Family life Staubach married his wife Marianne on September 4, 1965. Together they had five children. He and Marianne reside in
Dallas, Texas. As of 2017, they had 15 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Real estate In 1977, he started a commercial real estate business, The Staubach Company, in partnership with Robert Holloway Jr., an associate of Henry S. Miller. He had prepared by working in the off-seasons from 1970 until 1977 for the
Henry S. Miller Company. Staubach began working with real estate because "I couldn't have retired at my age and just played golf. First of all, they didn't pay quarterbacks what they do today. And I was 37 with three kids. I kept thinking about [what would happen] if some linebacker takes off my head and I can't play anymore." He said "Henry Miller Jr. was a lot like [legendary Cowboys coach Tom]
Landry. They both had similar haircuts ... they both had phenomenal integrity, great work ethic, and they could transfer their strengths to other people." The Staubach Company has been his primary endeavor since retiring from football. The company first developed several office buildings; Holloway managed construction while Staubach found tenants. In 1982, Staubach bought out Holloway and shifted the company's emphasis from commercial development to representing corporate clients seeking to lease or buy space. This proved fortuitous, for a boom in Dallas office construction followed by a recession in the Texas oil industry left the city with excess office space, so companies representing tenants wielded greater influence. The company has worked with major businesses including AT&T, McDonald's Corporation, Hospital Corporation of America, and K Mart Corporation, and was also involved in residential development, with ownership stakes in 27 apartments and other real estate projects in the Dallas−Fort Worth area. Some of these were in partnership with Cowboys teammate
Bob Breunig through S.B.C. Development Corporation, then a subsidiary of the Staubach Company. Others were collaborations with local developers and investors, including
Ross Perot. Staubach and his children's trust would gross more than $100 million from the sale by 2013. The sale provided an initial payment of $9.27 per Staubach share with additional payments due during the ensuing five years for a total of approximately $29/share. Staubach took half of his first payment in Jones Lang LaSalle stock which was then trading at approximately $59.50/share. Staubach served as executive chairman of the Americas region of Jones Lang LaSalle until his retirement in 2018.
Other work During the 1970s and early 1980s, he was a spokesperson for the men's clothing retailer
Anderson-Little, appearing in both print and television advertisements. Later, he did television advertisements for
Rolaids as well. Staubach served as the president of the
philanthropic organization No Greater Love in 1981. During the early 1980s, Staubach worked briefly as a
color commentator for
CBS Sports' NFL telecasts. On November 9, 1980, during a close game between the
New York Giants and
Dallas Cowboys, Staubach broadcast a nostalgic comment by exclaiming he would like to be "right down there in the middle of it". The Cowboys
lost 38–35. Staubach jointly owned
Hall of Fame Racing, a
NASCAR Nextel Cup Series team, with fellow former Cowboy and hall-of-famer
Troy Aikman, which began racing for the
2006 season. In 2009, Staubach was honored with the "Lombardi Award of Excellence" from the Vince Lombardi Cancer Foundation. The award was created to honor coach
Lombardi's legacy, and is awarded annually to an individual who exemplifies the "spirit" of the coach. On December 27, 2011, Staubach wrote the foreword for a book titled
The Power in a Link, published by
John Wiley & Sons and authored by
United States Military Academy graduate, David Gowel. ==References==