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Author Topic: Panthers send Steve Smith home after melee in camp  (Read 546 times)
Mike Bass
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« on: August 01, 2008, 04:19:56 PM »

Looks like Steve Smith is at it again... I wonder what this small dude has in his fists. After the fight with Anthony Bright teammates said that they could not even recognize Bright and now it looks like he one punched Lucas and caused pretty good damage to his eye.


http://www.usatoday.com/sports/football/nfl/panthers/2008-08-01-camp-fight_N.htm

SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) — Carolina Panthers receiver Steve Smith was sent home from training camp Friday after he punched teammate Ken Lucas during practice, causing the starting cornerback to be carted off the field holding an ice pack to his left eye.
Panthers coach John Fox said Smith and Lucas returned to Charlotte after the fight. The team didn't provide an update on the extent of Lucas' injuries and club officials declined to say if the volatile Smith, the team's top receiver, would be suspended.

"We're going to handle this matter internally," general manager Marty Hurney said.

Smith's agent, Derrick Fox, did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

The melee came after both players had taken off their helmets in a break for starters during a special teams drill. It was unclear what provoked the fight. While the two have routinely jawed at each other in practice since Lucas signed with Carolina in 2005, they've never come to blows in view of reporters.

"When that happens on the field usually guys have helmets on," quarterback Jake Delhomme said. "But this happened on the sidelines, so it probably wasn't a good idea."

When attention turned from the field to the fight, several players and Fox rushed to the scene. Fox tried to separate the two, but it took linebacker Jon Beason to pull Smith off Lucas.

Lucas walked to a tent, holding his head while accompanied by a trainer. Smith was then escorted there by receiver Muhsin Muhammad to talk to Lucas.

"Steve was probably a little remorseful for what happened," Muhammad said. "He was trying to apologize, so I was walking with him just to be there."

After being treated for several minutes, Lucas walked to a nearby cart and was taken to the locker room.

Smith spent several minutes talking to kicker John Kasay on an adjacent field before he was escorted to the locker room by Hurney as practice continued.

"Anytime something like that happens you're obviously disappointed," Fox said. "It's part of football and you deal with it."

The coach had an extended talk with the team after the workout. Delhomme said Fox warned the players not to retaliate against Smith.

"I don't anticipate this having any lingering effect on this team," Delhomme said. "We were talked to and things were squashed. That's it. That's the way it is. It happened. There will be no retaliation by anybody on anything. When you look at the schedule we don't play the Panthers this year. So we need to be smart when we're out there."

A three-time Pro Bowl pick, Smith has had trouble controlling his temper. He was suspended for a game in 2002 after punching teammate Anthony Bright during a film session. Smith received counseling for anger management, and a lawsuit filed by Bright was eventually settled out of court.

Despite a history of poorly timed penalties following angry outbursts, Smith signed a contract extension last year through the 2012 season that makes him one of the NFL's highest-paid receivers.

A possible suspension to Carolina's top playmaker cast a shadow over the team Friday afternoon.

"Obviously everybody is going to be waiting to see what the repercussions are from this event," Muhammad said. "I'm just praying that we rally together as a team, because obviously there's going to be some adversity here. The focus is not where it needs to be right now.

"I'm hoping we can all come together as a team, as a family, and are able to put this behind us."


« Last Edit: August 01, 2008, 04:40:00 PM by Mike Bass » Logged

Mike Bass
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« Reply #1 on: August 02, 2008, 03:13:48 PM »

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jG7_OoqyeW5iP2sGUvdqPuhhR6zwD92AAH4O0

Panthers receiver Steve Smith suspended 2 games

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Receiver Steve Smith was suspended two games by the Carolina Panthers after a training camp fight with cornerback Ken Lucas.

Smith, a three-time Pro Bowl selection, will continue to practice when training camp resumes Monday and will be allowed to participate in preseason games, coach John Fox said Saturday.

Lucas, who left the practice field at Wofford College on Friday with ice over his left eye, has a broken nose, Fox said. Smith was kicked out of practice and sent back to Charlotte.

"What (Smith) did was wrong and we take very serious and he is being punished severely for it," Fox said.

The melee came after both players had taken off their helmets in a break for starters during a special teams drill. It was unclear what provoked the fight. While the two have routinely jawed at each other in practice since Lucas signed with Carolina in 2005, they've never come to blows in view of reporters.

The suspension will cost Smith more than $205,000, a fraction of his base salary. Fox also seemed to issue a stern warning toward Smith and his future actions.

"He is still ours and he will have conditions," Fox said. "He knows what those are and we will move forward."

Lucas, who was not suspended, did not practice Saturday at Fan Fest and is listed as day-to-day. He showed up in the locker room Saturday morning unexpectedly and was mobbed by teammates, according to quarterback Jake Delhomme.

Delhomme said he was proud of Lucas for coming.

"Ken got overwhelmed with every single player coming up to him and telling him hello," Delhomme said. "I think it was great that he came out today. A lesser person would not have come out. But he did. And we can't wait to get him back."

Delhomme said he hasn't spoken with Smith, but has exchanged text messages.

"Steve will be back with us," Delhomme said. "I know he's extremely remorseful and he understands. But if we want to be a good football team we have to win without him."

Smith will miss the season opener at San Diego on Sept. 7 and the home opener the following Sunday against Chicago. He will not face any additional punishment from the league.
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Diesel247
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« Reply #2 on: August 02, 2008, 09:51:24 PM »

Reminds me of when Westbrook punched Stephen Davis...pretty stupid!
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Mike Bass
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« Reply #3 on: August 04, 2008, 03:49:24 PM »

Lucas Q&A: "A blessing in disguise"

Cornerback Ken Lucas took questions from reporters today about the broken nose he suffered from a punch by teammate Steve Smith last Friday. Lucas had a bruise under his left eye and said he'd need surgery, but didn't provide details on the operation. He said he expected to be back in practice in two or three weeks.

Here's a transcript of the highlights of Lucas' interview:

Q: How are you?

A: "I feel pretty good today. It's just good to be back out here with my teammates. I'm just trying to get prepared for this season coming up. Everybody is positive right now and that's a good thing."

Q: When will you be able to return to practice?

A: "Probably in two or three weeks, depending on the surgery. We're still waiting on the doctors to tell us the timetable on when I'll have the procedure done."

Q: What do you think about what happened:

"I feel like what happened was a blessing in disguise. It's something that has brought this team closer together. You all may say I'm crazy for saying that. But I really think it's bigger than me and Steve.

"Me and Steve have talked, man to man and one on one. We still have some more talking to do as far as the descrepencies of what we feel like are the issues between us. But we're going to handle it as men.

"As far as this incident holding the team back, I don't think it's going to do so. I think it's only going to make us better and bring us closer as a team (as we) work toward the ultimate goal of winning this tropy this year.

Q: Tell us about your conversation with him.

A: "That's between me and Steve. There are a lot of things that have been brewing for four years now. I can't possibly tell you what the issues are in this one conversation (about) what has happened in four years.

"Sometimes when emotions get involved, you do stupid things, and unfortunately that's what  humans do.

"For me, to be a Christian, I have a forgiving heart and I'm willing to move forward to help this team win this year."

Q: Has he apologized?

A: "Oh absolutely. I think that was a big step for this team to be able to accomplish the goals we want to accomplish. I felt like if I didn't forgive him, it would divide this team up and we could pretty much throw this season away. I'm a competitor and I hate losing. I felt like I had to do that in order to give this team an opportunity to perform at a high level and perform as a team this year.

"I have to admit it's tough as a human. But it's bigger than me and Steve, like I said. Where I get the courage and the grace to do so, I know it doesn't come from me. It comes from God. So I just give all the glory to God for how I'm handling the situation right now.

Q: Could you talk about your teammates greeting you Saturday at the stadium and what that meant to you?

A: "When I came over to the stadium, I wasn't coming over there to get a warm welcome. I was just coming over there to be a part of the team and not separate myself from the team. But, lo and behold, it was very overwhelming for how they responded to me. It felt pretty good.

"Sometimes you can view things as a gift or a curse. I look at this as a gift. We have the team, what it takes to win the Super Bowl this year. This is something I only thing will bring us closer.

"For those guys to come and hug me and say, `Man, we're glad to see you over here,' that felt so good to me. Sometimes it takes adversity to really know how much you're appreciated or how much people really care about you.

"If I could take it back, I wouldn't. It's a learning process. Trials and tribulations only make you stronger as a man, for me and Steve. I'm sure he regrets the actions he took, but I would be less of a man if I didn't forgive him. I go to Bible study, just like he does, every week. For me not to be able to forgive him, then I'd just be wasting my time going to Bible study. I just think it's bigger than us.

"I have forgiven him. I have moved forward. I have shook his hand and looked him eye-to-eye today. We have discussed some things. We still have some more discussions, some more things to talk about as far as what can we do to go out there and co-exist on the same field, the same team and be productive and help this team win this year.

"Only two men can do that, and think we have what it takes for us to do so."

Q: Why do you think this has been brewing between the two of you for four years?

A: "Because he's an ultra-competitor and I'm a ultra-competitor, and we both hate losing. He expects to catch every ball and I expect to defend every ball. When you have those two types of individuals, then something has to give. Sometimes when it's 100 degrees out there, you're sweaty, you're tired, you're frustrated, sometimes emotions get involved.

"If he could do it, and if he'd had a calmer head, I'm sure he would have made better decisions. I don't fault him for that.

"There are times when maybe I want to hit somebody, but I control myself. I tell some of my other teammates, `You have to keep your composure.' Typically, people do crazy things they regret when they're emotional, and I think he just got too emotional at the time, and that's it."

-- Charles Chandler
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redskin_ty
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« Reply #4 on: August 04, 2008, 11:28:17 PM »

I think Steve has a little man syndrome on the field.
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