I'm guessing Art will be back in the hole within 2 years.
I've NEVER seen anyone kick a gambling addiction.
I've NEVER seen anyone kick a gambling addiction.
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FairfaxBuckeye;696026; said:Odds are not good that Art will overcome this completely.
I hope that best for him.
I was a huge Art Schlicter fan as a kid, and still have his biography, 'Straight Arrow', that he autographed for when it came out.
osubuckeyealum;696033; said:Its a shame that such talent just went to waste...He may be out of jail now but I truely feel that he will be back...it seems like this guy doesn't know anything else in life other than gambling and screwing people over...:(
I sure hope your right.....I have hated to see him in that condition these last 10-15 years....IMO having being around him a few times in the recent weeks, he might seem to have a different perspective now on returning to prison. Gambling is a severe addiction that is worse than any drug, I hope he overcomes the demons. Art is l a Buckeye and needs support and I hope that the choices he will make in the future are choices without the consequences.
:osu:
osugrad21;732209; said:CBS
Schlichter on long road back to straight and narrow
Jan. 29, 2007
By Pete Prisco
CBS SportsLine.com Senior Writer
He was the golden boy quarterback of the Colts, a can't-miss kid with a strong arm -- with looks that made women stare -- and a charming way that bordered on con-man smooth, which, later, proved to be an apt description.
Long before Peyton Manning took over as the quarterback of the Indianapolis Colts, there was Art Schlichter, whose wonderful talents made him the fourth overall pick in the 1982 draft. They were the Baltimore Colts then, and they traded Bert Jones for the rights to draft Schlichter, who nearly led the Ohio State Buckeyes to a national championship as a collegian.
Continued...
osugrad21;732209; said:CBS
Schlichter on long road back to straight and narrow
Jan. 29, 2007
By Pete Prisco
CBS SportsLine.com Senior Writer
He was the golden boy quarterback of the Colts, a can't-miss kid with a strong arm -- with looks that made women stare -- and a charming way that bordered on con-man smooth, which, later, proved to be an apt description.
Long before Peyton Manning took over as the quarterback of the Indianapolis Colts, there was Art Schlichter, whose wonderful talents made him the fourth overall pick in the 1982 draft. They were the Baltimore Colts then, and they traded Bert Jones for the rights to draft Schlichter, who nearly led the Ohio State Buckeyes to a national championship as a collegian.
Continued...
Column: Art Schlichter tries to rebuild
TIM DAHLBERG
AP Sports Columnist
MIAMI - Art Schlichter's career stats are memorable for all the wrong reasons.
Ten years behind bars. Twenty some convictions. Forty-four different prisons.
One life wasted.
"I served my time," Schlichter said. "I got an enormous amount of time for what I did."
He was once the quarterback of the future for the Indianapolis Colts, the Peyton Manning of his time. He was always the ultimate con man, a smooth talker who could separate people from their money faster than he could zip a football downfield.
Continued....