John Albert Elway, Jr. (born June 28, 1960) is a
retired
American football quarterback. He played his
college football at
Stanford and his entire
professional career for the
Denver
Broncos of the
National
Football League (NFL).
Elway set career records for passing attempts,and completions at
Stanford. He also received
All-American
honors. Elway was drafted #1 overall in the
1983 NFL Draft by the
Baltimore Colts before
being traded to the Denver Broncos. By his second year in the
league, Elway set team records for passing attempts, completions
and yards. In 1987, he embarked on what is considered to be one of
the most clutch performances in NFL history, when he helped guide
the Broncos on a 98-yard, game-tying drive in the
AFC Championship Game against the
Cleveland Browns. The moment is
known in
National Football
League lore as
The Drive. Following
the AFC Championship Game, Elway and the Broncos lost in
Super Bowl XXI to the
New York Giants.
After two more Super Bowl losses, the Broncos entered a period of
decline; however, that would end during the
1997 season, as Elway and Denver
won their first Super Bowl title by defeating the
Green Bay Packers, 31–24, in
Super Bowl XXXII. The Broncos repeated as
champions the following season in
Super Bowl XXXIII by defeating the
Atlanta Falcons, 34–19. Elway was
voted MVP of that Super Bowl, which would prove to be the last game
of his career.
Elway was
inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame
in 2004 in his first year of eligibility.
Since his retirement, Elway has owned several businesses, including
currently being a co-owner of the
Colorado Crush, an
arena football team.
Elway currently writes a weekly
NFL blog and occasionally answers members' questions for
the newly launched sports website OPEN Sports.com.
John Elway signs with OPENSports.com John Elway's
profile on OPEN Sports.com His son Jack was a quarterback for
the
Arizona State Sun
Devils for one season.
Early life
Elway was
born in Port Angeles,
Washington
on June 28, 1960, the son of Janet Jordan and
Jack Elway, then a junior college football coach. As a youth he lived
primarily in Missoula,
Montana
, and Pullman, Washington
, when his father was an assistant coach at the
University of
Montana
and Washington State
, respectively.
His father
became the head coach at Cal
State-Northridge
in 1976, and the
Elways moved to Southern
California, where John attended his final two years of high
school at Granada Hills High School
in Granada Hills
, in the San Fernando Valley
. He ended his high school career with 5,711
passing yards and 49 passing touchdowns, and was named to the
PARADE All America High
School Football Team. Known as a dual-threat quarterback, meaning
he was accomplished at running and escaping pressure, and had
impressive passing ability, he was the number-one recruited high
school player in the country, receiving over 60 scholarship
offers.
College
He
enrolled at Stanford
University
where he played both football and baseball. His last football game at Stanford was one
of the most famous games of all time, the 1982 Big Game versus California
(also known as Cal), which ended with "The Play", an amazing and memorable play with five
lateral passes that allowed Cal to win
the game. After that game, Elway congratulated the trombone
player that got run over. Although Elway never led his team to a
bowl game, he had an accomplished college
career. In his four seasons (1979–1982) at Stanford, he completed
774 passes for 9,349 yards and 77 touchdowns. Stanford had a 20–23
record during his tenure. Elway's 24 touchdown passes in 1982 led
the nation, and he graduated with nearly every Stanford and
Pacific-10 career record for
passing and total offense. He won
Pac-10 Player of the Year honors in
1980 and 1982, was a consensus
All-American, and finished second in
Heisman Trophy balloting as a senior.
In 2000,
Elway was enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame
. In 2007, Elway was ranked #15 on ESPN's Top
25 Players In College Football History list. Thomas Davids, an
assistant football coach, said that Elway was the "best looking
ball player he had ever seen."
Elway also excelled as a baseball player, finishing his senior year
hitting .361 with nine home runs and 50 RBIs in 49 games and a 5–4
record with a 4.51 ERA.
Elway graduated with a degree in
economics, and he is a member of the
Delta Tau Delta Fraternity.
Draft
In the
1983 NFL Draft, Elway was
selected as the first overall pick by the
Baltimore Colts. Elway had, by then,
played two summers of
minor league
baseball for the
New York
Yankees organization. Additionally, Elway had publicly stated
that he refused to join the Colts organization, feeling the team
could not allow him to be successful. If they did not trade him he
said he was going to play baseball. Eventually, Colts owner
Robert Irsay gave in. The Colts traded
him to the
Denver Broncos for QB
Mark Herrmann, rights to OL
Chris Hinton and a first-round pick (OG
Ron Solt) in the
1984 NFL Draft on May 2, 1983. John Elway is
one of three quarterbacks in the history of the NFL Draft (started
in 1936) to be drafted #1 and go on to be inducted into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame. The other two are
Terry Bradshaw and
Troy Aikman.
1980s professional career
Elway stormed into the mile-high air as one of the most highly
anticipated athletes in the history of the NFL. The local
newspapers ran a section that was called "The Elway Watch".
Elway
would debut that season in the Broncos season opener against the
Pittsburgh Steelers at Three Rivers
Stadium
. Elway's first career sack in the NFL came at
the hands of linebacker and fellow
Hall of
Famer
Jack
Lambert.
Although the Broncos were playoff contenders for Elway's early
years, Elway would go through the normal growing pains of a young
NFL quarterback.
1986
In the 1986 season, Elway led the Broncos to
Super Bowl XXI, after defeating the
Cleveland Browns on a famous possession at
the end of the fourth quarter that became known as
"The Drive". (In a span of 5 minutes and 2
seconds, Elway led his team 98 yards to tie the game with 37
seconds left in regulation. The Broncos went on to win the game in
overtime). Elway and the Broncos started out the Super Bowl against
the
New York Giants very well,
building a 10–7 lead and then driving to the Giants 1-yard line in
the second quarter. However, the Broncos lost five yards on their
next three plays and came up empty after kicker
Rich Karlis missed the field goal attempt. From
that point on, the rest of the game went downhill for the Broncos.
Elway was sacked in the end zone for a safety on the Broncos
ensuing possession, cutting their lead to 10–9. Then in the second
half, the Giants scored 30 points and ended up winning the game
39–20. Still, Elway had an impressive performance, throwing for 304
yards and a touchdown, with one interception, while also leading
Denver in rushing with 27 yards and a touchdown on the
ground.
1987
In 1987, Elway was selected to start in the
American Football Conference's
(AFC)
Pro Bowl team and won the
NFL Most Valuable Player
Award. He went on to once again lead the Broncos to a victory
over the Browns in the AFC title game, earning their second
consecutive Super Bowl appearance, this one against the
Washington Redskins. The game started
out very well for Denver, and they built up a 10–0 lead by the end
of the first quarter. At the time, no team had ever overcome a 10–0
deficit in the Super Bowl. But in the second quarter, the Redskins
suddenly stormed back with a record 35 points, and ended up winning
Super Bowl XXII 42–10. Elway did
have a few highlights. His 56-yard touchdown pass to
Ricky Nattiel after just 1:57 had elapsed in
the game set a record for the fastest touchdown in Super Bowl
history, at the time. He also became the first quarterback ever to
catch a pass in the Super Bowl, recording a 23-yard reception from
halfback
Steve Sewell on a
halfback option play. With a porous
defense unable to stop the Redskins offense, Elway was forced to
take more risks on the offensive end. As a result, Elway's
performance was rather disappointing: just 14 out of 38 completions
for 257 yards and one touchdown, with three interceptions.
1988–1989
After recording an 8–8 record in 1988, Elway once again led his
team to the Super Bowl after the 1989 season, with yet another win
over the Browns in the AFC championship game, going on to face the
San Francisco 49ers in
Super Bowl XXIV. However this game ended
even worse for the Broncos than their previous Super Bowl losses.
San Francisco blew out Denver 55-10, the most lopsided score in
Super Bowl history. Although Elway scored the only touchdown for
his team on a three-yard run, his performance was exceptionally
abysmal: 10 out of 26 completions for 108 yards with no touchdown
passes and two interceptions. But he didn't try to hide from the
media after the game or downplay his dismal performance. And when
he was asked if he wanted to go back to the Super Bowl after three
losses, he responded that he wanted to go back every year, even if
his team kept losing Still by this point, many doubted that he
would ever win a Super Bowl in his career.
1990s professional career
Ending on top (1997–1999)
It took Elway another eight years, but he eventually led his team
back to the Super Bowl in 1998. During the 1997 preseason
American Bowl game in Mexico City, Elway
ruptured his right (throwing arm)
biceps tendon.
It was treated non-surgically, and he returned to play 19 days
later, going on that season to play in his fourth
Super Bowl. In
Super
Bowl XXXII, the Broncos faced the defending Super Bowl
champions
Green Bay Packers.
Despite Elway completing only 11 of 22 passes, throwing no TDs, but
one interception, they went on to defeat the Packers 31–24, finally
winning a Super Bowl after three failed attempts for Elway (and
four for the team). In 1999, the Broncos repeated this feat and
Elway was awarded the
MVP of
Super Bowl XXXIII, throwing for 336 yards
and one touchdown with one interception, while also scoring a
rushing touchdown in Denver's 34–19 win over the
Atlanta Falcons. It was his last game, other
than the 1999 Pro Bowl.
Legacy
On May 2, 1999, at the age of 38, Elway announced his retirement
from pro football. Elway is regarded as one of the top quarterbacks
ever to play the game. He has one of the best winning percentages
in league history (148–82–1), and is tied for second most
Pro Bowl selections for a quarterback (nine). He is
third to
Brett Favre and
Dan Marino in career passing attempts, passing
yards and completions. His four total rushing touchdowns in his
Super Bowl games are the most ever by a quarterback. Elway is the
only quarterback to have started in five Super Bowls. He is also
the second player ever to score a rushing touchdown in four
different Super Bowls (running back
Thurman Thomas was the first).
On Monday September 13, 1999, his number 7 jersey was retired by
the
Denver Broncos during halftime of
a game vs the
Miami Dolphins; that
same night he was inducted into the Denver Broncos Ring of Fame.
(
Craig Morton, his direct predecessor
in Denver, also wore number 7 and is in the Ring of Fame alongside
Elway). He was the first Broncos player to have the five-year
waiting period waived. Also in 1999 he was inducted in to the
Colorado Sports Hall of Fame.
Also in 1999, he was ranked number 16 on
The Sporting News' list of the 100
Greatest Football Players, the only player to have spent the
majority of his career with the Broncos to make the list (
Willie Brown, who began his
career with the Broncos but spent more of it with the
Oakland Raiders, also made the list). In
2005,
TSN published another special feature honoring the
50 Greatest Quarterbacks. Elway was ranked third behind
Johnny Unitas and
Joe
Montana.
Elway was named the greatest athlete wearing the #7 by
Sports Illustrated. Current
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger, who grew up idolizing
Elway and
Joe Montana, wears number 7 in
honor of Elway.
Notable statistics
Elway also holds the record for most game-winning or game-tying
scoring drives in the fourth quarter, with 47. Though, the validity
of this record has been held in question and a realistic definition
of comebacks has Elway tied for second with
Johnny Unitas and
Peyton Manning with 34 comeback wins (Dan
Marino is first with 36). Elway holds the rather undesirable record
for most times being sacked (516) and most career Super Bowl
interceptions, with eight picks in the five title games he played.
He also ended his career with a record 148 victories, since
surpassed by
Brett Favre for
most wins by a
starting quarterback. He finished his career with 774 rushing
attempts, one shy of NFL record-holder
Randall Cunningham (775) for rushes by a
quarterback. Elway's 3,417 rushing yards ranks sixth all-time among
NFL QB's behind Cunningham,
Steve Young,
Michael Vick,
Fran
Tarkenton, and
Steve McNair.
Elway threw for 1,128 yards in his five Super Bowls, third most
behind
Kurt Warner and
Joe Montana. His 76 Super Bowl pass completions
rank fifth, and his 152 attempts were a Super Bowl record before
being broken by Tom Brady (156 attempts)
Elway holds several Broncos franchise records:
- Most Total Offensive Yards: 54,882 yards (51,475 passing, 3,407
rushing)
- Most Total Touchdowns: 334 (300 passing, 33 rushing, 1
receiving)
- Most Total Plays: 8,027
- Winning Percentage: .643 (148–82–1)
- Most Career Passing Yards: 51,475
- Most Career Completions: 4,123
- Most Career Attempts: 7,250
- Most Touchdown Passes: 300
Hall of Fame
On August
8, 2004, Elway was inducted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
, by his eldest daughter Jessica.
He was
inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame
in 2000.
Career highlights
- In 1979, Elway was drafted out of high school by the Kansas City Royals to play baseball in MLB. George Brett, the future Hall of Fame third baseman for the Royals, is said to have
remarked, "I hope this guy plays football."
- In the 1981 MLB Draft, Elway was selected by the New York Yankees in the second round. The
following year, he played outfield in 42
games for the Oneonta Tigers of the Class A New York - Penn League. He had a .318
batting average, with four home runs and a team-high 25 RBI.
- In the 1983 NFL Draft, Elway was
selected as the first overall pick by the Baltimore Colts, and on May 2, was traded
to the Denver Broncos.
- On January 11, 1987, Elway executed "The
Drive" - a last ditch, five-minute, 15-play, 98-yard touchdown
drive in the AFC Championship against the Cleveland Browns to tie the game late in
the fourth quarter, leading to an overtime win by field goal (by
Rich Karlis) for the Broncos. It
included six passes made (nine attempted), five rushes and an
eight-yard sack. He was named the NFL Most Valuable Player and the
AFC Offensive MVP.
- Elway is the only player to throw for over 3,000 yards and rush
for over 200 yards in seven straight seasons (1985–1991).
- Elway was named the AFC Offensive MVP in 1993 when he passed
for over 4,030 yards and 25 touchdowns. He had a quarterback rating
of 92.8.
- In 1997, Elway led the Broncos to their first ever Super Bowl
win in Super Bowl XXXII. His three
previous attempts in Super Bowls XXI,
XXII and XXIV were unsuccessful.
- Elway is the oldest player to score a touchdown in a Super Bowl
at age 38 in Super Bowl
XXXIII.
- Elway is one of only two players to rush for a touchdown in
four Super Bowls (XXI, XXIV, XXXII, XXXIII). Thurman Thomas is the
other.
- On January 31, 1999, in Super Bowl
XXXIII, Elway passed for 336 yards in a 34-19 victory over the
Atlanta Falcons. He was named the
Super Bowl MVP.
- Elway was selected to the Pro Bowl nine
times during his 16 seasons with the Broncos, a franchise
record.
- Over his professional career, Elway led Denver to 34 comeback
wins in the 4th quarter & overtime, tied for second with
Johnny Unitas.
- Elway's 148 wins place him second (to Brett Favre) for career wins among quarterbacks.
He was also sacked 516 times, more than any other quarterback.
- Elway's 300 career touchdown passes places him fifth behind
Favre, Dan Marino, Fran Tarkenton and Peyton Manning.
- Elway is one of only three quarterbacks to pass for at least
3,000 yards in 12 seasons; Favre and Marino are the others.
- On
January 31, 2004, Elway was elected into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
.
Business activities
John Elway is currently co-owner of the Arena Football team
Colorado Crush, a position he has
held since 2002. In February 2007, Elway was elected chairman of
the
Arena Football League's
executive committee.espn.com
Elway to chair Arena League executive committee On
August 4, 2009 the Arena Football League announced an indefinite
suspension of operations. Elway was one of the 17 remaining
franchise owners that voted to suspend operations
indefinitely.
Elway is the owner of two steakhouse
restaurants, each named "Elway's": One is
located in the upscale Cherry Creek shopping district, and the
other is in the
Ritz-Carlton Hotel in
downtown Denver.
Elway used to own five auto dealerships called John Elway Autos in
the Denver area. He sold them to AutoNation for $82.5 million in
1997. In December 2006, Elway ended the nine-year licensing
agreement with AutoNation Inc., removing his name from Denver-area
dealerships. At the time, Elway said the move could allow him to
get back into the auto business under his own name. He still owns a
Toyota Scion
dealership in Ontario, CaliforniaCrown Toyota,
John Elway's Crown
ToyotaCrown Scion,
John Elway's Crown Scion and a
Nissan dealership in Riverside, California. John
Elway Nissan,
John Elway's Morreno Valley Nissan
In September 2008, John Elway became the spokesperson for a sports
website.John Elway signs with OPEN Sports.com
[39037] Elway also writes a weekly
NFL blog on the site.John Elway's
profile on OPENSports.com
[39038]
Elway had
LASIK eye surgery and endorsed Icon
LASIK in the Denver area in November 2008. John Elway LASIK
John Elway's Icon LASIK endorsement
Family
Elway
married Janet Buchan, who attended Stanford University
and competed on its swimming team, in 1984. They had
four children before separating in 2002 and divorcing in
2003.
Jessica Elway is a student at Stanford University. During her
freshman year, she was a member of the Stanford women's
basketball team. However, she did not rejoin the
team for her sophomore year.
She previously attended Cherry Creek
High School
, located in Greenwood Village, Colorado
. Jessica gave an introduction speech for her
father at his induction into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
in Canton,
Ohio
, becoming the first daughter to ever introduce her
father as an inductee into the Pro Football Hall of
Fame.
Jack
Elway played quarterback at Cherry Creek
High School
in Colorado
receiving All-State honors his senior year,
graduating in 2008. John worked as the quarterback coach for
Cherry Creek for Jack's senior year.
Jack signed to play
quarterback for Arizona State University
. ASU's head coach Dennis Erickson was his grandfather Jack's first offensive coordinator, from 1979–81,
at San José
State
, the elder Jack's first Division I head coaching job.
Elway had a
twin sister, Jana. She contracted
lung cancer and died at the age of 42 in
the summer of 2002. John's father,
Jack,
died of an apparent
heart
attack a year earlier.
Elway proposed marriage to former
Oakland Raiders cheerleader Paige Green in Italy in
September 2008. No wedding date has been set.
Elway met Green in
2005 at a celebrity golf tournament held by
former Raiders running back Marcus Allen in Los Angeles,
California
.
Pop culture
John Elway appeared on commercials for the foam Vortex
football.
Elway has suffered a long-term battle with
acid reflux disease. In 2003, he made
this condition public.
John Elway is often referenced on
South
Park, a cartoon set in Colorado.
He has twice been lampooned on
The
Simpsons.
In 1994 he appeared in an episode of "
Home Improvement".
Elway was featured as the star of
John Elway's Quarterback video
game for the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Two days before the 2006
AFC
Championship Game pitting the Broncos against the
Pittsburgh Steelers, a Pennsylvania high
school student named Joshua Vannoy sported an Elway jersey. A
teacher, John Kelly, an avid Steeler fan, humiliated him by having
him sit on the floor during a test and had the students throw paper
balls at him. Vannoy, who only wore the jersey because he was an
Elway fan, claimed that he wasn't able to concentrate fully on the
test, messed up miserably, and was called a "stinking Denver fan."
He eventually stopped attending school and had to transfer to
another high school. The teacher claimed that the incident was only
in fun. When Elway heard the news, he sent Vannoy a custom designed
recliner.
John Elway and his Elway Foundation, in partnership with Sun
Microsytems, host a charity
golf tournament
every year called the John Elway Celebrity Classic.
Elway has contributed to a number of
Republican Party candidates
in recent elections. Following the decision by incumbent U.S.
Senator
Wayne Allard on January 15,
2007 not to seek another term in 2008, some pundits speculated
Elway might campaign for the seat.
Elway appeared in the
ABC reality television series
Fast Cars and Superstars: The Gillette Young Guns Celebrity
Race, in 2007, featuring a dozen celebrities in a
stock car racing competition. Elway won the
competition.
Elway was featured on the cover of
All-Pro Football 2K8 video game with
Barry
Sanders and
Jerry Rice.
Elway has appeared in a commercial for
Heroes.
Career statistics
Regular season
¹Led league
²Second place ³Third place †Tied
| Year |
Passing |
|
Rushing |
| Att |
Comp |
Yds |
TD |
Int |
|
Att |
Yds |
Avg |
TD |
| 1983 |
259 |
123 |
1,663 |
7 |
14 |
|
28 |
146 |
5.2 |
1 |
| 1984 |
380 |
214 |
2,598 |
18 |
15 |
|
56 |
237 |
4.2 |
1 |
| 1985 |
605¹ |
327² |
3,891² |
22 |
23 |
|
51 |
253 |
5.0 |
0 |
| 1986 |
504 |
280 |
3,485 |
19 |
13 |
|
52 |
257 |
4.9 |
1 |
| 1987 |
410 |
224 |
3,198 |
19 |
12 |
|
66 |
304 |
4.6 |
4 |
| 1988 |
496 |
274 |
3,309 |
17 |
19 |
|
54 |
234 |
4.3 |
1 |
| 1989 |
416 |
223 |
3,051 |
18 |
18 |
|
48 |
244 |
5.1 |
3 |
| 1990 |
502 |
294 |
3,526 |
15 |
14 |
|
50 |
258 |
5.2 |
3 |
| 1991 |
451 |
242 |
3,253 |
13 |
12 |
|
55 |
255 |
4.6 |
6 |
| 1992 |
316 |
174 |
2,242 |
10 |
17 |
|
34 |
94 |
2.8 |
2 |
| 1993 |
551¹ |
348¹ |
4,030¹ |
25² |
10 |
|
44 |
153 |
3.5 |
0 |
| 1994 |
494 |
307 |
3,490 |
16 |
10 |
|
58 |
235 |
4.1 |
4 |
| 1995 |
542 |
316 |
3,970 |
26 |
14 |
|
41 |
176 |
4.3 |
1 |
| 1996 |
466 |
287 |
3,328 |
26 |
14 |
|
50 |
249 |
5.0 |
4 |
| 1997 |
502 |
280 |
3,635 |
27 |
11 |
|
50 |
218 |
4.4 |
1 |
| 1998 |
356 |
210 |
2,806 |
22 |
10 |
|
37 |
94 |
2.5 |
1 |
Total
(all-time) |
7,250
(3rd) |
4,123
(3rd) |
51,475
(3rd) |
300
(5th) |
226 |
|
774 |
3,407 |
4.4 |
33 |
Playoffs
*includes
Super Bowl
| Year |
Passing |
|
Rushing |
| Att |
Comp |
Yds |
TD |
Int |
|
Att |
Yds |
Avg |
TD |
| 1983 |
15 |
10 |
123 |
0 |
1 |
|
3 |
16 |
5.3 |
0 |
| 1984 |
37 |
19 |
184 |
2 |
2 |
|
4 |
16 |
4.0 |
0 |
| 1986* |
107 |
57 |
805 |
3 |
4 |
|
15 |
101 |
6.7 |
2 |
| 1987* |
89 |
42 |
797 |
6 |
5 |
|
18 |
76 |
4.2 |
1 |
| 1989* |
82 |
42 |
732 |
4 |
3 |
|
16 |
91 |
5.7 |
1 |
| 1991 |
54 |
30 |
378 |
1 |
2 |
|
10 |
49 |
4.9 |
0 |
| 1993 |
47 |
29 |
302 |
3 |
1 |
|
5 |
23 |
4.6 |
0 |
| 1996 |
38 |
25 |
226 |
2 |
0 |
|
5 |
30 |
6.0 |
0 |
| 1997* |
96 |
56 |
726 |
3 |
2 |
|
9 |
25 |
2.8 |
1 |
| 1998* |
86 |
45 |
691 |
3 |
1 |
|
9 |
34 |
3.8 |
1 |
| Total |
651 |
355 |
4,964 |
27 |
21 |
|
94 |
461 |
4.9 |
6 |
See also
Notes
- "Customizable draft querier",
Pro-Football-Reference.com
- Michael Wilbon - Big Ben, Already Like Clockwork -
washingtonpost.com
- "Quarterbacks and fourth quarter comebacks, Part
1", Pro-Football-Reference.com
- "Super Bowl Records: Individual Passing",
NFL.com
- "Super Bowl Leaders",
Pro-Football-Reference.com
- CNN/SI - John Elway: Master of the Drive - Class of
'83 shared place in history - Sunday April 25, 1999 10:16
AM
- CNN/SI - Elway - Master of the Drive - - Saturday
April 24, 1999 10:16 PM
- The Sporting News: John Elway
- http://www.denverbroncos.com/page.php?id=834 Broncos Official
Website, Ring of Fame page
- "Quarterbacks and fourth quarter comebacks, Part
1", Pro-Football-Reference.com
- http://www.profootballhof.com/hof/member.jsp?PLAYER_ID=64
- http://www.cbssports.com/arenafootball/story/12027198
- Irv Moss, "Arena Football League suspended
indefinitely", The Denver Post, August 4, 2009
http://www.denverpost.com/crush/ci_12986514
- espn.com, Elway expands business empire, opening new
steakhouse
- myfoxcolorado.com - John Elway Joins Cherry Creek
as QB Coach - 23 Aug 2007
- myfoxcolorado.com - Jack Elway Commits to ASU - 21
Oct 2007
- http://www.denverpost.com/ci_10568103
-
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/news/2008/sep/26/john-elway-engaged-former-raiders-cheerleader/
- Elways says heartburn is hard to swallow
-
http://media.southparkstudios.com/media/images/514/514_22.gif
- John Elway on IMDB
- ncnewsonline.com - John Elway giving recliner to
student harassed for wearing Broncos jersey
- John Elway Celebrity Classic Q&A
- Former NFL star John Elway wins ABC's 'Fast Cars
& Superstars'
References
- The Associated Press, "Clock runs out on Elway", Arizona
Daily Wildcat, May 3, 1999.[39039]
- Ivan Carter, "KC helped make Elway a star", The Kansas City
Star, August 8, 2004, p. C8.
External links