Article: Amazing Disgrace (Quincy Carter)

Angus

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Amazing Disgrace
Quincy Carter's fall from America's Team to Shreveport sideshow
By Richie Whitt
Published: April 12, 2007


You toke your way out of a job as quarterback of America's Team, shepherded from Dallas Cowboys training camp by the notorious Bishop Terry Hornbuckle.

You file a "wrongful termination" grievance against the Cowboys which, when you lose, makes nary a ripple of news.

One week into a comeback attempt in Canada, you are unceremoniously cut by the Montreal Alouettes.

On an early December morning you are arrested for possession of marijuana, only to sit in jail for 12 hours before being bailed out by a columnist exploiting you as a radio bit.

In the first game of your next—and last—attempted resurrection, you throw six touchdowns for a rinky-dink outfit called the Bossier-Shreveport BattleWings and collect your paycheck: $200 base, $50 bonus for winning.

"You can't believe it?" Carter says last Saturday night in CenturyTel Center. "Trust me, I can't believe it."

Since getting dismissed by the Cowboys in the summer of 2004, Lavonya Quintelle Carter's life has gone to ****. And, arguably worse, Shreveport.

"I kick myself almost every day," Carter says thoughtfully while peeling off his sweaty, black-and-green BattleWings uniform. "I was quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys, about as high-profile as you can get. And I'd love to have that back, I won't deny that. But I can't get that back."

Instead of sold-out NFL stadiums and national TV audiences, Carter toils in the modest arena alongside the Red River just down the street from a nest of casinos. For BattleWings' games the parking is free, admission is $8 and attendance—with the upper deck curtained off to create the illusion of a crowd—sometimes tops 3,000.

Like you, Carter wonders how the hell he got here.

"I made some bad decisions, did some stupid things," he says. "I can only point the finger at myself and try to move on. But it's hard being patient. I've got to realize I can't get three years back in one day."

Just like that, Carter went from riding in limos to washing them.

His fall from grace reads like a man slipping down the trunk of tree, grasping for safety only to have the branches whack him in the crotch each painful rung into despair. While Michael Irvin somehow parlayed his drug abuse into street cred, sympathy and even Canton, Carter's sentenced him to insignificance.

"If I'd never picked up pot I'd still be playing for the Cowboys," says Carter, who in Dallas routinely quoted Bible verses during interviews. "I have to live with that."

With a five-year, $4 million contract and endorsements from owner Jerry Jones and coach Bill Parcells, Carter started all 16 games and led the Cowboys to a 10-6 playoff berth in '03. But six days into '04 training camp, he flunked a drug test and was released, comforted in part by the reprehensible Hornbuckle.

Carter filed a grievance against the Cowboys, claiming he was wrongfully released. Last month the NFL Players Association lost the case on his behalf.

"Isn't that funny?" Carter says with a seemingly unbefitting laugh. "Look at how it went down. And somehow I lost? I don't know, man, it's just funny. God tells us to forgive and I'm doing my best, but what the Cowboys did to me...it's tough to swallow."

Says Jones, "Although Quincy's time in Dallas did not result in the type of success that we all had hoped for, we wish him nothing but the best in his pursuit of a new opportunity in professional football."

After a short stint with the New York Jets, skipping the '05 season and the humbling release north of the border last spring, Carter crashed into rock bottom December 15.

Called to Shady Grove Road in Irving around 5:30 a.m., police found Carter "throwing things around" and arrested him for possessing less than two ounces of pot, a Class B misdemeanor. He sat in jail until 5 p.m., when Fort Worth Star-Telegram columnist and ESPN 103.3 FM radio host Randy Galloway paid his $500 bail. Upon his release, Carter, apparently without money or transportation, hitched a ride home with a KDFW-Channel 4 van.

"It started as radio-show bull****," Galloway says. "But it turned into a legitimately sad story. The former quarterback of the Cowboys had no money and no friends, at Christmas? That's a pretty fast downward spiral."

With charges pending, Carter says only of the incident, "Let's just say the police didn't handle things the right way."

Worse, when Carter called Galloway the next day he was snubbed.

"He called, but I said no thanks," Galloway says. "You know your life's not going well if I have to bail you out of jail. I just didn't want to talk to him. I wanted him to move on and get his life turned around."

Fortunately, at the very base of the tree trunk, the BattleWings were willing to listen.

Claiming he's been drug-free for nearly four months, Carter plans to use Arena2—a developmental minor league to the AFL—as a one-year stepping stone back to the CFL and, ultimately, the NFL.

But before he can play Broadway again, Quincy has to perfect Bossier.

Fittingly, on an Easter Eve sprinkled with snow, Carter looks ridiculously out of place in the quaint building about the size of a concession stand in the Cowboys' new $1 billion baby. The joint is sponsored by Shoney's, has all the ambience of a nursing home knitting hour and boasts a grainy black-and-white scoreboard video screen not unlike the set your old man used to watch The Honeymooners. The game is 8 on 8, the 50-yard field is surrounded by padded walls and the referee constantly stops play to yell "Please turn down the music!"

Instead of his old No. 17, Quincy wears No. 8 ("I'm trying to put the 1 and 7 back together again," he explains.) He wears a yellow Livestrong bracelet, talks with that familiar lisp and carries the weight of a crappy franchise that has never made the playoffs and last year lost a game 72-3 in Tulsa.

Despite the pressure, Carter performs. Matched against former Texas Tech quarterback Cody Hodges, Carter leads the BattleWings to a 67-52 victory over the Fort Wayne Fusion with 20 of 29 passing for 237 yards, countless points to the sky, a couple of enthusiastic towel waves and the first, tiny steps toward salvaging a career.

"I'm not kidding myself. I know the talent level drops off, and it's not 11 on 11," says Carter, 29. "But this is my last chance. No doubt in my mind I will be back in the NFL."

Just not in Dallas.

http://www.dallasobserver.com/2007-04-12/news/amazing-disgrace/
 

soccerbud

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Angus;1455555 said:
Amazing Disgrace
Quincy Carter's fall from America's Team to Shreveport sideshow
By Richie Whitt
Published: April 12, 2007


You toke your way out of a job as quarterback of America's Team, shepherded from Dallas Cowboys training camp by the notorious Bishop Terry Hornbuckle.

You file a "wrongful termination" grievance against the Cowboys which, when you lose, makes nary a ripple of news.

One week into a comeback attempt in Canada, you are unceremoniously cut by the Montreal Alouettes.

On an early December morning you are arrested for possession of marijuana, only to sit in jail for 12 hours before being bailed out by a columnist exploiting you as a radio bit.

In the first game of your next—and last—attempted resurrection, you throw six touchdowns for a rinky-dink outfit called the Bossier-Shreveport BattleWings and collect your paycheck: $200 base, $50 bonus for winning.

"You can't believe it?" Carter says last Saturday night in CenturyTel Center. "Trust me, I can't believe it."

Since getting dismissed by the Cowboys in the summer of 2004, Lavonya Quintelle Carter's life has gone to ****. And, arguably worse, Shreveport.

"I kick myself almost every day," Carter says thoughtfully while peeling off his sweaty, black-and-green BattleWings uniform. "I was quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys, about as high-profile as you can get. And I'd love to have that back, I won't deny that. But I can't get that back."

Instead of sold-out NFL stadiums and national TV audiences, Carter toils in the modest arena alongside the Red River just down the street from a nest of casinos. For BattleWings' games the parking is free, admission is $8 and attendance—with the upper deck curtained off to create the illusion of a crowd—sometimes tops 3,000.

Like you, Carter wonders how the hell he got here.

"I made some bad decisions, did some stupid things," he says. "I can only point the finger at myself and try to move on. But it's hard being patient. I've got to realize I can't get three years back in one day."

Just like that, Carter went from riding in limos to washing them.

His fall from grace reads like a man slipping down the trunk of tree, grasping for safety only to have the branches whack him in the crotch each painful rung into despair. While Michael Irvin somehow parlayed his drug abuse into street cred, sympathy and even Canton, Carter's sentenced him to insignificance.

"If I'd never picked up pot I'd still be playing for the Cowboys," says Carter, who in Dallas routinely quoted Bible verses during interviews. "I have to live with that."

With a five-year, $4 million contract and endorsements from owner Jerry Jones and coach Bill Parcells, Carter started all 16 games and led the Cowboys to a 10-6 playoff berth in '03. But six days into '04 training camp, he flunked a drug test and was released, comforted in part by the reprehensible Hornbuckle.

Carter filed a grievance against the Cowboys, claiming he was wrongfully released. Last month the NFL Players Association lost the case on his behalf.

"Isn't that funny?" Carter says with a seemingly unbefitting laugh. "Look at how it went down. And somehow I lost? I don't know, man, it's just funny. God tells us to forgive and I'm doing my best, but what the Cowboys did to me...it's tough to swallow."

Says Jones, "Although Quincy's time in Dallas did not result in the type of success that we all had hoped for, we wish him nothing but the best in his pursuit of a new opportunity in professional football."

After a short stint with the New York Jets, skipping the '05 season and the humbling release north of the border last spring, Carter crashed into rock bottom December 15.

Called to Shady Grove Road in Irving around 5:30 a.m., police found Carter "throwing things around" and arrested him for possessing less than two ounces of pot, a Class B misdemeanor. He sat in jail until 5 p.m., when Fort Worth Star-Telegram columnist and ESPN 103.3 FM radio host Randy Galloway paid his $500 bail. Upon his release, Carter, apparently without money or transportation, hitched a ride home with a KDFW-Channel 4 van.

"It started as radio-show bull****," Galloway says. "But it turned into a legitimately sad story. The former quarterback of the Cowboys had no money and no friends, at Christmas? That's a pretty fast downward spiral."

With charges pending, Carter says only of the incident, "Let's just say the police didn't handle things the right way."

Worse, when Carter called Galloway the next day he was snubbed.

"He called, but I said no thanks," Galloway says. "You know your life's not going well if I have to bail you out of jail. I just didn't want to talk to him. I wanted him to move on and get his life turned around."

Fortunately, at the very base of the tree trunk, the BattleWings were willing to listen.

Claiming he's been drug-free for nearly four months, Carter plans to use Arena2—a developmental minor league to the AFL—as a one-year stepping stone back to the CFL and, ultimately, the NFL.

But before he can play Broadway again, Quincy has to perfect Bossier.

Fittingly, on an Easter Eve sprinkled with snow, Carter looks ridiculously out of place in the quaint building about the size of a concession stand in the Cowboys' new $1 billion baby. The joint is sponsored by Shoney's, has all the ambience of a nursing home knitting hour and boasts a grainy black-and-white scoreboard video screen not unlike the set your old man used to watch The Honeymooners. The game is 8 on 8, the 50-yard field is surrounded by padded walls and the referee constantly stops play to yell "Please turn down the music!"

Instead of his old No. 17, Quincy wears No. 8 ("I'm trying to put the 1 and 7 back together again," he explains.) He wears a yellow Livestrong bracelet, talks with that familiar lisp and carries the weight of a crappy franchise that has never made the playoffs and last year lost a game 72-3 in Tulsa.

Despite the pressure, Carter performs. Matched against former Texas Tech quarterback Cody Hodges, Carter leads the BattleWings to a 67-52 victory over the Fort Wayne Fusion with 20 of 29 passing for 237 yards, countless points to the sky, a couple of enthusiastic towel waves and the first, tiny steps toward salvaging a career.

"I'm not kidding myself. I know the talent level drops off, and it's not 11 on 11," says Carter, 29. "But this is my last chance. No doubt in my mind I will be back in the NFL."

Just not in Dallas.

http://www.dallasobserver.com/2007-04-12/news/amazing-disgrace/

despite all that happened, i wish him all the best, and hope he can turn his life back around one way or another.
 

junk

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Angus;1455555 said:
"If I'd never picked up pot I'd still be playing for the Cowboys," says Carter, who in Dallas routinely quoted Bible verses during interviews. "I have to live with that."

I doubt it. He really wasn't that good when he was here. What makes anyone think he was suddenly going to "get it"?

"Isn't that funny?" Carter says with a seemingly unbefitting laugh. "Look at how it went down. And somehow I lost? I don't know, man, it's just funny. God tells us to forgive and I'm doing my best, but what the Cowboys did to me...it's tough to swallow."
Uh, what exactly did they do wrong? Cut a player with obvious troubles who wasn't very good on the field?

This is typical Quincy behavior. He's had a trend of blaming anyone but himself.

With charges pending, Carter says only of the incident, "Let's just say the police didn't handle things the right way."
Again, not his fault. :rolleyes:

"I'm not kidding myself. I know the talent level drops off, and it's not 11 on 11," says Carter, 29. "But this is my last chance. No doubt in my mind I will be back in the NFL."

I kind of doubt it.
 

Gaede

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I really want things to work for the guy...Every one of us knows, or has known, the lovable loser that just can't get things straight.

hopefully Quincy gets it together...but for some reason, I don't think it'll ever happen
 

fortdick

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That is it! He has turned it around. Bring him in a let him fight it out with Brad for the backup job, next year he takes Romo's spot and his girl!

Thought I would get it in first. I have huffed enough paint for the day.
 

Pabst

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Best of luck to him in the future.

Regardless of reasons, I can't understand why people kick a fallen man.
 

5Stars

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Pabst;1455617 said:
Best of luck to him in the future.

Regardless of reasons, I can't understand why people kick a fallen man.


He's not fallen...he's getting up...it's all good.

;)
 

Chocolate Lab

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fortdick;1455604 said:
That is it! He has turned it around. Bring him in a let him fight it out with Brad for the backup job, next year he takes Romo's spot and his girl!

Thought I would get it in first. I have huffed enough paint for the day.
:laugh2:

Maybe as a public service to CZ, everyone could just post a letter...

a) I love Quincy and I wish him the very best! I'm sure he'll be winning again in the NFL soon!

b) Quincy is a loser and he sucked on the field -- good riddance.

c) Pot should be legal! Alcohol is way worse! The Feds are just out to get us!

k) Look at all the QBs in the league who are worse than Q. He wills teams to the playoffs. It's a conspiracy.

f) I crave brownies.
 

Mavs Man

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Mickey Spagnola didn't write this?

Seriously though, I thought Randy Galloway bailing Quincy out of jail was just a joke. I guess not.
 

Achozen

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The Real Mavs Man;1455646 said:
Mickey Spagnola didn't write this?

Seriously though, I thought Randy Galloway bailing Quincy out of jail was just a joke. I guess not.
I know right.

Mickey was always a QC hater. Even, when he was beginning to come along, he would find a way to down play QC's (few) good performances.
 

RCowboyFan

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Man, never dearth of defenders for that guy. I used to have some sympathy for him, but he is loser, and never will learn. He comes around always to blame something on someone, as if Cowboys wrong him. Heck Jones did more than he could ever hope for, by picking him in the draft high against scouts wishes.
 

notherbob

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junk;1455575 said:
I doubt it. He really wasn't that good when he was here. What makes anyone think he was suddenly going to "get it"?


Uh, what exactly did they do wrong? Cut a player with obvious troubles who wasn't very good on the field?

This is typical Quincy behavior. He's had a trend of blaming anyone but himself.


Again, not his fault. :rolleyes:



I kind of doubt it.

I agree. As long as he's blaming others for things when he was clearly in the wrong, he's not really ready to succeed.

Quincy's likeable enough, he just seems to be a natural loser who just happens to have some pretty fair athletic skills and thinking and decision-making just aren't among his strong suits.

I wish him well but I'm not optimistic. If he does come back and perform well and stay clean, he'll have earned my respect and admiration; it isn't going to be easy.

Hopefully, Jerry will remember this on draft day when he gets another wild hair.
 

Hostile

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Carter filed a grievance against the Cowboys, claiming he was wrongfully released. Last month the NFL Players Association lost the case on his behalf.

"Isn't that funny?" Carter says with a seemingly unbefitting laugh. "Look at how it went down. And somehow I lost? I don't know, man, it's just funny. God tells us to forgive and I'm doing my best, but what the Cowboys did to me...it's tough to swallow."
What the Cowboys did to you? I pray that JJT or someone else who actually knows him will get this message to him, because he needs to pull his head out of a dark, smelly place and hear this. Please excuse me while I talk to Quincy.

What the Cowboys did to you Quincy? They drafted you in the 2nd round of the 2001 NFL Draft ahead of 31 other teams. They got rid of all competition for you and handed you the starting QB job for America's Team. As a rookie! They gave you a contract worth millions of dollars.

And you repay that by doing drugs?

Forgive me if I don't weep for you, but I can't. You were right earlier in the article when you said the blame was all yours. But then you opened your pie hole again and removed some of the blame from yourself, and put it on the Cowboys. What a cowardly cop out. It's all your fault Quincy. All on you. No one else. No one shoved drugs in your hand and stuck a gun to your head and told you to flush your career down the toilet.

You know, I was a big time critic of your play when you were with the team Quincy. Too erratic and not disciplined enough for my tastes. I took a lot of crap for having the temerity to speak my mind about these doubts. Despite my doubts about your football ability, I never said anything about you personally except that I admired your work ethic and character. Since your fall I have not taken a single shot at you for your misfortune. I've even prayed that you would get your life together. I felt bad for you. That is past tense now.

What the Cowboys did to you? You have no idea what I would give to have the chance you did, you selfish jerk. You played football in a stadium that is like a cathedral to me and for a team whose history courses through my soul. I sacrificed a knee to this game trying to live the dream that you actually had, and if medicine had been able to fix that knee, I would have sacrificed the other one just as quickly.

You lived my dream, and you sit there and act like you have no idea how precious that is to those of us who can only dream of the opportunity you had. You had the world's greatest job handed to you on a silver platter and you have the unmitigated gall to whine about what the Cowboys did to you?

Forgive me if I don't feel sorry for you any more. Or don't, I honestly could give a flying crap what you think or feel. Shut your festering gob Quincy. That's the best advice I have for you. Your victim act is tired and it's a lie. Plain and simple. It's a lie.

Excuse my rudeness folks, but that burned my rear end.
 

calico

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Hostile;1455683 said:
What the Cowboys did to you? I pray that JJT or someone else who actually knows him will get this message to him, because he needs to pull his head out of a dark, smelly place and hear this. Please excuse me while I talk to Quincy.

What the Cowboys did to you Quincy? They drafted you in the 2nd round of the 2001 NFL Draft ahead of 31 other teams. They got rid of all competition for you and handed you the starting QB job for America's Team. As a rookie! They gave you a contract worth millions of dollars.

And you repay that by doing drugs?

Forgive me if I don't weep for you, but I can't. You were right earlier in the article when you said the blame was all yours. But then you opened your pie hole again and removed some of the blame from yourself, and put it on the Cowboys. What a cowardly cop out. It's all your fault Quincy. All on you. No one else. No one shoved drugs in your hand and stuck a gun to your head and told you to flush your career down the toilet.

You know, I was a big time critic of your play when you were with the team Quincy. Too erratic and not disciplined enough for my tastes. I took a lot of crap for having the temerity to speak my mind about these doubts. Despite my doubts about your football ability, I never said anything about you personally except that I admired your work ethic and character. Since your fall I have not taken a single shot at you for your misfortune. I've even prayed that you would get your life together. I felt bad for you. That is past tense now.

What the Cowboys did to you? You have no idea what I would give to have the chance you did, you selfish jerk. You played football in a stadium that is like a cathedral to me and for a team whose history courses through my soul. I sacrificed a knee to this game trying to live the dream that you actually had, and if medicine had been able to fix that knee, I would have sacrificed the other one just as quickly.

You lived my dream, and you sit there and act like you have no idea how precious that is to those of us who can only dream of the opportunity you had. You had the world's greatest job handed to you on a silver platter and you have the unmitigated gall to whine about what the Cowboys did to you?

Forgive me if I don't feel sorry for you any more. Or don't, I honestly could give a flying crap what you think or feel. Shut your festering gob Quincy. That's the best advice I have for you. Your victim act is tired and it's a lie. Plain and simple. It's a lie.

Excuse my rudeness folks, but that burned my rear end.



:bow:
 

BrAinPaiNt

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Hostile;1455683 said:
Excuse my rudeness folks, but that burned my rear end.

preparation%20H.jpg


Ditto...and I will now take my advice I was giving out earlier today and just be happy he is gone and move on.
 

GimmeTheBall!

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Angus;1455555 said:
Amazing Disgrace
Quincy Carter's fall from America's Team to Shreveport sideshow
By Richie Whitt
Published: April 12, 2007


You toke your way out of a job as quarterback of America's Team, shepherded from Dallas Cowboys training camp by the notorious Bishop Terry Hornbuckle.

You file a "wrongful termination" grievance against the Cowboys which, when you lose, makes nary a ripple of news.

One week into a comeback attempt in Canada, you are unceremoniously cut by the Montreal Alouettes.

On an early December morning you are arrested for possession of marijuana, only to sit in jail for 12 hours before being bailed out by a columnist exploiting you as a radio bit.

In the first game of your next—and last—attempted resurrection, you throw six touchdowns for a rinky-dink outfit called the Bossier-Shreveport BattleWings and collect your paycheck: $200 base, $50 bonus for winning.

"You can't believe it?" Carter says last Saturday night in CenturyTel Center. "Trust me, I can't believe it."

Since getting dismissed by the Cowboys in the summer of 2004, Lavonya Quintelle Carter's life has gone to ****. And, arguably worse, Shreveport.

"I kick myself almost every day," Carter says thoughtfully while peeling off his sweaty, black-and-green BattleWings uniform. "I was quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys, about as high-profile as you can get. And I'd love to have that back, I won't deny that. But I can't get that back."

Instead of sold-out NFL stadiums and national TV audiences, Carter toils in the modest arena alongside the Red River just down the street from a nest of casinos. For BattleWings' games the parking is free, admission is $8 and attendance—with the upper deck curtained off to create the illusion of a crowd—sometimes tops 3,000.

Like you, Carter wonders how the hell he got here.

"I made some bad decisions, did some stupid things," he says. "I can only point the finger at myself and try to move on. But it's hard being patient. I've got to realize I can't get three years back in one day."

Just like that, Carter went from riding in limos to washing them.

His fall from grace reads like a man slipping down the trunk of tree, grasping for safety only to have the branches whack him in the crotch each painful rung into despair. While Michael Irvin somehow parlayed his drug abuse into street cred, sympathy and even Canton, Carter's sentenced him to insignificance.

"If I'd never picked up pot I'd still be playing for the Cowboys," says Carter, who in Dallas routinely quoted Bible verses during interviews. "I have to live with that."

With a five-year, $4 million contract and endorsements from owner Jerry Jones and coach Bill Parcells, Carter started all 16 games and led the Cowboys to a 10-6 playoff berth in '03. But six days into '04 training camp, he flunked a drug test and was released, comforted in part by the reprehensible Hornbuckle.

Carter filed a grievance against the Cowboys, claiming he was wrongfully released. Last month the NFL Players Association lost the case on his behalf.

"Isn't that funny?" Carter says with a seemingly unbefitting laugh. "Look at how it went down. And somehow I lost? I don't know, man, it's just funny. God tells us to forgive and I'm doing my best, but what the Cowboys did to me...it's tough to swallow."

Says Jones, "Although Quincy's time in Dallas did not result in the type of success that we all had hoped for, we wish him nothing but the best in his pursuit of a new opportunity in professional football."

After a short stint with the New York Jets, skipping the '05 season and the humbling release north of the border last spring, Carter crashed into rock bottom December 15.

Called to Shady Grove Road in Irving around 5:30 a.m., police found Carter "throwing things around" and arrested him for possessing less than two ounces of pot, a Class B misdemeanor. He sat in jail until 5 p.m., when Fort Worth Star-Telegram columnist and ESPN 103.3 FM radio host Randy Galloway paid his $500 bail. Upon his release, Carter, apparently without money or transportation, hitched a ride home with a KDFW-Channel 4 van.

"It started as radio-show bull****," Galloway says. "But it turned into a legitimately sad story. The former quarterback of the Cowboys had no money and no friends, at Christmas? That's a pretty fast downward spiral."

With charges pending, Carter says only of the incident, "Let's just say the police didn't handle things the right way."

Worse, when Carter called Galloway the next day he was snubbed.

"He called, but I said no thanks," Galloway says. "You know your life's not going well if I have to bail you out of jail. I just didn't want to talk to him. I wanted him to move on and get his life turned around."

Fortunately, at the very base of the tree trunk, the BattleWings were willing to listen.

Claiming he's been drug-free for nearly four months, Carter plans to use Arena2—a developmental minor league to the AFL—as a one-year stepping stone back to the CFL and, ultimately, the NFL.

But before he can play Broadway again, Quincy has to perfect Bossier.

Fittingly, on an Easter Eve sprinkled with snow, Carter looks ridiculously out of place in the quaint building about the size of a concession stand in the Cowboys' new $1 billion baby. The joint is sponsored by Shoney's, has all the ambience of a nursing home knitting hour and boasts a grainy black-and-white scoreboard video screen not unlike the set your old man used to watch The Honeymooners. The game is 8 on 8, the 50-yard field is surrounded by padded walls and the referee constantly stops play to yell "Please turn down the music!"

Instead of his old No. 17, Quincy wears No. 8 ("I'm trying to put the 1 and 7 back together again," he explains.) He wears a yellow Livestrong bracelet, talks with that familiar lisp and carries the weight of a crappy franchise that has never made the playoffs and last year lost a game 72-3 in Tulsa.

Despite the pressure, Carter performs. Matched against former Texas Tech quarterback Cody Hodges, Carter leads the BattleWings to a 67-52 victory over the Fort Wayne Fusion with 20 of 29 passing for 237 yards, countless points to the sky, a couple of enthusiastic towel waves and the first, tiny steps toward salvaging a career.

"I'm not kidding myself. I know the talent level drops off, and it's not 11 on 11," says Carter, 29. "But this is my last chance. No doubt in my mind I will be back in the NFL."

Just not in Dallas.

http://www.dallasobserver.com/2007-04-12/news/amazing-disgrace/

I was reading about his fall from grace. I was feeling sorry for him. Gee, I just hope he turns things around . . . . whaaaaa?

What the Cowboys did to him?????

Screw you, Lavonya Quintelle Carter.

You and the horse you rode in on.:(
 

jrumann59

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I have no sympathy for druggies. That type of problem is a character flaw, no one gets an ounce of sympathy from me if you let a substance dictate life to you, that goes for QC or my own flesh and blood. Drugs just tell everyone you are of weak heart and mind.
 

silverbear

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The Real Mavs Man;1455646 said:
Mickey Spagnola didn't write this?

Seriously though, I thought Randy Galloway bailing Quincy out of jail was just a joke. I guess not.

Quincy said at the time that he could have made the bail... it just would have taken him a little more time, sitting in jail that way...

Of course, the fact that Galloway refused to talk to him the next day is all the proof anybody needs that he just did that for the publicity... any suggestion he gave a flamin' crap about Quincy is ridiculous...

As for those who still insist he really wasn't all that good, I'll simply repeat that he put up the 6th best single season passing yardage total in Cowboys history in his one full season as a starter... which is why he was firmly entrenched as the starter going into training camp that year, until the bong got the best of him...

Quincy had to go after that, but this knee-jerk need to trash his play is revisionist history...
 
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