San Diego Chargers Carson was selected by the
San Diego Chargers in the fourth round (113th overall) of the
2000 NFL draft. As a rookie, he appeared in 4 of the first 10 games, making 2 tackles. On November 17, he was placed on the
injured reserve list with a tore right rotator cuff. In
2001, he started 13 games at
defensive tackle, after replacing
Jamal Williams who tore the ACL in his left knee. He posted 33 tackles, 3 sacks, 3 passes defensed and 2 fumble recoveries. In
2002, he began the season as a backup, but started the last 6 games after Williams suffered a season-ending ankle injury, posting 31 tackles, 3.5 sacks, 3 passes defensed and one fumble recovery. On August 21,
2003, he was arrested for breaking into an apartment and was later sued on September 30. He appeared in 5 games as a backup
defensive tackle, making 2 tackles and one pass defensed. He was waived on October 14.
Dallas Cowboys On October 18,
2003, he was signed as a
free agent by the
Dallas Cowboys. He was a backup
defensive tackle, registering 21 tackles (1 for loss), 1.5 sacks and 2 quarterback pressures. He tore his right triceps muscle against the
Washington Redskins and was placed on the
injured reserve list on December 16. Carson was re-signed for the
2004 season, although he served 8 days in jail in June and was suspended for the opening game by the
NFL for his previous legal problems and the violation of the player conduct policy. He passed
Willie Blade on the depth chart and started 15 games alongside
Pro Bowler
La'Roi Glover. He posted 55 tackles (seventh on the team), 5 tackles for loss (tied for the team lead), 8 quarterback pressures, one fumble recovery and a half sack. Although large and physically talented, his productivity as a player was often average, and
head coach Bill Parcells, who initially lauded his arrival to the team, stated in several
press conferences that he'd lost confidence in Carson. He signed a one-year contract with the Cowboys for the
2005 season, but was released on September 1, after being passed on the depth chart by rookie
Jay Ratliff. ==NFL career statistics==