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PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 9:48 pm 
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While It certainly looks like Rosenhaus fucked him over pretty good financially ( and I hope he sues his fucking ass off) can't generate a lot of sympathy for him over the 4 baby mommas he impregnated and is now bitching about, nor about being portrayed as a bad guy in the media for all drama he's caused throughout his career.


Terrell Owens In GQ: I'm In Hell



Terrell Owens has always been an island of sorts. His brash personality and self-absorption routinely alienated his teammates during an NFL career that teetered between terrific and toxic, leaving him to fend for himself.

Now, at 38 and out of football, he's lonelier than ever, and running out of money. In a GQ profile, Owens comes across as wounded, broke and desperate. When people text him to ask where he is, he replies back: "I'm in hell."

But is it his own fault? That's the perennial debate on T.O., who had a heartbreaking childhood but continually pointed fingers at everyone but himself once he became an adult.

In the GQ story by Nancy Hass, Owens blames the media for not giving him a chance to rehab his injury, blames agent Drew Rosenhaus for not protecting him from a bad business arrangement, and -- perhaps most surprisingly -- blames a former team captain for his issues with former Philadelphia teammate Donovan McNabb.

Owens earned around $80 million during his NFL career, but has found himself in deep financial trouble, despite never spending lavishly. In the February edition of GQ, Owens admits to trusting the wrong people, who in turn cost him a lot of his fortune.

"It's not a matter of having lived too large -- he was never the type to stockpile Ferraris or build himself a compound; the flashiest car he ever drove was a Mercedes, and while he indeed racked up a few homes that cost as much as $4 million, the only crib he classifies as even mildly sick by pro-ball standards was the one he bought in Atlanta to live in during the Philly off-season.

The problem, he says, is that he's by nature too trusting, loyal to a fault, despite everyone's carping that he's selfish. It's the sad old stereotypical song of the up-from-nothing black athlete: He let other people take care of things."

Owens said financial advisers recommended by Rosenhaus lost much of his money in highly leveraged ventures, then houses and apartments he thought he could rent out in a worst case scenario became dead weight in a housing market collapse (none of the properties is particularly excessive, but total a yearly mortgage of about $750,000), and $2 million was lost in an Alabama entertainment complex investment. That venture turned out to be illegal, and also claimed former Redskins running back Clinton Portis as a victim.



"I hate myself for letting this happen," Owens told GQ. "I believed that they had my back when they said, 'You take care of the football, and we'll do the rest.' And in the end, they just basically stole from me."

Owens has also found himself friendless, thanks to a growing sense of distrust thanks to his many unfortunate dealings.

He never had many friends -- teammates never called him to party, he says, wrongly assuming that he was "too big" to socialize -- and now, "I don't have no friends. I don't want no friends. That's how I feel."

And on top of that, he's battling in court with four women to whom he pays a total of $44,600 a month in child support for his four children, ages 5 to 12.

"If there's anything I'm sorry about, it's getting involved with all that." He never actually dated any of the women, he says. One was a one-night stand, the others "repeat offenders." Owens, who has never been married, concedes he is "not a very good judge of character." Still, he "never suspected they were the types to do what they done in the past year."



When money became tighter, Owens had to reduce the amount he paid to each of the women, and three of them sued him. A warrant was issued for his arrest when he didn't show up for a court date with the mother of his oldest child, Tariq. Beyond that, the relationship he's maintained with the mothers and his children is tenuous, at best.

Now he is in court with all four women, whom he lumps together like one big bloodsucking blob. None of them are being fair, he says: "They know I'm not working; they know the deal." Although he never established regular visitation with any of the children through the courts, he says he sees the eldest three as much as he can when their mothers allow it. So bitter is his relationship with the mother of the youngest child, a son, that he has never met the boy.

As for McNabb, Owens stands by his decision not to mend fences with the former Eagles quarterback, whom Owens characterized as "tired" following the Eagles' 24-21 loss to New England in Super Bowl XXXIX in 2005.

When given an apology written by the team's media relations staff, Owens claims to have handed Eagles' captain Jeremiah Trotter the mea culpa moments before he was to deliver it to reporters.

Owens tells GQ Trotter read through the statement and arrived at the portion regarding McNabb, who threw for 357 yards, but was picked off three times. Owens claims Trotter ripped off the bottom portion of the page and told Owens he didn't owe McNabb a thing.

"This is the team leader we're talking about," Owens tells GQ. "He told me not to do it."

Trotter calls Owens' account inaccurate, telling the magazine he was the one insisting Owens apologize.

Once again, T.O. stands alone.

Owens' career is defined as much by its theatrics than for its statistical body of work. His playing days ended last spring after his one-year, $2 million contract was not renewed by the Cincinnati, where Owens and Chad Ochocinco collectively proved to be more style than substance.

Owens has clearly moved on.

Some decisions, he admits, may have been handled differently now. But at this point of his life, he's not willing to look back.

"To say I regret anything would be a slap to my grandmother's face," Owens says, referring to the woman who raised him.



He concedes his only mistake in calling McNabb out was one of timing, admitting "I might not have said or done things at exactly the right moment."

To this day, Owens remains confident bordering on cocksure, convinced -- even with a medically repaired ACL -- that he is capable of the jaw-dropping playmaking ability of his youth. It's not his talent that keeps teams from calling, he insists, but instead a reputation cast onto him by the reporters he often held hostage.

"I think people change, but the media, they never allowed me to change," Owens says. "They never allowed me to be a better person."

Described in the GQ piece as a "caged cat" living in a spacious 1,800-square foot Los Angeles apartment, Owens remains on an island. He claims to be broke despite making at least $80 million during his playing days.

He says he's never been diagnosed as clinically depressed but he's been "real down."

"I don't have no friends -- I don't want no friends," Owens says. "That's how I feel."


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 10:42 pm 
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That is so sad.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 10:49 pm 
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Basically him doing sit-ups on a magazine page.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 10:52 pm 
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He made 80 million in the NFL and he's in severe debt. The women is one thing. While it's stupid that he got 4 of them pregnant, I understand that weakness. I don't understand him trusting other people to handle his money. Christ, if you just put half of it in the bank and leave it there, you're set for life. :roll:


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 10:58 pm 
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He doesn't have the tools. He trusted people to do that for him.

There was a rumor of another suicide attempt a couple months back.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 11:00 pm 
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Spaulding wrote:
That is so sad.

Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy...

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PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 11:16 pm 
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Looks like TO has been crying, bitching and blaming on his twitter for the last few hours. He's also fighting the twitter haters who rub it in.

http://twitter.com/terrellowens


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PostPosted: Wed Jan 25, 2012 12:24 am 
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Spaulding wrote:
He doesn't have the tools. He trusted people to do that for him.

There was a rumor of another suicide attempt a couple months back.


It was more than a rumor. Owens personal assistant calLed 911 & said that he was trying to kill himself

Owens is yet another example of a selfish athlete who treated others like shit.
Karma is a bitch.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:15 am 
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Scorehead wrote:
Owens is yet another example of a selfish athlete who treated others like shit.
Karma is a bitch.

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Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy...

He was a media whore, but there are athlete's who do things that are a lot worse...in public and private, on the field and off. Ray Lewis more than likely helped kill a man and he is constantly lauded as being one of the great leaders in the NFL.

I don't like TO because as I said he was a media whore, but some of you guys are way off base.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:18 am 
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Frank, Ray Lewis didnt LIKELY help kill a man. Thats a stretch.


I dont think Owens is a huge jerk. He's a selfish athelete who has a lot of mental issues and probably chemical inbalances.


He should have found someone he could trust.


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PostPosted: Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:19 am 
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This is all a lie to save himself from having to pay the heavy child support. He has money. It may not be liquid but he has money.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 25, 2012 11:12 am 
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good dolphin wrote:
This is all a lie to save himself from having to pay the heavy child support. He has money. It may not be liquid but he has money.


I don't think so. You have to be smart to succesfully hide money. He's not. Eventually, if he's gonna pull off your suggested ruse, he has to file for bankruptcy. You have to prove you're broke to do this. The government will go sniffing to see if it's legit. The lawyers for the women will see if it's legit. His creditors will go looking for it. He can't pull it off.

Where is he hiding this money, by the way? Swiss bank accounts? Under the mattress? He had crooks handling his money. They were stealing it. In order to hide it, he would have to have to have smart people help him. He clearly doesn't.

To pull it off, it would also mean that he can't ever spend this hidden money. Because as soon as the govenment sees big purchases, he'll go to jail for fraud. The women's laywers will see the new house he just bought and get their back child support. It's too complicated to pull off. An idiot like him can't do it.


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