Former Raiders quarterback JaMarcus Russell will go down as one of the biggest busts in NFL history. Russell was selected with first overall pick in the 2007 NFL Draft out of LSU, but lasted just three seasons in the league. The now 33-year-old never looked the part on or off the field in his time in Oakland and by 2009 he was out of football completely.The troubled signal caller started just one game in his rookie season, finishing the year with only two passing touchdowns and four picks thrown, and it didn't get any better from there either. Russell ended his career with 4083 passing yards at a completion rate of just 52.1%, whilst throwing 18 TD's to 23 interceptions and losing 15 fumbles. Despite his shortcomings on the field, Russell made a ton of money in his short time in the league. He held out for the majority of the offseason befogging signing an enormous 6-year $61 million rookie deal that helped pave the way for the rookie wage scale we today.Russell missed the Raiders' annual rookie talent show as a result of his hold out, but he was made to perform his own act when he returned and by all accounts it was something to behold.He's been called many negative things, but cheap is apparently not one of them after hearing this story from former Raiders linebacker Kirk Morrison on the Rich Eisen Show. 

We've been privy to many an amusing performance at rookie shows on Hard Knocks, but making it rain has certainly not been one of them. 

Jets QB Josh McCown, who was a Raider at the time, confirmed the story and proclaimed it was a good day to be sitting within throwing distance of Russell and his bag of cash!

Morrison's words set a sorry scene for how Russell's career would unfold.

Seemingly most of the team knew from that moment that this was not how a franchise quarterback should be acting it certainly turned out that way. 

Russell will likely go down as the biggest bust in league history, and it's not hard to see why he couldn't adjust to the mental side of being a professional football player when you hear stories like this. 

One simply couldn't imagine the Tom Brady's and Peyton Manning's of the world doing such wild things and it's telling that Russell didn't last long in the NFL. 

He attempted a comeback in 2013 and 2014 but despite a try out with the Bears, and a pledge to teams around the league that he'd play for free, nobody showed any serious interest in bringing him on board.