Metro

Ex call$ foul on hoopster

A millionaire former Brooklyn hoops star who played in the NBA will be dragged into Family Court today in a bid to get him to cough up child support for his daughter.

Quincy Douby, 28 — a one-time guard for the Sacramento Kings who reportedly raked in $2 million last year playing in China — is being sued by ex Tanya Raymond, 28, for $15,000 a month in child support for their daughter, Quinn, 5, according to Brooklyn court papers and Raymond’s lawyer, Steven Gildin.

“Things are so bad that now my daughter is on Medicaid,” Raymond says in the suit. “That’s right — her father makes millions of dollars a year playing professional basketball . . . and she has public-funded health care!”

Douby, Raymond and Quinn had lived together in his Freehold, NJ, home until about seven months ago, when he began to see other women and booted Raymond and his daughter out, Gildin said.

Douby then got them an apartment in Brooklyn, but stopped paying the rent after a few months, Gildin said.

“They were high-school sweethearts. She knew him before he had anything,” Gildin told The Post. “She stood by him through his ups and downs, and he left her in the dust.”

The mother and child now live with her parents.

Douby was picked 19th in the 2006 NBA Draft after excelling at Rutgers University and Thomas More Prep in Brooklyn.

His NBA career was mediocre, but the guard found success overseas.

Raymond and Quinn even flew to Asia to visit Douby for Chinese New Year in 2011, according to the Web site of his then-team, the Xinjiang Flying Tigers.

The happy family posed for photos and told interviewers about how Douby hit on Raymond after he spotted her in the stands at one of his high-school games, reported the Web site — which also joked about the height disparity between the petite Raymond and the 6-foot-3 Douby.

Raymond, now a substitute teacher, never married Douby. “My daughter is my entire world,’’ she says in the suit.

Douby could not be reached. His lawyer, Mark McAuliffe, declined to comment.

Additional reporting by Chuck Bennett