Carter High is a football movie. But it’s not the kind of football movie that Dallas-based writer and director Arthur Muhammad ever imagined he’d be making. “We always thought that, ‘Wow this would be a great movie, somebody needs to make a movie about this,'” Muhammad says.
Teenage boys were sent to prison. Carter was stripped of its championship after a court found that it had indeed violated the no-pass, no-play law. Everything changed. Now, a new movie chronicles the team’s against-all-odds rise — and its steep fall. Carter High hits theaters here Oct. 30. The movie has several Dallas ties.
So though he’s 78 and often uses a cane to walk, James has spent the last three years working as a school crossing guard in South Dallas, a few miles east of his beloved Carter High. “I just love seeing those little kids coming across and they reach out and catch my hand and I help them across.
Carter has donated to his high school, Mainland High School, and he established charitable foundation, The Embassy of Hope, upon being drafted into the NBA in 1998. On February 3, 2007, a statue of Carter was unveiled at Mainland.
Among those sentenced was Derric Evans, 17 years old, an all-America defensive back last year at Dallas Carter High School who lost a full scholarship to the University of Tennessee.
The film is centered on the 1988 Cowboys of David W. Carter High School in Dallas, a team that fought through racial prejudice and a grades controversy to claim the 5A state title, only to be rocked when six of their players were involved in an armed robbery and the grades issue stripped them of their title.
Keith Campbell was one of those players. He was a wide receiver who served seven-and a-half years of a 25-year sentence for armed robbery.
Defense wins championships. This is based on the true story of the David W. Carter high school in Texas during the 1988-1989 season. They had won the state championship but had players that misbehaved too much even for Florida State.
Carter High School students and football players Derric Evans and Gary Edwards facing robbery charges and the connection to a robbery of Herman's World of Sporting Goods store by a Hillcrest football player.
Campbell and Evans were the last Carter players released from prison. At the end of his term, Campbell was sent to the Allred Unit near Wichita Falls, where he saw Evans for the first time in nearly seven years.
Evans got 20 years. The others got anywhere between 13 to 25 years. Edwards served four years in prison. Evans served seven years.
All PlayersPlayerPosFromDaryl JonesWR2002Jessie ArmsteadLB1993Greg HillRB1994Le'Shai MastonRB199312 more rows
DallasNow, the new film Carter High, which premieres Tuesday in Dallas, chronicles that 1988 team. It was filmed in Dallas and many former Carter players helped push the film across the goal line.
West Canaan, TexasSet in the fictional town of West Canaan, Texas, Varsity Blues follows Jonathan “Mox” Moxon (James Van Der Beek), the backup quarterback for West Canaan High School as he is thrust into the spotlight after the starting QB, Lance Harbor (Paul Walker) suffers a horrific knee injury and is forced to stand on the sidelines ...
6 days agoThe television show Friday Night Lights was inspired by a true story, although one that traveled through multiple layers of adaptation. The real-life Permian Panthers, and the surrounding town of Odessa, were a major inspiration for the critically acclaimed NBC series.
FootballConferenceChampionScore1988-19891AWhite Deer14-131A Six-ManFort Hancock76-30 (boxscore not available)2ACorrigan-Camden35-143 more rows
Teenage boys were sent to prison. Carter was stripped of its championship after a court found that it had indeed violated the no-pass, no-play law. Everything changed. Now, a new movie chronicles the team’s against-all-odds rise — and its steep fall. Carter High hits theaters here Oct. 30.
Talented and bold, the Oak Cliff team ruled high school football in Texas. One player famously signed his letter of intent to play college ball while lounging in a hot tub, adorned in gold jewelry. But the record books don’t tell the story of their success.
Image via IMDB. A still from the 2015 movie 'Carter High' about the 1988 Dallas-area football team mired in controversy. A high school state football championship in Texas is arguably about more than just temporary bragging rights. It’s a guaranteed story that will be told for generations, with a record that will be likely painted up on ...
A new film, written and directed by a former player for Carter High, details their triumphant road to the 1988 State Championship and the controversy that surrounded the team after they won. Oops, we couldn’t find that track.
Carter High is a football movie. But it’s not the kind of football movie that Dallas-based writer and director Arthur Muhammad ever imagined he’d be making. “We always thought that, ‘Wow this would be a great movie, somebody needs to make a movie about this,'” Muhammad says.
Keith Campbell received the harshest prison sentence, 25 years, and the sharpest rebuke from Judge Kendall.
After several phone conversations, Evans agrees to a sit-down interview in Houston, then reschedules twice, then decides not to do it.
JULY 18: In a final order, Davis reaffirms his ru ling that Kirby abused his power in citing Carter for violating no-pass, no-play. Although this preserves Carter's state title, Kirby vows to appeal.
And it was the June 20, 1989 arrest of Edwards and teammate Derric Evans, shortly after they robbed two video stores at gunpoint, that helped police trace the string of robberies that had begun five days after the state title game. Sentenced to 16 years in prison, Edwards was paroled in 1993.
JUNE: The Legislature passes, and Gov. Bill Clements signs, a school reform law that restricts future lawsuits against no-pass, no play. The new provision also makes the TEA commissioner's decision final in no-pass, no-play cases unless a school district can prove the decision is arbitrary and capricious.
The UIL reinstates Plano East into the playoffs. State District Judge Paul Davis issues a temporary injunction restraining Kirby from determining eligibility and directs the UIL to restore Carter to the playoffs.
He thus surpassed Reggie Miller for 20th on the all-time scoring list, passed Jamal Crawford for sixth on the all-time 3-point field goals made list, became the oldest player to shoot seven 3-pointers, and broke his own record of being the oldest player to score 20+ points in a game at 42 years old.
Vince Carter. Vincent Lamar Carter Jr. (born January 26, 1977) is an American former professional basketball player and current basketball analyst for ESPN. He has been ranked as the greatest dunker of all time by numerous players, journalists, and by the National Basketball Association (NBA).
Only Robert Parish (42 years and 65 days old) was an older opening-night NBA starter than Carter. On November 21, he scored 14 points off the bench in a 124–108 loss to the Toronto Raptors, thus becoming the 22nd player in NBA history to reach 25,000 career points.
National team career. Carter played for head coach Kelvin Sampson on the United States men's national under-19 team at the 1995 FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup in Athens. He and Samaki Walker tied for the team lead in blocks in the team's eight games.
The Toronto Sun reported that Carter felt misled and felt the Raptors would never be an elite team under the current MLSE structure with Peddie as Raptors president. Some fans raised money to fly a "Keep Vince, Trade Peddie" banner over the Air Canada Centre just before Carter's annual charity game.