Step inside the collection. Every trophy, ring and jersey is on display — click any artifact to step closer and hear its story.
Eight artifacts under glass. Click a case to open the exhibit.
Washington 42, Denver 10 — the most one-sided Super Bowl to that point. It capped the 1987 season and handed Darrell Green his first championship ring.
The title was the reward for a fearless playoff run — the same postseason in which Green tore rib cartilage on his legendary 52-yard punt-return touchdown against the Bears and finished the run anyway.
Washington 37, Buffalo 24. The 1991 team went 14–2 and finished the job in Minneapolis — the franchise's third Lombardi Trophy and Green's second.
Green didn't simply watch the celebration. He intercepted a pass in the championship game itself, a fitting stamp on a season in which he was named first-team All-Pro.
Two Super Bowl rings, won a championship apart — both with the only NFL franchise Darrell Green ever played for.
They are the hardware of a twenty-year career spent entirely in burgundy and gold, a loyalty almost unheard of in modern professional football.
The most exclusive jacket in football. Darrell Green earned his in his first year of eligibility — a first-ballot Hall of Famer.
He was presented for enshrinement in Canton by his eldest son, the pastor Jared Green, in a speech that became one of the most quoted in Hall of Fame history.
Cast in bronze and placed in the Hall of Fame gallery forever — the permanent likeness of a cornerback who intercepted a pass in 19 straight seasons.
It stands among the immortals of the game, the final word on a career that, in Green's own words, "transcends football."
One locker. Twenty seasons. Six head coaches — from Joe Gibbs to Steve Spurrier. The nameplate above this stall never changed.
It is the quiet center of a career defined by durability and faith, the place a 5'9" cornerback returned to year after year after year.
The burgundy and gold No. 28 — worn for two decades, then lifted to the rafters at Northwest Stadium, never to be issued to another player again.
More than twenty years after his final snap, Washington made the number permanent — a one-team, two-decade career honored in full.
The jacket of the NFL's Fastest Man Competition — and Darrell Green is the only man who entered and never lost, taking the title four times.
Speed was the gift that carried an undersized cornerback out of a small Texas college and into football immortality.