DALLAS COWBOYS DANNY WHITE AUTOGRAPHED SIGNED JERSEY AUTHENTIC GTSM HOLOGRAM COA


DALLAS COWBOYS DANNY WHITE AUTOGRAPHED SIGNED JERSEY AUTHENTIC GTSM HOLOGRAM COA

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DALLAS COWBOYS DANNY WHITE AUTOGRAPHED SIGNED JERSEY AUTHENTIC GTSM HOLOGRAM COA:
$107.25


SELLING MY PERSONAL COLLECTION!

My items were either hand-selected from purchased lots, gifts from vendors,

or autographed & custom inscribed at our own company signing!

Danny White hand-signed

Size XL Custom Dallas Cowboys Jersey

withOfficialGTSM COA &

Authentic Danny Whitehologram!

Danny\'s auto is in silver permanent paint pen.

Thissignaturehas been in smoke free& petfreestorage and never displayed, other than for the imaging for this listing.

Compare myphotos or contact me with any questions.

NOTE: I recently sold my sports memorablia ownership interest in Legends of the Field and am selling much of my personal collection. I have attended a majority of my former companies\' signings over the last few yearsincluding Greg Jennings, AJ Hawk, Brian Urlacher, LeRoy Butler, Robert Brooks, Thomas Jones, Andrew Bogut, Jennie Finch, Mason Crosby, Donald Driver, Gilbert Brown, Tommie Harris, Bernard Berrian, Ben Sheets, Corey Hart, Prince Fielder, Devin Hester to name a few. In addition, I\'ve acquired some of my collection directly from our vendor partners Steiner Sports, Mounted Memories, Official Brett Favre, TriStar Productions, Upper Deck Authenticated UDA, Schwartz Sports, Radtke Sports and many more. Lastly, we have a partnership with world renowned artist,Andrew Andy Goralski, which meansI have acquired his recently created artwork over the last two years, and many of his pieces from thepast.My point is you can offer with confidence as I\'ve acquired these items direct from their signing agent, athlete, or partners in the business.Also, Iwill be listing many more items on over the next few weeks/months. Please add me as a favorite seller, visit my store, and receive updates as to any new items being listed.

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Whatever you are looking for - Football, Baseball, Basketball, Hockey, Soccer, Olympics, etc....

framed photo, artwork, lithographs, paintings, jersey, bat, ball, helmet,

one-of-a-kind vintage, rare collectibles or memorabilia,

please click on the store link below

other items!

Danny White

No. 11

Personal information

Date of birth: February 9, 1952 (age 62)

Place of birth: Mesa, Arizona

Height: 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) Weight:193 lb (88 kg)

Career information

High school: Mesa (AZ) Westwood

College: Arizona State

NFL Draft: 1974 / Round: 3 / Pick: 53

Debuted in 1974 for the Memphis Southmen

Last played in 1989 for the Dallas Cowboys

Career history

As player:

Memphis Southmen (WFL) (1974–1975)

Dallas Cowboys (1976–1988)

As coach:

Arizona Rattlers (1992–2004)

Utah Blaze (2006–2008)

Career highlights and awards

WAC Offensive Player of the Year (1973)

All-WFL selection (1975)

Pro Bowl selection (1982)

AP Second-Team All-Pro (1982)

3× UPI Second-Team All-NFC (1979, 1981, 1982)

Super Bowl champion (XII)

2× ArenaBowl champion (VIII, XI)

Arizona State Sun Devils #11 retired

College Football Hall of Fame inductee (1998)

Dunham and Miller Hall of Fame Inductee (2000)

Career NFL statistics

TD-INT 155-132

Yards 21,959

QB Rating 81.7

Stats at NFL.com

College Football Hall of Fame

Wilford Daniel \"Danny\" White (born February 9, 1952) is aformer quarterback and punter for the Dallas Cowboys and an American footballcoach in the Arena Football League. He has been the color commentator forCowboys games on Compass Media Networks\' America\'s Team Radio Network since the2011 season.[1]

Early years[edit]

A graduate of Westwood High School in Mesa, Arizona, he didn\'t receivea lot of notice while being the starter at quarterback, because back then hewas a better baseball prospect.

Frank Kush, then the football head coach at Arizona State University,helped convince Bobby Winkles, the school\'s baseball coach, to sign White to ascholarship with the provision that he would also play punter for the footballteam. During those early years Kush gave him a chance to improve his skills asa quarterback, which eventually would lead him to become the starter midwaythrough his sophomore season, ending up throwing for 6 touchdowns in a gameagainst the University of New Mexico.

White went on to have a stellar career as a quarterback and punter,compiling a 33-4 record, winning 3 Fiesta Bowls, setting 7 NCAA passing recordsand being named All-America in 1973, when he led the nation\'s second ratedtotal offense. He finished with 6,717 passing yards, 64 touchdowns, 42interceptions and averaged 41.7 yards per punt.[2]

Besides having his jersey retired, he was inducted into the CollegeFootball Hall of Fame, the State of Arizona Sports Hall of Fame and the ArizonaState University Hall of Fame. In 2000 he was named Arizona Athlete of theCentury by the Arizona Republic.

Memphis Southmen (WFL)[edit]

The Dallas Cowboys drafted him in the third round of the 1974 NFLDraft, but were mainly interested in him as a punter, so he chose to sign withthe World Football League\'s Memphis Southmen for a better offer.

White shared the quarterback position with John Huarte, helping histeam reach the semifinals as a rookie and a second place finish in 1975. Duringthese two years, he passed for 2,635 yards and 21 touchdowns in 30 games, andalso led the league in punting his last year.[3]

Dallas Cowboys[edit]

In 1976 he signed with the Dallas Cowboys after the World FootballLeague folded. Through 1979, White was the Cowboys\' punter and the backup tothe team\'s star quarterback Roger Staubach. After Staubach\'s retirementfollowing the end of that season, White became the Cowboys\' startingquarterback, and for a few years did double-duty as the punter until sometimein 1984.

White\'s most famous game as a pro was undoubtedly a 1980 playoff gameagainst the Atlanta Falcons, in which he led the Cowboys to a come-from-behind30-27 win in a Staubach-like fashion. He also played in one of the Cowboys\'most painful playoff losses against the San Francisco 49ers in the 1981 NFCChampionship Game, famous for the Joe Montana-to-Dwight Clark game-winningplay, which would simply come to be known as \"The Catch\". Whitealmost brought the Cowboys back to win the game, but his pass to Drew Pearsoncame a finger tackle away from winning the game in the final seconds. He receivedPro Bowl and second team All-Pro honors in 1982.

White led the Cowboys to three consecutive NFC Championship Games(1980-1982), but was criticized after the Cowboys lost each of the three gamesdespite having been favored in all of them. White also received criticism forpublicly siding with the owners during the 1982 NFL Players Strike. Fans andteammates alike began to show support for White to be replaced as the Cowboysquarterback by Gary Hogeboom, who was coming off an impressive performance inthe 1982 NFC Championship Game (which they lost to the archrival WashingtonRedskins). Even White\'s statistically career-best 1983 season wasn\'t evenenough to quiet the critics, after ending it with consecutive blowout losses tothe Redskins (at home) and the 49ers after a 12-2 start. To add insult toinjury, the Cowboys lost the NFC Wildcard Playoff game to the Los Angeles Rams.That apparently was enough for White to lose his starting job to Hogeboom atthe start of the 1984 season. Under Hogeboom, the Cowboys looked impressivewith a 4-1 start, but then a loss to division rival St. Louis and ineffectiveplays by Hogeboom convinced coach Tom Landry to reinstate White as his starter.The Cowboys finished 9-7, but missed the playoffs in 1984 for the first time ina decade; but with White as quarterback, the Cowboys made it back in 1985 witha 10-6 record. However, they lost again to the Los Angeles Rams in theplayoffs.

In 1986 the Cowboys started 6-2, had the #1 offense in the NFL, weretied for the lead in the NFC Eastern Division and White was also the number onerated passer in the NFC at that point in the season. During an away gameagainst Bill Parcells’s New York Giants, however, a blind-side sack by Giantslinebacker Carl Banks broke White\'s throwing wrist, knocking him out of thegame and ending his season. Dallas lost the game, 17-14, and without White theteam faded badly, finishing the year 7-9 and the Cowboys first losing seasonsince 1965.

White returned as the starter at the beginning of 1987, but after inconsistentplay, he was benched in favor of Steve Pelluer for 4 of the final 6 games. In1988 Pelluer won the starting job in training camp, relegating White as abackup. White appeared briefly in only two games, and in his second game hesuffered a season-ending knee injury. An option on his contract was not pickedup in April 1989 and he retired, paving the way for Troy Aikman to take thereins of the struggling franchise.

White had 1,761 completions on 2,950 attempts for 21,959 yards, 155touchdowns, and 132 interceptions in his career. He also gained 482 yards andscored 8 touchdowns rushing. Unusual for a quarterback, he had two passreceptions for touchdowns, both from a halfback option pass. On special teamshe punted 610 times for 24,509 yards, an average of 40.4 yards per punt, with144 punts inside the 20 and 77 touchbacks. His record as the Cowboys\' startingquarterback was 62-32 (.659 winning percentage) during the regular season, and5-5 in the playoffs.

Being Roger Staubach\'s successor and never reaching a Super Bowl,contributed to White\'s being an unappreciated player, even considering all ofthe successes he achieved for the Cowboys and the NFL during the decade of theeighties.[4] \"I don\'t think anybody could have followed Roger and done as wellas Danny,\" Coach Tom Landry remarked. \"Danny was a solidwinner\".[5]

Career statistics[edit]

Regular season[edit]

Year Tem Passing Rushing Punting

Comp Att Yds TD Int Att Yds Avg TD ATT Yds Lng Avg Blk

1976 DAL 13 20 213 2 2 6 17 2.8 0 70 2,690 54 38.4 2

1977 DAL 4 10 35 0 1 1 -2.0 -2.0 0 80 3,171 57 39.6 1

1978 DAL 20 34 215 0 1 5 7 1.4 0 76 3,076 56 40.5 1

1979 DAL 19 39 267 1 2 1 25 25.0 0 76 3,168 73 41.7 0

1980 DAL 260 436 3287 28 25 27 114 4.2 1 71 2,903 58 40.9 0

1981 DAL 223 391 3098 22 13 38 104 2.7 0 79 3,222 60 40.8 0

1982 DAL 156 247 2079 16 12 17 91 5.4 0 37 1,542 56 41.7 0

1983 DAL 334 533 3980 29 23 18 31 1.7 4 38 1,543 50 40.6 1

1984 DAL 126 233 1580 11 11 6 21 3.5 0 82 3,151 54 38.4 0

1985 DAL 267 450 3157 21 17 22 44 2.0 1 1 43 43 43.0 0

1986 DAL 95 153 1157 12 5 8 16 2.0 1

1987 DAL 215 362 2617 12 17 10 14 1.4 1

1988 DAL 29 42 274 1 3 -- -- -- --

Total 1761 2950 21259 155 132 156 482 3.0 8 610 24,509 73 40.2 5

Coaching career[edit]

His career as a coach began shortly after his playing days ended. Thisis appropriate considering that, while an active player, he was widelyregarded—like Staubach before him—as knowledgeable of the game and as somethingof a coach on the field.

White served as the head coach of the Arizona Rattlers from 1992 to2004, winning the ArenaBowl championship in 1994 and 1997. White\'s contract wasnot renewed by the new Rattlers ownership after the 2004 season following threeconsecutive ArenaBowl losses. He was named the head coach of the Arena FootballLeague expansion Utah Blaze, which began play in 2006. He led his teams to theplayoffs in 10 of 11 seasons, including two championships (1994 and 1997),finishing with a 162-95 record as a Head Coach.

White was named to the Arena Football League Hall of Fame inrecognition for his coaching success.

Recent Honors[edit]

On October 29, 2010, White was honored, along with all Sun DevilQuarterbacks, at a Legends Luncheon hosted by the Arizona State UniversityAlumni Association and Sun Devil Club. Other honorees included John F. Goodman,Andrew Walter, Jake Plummer, and Jeff van Raaphorst.[6] Inaugural member ofDunham and Miller Hall of Fame.

Musical career[edit]

In 1983 White briefly recorded as a country music artist for the GrandPrix label. His only single, \"You\'re a Part of Me,\" a duet with LindaNail, reached #85 on the Hot Country Songs charts.[7]

Personal life[edit]

White\'s father, Wilford \"Whizzer\" White (no relation tocollege football legend and U.S. Supreme Court justice Byron\"Whizzer\" White), was the first Arizona State University All-Americanfootball player and still ranks second in school\'s history with 1502 rushingyards in a season,[8] he also played halfback for the Chicago Bears from 1951-52.[9]

White and his wife, JoLynn, have four children and twelvegrandchildren. He now makes corporate appearances and motivationalspeeches.[10]

White also is related to NFL tight end, Todd Heap, on Heap\'s mother\'sside.



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DALLAS COWBOYS DANNY WHITE AUTOGRAPHED SIGNED JERSEY AUTHENTIC GTSM HOLOGRAM COA:
$107.25

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