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General Category => General Talk => Topic started by: Brent Murray on July 27, 2009, 11:01:24 pm
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NEW YORK — Michael Vick is back in the NFL. Now all he needs is a team to play for.
Vick, free after serving 18 months in prison for running a dogfighting ring, was reinstated with conditions by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell on Monday. He could participate in regular-season games as early as October.
Vick can immediately take part in preseason practices, workouts and meetings and can play in the final two preseason games — if he can find a team that will sign him. A number of teams have already said they would not.
Once the season begins, Vick may participate in all team activities except games, and Goodell said he would consider Vick for full reinstatement by Week 6 (Oct. 18-19) at the latest.
Goodell suspended Vick indefinitely in August 2007 after the former Atlanta Falcons quarterback admitted bankrolling a dogfighting operation on his property in Virginia. At the time, Goodell said Vick must show remorse before he would consider reinstating him.
"I accept that you are sincere when you say that you want to, and will, turn your life around, and that you intend to be a positive role model for others," Goodell said in his letter to Vick. "I am prepared to offer you that opportunity. Whether you succeed is entirely in your hands."
"Needless to say, your margin for error is extremely limited," the letter said. "I urge you to take full advantage of the resources available to support you and to dedicate yourself to rebuilding your life and your career. If you do this, the NFL will support you."
Goodell said he spoke to numerous current and former players and coaches as he weighed his decision and that the responses were "very mixed."
"I do recognize that some will never forgive him for what he did," Goodell said. "I hope that the public will have a chance to understand his position as I have."
Vick, once the highest-paid player in the league, said he was grateful for a second chance.
"I would like to express my sincere gratitude and appreciation to commissioner Goodell for allowing me to be readmitted to the National Football League," Vick said in a statement released by his agent, Joel Segal. "I fully understand that playing football in the NFL is a privilege, not a right, and I am truly thankful for the opportunity I have been given.
"As you can imagine, the last two years have given me time to revaluate my life, mature as an individual and fully understand the terrible mistakes I have made in the past and what type of life I must lead moving forward," he said.
The announcement came after a busy first week of freedom for Vick, who met with union leaders and Goodell on consecutive days last week. His 23-month federal sentence ended when an electronic monitor was removed from his ankle on July 20 at his home in Hampton, Va.
He met with DeMaurice Smith, executive director of the NFL Players Association, last Tuesday and, on Wednesday, he sat down with Goodell at a security firm in Allendale, N.J.
Goodell suggested that preventing Vick from playing at the start of the regular season wasn't punishment but a chance for the quarterback to gradually make a transition back into the league.
"I have thought about every alternative, but I think this gives him the best chance for success," Goodell said. "We are not looking for failure here. We are looking to see a young man succeed."
But Vick's issues are far from over and he needs a team to call his own. So far, the owners of the New York Giants, Jets and Dallas Cowboys have said they had no interest in the 29-year-old quarterback. Neither do the Falcons, who officially released Vick in June.
Vick filed for bankruptcy protection last July, listing assets of about $16 million and debts of more than $20 million, and has a hearing about his plan to repay his creditors on Friday in Newport News, Va. That plan is built around his ability to make NFL-type money again.
He's unlikely to command anything close to the 10-year, $130 million contract he once had with the Falcons, or to get endorsement deals after the grisly details of the dogfighting ring were publicized.
Vick pleaded guilty after his three co-defendants had already done so. They told of how Vick participated in the killing of dogs that didn't perform well in test fights by shooting, hanging, drowning or slamming them to the ground.
Vick's appearances at federal court in Richmond, Va., prompted large groups of protesters to gather outside. Many were with PETA and held signs depicting photographs of pit bulls ravaged in dogfights.
Still, there were supporters who wore his No. 7 jersey. :fogetgasp:
Vick has already taken steps to rebuild his image.
He met with the president of the Humane Society of the United States while serving his federal sentence at Leavenworth, Kan. He plans to work with HSUS in a program designed to steer inner city youth away from dogfighting. He was not permitted to work with the program while in custody.
Ed Sayres, president of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said the organization hopes Vick "rises to the occasion and proves worthy of the rare second chance Commissioner Goodell has granted him."
"Opportunities for redemption are rare — but that is exactly the opportunity that awaits Mr. Vick," he said. ___
AP Sports Writers Hank Kurz in Richmond, Va., and Rachel Cohen in New York contributed to this story.
I just saw this on Sportsnet this morning and was a bit surprised that no one mentioned this. I shake my head still on this matter, I mean…come on! What this guy did was a terrible thing that as an animal owner, and I'm still disgusted. Yeah yeah, he’s learned his lesson…HE’S A CHANGED MAN! HE BELIEVES IN JEBUS!? …Right. Anyways, the NFL was right in the sense to ban him 2 years from the sport, but no team is going to pick up him and get all that negative attention on the field. No one is that stupid. So heh, good lick Michael Vick on finding a team. Hehehehe. Then again, the Raiders have been known to sign washed up bums. They might take a chance.
Welcome back Michael Vick. (lifts middle finger)
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yeah well Ray Lewis murdered a dude.
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well he played for baltimore. pretty sure everyone in baltimore has murdered someone
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this is some bullshit.
if any of the teams take him, we can at least be sure their games will be protested.
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EEhhhhhh... I'm not a big fan of professional sports (college football is pretty cool), but I see guys like this tainting the image of American athletes all the time. Pro sports is a pretty tainted system in the first place, though.
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Everyone in the NFL has murdered someone. :welp:
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STFU :welp:
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You win :welp:
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Good riddance.
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That guy can go fuck himself for what he did.
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Eagles signed him... I like the Eagles and I'm not very happy about this! The idiot should just rot in jail.. What he did was absolutely disgusting and he continued to do it knowing what he was doing was inhumane.. At least with Stallworth, he was drunk and ran over someone (which is terrible!) and knew it was wrong and would never (hopefully) do it again. Vick though continued to kill these poor dogs, despite knowing full well what he was doing..
Lock him up!
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he paid his debt to society
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EEhhhhhh... I'm not a big fan of professional sports (college football is pretty cool), but I see guys like this tainting the image of American athletes all the time. Pro sports is a pretty tainted system in the first place, though.
obviously you're subconsciously thinking of football players' taints
it would be awesome though if immediately after he got back on a team somebody tackled him REALLY hard and made it look like an accident and after he recovered it instantly happened again and so on
Edit: Maybe this guy is HUGE I dunno but then they'll do it 80's style and put some guy named TINY on their team who just got out of a mental institution and his favorite hobby is wrestling hippotamuses or something (I dunno can't think of something crazier than alligators to wrestle)
he also has to go ARGH and immediately bend a steel bar in half or squeeze a football into dust
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man hippos are hella deadly. they are also extremely fast. if anything's more crazy than an alligator it's gotta be a hippo
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Im from the same are as Vick and loved watching him play at VT and for the Falcons, but since I am a HUGE Redskins fan, I now hate him, and it has nothing to do with the dogs!