elite run-stuffing abilities for the past nine years. It may not go to the tenth year.

After the Lions' loss to the Green Bay Packers on Sunday, Harrison was asked about his thoughts on the future, particularly on if he will retire or not. He did not give a confident answer to continuing his outstanding NFL career.

At this point everything's on the table,” Harrison said, via Stacey Dales of the NFL Network. “My mind's still telling me I can do it, but my body's just not there… I gotta talk it over with my family, try to seek some options different options… if I can't be that guy I wanna be, and I know I can be, then I gotta hang it up because everybody deserves better.”

After, he was asked: Not a final decision?

“No, no,” Harrison responded. “My mind is saying yes, but my body is saying no, so I just gotta figure some stuff out.”

Harrison, 31, is one of the NFL's elite run-stuffing defensive tackles. It doesn't show in the Lions defensive tackle's box score stats (48 combined tackles, two sacks, three tackles for loss), but it does in the “Snacks” nickname. An uber-athletic, 6-3, 350-pound interior defender, he makes running against any time he's employed by a nightmare.

Harrison joined the Lions via trade in 2018. He played three seasons with the New York Giants before and four with the New York Jets before that. He earned a Pro Bowl nod in 2016 despite entering the NFL as an undrafted free agent out of William Penn in 2012. Harrison is under contract through the 2021 season.