From the gridiron to US Senate candidate, Herschel Walker's past successes and controversies are colliding in Georgia
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Cork GainesOct 5, 2022, 00:37 IST
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Before Herschel Walker was the Republican candidate in the key battle for the US Senate in Georgia, he was a star football player.
In three years at the University of Georgia, he was an All-American each season and won the Heisman Trophy in 1982.
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Walker did not graduate from Georgia despite claims later that he graduated in the top 1% of his class at the school.
In 1983, after his junior year, he turned pro and chose to sign a 3-year, $5 million contract with the New Jersey Generals of the upstart USFL. According to rules at the time, Walker was not eligible for the NFL until 1985.
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In his final USFL season, he set the pro football record of 2,411 rushing yards, albeit in an 18-game season, which is two more matches than the standard NFL season at the time.
It was with the Generals that Walker first met Donald Trump, who became the team's owner in 1984. Trump gave Walker a contract extension that would have kept the running back with the Generals through 1989 and raised his total earnings to $10-11 million over seven years.
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Despite the extension, the Dallas Cowboys drafted Walker in the fifth round of the 1985 draft. The risk paid off. When the USFL folded that year, Walker signed a 5-year, $5 million deal with the Cowboys.
After three seasons with the Cowboys, Jerry Jones purchased the Cowboys and hired Jimmy Johnson to replace the legendary Tom Landry as coach. Johnson wanted to rebuild the team from scratch, so he traded his most valuable player, Walker, to the Minnesota Vikings in one of the biggest deals in league history. The Cowboys received four players and eight draft picks, using those to win three of the next six Super Bowls.
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Walker initially didn't want to go to Minnesota and made what he thought was an outrageous demand of $1.25 million, two cars, and a house. Walker told the Twin Cities Pioneer Press that Jones called his bluff, so he accepted the trade. As of 2021, he still owns the house in Medina, Minnesota.
Walker played 12 productive seasons in the NFL but was never able to recreate the dominance he showed at Georgia and in the USFL. After the Vikings, he spent time with the Philadelphia Eagles and New York Giants before going back to the Cowboys to end his career. After making the Pro Bowl in two of his first three seasons with the Cowboys, he never received the honor again.
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Walker now has an estimated net worth between $29 million and $65 million, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
According to his financial statements, he makes $850,000 a year in salaries from his poultry production company, two sports marketing companies, and a mental health provider, for whom he serves as a spokesperson. He also makes about $400,000 a year giving speeches.
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During his playing days, he also had lucrative endorsement deals with Adidas and Franklin Sports.
Walker married Cindy DeAngelis Grossman in 1983. They had one son together — Christian — and divorced in 2002 after 19 years together.
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During the divorce, Cindy accused Walker of being "physically abusive" and having "extremely threatening behavior." She also said he pointed a gun at her head and threatened her with knives.
Walker's son, Christian, also accused him of being abusive and not being honest about his past after a woman accused the staunchly anti-abortion candidate of paying for her to have an abortion.
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Walker revealed in his autobiography that he has dissociative identity disorder and said that led to his violent behavior. He said things unraveled when his football career ended, which was about the time his son was born.
Walker also recently admitted to having three other children out of wedlock.
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Outside of football, Walker tried his hand at other sports. While still in the NFL, he was a member of the US Bobsleigh team at the 1992 Winter Olympics. He finished seventh in the two-man event.
He also went 2-0 as an MMA fighter in 2010 and 2011.
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He has always been in tremendous shape. At the age of 52, in 2014, Walker said he felt he could still play in the NFL.
Outside of sports, he also competed on Trump's "Celebrity Apprentice."
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Trump later named Walker to the President's Council on Sports, Fitness, and Nutrition.
Walker also spoke at the 2020 Republican National Convention, saying he and Trump have a "deep, personal relationship." More importantly for Walker, it was another toe being dipped into the pool of politics.
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In 2021, Trump backed Walker to run for the US Senate in Georgia. Walker said at the time that he was only contemplating the move, and later denied that Trump asked him to run.
In May, Walker defeated five other candidates to win the Republican primary. He is now going against Rafael Warnock for a seat in the US Senate.