Hemophilia of Georgia – 2020 Hit 'Em for Hemophilia Golf Tournament
Auction Ends: Oct 20, 2020 04:00 PM EDT

Memorabilia

Football Hand-Signed by Soon-To-Be Hall of Famer Allen Rossum and others!

Item Number
181
Estimated Value
1000 USD
Opening Bid
350 USD

Item Description

Tim Lewis
Born in Pa and attended the University of Pittsburg
Drafted in 1983 by the Greenbay Packers and went on to play for 3 years. He went on to begin his coaching career in 1987 at Texas A & M. He would later spend time as defensive coordinator for the Pittsburgh Steelers & New York Giants. 2013 marked his third year as the secondary coach for the Atlanta Falcons. In 2015, Lewis became the defensive backs coach for the San Francisco 49ers, but was let go once the season ended as part of a complete coaching overhaul. 2018 the Alliance of American Football named Tim head coach of the Birmingham Iron.With two games remaining in the 10-week inaugural AAF season, Lewis and the Iron clinched a playoff berth, though due to the AAF's overall underfunding and ownership disputes, the playoffs were never played.Lewis is currently the defensive back coach for the St. Louis BattleHawks of the XFL. Tim played 51 games started in 42 and had 16 interceptions

William Andrews
William Andrews- #31
Born in Thomasville Ga attended Auburn University and was drafted by the Falcons in 1979-1986
4 x Pro Bowl
NEA First -Team ALL PRO
The Sporting News First Team ALL PRO
2x AP Second Team ALL PRO
NEA Second Team ALL PRO
Atlanta Falcons Retired #31
Rushing Yards- 5986
30 Touch Downs

Andrews was regarded as arguably the most bruising, powerful running back in the NFL. Ronnie Lott would later share that a head-on-collision he had with Andrews during a game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Falcons on December 19, 1982 was the hardest hit that he had received during his NFL career. In addition to leading the NFL in yards from scrimmage in 1981. He was named "Falcons Player of the Year" in both 1981 and 1983.
To celebrate his career, his number 31 was retired in 2004 by the Falcons. Andrews was inducted into the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame in 1996.

Allen Rossum - soon to be inducted into the Hall of Fame!
Born in Dallas Texas 
Rossum is a rare breed to say the least. Allen was an exceptional athlete, in high school he  played option quarterback, receiver and tailback in addition to returning kicks and playing defensive back. He recorded 580 tackles and 13 interceptions. He also rushed for 1,634 yards and had 12 touchdown receptions as a senior. Later he was recruited by the University of Notre Dame where he would set the NCAA Fighting Irish record career record with nine touchdown returns (three interceptions, three punts and three kickoffs). As a cornerback, he tallied seven interceptions, 144 tackles, two sacks and 12 passes defensed. When he wasn't playing football you would find him taking the same level of performance on the track where he would become a 2 x All American.
1998 he was drafted by the Philidelphia Eagles where he would continue to wow his teammates and fans. Rossum set an Eagles single-season records for kickoff returns (54) and kickoff return yds (1,347), while ranking 4th in NFC (and 5th in the NFL) with a 24.9 avg. He was selected as the special teams MVP by his teammates. Tallied 12 tackles and 2 PDs at CB, adding a career-high 17 special teams stops and ranking 7th in conference with an 8.9 avg. on 28 punt returns in addition to an 86-yd. return to earn NFC Special Teams Player of the Week. In his rookie season shared punt return duties with Freddie Solomon, Jr., returning 22 for 187 yds. (8.5 avg.).
In 2000 he was picked up by the Green Bay Packers, where he would play out 2 seasons and be named NFC Special Teams Player of the Week for his efforts.
After 2 seasons with Green Bay he would go on to sign with the Atlanta Falcons as a free agent and became the team's all-time leader in kickoff and punt return yardage. He led the NFL  with 545 punt return yards in 2003. Rossum won the NFL's "fastest man" competition at the Pro Bowl 2005, where he also made his first appearance for the NFC squad as a kick returner,. In his five seasons with Atlanta, he returned 154 punts for 1,723 yards and two touchdowns. During the 2004 season, Rossum also recorded two interceptions as a cornerback and set a playoff record in a win against the St. Louis Rams with 152 punt return yards on just three returns, an average of 50.7 yards per return, including a touchdown where he faked a lateral to DeAngelo Hall.
In 2007 he would go onto play 1 season with the Pittsburg Steelers only to head to the westcoast in 2008 and play for San Francisci 49er's, where he would primarily be a  kick returner, although he occasionally played as a receiver during the season, scoring a rushing touchdown on a reverse against the Detroit Lions – the first rushing touchdown of his career. Rossum became the first 49ers defensive back to score an offensive touchdown since Dicky Moegle in 1955 (December 11, 1955, vs. Baltimore Colts).
In 2009 Rossum would sign with the Cowboys only to sustain an injury on his first play that would end his NFL carreer 
Rossum and his wife have four children. He won the National Fatherhood Award in 2005. He established the Allen Rossum Healthy Kids Foundation and hosts an annual Allen Rossum Golf Tournament.  

NFL RECORDS-
Most punt return yards in a playoff game: 
Eagles RECORDS:
Most kickoff returns in a single season:  
Most kickoff return yards in a single season: 
FALCONS RECORDS:
Most Career Punt Return Yards (1,723)
Most Career Kickoff Return Yards (5,489)
Most career All-Purpose yards (7,212)
Most career punt return touchdowns (2) (tied with Deion Sanders, Tim Dwight)
Most career kickoff returns (250)
Most career punt returns
 
Willie Totten
Totten born in North Carrollton, MS. He was the starting quarterback at Mississippi Valley State University all four years from 1981 to 1985, along with Jerry Rice as his target at wide receiver. Totten set more than 50 Division I-AA passing records. The Delta Devils averaged 59 points a game during the 1984 season, with Totten throwing for a record 58 touchdowns and leading the Delta Devils to the Division I-AA playoffs in 1984. Archie Cooley, who was the head coach at Mississippi Valley State University from 1980 to 1986, was the architect of the pass-oriented offense that utilized the skills of Totten.
Although Totten only played 1 season with the Buffalo Bills he did play Canadian and Areana football before beginning his coaching career at Grambling State University. After earning his masters degree and coaching he returned to his alma mater and served as quarterbacks and running back coach during the 1990s before moving on to coach at the high school level for two years. In 2000 Totten returned once more to Mississippi Valley State where he restored the pride of the Delta Devils as head coach. In 2009 he resigned from MVSU to coach one season at Albany State University before landing his current position as quarterback coach at Alabama A & M.
Totten is one of a few college football coaches ever to coach in a stadium named after him. The Delta Devils football team plays in Rice-Totten Field, named for Totten and wide receiver Jerry Rice. He is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame

Randy Moss
Born in Charleston WV where he excelled in football, basketball, baseball, and track. On the field, Moss helped lead his team to the state championships in 1992 and 1993. He was a star at wide receiver, that also played free safety, returned kickoffs and punts. In 1994, he was honored with the Kennedy Award as the West Virginia Football Player of the Year. Parade magazine named him to their annual All-American high school football team in 1995 and in 2009 named him one of the 50 greatest high school football players of all time.
In addition to playing football Moss was twice named West Virginia Player of the Year in basketball  
In 1995 after signing a letter of intent to attendand play at his dream Notre Dame, he found himself in trouble with the law and Notre Dame. This didn't hold him back though. On the recommendation of head coach Lou Holtz, Moss soon found himself under the watchful eye of coach Bobby Bowden at Florida State. Troubles quickly found Moss again one year in, which ultimately was a blessing. He soon transfered to Marshall University where he set the NCAA Division I-AA records for the most games with a touchdown catch in a season (14), most consecutive games with a touchdown catch (13), most touchdown passes caught in a season (28 – tying Jerry Rice's 1984 record), and most receiving yards gained by a freshman in a season (1,709 on 78 catches), a record which still stands today Moss was also the leading kickoff returner in Division I-AA on the season, with 612 total yards and a 34.0 yard average. 
Moss finished his career at Marshall having scored at least one touchdown in all 28 games that he played.He won the Fred Biletnikoff Award as the season's outstanding receiver regardless of position, and was a finalist for the 1997 Heisman Trophy (finishing fourth in the balloting, behind Ryan Leaf, Peyton Manning, and Charles Woodson, who won the award).  

In 1998 before the Minnisota Vikings drafted Moss he was quoted as saying teams that passed on him "will regret it once they see what kind of a player I am and what kind of guy I really am. boy was he right 
At the end of the 1998 regular season, Moss was named a Pro Bowl starter and NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year for his rookie-record 17 touchdown receptions and the third highest receiving yardage (1,313) total.
After 6 seasons with the Vikings Moss had earned  his second straight Pro Bowl appearance, and turned in a record breaking performance. He had 9 receptions for a Pro Bowl record 212 yards and was given the game's Most Valuable Player award, he became the second wide receiver in NFL history (behind Jerry Rice in 1995) to play more than 12 games.
Come 2005 Moss would be traded to the Oakland Raiders only to find himself unhappy after one season, so come 2007 he made his way to New England, where he would call home for the next 3 seasons. Coach Belichick was quoted saying that Moss "is the smartest receiver he's ever been around." He compared Moss' ability to see the field and anticipate plays to that of Tom Brady, and to Lawrence Taylor who Belichick coached with the New York Giants. He said Moss not only knows what he's doing on a play, but what everybody else on the field is doing as well. "That's what makes them special. They just have a sixth, seventh sense", Belichick said. This sentiment was repeated when Moss was inducted into the Hall of Fame, Belichick went further on saying he learned from Moss. Moss became the 11th player in NFL history with 900+ receptions and the seventh player to reach 14,000+ career receiving yards.
2010 Moss signed with the Tennessee Titans for  a total of 8 games before hanging up his helmet. Moss would soon return to the NFL on his 35th birthday for one ast season with the San Fransici 49er's
Upon his release from the 49ers, Moss was hired as an analyst for Fox Sports 1's Fox Football Daily show. Moss was hired as an associate head coach and defensive coordinator at Victory Christian Center High School in Charlotte, North Carolina, in June 2014, where his son was attending high school and playing football.

In July 2016, Moss joined ESPN as an analyst, appearing on Sunday NFL Countdown and Monday Night Countdown.He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2018. In 2019, Moss was named to the National Football League 100th Anniversary All-Time Team
 
Career highlights and awards
6× Pro Bowl (1998–2000, 2002, 2003, 2007)
4× First-team All-Pro (1998, 2000, 2003, 2007)
NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team
NFL 2000s All-Decade Team
NFL Comeback Player of the Year (2007)
5× NFL receiving touchdowns leader (1998, 2000, 2003, 2007, 2009)
Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor
NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year (1998)
NCAA I-AA national champion (1996)
Fred Biletnikoff Award (1997)
Consensus All-American (1997)
MAC Most Valuable Player (1997)
MAC Offensive Player of the Year (1997)
NFL records
23 receiving touchdowns in a season
17 receiving touchdowns in a rookie season