Bo Jackson Net Worth: Contract, Earnings, Age, Height

Bo Jackson Net Worth: $25 million (approx.)

Net Worth:$25 Million (approx.)
Date of Birth:1962-11-30
Age:60 years
Height:6 ft (1.85 m)
Profession:Baseball player, American football player, Businessperson, Actor, Athlete
Nationality:United States of America

Bo Jackson net worth is around $25 million. Bo Jackson is a retired American baseball and football player and his full name is Vincent Edward “Bo” Jackson.

Bo Jackson Net Worth

He also had contracts with so many famous brands and companies. He shoots lots of ads. So after he retired he opened his own business. That’s how his 2022 net worth is $25 million.

Bo Jackson Net Worth (2023):

Bo Jackson’s net worth is $25 million. Bo Jackson is the first athlete to be named an All-Star in two major American sports. Bo also won the Heisman Trophy in 1985.

Bo Jackson Net Worth
(Photo by Mike Powell/Allsport/Getty Images)

Bo Jackson was perhaps the best athlete of his generation and was one of the most important celebrity product endorsers in history.

Bo Jackson Contracts:

As you know Vincent Edward “Bo” Jackson was one of the extraordinary athletes of his generation and one of the most important celebrity product endorsers in history.

During his professional career, Bo Jackson earned $6.8 million in baseball salary and $6.1 million in football salary. Combined that’s the same as around $20 million after adjusting for inflation.

He earns lots of money because he contracts with Nike and Gatorade, earning tens of millions of dollars from endorsements

In 1986 Bo was offered $100,000 per year from Nike if he just played baseball. They offered $1 million if he ALSO played in the NFL.

When he started getting too much fame and respect Bo was operating under a 5-year $7.4 million contract with the Los Angeles Raiders and a one-year $2.4 million deal with the Kansas City Royals while earning $500,000 per year from Pepsi and AT&T (combined), $1 million from Nike and $1 million from Gatorade. On a per-year basis in the early 1990s, Bo was earning $6 million from salary and endorsements. That’s the same as $11 million today after adjusting for inflation.

Bo Jackson Nike Contracts:

Bo’s relationship with Nike was extremely noteworthy. The now-famous “Bo Knows” commercial series is considered one of the most influential advertising campaigns of all time.

At the Nike corporate campus in Beaverton, Oregon, each building is assigned to an athlete who had a major impact on the company. The three biggest buildings on campus are dedicated to Michael Jordan, Serena Williams and Bo Jackson. The 60,000 square-foot Bo Jackson Sports and Wellness Center features an elite training facility, basketball court, two-lane indoor track, childcare facilities and much more.

Nike never stopped paying Bo. Despite having not played a professional sport in decades, still earns what is believed to be AT LEAST $1 million per year from Nike. And unlike Michael Jordan who still sells a product for the company, Bo’s paycheck is essentially just an annual thank you note.

Business

If you think about what Bo Jackson is doing now for a living after his retirement he becomes part of the investors who own the Burr Ridge Bank and Trust in Burr Ridge, Illinois. He is also a part – the owner of the Bo Jackson Elite Sports Complex alongside John Cangelosi.

From 2021 he is working on his new venture, Which offers a line of CBD (Cannabinoids) products called hero brand.

Bo Johnson Biography:

Bo Johnson was born as Vincent Edward Jackson, the eighth child of Florence Jackson Bond’s ten children. Bo Jackson was born on November 30, 1962. His mother was barely able to support her family with her job as a housekeeper, since Jackson’s father, A.D. Adams never married Florence and had a family of his own on the opposite side of town.

BornVincent Edward Jackson
November 30, 1962 (age 59)
Birmingham, Alabama
Football career
No. 34
Position:Running back
Personal information
Height:6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight:230 lb (104 kg)
Career information
High school:McCalla (AL) McAdory
College:Auburn (1982–1985)
NFL Draft:1986 / Round: 1 / Pick: 1
Career history
Los Angeles Raiders (1987–1990)
Career highlights and awards
Pro Bowl (1990)Heisman Trophy (1985)Walter Camp Award (1985)SEC Player of the Year (1985)Sporting News Player of the Year (1985)UPI Player of the Year (1985)2× Consensus All-American (1983, 1985)3× First-team All-SEC (1982, 1983, 1985)Auburn Tigers No. 34 retired
Career NFL statistics
Rushing yards:2,782Yards per carry:5.4Rushing touchdowns:18
Player stats at NFL.com · PFR
College Football Hall of Fame
Baseball career
Outfielder / Designated hitter
Batted: RightThrew: Right
MLB debut
September 2, 1986, for the Kansas City Royals
Last MLB appearance
August 10, 1994, for the California Angels
MLB statistics
Batting average.250
Home runs141
Runs batted in415
Teams
Kansas City Royals (1986–1990)Chicago White Sox (1991, 1993)California Angels (1994)
Career highlights and awards
All-Star (1989)

The name Vincent quickly disappeared as Jackson entered adolescence and gained a reputation as a troublemaker. Bo seemed unable to stay out of trouble, breaking windows, stealing bicycles, and beating up the other kids in the neighborhood.

(Photo by Otto Greule Jr/Allsport/Getty Images)

As Jackson wrote in his autobiography, Bo Knows Bo (co-authored with sportswriter Dick Schaap), “I even hired kids to beat up other kids for me [because] I didn’t have time to beat all of them up myself.” His brothers started calling him a “wild boar,” because it was the only animal they felt he was compared to. They soon shortened the nickname to “Bo.”

Bo Johnson’s life as a hoodlum was short-lived, when at thirteen he was caught throwing rocks at the Baptist minister’s hogs. The boys had killed many pigs and the minister made them pay back the loss. Jackson had to take on odd jobs to earn his portion of the three thousand dollar loss. His mother unsure of what to do, was encouraged by the preacher to send Jackson to reform school. Bo realized that he needed to change his ways or be sent away.

Bo decided to focus his attention on sports.Athletics proved to be what Jackson needed to stay out of trouble. He proved a natural talent at baseball, but he also had an incredible work ethic that allowed him to surpass his peers. At 13 years old, Bo Johnson had already moved up to the Industrial League in Bessemer, where he played against grown men.

Jackson played college football as a running back for the Auburn Tigers and won the Heisman Trophy in 1985. He played in the National Football League for the Los Angeles Raiders and Major League Baseball for the Kansas City Royals, Chicago White Sox, and California Angels. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1996.

In 1989 and 1990, Jackson’s name became known beyond just sports through the “Bo Knows” advertising campaign, a series of advertisements by Nike, starring Jackson alongside musician Bo Diddley, promoting a cross-training athletic shoe named for Jackson.

Bo Johnson Baseball Career:

Bo Johnson had been on track to play professional football after college. Johnson was selected by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 1986 NFL Draft using the first overall pick. But, he refused to play for them after an incident where he was forced to miss his senior college baseball season after a visit to the Buccaneers’ team facilities. Bo Johnson chose to play professional baseball for the Kansas City Royals instead, who had drafted him in the 1986 amateur draft.

Bo Johnson signed a three-year, $1.07 million contract with the Royals, and he played 53 games with their Class AA minor league affiliate, the Memphis Chicks. Bo Johnson was called up to the majors in September 1986, and made the Royals’ roster in 1987. After the Royals released him in 1991 due to him being injured, the Chicago White Sox offered him a three-year contract that guaranteed $700,000 per season, that also had a performance-based upside of $8.15 million.

With the White Sox, Bo Johnson played two seasons, in 1991 and 1993; he took the 1992 season off and was on the disabled roster because he has hip replacement surgery that year. Bo finished his professional athletic career in 1994 with the California Angels, retiring at the age of 32.

Bo Johnson Football Career:

In the 1987 NFL Draft, Bo Johnson was selected in the seventh round with the 183rd pick by the Los Angeles Raiders. Initially disinterested, and committed to focusing on his baseball career, Bo Johnson looked forward to playing in the NFL after he learned that the Raiders’ owner Al Davis was open to the idea of him playing both sports simultaneously.

Bo Johnson negotiated a five-year, $7.4 million contract that allowed him to finish each MLB season in full before reporting to the Raiders, even if it meant he would miss NFL games. Additionally, Davis offered Bo Johnson the highest salary of any non-quarterback player in NFL history at the time, plus a reported $500,000 signing bonus.

Bo Johnson played four seasons in the NFL, during which he rushed for 2,782 yards and 16 touchdowns, with an average yards per carry of 5.4. He also caught 40 passes for a total of 352 yards and two touchdowns.

In his last professional football match in January 1991, Bo Johnson had a dislocated hip after a tackle. This resulted in avascular necrosis of his left hip joint, and will need to have his hip replaced. This is the injury that resulted in the Royals releasing him from the team, and he would struggle with it until his ultimate retirement in 1994.

Bo Johnson Dating ,Relationship, Wife, Childrens:

He married his college sweetheart Linda and his wife is a rehabilitation counselor. Bo Jackson has three children, sons Garrett and Nicholas, and a daughter, Morgan. Jackson and his family live in Burr Ridge, Illinois.

In 2009, he joined the board of Burr Ridge Bank and Trust. In 2013, the bank was acquired by First Community Financial Bank, which retained Jackson as a board member. In 2017, First Community was acquired by Busey Bank, and Jackson left the board.

In a 2017 conference with USA Today, Jackson said he never would have played football if he had known the health risks associated with it. “I wish I had known about all of those head injuries, but no one knew that. And the people that did know that, they wouldn’t tell anybody,” he said. “The game has gotten so violent, so rough. We’re so much more educated on this CTE stuff (chronic traumatic encephalopathy), there’s no way I would ever allow my kids to play football today.

Bo Johnson is known to repeatedly refer to himself as the third individual, a habit he has had since his childhood due to his severe stutter which made it difficult for him to say “I”.

He also did some charity for his native state of Alabama, Jackson started up a fundraiser known as “Bo Bikes Bama”. The event began after a series of tornadoes devastated Alabama on April 27, 2011. The tornadoes claimed hundreds of lives and left many Alabama residents without power.

Interesting Facts about Bo Jackson


● Jackson might just be the fastest NFL player ever.
● His sincere humbleness and modesty are just other things that make him one of the
most beloved athletes in history
● He played 38 games in the NFL.
● Nike still pays Bo Jackson and Nike never gonna stop paying him.
● He is the winner of the Heisman Trophy.
● During his High School football career, he played Offense, Defense, Punter, Kicker, Punt
Returner, and lastly, Kick Returner (“30 for 30,” 2012).
● Bo Jackson’s Auburn Tigers won the Sugar Bowl in 1983, during which he was named
the MV.