Account'savatar during Luck's playing career | |
| Formation | December 2015; 9 years ago (December 2015) |
|---|---|
Publication | |
| Website | Capt. Andrew Luck onTwitter |
Capt. Andrew Luck, with the handle@CaptAndrewLuck, is aTwitter account parodying formerAmerican football playerAndrew Luck. Created in 2015, the account documented Luck's career as aNational Football League quarterback in the style of letters written by anAmerican Civil War soldier. It continued to operate sporadically following his retirement before being revived when he became the general manager of theStanford Cardinal football team.
As of August 2025[update], the account has garnered over 446.7 thousand followers on Twitter.[1]
While Luck played in the NFL, Capt. Andrew Luck tweeted aboutIndianapolis Colts games and news as if they were wartime letters for his mother at home.[2] The character is depicted as having grown up on his family farm while his teammates are troops in the same unit. Opposing teams have monikers that paint them as enemy forces, such as "Tiger men" for theCincinnati Bengals and "Horned Barbarians" referring to theMinnesota Vikings.[3][4] Individual figures are portrayed as military personnel like Colts head coachFrank Reich being a general andJosh McDaniels adeserter, the latter in reference to his initial hiring as Indianapolis' coach in 2018 before changing his mind.[4][5]
After Luck retired from the NFL in 2019, the account tweeted he "made the decision to holster my sidearm permanently" and wrote a farewell message formatted as a letter to his unit.[6][4] Its activity declined in the years since, making only four posts through 2023, before resuming again in November 2024 when Luck was hired as the general manager for hisalma mater Stanford.[7][8] Ahead of Stanford's2025 season, the program's social media released a trailer of Luck writing a letter in the character's style.[9]
The only accounts that Capt. Andrew Luck follows are the Colts, the Stanford football team, and filmmakerKen Burns.[1] Burns is best known for creating the documentary seriesThe Civil War, which the account creator credited with inspiring the account.[10]

During his playing career, Luck typically wore a grizzledneckbeard with largesideburns. Thequarterback's facial hair was compared by fans and outlets to that of amountain man or 19th-century soldier.[11][12]SB Nation writer Rodger Sherman found Luck's image particularly resembled that ofUnion army generalRufus King, and photoshopped his face onto King's body for a 2014 post to the site.[13]
SB Nation sports editor Ryan Van Bibber, who majored in history, created "Gen. Andrew Luck" to accompany Sherman's picture.[14] The character wrote wartime-styled letters to his wife "Abigail" throughout the2014–15 NFL playoffs. After the Colts defeated the Bengals in the Wild Card Round, the corresponding article described the victory as Luck having "defended the garrison atLucas Oil from a battalion of Cincinnati-born marauders".[15] The Colts' Divisional win over theDenver Broncos was written as if it was a successful military campaign in theColorado Territory, while losing to theNew England Patriots in theAFC Championship Game was an invasion of the New England region that was thwarted by "wily veteran"Tom Brady.[16][17] The gimmick briefly resumed at the start of the2015 season to write about injuries plaguing the team, comparing them to disease and battle casualties, Van Bibber subsequently stopped because "the joke eventually wears out."[18][14]
Capt. Andrew Luck was launched in December 2015 after its creator, "being a fan of [Luck] and of history", was inspired by Sherman and Van Bibber's posts.[14] After texting some "letters" to their friends, they were encouraged to start the account.[10] Van Bibber joked he "should have copyrighted" the joke but was flattered to see it continue.[14]
The owner of the account is a self-described "West Coast journalist" and Colts fan who does not disclose their identity since the anonymity makes the persona more fun for followers.[19] They only played football in their youth "for recreation".[10]
In 2023,West Virginia University linguistics professor Dr. Kirk Hazen speculated the owner is a white male, the most common demographic for those with an "adoring reverence" forThe Civil War and the era it covers, who studied a technical field like engineering because of how "crafted" the messages are.[20]Peter S. Carmichael, the director of theCivil War Institute at Gettysburg College and a Colts fan, also doubted they were a professional historian since such an account requires creativity that the field does not ordinarily have.[10]
It has been joked that the account could be run by Luck himself because of his background atStanford University and enjoyment of academia.[20] The Colts embraced the gag in September 2018 by conducting an interview purportedly with the person behind the account before revealing it to be Luck.[3] Luck does not use social media.[19]
The account has received praise for its unique premise and amusing content. Colts punterPat McAfee called some tweets "pretty funny" and "has some comedian in him".[19] Prior to the Colts' preseason game against theChicago Bears in 2019, ironically when reports of Luck's retirement broke, Bears cornerbackPrince Amukamara challenged the account to prepare for battle.[21]
Michael Adams, an English professor atIndiana University who researcheslexicography, noted the account's writing style did not properly reflect letters penned during the Civil War. For example, Adams pointed to the use of terminology that were not common vernacular in 1860s American English such as "tundra" and "sniper". The grammar and spelling differed from the word variations seen during that time period as well, though Hazen clarified they made the tweets easier for a modern audience to understand. Hazen also conceded the tweets still resembled wartime letters enough that he could "almost hearShelby Foote's voice in some of these lines".[20]
Luck has praised the account and its owner for their ingenuity, remarking in 2024 that he wished he "had the humor and wit to pull off a social media account (like that)."[22] On September 21, 2023, following theSan Francisco 49ers–New York Giants game, Luck appeared onThursday Night Football's post-game show dressed in a replica Civil War uniform and quipped "the war is over"; Capt. Andrew Luck tweeted again afterward hoping his mother appreciated his "magical, moving picture box" cameo.[23]
Similar accounts have also been created for other players such as "MajorRyan Fitzpatrick", who has a similar beard to Luck, and "LieutenantJacoby Brissett", who took over as Colts quarterback following Luck's retirement.[24][25]