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Born | January 30, 1979 | ||
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Career information | |||
Year(s) | 2002–2004 | ||
NFL Draft | 2002 / Round: 7 / Pick: 246 | ||
College | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | ||
Professional teams | |||
Career stats | |||
Tackles | 9 | ||
Sacks | 0.0 | ||
Games played | 15 | ||
Stats at NFL.com | |||
Stats at pro-football-reference.com | |||
Stats at DatabaseFootball.com | |||
Career highlights and awards | |||
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Quincy Omar Monk (born January 30, 1979) is a former American football linebacker in the National Football League for the New York Giants and the Houston Texans. He was drafted in the seventh round of the 2002 NFL Draft by the Giants. He played college football at North Carolina.
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Monk was born in Jacksonville, North Carolina. He attended White Oak High School where he played quarterback, safety and defensive end. At White Oak, he also played basketball where as well as in football he was named All-conference and All-area in his junior and senior seasons.[1]
The New York Giants drafted Monk in the seventh round (246th overall) in the 2002 NFL Draft. He was one of six players from North Carolina taken, which was the highest since seven were taken in 1998.[2] Monk signed a three–year $930,500 contract with the Giants on June 24.[3] During the Giants 2002 playoff loss to the San Francisco 49ers, Monk almost had his head "decapitated" when tight end Dan Campbell drop–kicked his helmet. Campbell later apologized for the incident.[4] He recorded three tackles during his rookie season.[5] In October, Monk and Giants teammates, Will Allen, Brian Mitchell, Marcellus Rivers, Kevin Lewis, Tim Carter, Delvin Joyce, Nick Greisen and Ataveus Cash participated in a cooking competition sponsored by the Giants.[6] In 2003, Monk recorded four tackles for the Giants.[5] He was released as a final cut before the 2004 season on September 5.[7] Throughout his career with New York, Monk was inactivated in 19 games[3] and played in 13.[5]
Monk signed with the Houston Texans on December 17, 2004[3] and played in two games for the team, recording two tackles.[5] He was released on August 30, 2005.[8]
Monk was hired by Argentum Capital Management as a managing director.[9] A few weeks later he was appointed to the University of North Carolina's Board of Visitors. He has also held positions at Citigroup Smith Barney and Captrust following his playing days.[10]
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