Six years after entering the NFL as the third player taken in the
draft, Vince Young finds himself
without a team and with just a fraction
of the money he received from a contract that guaranteed him $26
million.
The question is, where did it all go?
In an increasingly caustic war of words, attorneys have been arguing
for months over whether Young is an out-of-control spender who put
himself deeply in the hole or simply a victim of inexperienced advisers,
one of whom was his own uncle.
Either way, the quarterback whose future seemed unlimited after he
led Texas to a Rose Bowl victory in 2006 is now back home in Houston and
in a tenuous financial condition.
“I would just say that Vince needs a job,” said Trey Dolezal, Young’s
attorney, when asked to give a general assessment of his client’s
finances.
Young was cut by the Buffalo Bills, his third NFL team, in August. He
was trying to make the Bills as a backup, the same role he filled with
the Philadelphia Eagles in 2011.
The fall has been a dizzying one for the player who twice made the
Pro Bowl with the Tennessee Titans. Young sent out a tweet thanking the
Bills and their fans after he was released but hasn’t spoken to the
media since. He declined a request to be interviewed for this story.
Even in pro sports, where tales of squandered wealth abound, Young’s
plight is “pretty dramatic,” said Kenneth Shropshire, a professor at the
University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business who has written
and lectured extensively on the business of sports.
“You’d think it would be hard to blow that much money,” Shropshire said.
Young is suing his former agent, Major Adams, and a North Carolina
financial planner, Ronnie Peoples, alleging that they misappropriated
$5.5 million. In some instances, the pair forged his signature or
impersonated him on the phone or in emails, according to the lawsuit,
filed in Houston in June.
The suit was filed five days after a New York lender notified Young
that a loan of nearly $1.9 million obtained in his name during the NFL
lockout in 2011 was in default. Young is now seeking to stop the lender,
Pro Player Funding LLC, from enforcing a judgment of nearly $1.7
million, claiming he wasn’t involved in obtaining the loan and that the
proceeds went to Adams and Peoples.
“They conspired to take Vince’s money,” Dolezal said. “It’s that simple.”
Young was the first client of a company, (hash)1 Next Level Sports
and Entertainment Inc., formed by Adams, a Houston criminal defence
attorney, and the quarterback’s uncle, Keith Young, a former middle
school teacher.
Young’s problem was “he was just very young … and allowing these
people to have too much control over his life and his name,” Dolezal
said.
That notion is vigorously disputed by attorneys for Adams and Peoples, who say Young has nobody to blame but himself.
“This is a person scrambling helplessly and pointing in all
directions to blame others to get out of debt,” said Charles Peckham,
Adams’ attorney.
Adams twice wrote checks to himself from Young’s accounts, but both
times were out of necessity, including once when the agent was required
to use personal funds to charter a plane for the quarterback after he
missed a team flight, Peckham said.
Peoples has filed a countersuit in which he castigates Young for
allowing his uncle to serve as his business manager despite having no
expertise in that field.
Peoples claims in the countersuit that every decision he made was
approved by Keith Young. And he calls Vince Young’s unwillingness to
accept responsibility “a common occurrence … as (former Titans coach)
Jeff Fisher, (Texas coach) Mack Brown, numerous NFL executives, coaches,
teammates, scouts, girlfriends and illegitimate children will attest.”
Peoples’ attorney, David Chaumette, said he has documents to support the strongly-worded filing.
“You’ll find there was a lot of money being spent in a bunch of different directions,” Chaumette said.
A working phone number for Keith Young could not be located. Court records do not show that he has an attorney.
According to public records, Vince Young was one of at least 10 NFL
players who turned to Pro Player Funding for cash during the lockout.
Loan documents show he borrowed the $1.9 million at 20 per cent
interest, with $619,122 in interest paid up front, and agreed that a
judgment could be entered if he missed a payment.
Young authorized $1 million in payments to Pro Player directly from
his Eagles salary during the 2011 season, and his accountant was working
this year to have a similar arrangement with the Bills, according to
court records. However, when a payment due in May was never made, the
loan went into default.
In challenging the loan’s validity, Young claims he didn’t “knowingly
execute” any of the loan documents. Anything he signed was “without the
corresponding documents attached and without knowledge as to what the
signatures pages referred,” one of his court filings states.
Pro Player says its case is supported by the fact that Young’s
signatures were notarized and that emails show he was involved in making
sure the lender received repayment directly from the Eagles.
“Call me if this is not 100 per cent clear,” Young’s accountant wrote
him in August 2011 in an email explaining the arrangement. “We want to
make certain you know exactly what is going on at all times, especially
when you’re signing your name to something.”
Young also contends that Pro Player’s efforts to serve him and the
Bills with legal papers during training camp, which included a threat to
contact the local sheriff, “played a role” in the Bills’ decision to
release him.
“I wasn’t in the room when they (the Bills) made a decision, but what
would you think? It certainly wouldn’t help me if I’m the owner or the
head coach knowing all this is going on with Vince and then he goes out
and plays poorly,” Dolezal said.
Bills coach Chan Gailey declined comment when asked if Young’s off-the-field issues had anything to do with his release.