Ice,
ice baby
Culpepper takes
back necklace from paralyzed player

Wednesday February 2, 2005
Daunte Culpepper's necklaces were
very impressive, until he asked for them back after Wednesday's
ceremony.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- Daunte
Culpepper showed off his scrambling ability Wednesday -- in a crowded
convention center ballroom.
The Minnesota Vikings quarterback
presented a paralyzed high school football player two diamond necklaces
worth about $75,000 during an NFL awards ceremony, but then awkwardly
asked for them back after it was finished.
The apparent gift prompted a mother
to cry, a father to think about buying a safe to store it and Culpepper
to find a way out of the mess.
"I'll get him something else,"
Culpepper said sheepishly.
The confusion began at the FedEx
ground and air player of the year honors, where finalists Culpepper,
Peyton Manning, Shaun Alexander and Curtis Martin were on stage for the
announcement.
When the master of ceremonies
opened the floor for questions, Jerry Townsend spoke up from his
wheelchair in the front row.
"Hey Daunte, can I get some of that
ice?" he said in a low voice, referring to the two sparkling necklaces
hanging around Culpepper's neck.
Culpepper jumped up, pulled them
off and brought them over to Townsend, a senior defensive back at
Jacksonville Episcopal High School who was paralyzed from the neck down
while making a tackle in October.
Townsend spent the last four months
in various hospitals and was released Wednesday -- just in time to go
to the Super Bowl event.
After Culpepper put the necklaces
around Townsend's neck, his mother started to cry. His father talked
about needing to get a safe for the expensive jewelry.
Culpepper, meanwhile, went back to
his seat and finished the awards ceremony (Manning won the air award,
and Martin won the ground one). After it was over, Culpepper patiently
answered dozens of questions while keeping a close eye on his jewelry
across the room.
One of the diamond-laced necklaces
was the No. 11, Culpepper's jersey number, and the other was a large
pepper (for Culpepper).
"Where's that kid at? I've got to
get my stuff back," Culpepper said.
Culpepper then walked over to the
Townsends and asked them to write down their address so he could send
them something else. Culpepper wasn't sure what it would be.
In an unrelated note, Culpepper
will appear in a 60-second NFL Network commercial to air during the
Super Bowl along with several other players and coaches from around the
league that didn't make it to the big game. They'll be singing
Tomorrow, a tune from the musical Annie.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press.
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten, or redistributed.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2005/football/nfl/specials/playoffs/2004/02/02/bc.fbn.superbowl.culpep.ap/index.html?cnn=yes