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"Alcohol caused me to act in an erratic way and there were certain personal issues, some family issues that I needed to address," he said. "As everybody saw in those years, the confusion, the angst, the anger that I was experiencing at that time, came to the fore. Alcohol fueled it. I was described as a lost soul at one time and I definitely think that was the case."
The Cincinnati Bengals found themselves in the middle of a shitstorm today--not of their own making, ironically.
Paul Brown Stadium was turned into a wind tunnel by 30 MPH winds while swirling debris pelted the field - one of the referees’ white caps sailed more than 50 yards off his head - and every throw became a gamble. Balls floated and veered, forcing the offenses to keep it simple.
It was a fitting end for a week--for one of those rarest of weeks--that The Bengals enjoyed the fact that the off-field troubles of the other team seem to be larger and more consuming than their very own.
The Tennessee Titans franchinse quarterback Vince Young was in the news earlier in the week as mental health officials with close knowledge of his state of mind scrambled to find him during a few hours when he went missing without his cell phone and with a gun.
Suddenly, the unlikeliest of hero's was called upon and thrust back into the spotlight that had been so bright and encompassing once.
Former 1st Round Draft Pick quarterback Kerry Collins was given the nod in the start with Cincinnati, the latest leg on what has been a "long strange trip" of a career. The 35-year-old alcoholic was drafted by the Carolina Panthers in 1995, and in his three seasons with the Panthers, he threw for 7,295 yards, 39 touchdowns and 49 interceptions. His completion percentage was 52.6% and his quarterback rating was 65.6. In his second season, he led the Panthers to the NFC Championship Game.
1997 was the year everything fell apart.
After a binge-drinking episode with teammates lead to a team brawl and injured Collins in the late preseason, Collins threw 21 interceptions during the season and the Panthers finished 7-9, just one season after advancing to the NFC Championship. Collins was placed on waivers by Carolina during the 1998 season and was subsequently signed by the New Orleans Saints.
On November 2, 1998 Collins was arrested for drunk driving in Charlotte, North Carolina. He finished the 1998 campaign in New Orleans and signed with the New York Giants as a free agent on February 19, 1999.
In the 2000 season Collins led the Giants to Super Bowl XXXV, where they lost to the Baltimore Ravens. The next year he set the single-season fumbling record with 21 fumbles (tied by Daunte Culpepper in 2002). After five seasons, sixty-eight starts and 16,875 yards in New York, Collins found himself replaced in the offseason by the unforgiving New York Giants by Kurt Warner and Eli Manning.


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