Joe Montana

Joe Montana net worth is $80 Million. Also know about Joe Montana bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

Joe Montana Wiki Biography

Joseph Clifford Montana Jr., commonly known as Joe Montana, is a famous former American football player, as well as a football coach. Often referred to as “The Comeback Kid” and “Joe Cool”, Joe Montana rose to prominence as a quarterback after he joined the 1979 NFL Draft. During his career, Montana had played in such popular American football teams as the Kansas City “Chiefs” and San Francisco “49ers”, who picked him during the NFL Draft.

Montana made several memorable plays during his career, including the ones which happened in the 1981 NFC Championship game, as well as the Super Bowl XXIII event. Shortly afterwards, Montana’s pass to Dwight Clark, which ended in a game-winning touchdown became known as “The Catch”. Up to date, “The Catch” is considered to be among the greatest moments in the history of the National Football League.

As a football player, Montana set several records in the NFL league, which included winning three Super Bowl MVP awards, and completing most Super Bowl passes. Some of Montana’s career highlights and accolades include winning the NFL MVP title, becoming an Athlete of the Year, both in 1989 and 1990, winning the Super Bowl title four times, and securing himself as the NFC Champion four times. For his contributions to American football, Joe Montana was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2000. Joe Montana was also featured on the list of “The Top 100: NFL’s Greatest Players” compiled by the “NFL Network”, where he landed at #4 spot.

A famous former American football player, how rich is Joe Montana? According to sources, Joe Montana’s net worth is estimated to be $80 million. Undoubtedly, most of Joe Montana’s net worth and wealth comes from his football career.

Joe Montana was born in 1956, in New Eagle, Pennsylvania. Montana attended Ringgold High School, where he expressed interest in football, as well as basketball. Montana excelled as a basketball player and was even offered a basketball scholarship from North Carolina State. However, Montana rejected this opportunity, since he wanted to be able to play basketball as well as football. Eventually, Joe Montana decided to attend Notre Dame University, where he began his football training under Ara Parseghian, who was a football coach at the time. Over these years, Montana experienced both ups and down in terms of playing on the team, until he graduated from Notre Dame and entered the 1979 NFL Draft, where he was chosen as the 82nd pick by the San Francisco “49ers”. It was with “49ers” that Montana made a name for himself, and became one of the greatest American football players in the history of NFL. Joe Montana ended his 25 year football career in 1995, during an event that was shown on television screens all around the United States. During his speech, Montana was honored by Joe Madden and Eddie DeBartolo and was additionally honored during the Super Bowl XXX event. A famous former American football player, Joe Montana has an estimated net worth of $80 million.

IMDB Wikipedia $80 Million 1956 (age 59 205 lbs (92.99 kg) 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) Alexandra Montana American football player Big Sky Cass Castillo Cass Castillo (m. 1981–1984) Coach Comeback Kid David W. Gibson Dwight Clark Eddie DeBartolo Elizabeth Montana Finleyville Middle School Golden Joe Halloween Italian American Jameis Winston Jennifer Montana Jennifer Montana (m. 1985) Joe Clifford Joe Cool Joe Madden Joe Montana Joe Montana Net Worth. Ara Parseghian John Fogerty Joseph Clifford Montana Joseph Clifford Montana Jr. Jr. June 11 Kim Moses Kim Moses (m. 1974–1977) Los Angeles Clippers Montana State Bobcats football Nate Montana National Football League National Football League season New Eagle NFL NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team NFL Players Nick Montana Notre Dame University Pennsylvania Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees Ringgold High School San Francisco San Francisco 49ers San Francisco 49ers season Sports Super Bowl Super Bowl MVPs Super Bowl XXIII The Catch The Golden Great Tom Fogerty United States United States of America University of Notre Dame University of Notre Dame (1974–1979) Waverly Elementary

Joe Montana Quick Info

Full Name Joe Montana
Net Worth $80 Million
Date Of Birth June 11, 1956 (age 59
Place Of Birth New Eagle, Pennsylvania, United States
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Weight 205 lbs (92.99 kg)
Profession American football player, Coach
Education University of Notre Dame (1974–1979), Ringgold High School, Waverly Elementary, Finleyville Middle School
Nationality United States of America
Spouse Jennifer Montana (m. 1985), Cass Castillo (m. 1981–1984), Kim Moses (m. 1974–1977)
Children Nick Montana, Nate Montana, Elizabeth Montana, Alexandra Montana
Parents Theresa Montana, Joseph Montana, Joe Montana
Siblings Nick Montana, Elizabeth Montana, Alexandra Montana
Nicknames Joe Cool , Joseph Clifford Montana, Jr. , The Golden Great , Joe Clifford , Comeback Kid , David W. Gibson , Golden Joe , Big Sky , Joseph Clifford Montana Jr.
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/JoeMontana
Twitter http://www.twitter.com/joemontana
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0598921
Awards Super Bowl Most Valuable Player Award, All-Pro, Associated Press NFL Offensive Player of the Year Award, Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year, UPI NFC Player of the Year, Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year, AP Most Valuable Player
Music Groups La Factoria
Movies NFL: Greatest Super Bowl Moments, Inside the Irish Huddle, ESPN Honor Roll: The Best of College Football: Vol. 1

Joe Montana Quotes

  • Installing a new offense is harder than a new defense. It just takes time.
  • Man, coaching is a hard job, and it requires a lot of time… I hear stories from coaches who tell me that players call them in the middle of the night not knowing where they parked their car. You are baby-sitting rich, spoiled kids… I don’t know where you parked your car!
  • I mean the game is just, everybody talks about baseball but I really think football probably has a little bit more American feeling than anything.
  • I had six or seven documented concussions, so I had a lot more than that. But I feel fine.
  • Man, coaching is a hard job, and it requires a lot of time… I hear stories from coaches who tell me that players call them in the middle of the night not knowing where they parked their car.
  • My back only bugs me when I sleep wrong. I feel my knee more than anything, the left one. It’s arthritic. I have a bad nerve in the back of my eye.
  • I don’t watch a lot of the games on Sunday. But I always kept an eye on the 49ers. I think Mike Singletary has made a big difference. He’s done a tremendous job.
  • You know, I’ve had blowups with my coach too. The same thing happens, it just wasn’t as evident back then because they didn’t have so many cameras and ways to see things happen.
  • The game is just, everybody talks about baseball, but I really think football probably has a little bit more American feeling than anything.
  • My back only bugs me when I sleep wrong. I feel my knee more than anything, the left one. It’s arthritic.
  • I don’t live in the past.
  • If I could still play, I would be trying. It’s been 15 years.
  • There’s no thrill like throwing a touchdown pass.
  • You need to be able to work with people. Especially in football, it is not a QB’s game… even though the media likes to make it into that – it takes the whole team.
  • Cause there’s only one reason for doing anything that you set out to do. if you don’t want to be the best, then there’s no reason going out and trying to accomplish anything.
  • Winners, I am convinced, imagine their dreams first. They want it with all their heart and expect it to come true. There is, I believe, no other way to live.
  • My mother and father, Joe and Theresa Montana brought me along and taught me to never quit, and to strive to be the best.
  • I don’t live in the past. I just live in the enjoyment of the game.
  • Yeah, it’s nice to look up to people, but the more you try to be somebody else, the less you are of yourself.
  • Some people have no respect whether you are with your family or not. That’s the hardest part. I was shopping in a grocery store in Seattle looking for stuff for Nicholas. This guy kept following me with his cell phone video on.
  • Always be prepared to start.
  • Any quarterback that understands what the offense is really about is going to succeed.
  • I miss the game – I miss it a lot.
  • I don’t watch a lot of the games on Sunday. But I always kept an eye on the 49ers.
  • As a quarterback, you have to love it. As much as you like to turn around and hand the ball off – the whole traditional football game – as a quarterback, you gotta love putting it in the air.
  • I started a business with two guys I played with, Ronnie Lott and Harris Barton: Champion Ventures, it’s a fund of funds. We have $400 million or so under management.
  • In sports… you play from the time you’re eight years old, and then you’re done forever.
  • Yeah, I think it motivates you as people start to count you out. It doesn’t make you play any harder, because every time you go out on the field you give 110 percent, but it does give you more of an edge mentally, knowing that you were in the same situation, because in sports you always find yourself behind.
  • Confidence is a very fragile thing.
  • Some guys practice like all-Americans but they can’t play!
  • Especially in football, it is not a QB’s game… even though the media likes to make it into that – it takes the whole team.
  • There is nothing worse for me than sitting in traffic. That’s what killed me in L.A.
  • As a quarterback, there’s no better way to finish your year, in winning a Super Bowl, than with a touchdown pass. The chances of that happening, by the looks of most of the Super Bowls, is a very rare chance. Fortunately for me, I had an opportunity.

Joe Montana Important Facts

  • Appeared in commercials for “Skechers Shape-up” footwear. [2010]
  • Appeared in a commercial for Scott’s “Miracle-Gro”. [2010]
  • Of Sicilian-Italian descent.
  • Lives on a 600-acre estate in Calistoga in Northern California’s Napa Valley district where he enjoys cultivating grapes for wine-making. [2007]
  • Attended Ringgold High School in Monongahela, PA.
  • Oliver Stone named the main character (Tony Montana) in his 1983 movie Scarface (1983) after Montana.
  • Ranks 5th on NFL All-Time Passer Rating List (92.26).
  • Ranks 39th on NFL All-Time Yards Lost List (2,095).
  • Tied with Roger Staubach at 30th on NFL All-Time Times Sacked List (313).
  • Ranks 58th on NFL All-Time Passes Intercepted List (139).
  • Ranks 7th on NFL All-Time Touchdown Passes List (273).
  • Ranks 8th on NFL All-Time Gross Yards Passing List (40,551).
  • Ranks 8th on NFL All-Time Pass Completions List (3,409).
  • Ranks 9th on NFL All-Time Pass Attempts List (5,391).
  • Earned the nickname “Joe Cool” because of his ability to remain calm in the biggest of game situations. The best example of this was in Super Bowl XXIII against the Cincinnati Bengals. With the 49ers on their own 8-yeard line, down by three points with 3:20 left to go in one of the biggest games of his career, Montana pointed toward the stands and said to tackle Harris Barton, “Hey look over there. Isn’t that John Candy?” He then marched the 49ers on a 92-yard drive for the game-winning touchdown.
  • Was ready to quit on the spot in the 1977 Purdue game when head coach Dan Devine sent Rusty Lisch in to replace the injured Gary Forystek. With the Irish still trailing 24-14 late in the 3rd, Devine replaced Lisch with Montana, the third-string quarterback. He engineered a 31-24 victory, and remained the starting QB for the rest of his Notre Dame career.
  • Met Jennifer Montana when they did a Schick razor commercial. He proposed by hiring an airplane with a streamer reading “Jen, will you marry me?” Children: Alexandra Whitney (b. 10 October 1985), Elizabeth Jean (b. 20 December 1986), Nathaniel Joseph (b. 3 October 1989), and Nicholas Alexander (b. 28 April 1992).
  • Has endorsed Coors beer, Mervyns stores and DirecTV since his retirement.
  • Montana started playing peewee football when he was eight, a year younger than the legal limit. His father listed his age as nine.
  • In his pro career, Montana completed 3,409-of-5,391 passes for 40,551 yards with 273 touchdowns and 139 interceptions. In 23 postseason games, Montana completed 460-of-734 passes for 5,772 yards with 45 touchdowns and 21 interceptions.
  • An only child.
  • Quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers (1979-1992) and Kansas City Chiefs (1993-1994).
  • Inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2000.
  • Quarterbacked Notre Dame to a National Championship in 1977.
  • Led the Irish to last-minute victories in 1975 vs North Carolina and Air Force, Purdue and Clemson in 1977, and Houston in the 1979 Cotton Bowl, the latter being regarded as the greatest comeback in Notre Dame history. Staged a furious fourth-quarter rally vs USC in 1978, only to see the Trojans pull out a last-second win themselves in a game Coach John Robinson says he still has nightmares about.
  • Wore number 3 while at Notre Dame, a number worn by many great Irish quarterbacks throughout the years.
  • Sent a telegram to Irish quarterback Rick Mirer before Mirer’s debut as a starter in the 1990 season opener reminding him to “take care of my number” (Mirer also wore #3 while at Notre Dame).
  • Suffered a separated shoulder in the last pre-season scrimmage in 1976 and sat out the entire season.
  • Was a member of the last class recruited by legendary Irish coach Ara Parseghian.
  • The 49ers picked Montana in the third-round, acquired from Dallas, in the 1979 draft.
  • California Supreme Court rejected his appeal to reverse an earlier Santa Clara County Superior Court ruling stating the San Jose Mercury News had the right to sell posters showing Montana in the Super Bowl. The Court ordered Montana to pay the Mercury News over $20,000 in lawyer fees and court costs, and awarded the paper additional fees for defending the appeal. [August 1995]
  • Born at at 3:25pm EDT.
  • Informed wife #2, Cass Castillo, that he was divorcing her by leaving her a “Dear Jane” letter at the 49ers’ front office.
  • Has “co-written”/authorized 3 books about himself.

Joe Montana Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Asylum 2014/II Barnett Actor
The Complete History of the San Francisco 49ers 2006 Video Actor
Hollywood Health Report 2016 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Hollywood Today Live 2016 TV Series Himself Self
The Jim Rome Show 2016 TV Series Himself Self
NFL Films Presents 2015 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Mike & Mike 2010-2014 TV Series Himself – Telephone Interviewee / Himself – Guest / Himself – Pro Football Hall of Famer / … Self
CBS This Morning 2013 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Entertainment Tonight 2013 TV Series Himself Self
A Football Life 2012 TV Series Himself Self
Fox and Friends 2012 TV Series Himself Self
E3 Xbox Media Briefing 2012 TV Movie Himself Self
Rome Is Burning 2011 TV Series Himself – Guest / Former NFL Quarterback Self
Rachael Ray 2006-2010 TV Series Himself Self
Sport: Iooss and Leifer 2009 Documentary short Himself Self
The Simpsons 2008 TV Series Himself Self
ESPN 25: Who’s #1? 2004-2007 TV Series documentary Himself Self
CMI: The Chris Myers Interview 2006 TV Series Himself Self
Quite Frankly with Stephen A. Smith 2006 TV Series Himself Self
On the Record w/ Brit Hume 2006 TV Series Himself Self
Costas Now 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Joe Montana and Tom Mitchell: The Winning Spirit 2005 Video Himself Self
The Best Damn Sports Show Period 2005 TV Series Himself Self
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Jimmy Kimmel Live! 2003 TV Series Himself Self
ESPN SportsCentury 2002 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Here’s to You, Charlie Brown: 50 Great Years 2000 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Big Game XXVIII: Road Runner vs. Coyote 2000 TV Movie Himself Self
The Daily Show 2000 TV Series Himself Self
Late Night with Conan O’Brien 2000 TV Series Himself Self
Sports Illustrated: Swimsuit ’99 1999 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 1998 TV Series Himself Self
Late Show with David Letterman 1995-1997 TV Series Himself Self
Super Bowl XXX 1996 TV Special Himself – Ceremonial Coin Toss Self
1995 AFC Championship Game 1996 TV Movie Himself – Studio Analyst Self
ESPN’s Sunday Night Football 1987-1994 TV Series Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback / Himself – Kansas City Chiefs Quarterback Self
The NFL on NBC 1981-1994 TV Series Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback / Himself – Kansas City Chiefs Quarterback Self
NFL Monday Night Football 1983-1994 TV Series Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback / Himself – Kansas City Chiefs Quarterback Self
Billy Ray Cyrus: A Year on the Road 1994 TV Movie Himself Self
TNT Sunday Night Football 1994 TV Series Himself – Kansas City Chiefs Quarterback Self
1993 AFC Championship Game 1994 TV Special Himself – Kansas City Chiefs Quarterback Self
1990 NFC Championship Game 1991 TV Movie Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
The NFL on CBS 1981-1990 TV Series Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
America This Morning 1990 TV Series Himself Self
Super Bowl XXIV 1990 TV Movie Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
1989 NFC Championship Game 1990 TV Movie Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
Super Bowl XXIII 1989 TV Movie Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
1988 NFC Championship Game 1989 TV Special Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
Kraft Salutes Super Night at the Super Bowl 1987 TV Movie Himself Self
Saturday Night Live 1987 TV Series Himself – Co-Host / Various Self
Super Bowl XIX 1985 TV Special Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
1984 NFC Championship Game 1985 TV Special Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
1983 NFC Championship Game 1983 TV Special Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
Professor Hope’s Thanksgiving Campus Comedy Capers 1983 TV Movie Himself Self
Super Bowl XVI 1982 TV Special Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
1981 NFC Championship Game 1982 TV Special Himself – San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Self
Wake Up the Echoes: The History of Notre Dame Football 1982 Video documentary Himself – Quarterback, 1978 Self
1979 Cotton Bowl 1979 TV Movie Himself – Notre Dame Fighting Irish Quarterback Self
1978 Cotton Bowl 1978 TV Movie Himself – Notre Dame Fighting Irish Quarterback Self
A Football Life 2012-2016 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Mike & Mike 2013 TV Series Himself – Pro Football Hall of Famer Archive Footage
Year of the Quarterback 2011 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Rome Is Burning 2009 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Saturday Night Live Sports Extra ’09 2009 TV Special Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
Quite Frankly with Stephen A. Smith 2006 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
ESPN SportsCentury 2003 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage