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Hutchinson seems to have the most at stake.
After fours years in pro baseball as a pitcher with the St. Louis Cardinals, he became the Cowboys' starter midway through his rookie season. But the Cowboys went 2-7 in his starts and coach Dave Campo was fired.
Campo's replacement, Bill Parcells, picked Carter as his starter last season and Dallas went 10-6 with a playoff appearance. Last month, the Cowboys acquired another high-profile quarterback and former baseball player, Drew Henson, apparently leaving Hutchinson as the odd man out.
"It would be nice to be able to get a fair shot at winning the job, but as I found out this year it's not always fair," Hutchinson said in a telephone interview. "I know I can compete at that level."
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones visited Hutchinson at the Fire's training camp in Tampa, Fla., and assured him the team remains committed to him.
After fours years in pro baseball as a pitcher with the St. Louis Cardinals, he became the Cowboys' starter midway through his rookie season. But the Cowboys went 2-7 in his starts and coach Dave Campo was fired.
Campo's replacement, Bill Parcells, picked Carter as his starter last season and Dallas went 10-6 with a playoff appearance. Last month, the Cowboys acquired another high-profile quarterback and former baseball player, Drew Henson, apparently leaving Hutchinson as the odd man out.
"It would be nice to be able to get a fair shot at winning the job, but as I found out this year it's not always fair," Hutchinson said in a telephone interview. "I know I can compete at that level."
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones visited Hutchinson at the Fire's training camp in Tampa, Fla., and assured him the team remains committed to him.
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