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Randy White
Super Bowl Champion and Co-MVP of Super Bowl XII, NFL '80s All-Decade Team, Cowboys Ring of Honor, Pro Football Hall of Fame, Rancher and Dog Enthusiast
At 6-4, 265 pounds and one of the strongest (bench presses 501 pounds) and toughest (111 career sacks) defensive tackles ever to play the game, Randy White was dubbed “Manster- part-man and part-monster” by teammate Charlie Waters. Opposing quarterbacks who unsuccessfully scrambled to avoid his reckless abandon, were quick to understand why.
During Randy’s 14-year tenure with the World Champion Dallas Cowboys, he was selected All Pro 8 times, was a Pro Bowl selection 9 times and played in 3 Super Bowls. After his outstanding performance in Super Bowl XII, he was selected as a Super Bowl MVP.
In 1994, his first year of eligibility, Randy received the ultimate honor, selection to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. A few other pro football honors include The Ed Block Courage Award, Dallas Cowboy All-Time Team, Interior Lineman of the Year, Field Scovell Award, Defensive Lineman of the Year (2 times) and Defensive Player of the Year. At the University of Maryland, he was a Consensus All-America and received both the Vince Lombardi Award and the coveted defensive version of the Heisman, The Outland Trophy.
Post football, Randy appeared in the feature film Necessary Roughness and national tv commercials for such brands as Dicks Sporting Goods, Under Armour, PC Matic and Tide. He co-hosted CBS-11 Dallas Cowboys pre-game show for 14 years. His hobbies include Martial Arts and making custom knives. He and wife Susan reside on a ranch in Texas.
TOPICS
Pro athlete/Sports
Dedication and Hard Work
Teamwork and Leadership
Overcoming Challenges

PAST CLIENTS
Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE)
Panini
Indeed
SAP
AT&T Services
Main Event
Insurance Industry Charitable Foundation (IICF)
Overhead Door
Carlsbad Mayor’s Energy Summit
North Texas Residential HVAC & Supply (TRANE)
Chandler Signs
Amway
Yellow Entertainment
Intersport
Angus Measurement
Boys & Girls Club
Billy T. Cattan Recovery Center
Midwestern State University
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