Packers of the Past: Backup Quarterback David Whitehurst

Furman graduate opted to remain a backup in Green Bay over the USFL  

Born in West Germany, former Green Bay Packers quarterback David Whitehurst grew up in Georgia as a fan of the team that would draft him in the eighth round of the NFL Draft in 1977. While playing college football at Furman, he even wore number 15 in honor of Bart Starr, his favorite Green Bay player, and who suddenly was his coach.

His dreams of one day being an NFL star for the franchise he loved would never come to pass, however – he immediately was relegated to being the backup to Lynn Dickey, for whom the team had traded the season before.

And then, early in 1977, Dickey got hurt. A broken leg would keep him sidelined into the 1979 season.

On came Whitehurst – and the results were, well, mixed. The lean, 6-2 quarterback with long brown hair would make his first NFL start on Monday Night Football in the first ever Monday night game played at Lambeau Field. He went 12 of 24 with three picks in a 10-9 Packers loss.

His career as a Packer was up and down from there, with flashes of talent blended with head-scratching mistakes. Over his seven years in Green Bay, he threw for 6,205 yards on 51.4% passing, but managed only 28 touchdowns against, gulp, 51 interceptions.

Still, Whitehurst relished being a Packer, despite seeing very little action after Dickey’s return. And then, in 1981, the Packers picked another quarterback sixth overall in Rich Campbell. It appeared Whitehurst’s time might have come to an end. As he tells it, he heard about the pick on the radio while driving home after having just bought a house in Green Bay.

“I was wondering how I was going to pay for this house,” he told UPI in 1981. 

But in early November, Dickey was again sidelined for a game against the Seattle Seahawks at Lambeau Field. Instead of going with his rookie first-rounder, Whitehurst got the start. He completed 19 of 31 passes for 205 yards and three touchdowns in a 34-24 Packers victory.

After being routinely booed during his stint as a starter with Dickey sidelined, nearly 50,000 Packers fans cheered him as he walked off the field following the victory. 

“I'd love to say 'I showed you guys,'’' he told the media after the game. “But I don't really feel that way.” 

He continued on as Dickey’s backup through the 1983 season as Campbell struggled to get a foothold in the NFL on his way to becoming one of the Packers’ all-time first-round busts. And then, following the 1983 season, Starr was fired as head coach. His former teammate Forrest Gregg was hired to replace him, and Whitehurst was released. He signed with the Kansas City Chiefs as a backup, but never played.

Ironically, Whitehurst had just signed a new contract not long before being cut – after turning down an offer to presumably become a starter in the USFL. He preferred, however, to remain in Green Bay, even as a backup.

“At one point, yes, I was considering it,” he said at the time. “But toward the end of the season, I wasn't.”

After leaving the NFL, Whitehurst started his own residential construction company, David Whitehurst Homes. He became far more successful in business than on the field.

Interviewed at a Packers alumni golf outing last year by the Green Bay Press-Times, Whitehurst expressed zero regrets about his time with the team.

“How fortunate I was to come to Green Bay to begin with, and to have Bart Starr as my head coach [was] unreal,” Whitehurst said. “When I was a kid, the Green Bay Packers were my favorite team. And then, Bart Starr was my favorite player.”

Perhaps fellow Green Bay alum Davante Adams summed it up best back in January when he said, “Once a Packer, always a Packer.”

 

 

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Kevin Gibson is a professional writer and author based in Louisville, Ky. He's also a former sports writer who covered high school, college and professional sports, a Packers shareholder and a fan since 1975. Even John Hadl couldn't break him. Follow him on Twitter: @kgramone

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Comments (10)

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NickPerry's picture

May 08, 2026 at 07:05 am

Oh wow, a reminder of just how bad the Packers and the QB position were in Green Bay for 20 years. There's many posters here that wouldn't remember the David Whitehurst's, Jerry Tagge's or Scott Hunters, that were Packers QBs in the 70's and 80's. Rick Campbell? What a waste of a draft pick. He would have been a considered a bust in the 7th round, THAT's how bad Campbell was.

Thank God for Lynn Dickey. Dickey and the Packers offense of the early 80's, especially 1983, were a blast to watch. John Jefferson, James Lofton, Paul Coffman were all in the Pro Bowl before it became the joke it is today. For a very brief period, that Packers offense was GREAT!

Glad Whitehurst is alive and doing well... GO PACK GO!!

8 points
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GregC's picture

May 08, 2026 at 08:14 am

The Packers went 8-7-1 in 1978 with Whitehurst starting at QB all year. It was their first season above .500 since 1972, so it seemed like a big deal to me as a kid at the time. The Vikings also finished 8-7-1 but won the division on a tiebreaker. The tie between the Packers and Vikings was 10-10 at Lambeau Field. The Packers should've won that game.

The Eagles finished 9-7 and edged out the Packers for a wildcard spot, thanks in part to their fluke win over the Giants in November. The Giants just needed to take a knee to run out the clock, but the QB attempted a handoff instead, which was fumbled and scooped up by Herman Edwards, who returned it for the game-winning score. Ugh.

6 points
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Oxymoron 3339's picture

May 08, 2026 at 08:27 am

Freaking Fran and the Vikes had a good team for years. Always wanted Dave Roller to roll over Fran but he was tough to get a clean shot at. Then all of a sudden Roller was a Vike. My 12 year old self was crushed.

3 points
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Swisch's picture

May 08, 2026 at 11:02 am

As a junior in high school and a huge Packers fan in suburban Chicago, what hurt about that season of 1978 was the Packers fading so badly down the stretch after getting off to a stellar start.
In October, I was super excited that Bart Starr, as head coach, finally had the Packers on a roll. Then, the slide. The tie against the Vikings at the end was a really frustrating finish.
Then, things were really dismal until 1982, when the Packers started off fast in a season interrupted by a strike, went on to make the playoffs in a shortened season, won a playoff game at Lambeau Field against the Cardinals when came up from St. Louis, and then played an exciting game against the Cowboys but fell short.
Then, more misery until 1989, with another season of some success that was unfortunately just a blip.
Wow! we Packers fans of the 1970s and 1980s really suffered. Those of us who persevered form a loose alliance but admirable cadre of loyalty.
***
What made it worse for me in the mid-1980s, still residing in Chicagoland through college and out into the world of work, was the Bears of the Super Bowl Shuffle, with William "the Refrigerator" Perry steamrolling the Packers on Monday Night Football, then in their next beatdown of the Packers, actually catching a pass for a touchdown.
Since about 1993, it's actually been a golden age. A couple of Super Bowls mixed with some playoff disappointments -- but in any case, enjoying the team as competitive just about every season. Only a single team each season wins the Super Bowl; all of the other playoff teams have to end it with the down note of a loss.
Younger fans may not appreciate just how good it has been for more than three decades. Overall, the Packers have been a model franchise setting a standard of success, and at times excellence, with remarkable consistency.
We're all hoping for another title or more in the next few seasons, but it's good to appreciate the good times we have just about every autumn.
I think there's good reason to be excited about 2026 -- with even an outside possibility of going all the way to the top.

2 points
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jannes bjornson's picture

May 08, 2026 at 02:12 pm

His son, Charlie played Ten years in the NFL and would have been a good backup guy for the Pack.
David Whitehurst took a bit more flak than he deserved. It was the coaching and Organization, more so than his performance.

3 points
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Oxymoron 3339's picture

May 08, 2026 at 08:22 am

Great story/update KG.

4 points
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GreenandBold's picture

May 08, 2026 at 08:35 am

Whitehurst was certainly devoted to his team as a fan and a player . Happy that his life after football was so prosperous .

3 points
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HarryHodag's picture

May 08, 2026 at 02:49 pm

For the younger fans, this story is a nice sampling of what the 'dry years' were like. A major issue was the Packers perpetually lousy offensive lines. Packers QB's were constantly harassed and they rarely got the running game going to help them out. They had talent at times---Lofton and Jefferson, Dickey, Paul Coffman, but it was always too little, too late. Couple this with a defense that often was simply bad and you had, well, frustration.

That's why I give a jaundiced eye when people foam at the mouth about what's going on now. It was bad then compared to now. There was little if any hope of playoffs, a team not unlike the current Arizona Cardinals.

4 points
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Spock's picture

May 08, 2026 at 03:16 pm

Packers just cut McManus.

0 points
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LeotisHarris's picture

May 08, 2026 at 06:38 pm

Nice article, Kevin. However, the first MNF game at Lambeau was a 27-14 win against the Patriots in 1979. Whitehurst was 17 of 27 for 206 yards with two Ints. He threw for one TD and ran for another.

The mention of MNF put Howard Cosell's voice in my head saying "Day-vid White-hurst, the ang-u-lar one, from ti-ny Fur-man Coll-ege." Those were the days.

4 points
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