Marshawn Lynch came out of retirement to run the ball for his hometown Oakland Raiders. But, after two seasons with the Silver and Black, Lynch has decided to hang up the cleats for a second time, ESPN's Adam Schefter first reported.

Now, on the eve of the NFL Draft, the Raiders have one more need to add to their list of areas to address.

Without Lynch, the Raiders' backfield now consists of Isaiah Crowell, Jalen Richard, DeAndre Washington and Chris Warren.

Lynch's stint with the Raiders had highs and lows, but the character known as “Beast Mode” never failed to entertain. Last season, he was tied for fifth in the AFC with 331 rushing yards through Week 5 when he suffered what eventually became a season-ending groin injury against the Seattle Seahawks, his former team, in London.

Lynch rushed for 1,267 yards on 297 carries in 21 games over two seasons with the Raiders, who acquired him in an April 2017 trade with the Seahawks after he retired and didn't play in 2016.

Lynch retired for the first time after spending the first nine seasons of his career Seattle. The announcement came in only a way Lynch would, tweeting out a photo of cleats dangling over a wire with the “peace out” emoji.

Lynch continued to play with his physical style last season, before getting hurt, forcing 23 missed tackles and gaining 311 of his 376 yards after contact, according to Pro Football Focus.

Lynch ranks fourth among active players with 10,379 rushing yards in 11 seasons.