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Charley Johnson 1975 Topps #295 Signed Football Card Denver Broncos New Mexico

Description: Charlie Charley Johnson Autographed 1975 Topps Football Card #295 Great looking autographed football card of former Denver Broncos quarterback...Charley Johnson. Great looking autographed football card signed in blue Sharpie. We are putting together our own autographed card sets for our personal collection and these in inventory are duplicates. We intend on someday obtaining the other cards that we don't have in our own personal collection. The sale of any of these autographed cards will go back into financing our own autographed set collections. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia... Charley Lane Johnson (November 22, 1938 – September 3, 2024) was an American professional football player who was a quarterback in the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the New Mexico State Aggies. Johnson played in the NFL for 15 years with three teams: the St. Louis Cardinals, Houston Oilers, and Denver Broncos. After his playing career, he became a professor of chemical engineering.College careerBorn in Big Spring, Texas, Johnson initially was set to play football with a scholarship at Schreiner Institute, but the school dropped football the season he arrived. He then transferred to New Mexico State University, but did so with a scholarship to play basketball instead and had to walk-on to play football there, though he eventually won the starting job at quarterback.[1]During his college football career at New Mexico State he became the only person to date to be named Most Valuable Player of the Sun Bowl in consecutive years, winning the award in 1959 and 1960.[2] He is a member of the NMSU Sports Hall of Fame (1970),[3] and was the first player in the history of the NMSU football program to have his jersey number (33) retired.[2]Professional career Johnson was a late-round draft pick by both the San Diego Chargers of the AFL,[4] and St. Louis Cardinals of the NFL,[5] opting to go to St. Louis. After just 13 attempts in his 1961 rookie season, he became the Cardinal's primary starter for the next five years.He was named to the NFL Pro Bowl in 1963 after career-bests 3,280 passing yards and 28 passing touchdowns, and was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated twice, on the December 14, 1964 and November 1, 1965. In 1964, he led the league with 223 completions, 420 attempts, 3,045 passing yards, and 24 interceptions. In 1966, he had a league-leading four 4th quarter comebacks. He played back-up to Jim Hart in 1967, and despite starting just two games, again led the league with two 4th quarter comebacks in 1968. He split time with Hart in 1969 before being traded to Houston. There he started 14 games in two seasons (1970–71), before ending his career with a four-year stint in Denver. He started 9 games for the Broncos in 1972, and all 14 games for the 7–5–2 squad in 1973. In 1974, his 14th season, he led the league for the first time in yards per attempt with 8.1. He began his final year with a 90-yard touchdown pass to Rick Upchurch against the Kansas City Chiefs, the only 90+ yard pass that decade by a Bronco.[6] As of 2017, his 16.45 yards per attempt in the game remains a franchise record, and he is a member of the Denver Broncos Ring of Fame.He retired in 1975 with a 59–57–8 record as a starter, with 1,737 completions (at the time, ranked 13th all-time in professional football) on 3,392 attempts (13th), for 24,410 yards (14th), 170 touchdowns (15th), 181 interceptions (14th) and a passer rating of 69.2 (20th).[7]Outside of footballAn engineering major at NMSU, Johnson obtained his bachelor's degree in chemical engineering at NMSU with a 4.0 GPA in 1961.[8] Johnson continued his academic pursuits and obtained master's and doctoral degrees in chemical engineering from Washington University in St. Louis while also playing in the NFL.[8] As an undergraduate, Johnson was part of NMSU's Army ROTC; he used his graduate studies to delay his commission until 1967, when he was called into active duty. He was deemed unfit for combat, but was stationed with and worked for NASA as a second lieutenant in the United States Army Reserve for two years, while simultaneously playing for the Cardinals and working on his doctoral studies.[9][10] After his football career and military service were over, he worked in industry, opening Johnson Compression Services in Houston in 1981 and working as an engineering and product development consultant until 1999.[11] In 2000, he was hired to be the head of his New Mexico State's chemical engineering department, a position he held until 2004, then becoming a professor in the department until his retirement in May 2012.[10] Johnson was also briefly the interim head coach of the NMSU football team during the off-season, following the firing of Hal Mumme in January 2009.[11]Johnson appeared as an imposter on the February 14, 1966, episode of the CBS game show To Tell the Truth. He revealed his true identity after receiving one vote.[12]Johnson died on September 3, 2024, at the age of 85.[13] Lifetime guarantee in regard to the authenticity of this autographed football card, which is being brought to you by Gearhart Enterprises, Inc. Member of the UACC. UACC Registered Dealer #RD189. Be sure to check out our other auctions. Thanks for bidding and enjoy! Winning bidder to pay thru PayPal. Payment must be received ten days from the end of the auction, or negative feedback will be left. To all winning bidders, positive feedback will be given shortly after receiving payment. Thanks!! On September-21-24 at 01:46:47 PDT, seller added the following information:

Price: 40 USD

Location: Rockford, Illinois

End Time: 2024-12-21T12:56:35.000Z

Shipping Cost: 10 USD

Product Images

Charley Johnson 1975 Topps #295 Signed Football Card Denver Broncos New MexicoCharley Johnson 1975 Topps #295 Signed Football Card Denver Broncos New Mexico

Item Specifics

All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

Sport: Football

Player: Charley Johnson

Signed: Yes

Original/Reprint: Original

Product: Card

Team: Denver Broncos

Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

Modified Item: No

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