
Ray Davis went from homelessness to 2024 NFL Draft in long-shot journey: ‘I’m the 1 percent’
NY Post
Second of an 11-part series. Coming next: wide receivers.
Ray Davis talked with a purpose, like someone who knows where he is headed.
No doubts in his mind.
Only certainty.
Like somebody who’s been through so much to get to this point, failure isn’t even a possibility, let alone an option.
The Kentucky running back grew up in foster care and spent time homeless, with parents in and out of prison, in the Hayes Valley area of San Francisco.

SALT LAKE CITY — It’s easy to forget about the quiet, which in Knicks World means Leon Rose. We’re approaching five years — amazingly — since the team president answered questions from the independent media, and I’ve always maintained that’s poor practice because it avoids responsibility. If there’s no public explanation behind a move or a goal, there’s no accountability if it doesn’t work out.












