The concept of an NFL player needing to take a second job in the off-season to help pay bills sounds absolutely ridiculous, right? Today, the NFL league minimum for a player with zero years of service (aka, his rookie year) is $660,000. Even after taxes, that’s plenty of money to spend the off-season relaxing, partying, and MAYBE doing a little training for next season.
In today’s day and age, can you fathom an active NFL player putting on a suit in the off-season and going to a new job? Now can you imagine a world where not just a rookie, but the starting quarterback of the world famous Dallas Cowboys, needs to work an off-season job? And not out of boredom but out in order to support his family! Sounds insane right? As crazy as it sounds, that was pretty common in the 1970s NFL.
Understanding this reality, is key to understanding the life of legendary Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach. Despite being an all-star player, Roger never made enough money to make ends meet from his NFL salary alone. Yet today, he is one of the 10 richest athletes on the planet. Roger is richer than Cristiano Ronaldo, A-Rod, Shaq, David Beckham and Floyd Mayweather. Roger is literally hundreds of millions of dollars richer than any other former or active NFL player. But only a teeny tiny percentage of his net worth came from throwing a football. As you are about to learn, the vast majority of Roger’s fortune started with a very humble side job that turned into an empire.
Early Years
Roger Staubach was born on February 5, 1942 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He attended two different high schools in nearby Silverton and then went on to attend the New Mexico Military Institute (NMI). He played the 1960 college football season for NMI, but then transferred to the US Naval Academy. Roger won the 1963 Heisman Trophy his junior year while playing for the Navy Midshipmen and was drafted by the Cowboys BEFORE he started his senior year in college (something the NFL apparently allowed back in the Wild West era of the 1960s). After college, Staubach did his mandatory four years of active duty including a one year tour of duty in Vietnam and joined the Cowboys in 1969.
NFL Career
The NFL today is much different than it was in the 1960s and 1970s. Consider this: the first Super Bowl, which took place at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, did not sell out. The most expensive tickets for the game were $12. Average NFL salaries in 1970 were just $23,000 (that’s $173,000 in today’s dollars). An average ticket price for the Super Bowl today would be thousands of dollars and NFL average salaries hover around $2 million.
As a 27 year old rookie, Roger Staubach earned a salary of $25,000.
As a Cowboy, Staubach was known for his last minute heroics, his Hail Mary passes, his deft handling of Tom Landry‘s offenses. In fact, the Hail Mary pass was invented by Staubach. In the 1975 playoff game versus the Minnesota Vikings, Staubach let a 50-yard pass fly with just seconds left on the clock and the Cowboys trailing 14-10. Wide receiver Drew Pearson caught the pass and easily ran into the end zone for a 17-14 Dallas victory. After the game, Staubach told a reporter he’d prayed the “Hail Mary” after he released the ball for that pass. Ever since then, any last minute long pass into the end zone in an attempt to seal a victory has been referred to as a “Hail Mary pass”.
At 6’3″ and 200-lbs, Roger Staubach was hard to defend because he had a phenomenal ability to scramble his way out of trouble. He had 410 career rushes for 2,264 yards and 20 touchdowns. Over his career as a passer, he had 1,683 completions on 2,958 passing attempts for 22,700 yards and 153 touchdowns in nine seasons. By today’s standards, Staubach would have Tom Brady or Peyton Manning level superstardom and the salary to go with it.
Staubach led the Cowboys to four NFC titles as the starting quarterback, two Super Bowl wins, he was the MVP of Super Bowl VI, invited to the Pro Bowl six times, 1971 NFL MVP, 1971 NFC Player of the Year, and two time all AFC, to name just a few of his awards and accolades.
Making Ends Meet
Despite being a superstar NFL quarterback, after his first season Roger realized he still needed a second job to make ends meet. Roger was also wise to understand that a career in the NFL would be short. He was a 27 year old husband and father. Roger knew he had to prepare to support his family in the long run when football money dried up.
After the 1970 season Roger began working as real estate broker in the off-season for the Henry S. Miller firm. The Henry S. Miller firm was founded in 1914 and was one of the biggest and most respected businesses in Texas. Henry Miller himself mentored the Cowboys QB in all the ins and outs of commercial real estate in Texas. While his fellow players relaxed and partied, at the end of every season, Staubach hung up his shoulder pads and helmet and put on a suit and tie and went to work selling commercial real estate
In 1977, the Dallas Cowboys were coming off a 12-2 season and a Super Bowl XII victory over the Denver Broncos. Any quarterback today would bask in the victory, the great season, and the Super Bowl bonus. They might even pack up the family and go to Disney World. Not Roger Staubach. After that season, Staubach decided it was finally time to leave the Henry S. Miller firm and start his own company – The Staubach Company.
The Staubach Company
Two years later, Roger Staubach hung up his helmet and retired from the NFL. At that time he took all the hard work and dedication he learned from football and applied it to his burgeoning real estate empire. He added partners and expanded the business nationally throughout the 1980s. In 1985, he was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Staubach’s client roster grew steadily. He became the go-to guy for office, retail, and industrial space in all of Texas. Simultaneously during this time, the Texas economy grew and then faltered – just as it did across the country, but Staubach’s company not only survived, it thrived. He seemed to have the same golden touch in business that he did as a quarterback. The Staubach Company had 1,100 employees in 50 offices by 2008.
Later that same year, Staubach entered into a multi-year deal with the Chicago-based Jones Lang LaSalle to take over his company. At the end of the payout period, Jones Lang LaSalle paid Roger Staubach $640 million to acquire his company.
Today, Roger has a personal net worth of $600 million. That’s a far cry from his 1970’s NFL salary of $25,000, even after it has been adjusted for inflation!
Roger Staubach being the guy he is, spread the wealth around, giving equity to long time employees and putting half of his payout into a trust for his children. In 2013, he got the final payout on the 2008 deal. It included an additional $36.9 million performance bonus.
So in total, Roger earned right around $675 million from the sale.
But that’s not all! Staubach is the guy who keeps on earning. Today, Staubach still goes into the office every day as executive chairman of Jones Lang LaSalle. In fact, he continues to make $10-12 million per year in compensation from the company.
The lesson here? Invest wisely in your present to insure your future. It took a rare man with little to no ego to realize he had to plan for life beyond the NFL and that paid off in a $670 million buyout of his company and a $12 million salary last year. Roger Staubach may be a legendary Dallas Cowboy and beloved Texas sports figure, but where he really excelled was in business.
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