Bo jackson net worth

Bo Jackson

They were ubiquitous. They were funny. And for a while during the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Nike commercials that showed Bo Jackson playing everything from baseball to cricket to hockey — wearing the uniform of the storied Montreal Canadiens no less — brought the phrase “Bo Knows” into popular culture.

These commercials played on Jackson’s astounding athletic abilities. His abundant speed, power, agility, and quickness allowed him to play in the NFL and baseball’s major leagues. Although he wasn’t the first athlete to play two sports professionally — Jim Thorpe holds that distinction — he was the first to become an All-Star in the two leagues in which he played and the first to rise to prominence in the media-driven sports world of the late twentieth century.1

Bo Jackson was born on November 30, 1962, in Bessemer, Alabama, the eighth of Florence Jackson Bond’s 10 children born. A fan of the television show Ben Casey, Florence, who worked as a housekeeper, named her son Vincent Edward Jackson, after the show’s star, Vince Edwards.2 Young Vincent could neve

Bo Jackson

American football and baseball player (born 1962)

Not to be confused with Boo Jackson.

Bo Jackson

Jackson in 2011

Born (1962-11-30) November 30, 1962 (age 62)

Bessemer, Alabama, U.S.

American football player


American football career
Position:Running back
Height:6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight:230 lb (104 kg)
High school:McAdory
(McCalla, Alabama)
College:Auburn (1982–1985)
NFL draft:1986 / round: 1 / pick: 1[a]

College Football Hall of Fame

Baseball player


Baseball career
Outfielder / Designated hitter

Batted: Right

Threw: Right

September 2, 1986, for the Kansas City Royals
August 10, 1994, for the California Angels
Batting average.250
Home runs141
Runs batted in415
Stats at Baseball Reference 

Vincent Edward "Bo" Jackson (born November 30, 1962) is an American former professional baseball and football player. He is the only professional

 By Ron Flatter
Special to ESPN.com

There have been others - from Jim Thorpe to Deion Sanders. But even now, almost a decade after he played his last football game and six years since his last baseball game, Bo Jackson is still considered by many to be "the man" among multi-sport athletes. Memories of Jackson linger, and not just because an ad campaign made "Bo Knows" a mantra. There was that Monday Night Football touchdown run through Seattle's Brian Bosworth in 1988. There was the 1989 All-Star Game home run, which he hit while Ronald Reagan was in the TV booth describing it.
Jackson had 415 career RBIs.
He never played for a world champion, but the 6-foot-1, 225-pound Jackson was the first athlete named to play in the all-star game of two major sports. Not bad for a guy who won a Heisman Trophy and became a 1998 College Football Hall of Fame inductee in a sport he described as his "hobby." "When people tell me I could be the best athlete there is, I just let it go in one ear and out the other," Jackson said when his star was near its apex in 1990. "There is

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