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Michael Vick
Michael Vick
Michael Vick, during a game with the Eagles.
No. 7, 1, 2
Position:  Quarterback
Personal information
Born:  June 26 1980 (1980-06-26) (age 43)
 Newport News, Virgina
Listed height:  6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Listed weight:  215 lbs (98 kg)
National Football League Debut
Debut: 2001 for the Atlanta Falcons
Final season: 2015 for the Pittsburgh Steelers
Career information
High school:  Warwick (VA)
College:  Virginia
NFL Draft:  2001 / Rnd: 1 / Pck: 1
Career history
* = offseason / practice squad only
Career highlights and awards
  • Pro Bowl (2002, 2004, 2005, 2010)
  • NFL Comeback Player of the Year (2010)
  • Bert Bell Award (2010)
  • Heisman Trophy finalist (1999)
  • Big East Offensive Player of the Year (1999)
  • Big East Rookie of the Year (1999)
  • NFL records
  • Career yards per carry (7.0)
  • Career rushing yards by a quarterback (6,109)
Career information
Passing
Passing Yards:  22,464
Passer Rating  80.4
Passing TD-INT:  133-88
Rushing
Rushing Yards:  6,109
Rushing TD's:  36
Fumbles  98
External links
Stats at Pro-football-reference

Michael Dwayne Vick (born June 26, 1980) is a former American professional football Quarterback, who played for 13 seasons. Vick was indefinitley suspended after pleaing guilty to federal felony charges resulting from the Bad News Kennels dog fighting investigation[1].[1] Before suspension, he was a quarterback for the team Atlanta Falcons.

Vick attended Virginia Tech where he played for the Hokies' football team on a full athletic scholarship. During his time with the Hokies, he helped the team to an appearance in the 1999-2000 BCS National Championship game and finished third in that seasons Heisman Trophy voting.[2]

After three years at Virginia Tech, Vick declared himself eligible for the 2001 NFL Draft. In that draft, the Atlanta Falcons selected Vick with the first overall selection. In his first year with the fanchise, the Falcons, aided by Vick's performance at quarterback, played in the National Football Conference Championship Game.

In week eight of the 2004 NFL season, Vick became the first player in NFL history to rush for 100 yards and pass for 250 in a single game.[3] On December 24, 2004, Vick signed a 10-year contract extension with the Falcons; it was the most lucrative contract in the history of the NFL.[4][3] However, on August 29, 2007, the Falcons began a process to recoup $20 million of the $37 million in bonuses paid to Vick under terms of the extension.[4]

Early years[]

Teenage parents, public housing[]

Michael Dwayne Vick was born the second of four children to Brenda Vick (16) and Michael Boddie (17) on June 26, 1980, in Newport News, Virginia. Already of modest finances, beginning a family as unmarried teenagers added to the challenges for both Brenda Vick and Michael Boddie.

Brenda Vick obtained some public financial assistance and worked jobs at a local Kmart and driving a school bus part-time; her parents helped with the young family. Michael Boddie spent 2 1/2 years in the U.S. Army, then went through a succession of jobs, eventually finding steady work in the Newport News shipyards as a sandblaster and spray-painter, with his days starting early and ending after dark.[5]

Michael and Brenda were married when their Vick was about five years old, by which time they had four children; Vick's older sister Christina ("Niki") and younger siblings Marcus and Courtney. Biographers state that the children elected to continue to use their "Vick" surname after their parents wed.

The family grew up living in the "Ridley Circle Homes", a public housing project in a financially depressed and crime-ridden neighborhood located in the East End section of the port city on the harbor of Hampton Roads. Located not far from the downtown area and the massive shipyard and coal piers, the "East End" of Newport News is often known in hip hop culture by the slang names "Bad News" or "Bad Newz".

In 2007, a newspaper article published in the Richmond Times-Dispatch written by reporter David Ress, painted for readers a vivid image of the neighborhood which he noted seemed to be "not much changed" by observations of local people almost ten years after Michael Vick left:

"950-plus units of public-housing projects crammed into an area of about a dozen blocks. Row after row of aging two-story apartment buildings, pressed close to the Interstate 664 bridge and looming black piles of coal. Close enough to the water for a whiff from the seafood packing plants but not for a fresh breeze. Just enough space for a walkway and clotheslines between the buildings, but not for a basketball court...not a dog in sight."

Ress interviewed one resident who said that there is drug dealing, drive-by shootings and other killing in the neighborhood, adding, "Plenty of good people, too." The man, kicking his foot in the dirt, commented "All this is nothing but sand down here, can't even grow grass...You're stuck in a little hole down here." For some, that resident told Ress, sports was a way out...a dream for many. And even if it isn't, sports is a way for children in the Newport News projects to stay out of trouble...his kids, ages 9 to 15, like to play at the basketball court four blocks away from their home, adding "gunfire sometimes sends them scampering back home."[6]

In a 2001 interview, Michael Vick told the Newport News Daily Press that when he was 10 or 11 "I would go fishing even if the fish weren't biting, just to get out of there" and away from the violence and stress of daily life in the projects. His home at Ridley Circle was within walking distance of the Newport News Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism's public King-Lincoln Park, which offers salt water fishing near the point where the James River becomes part of Hampton Roads. The former Lincoln Park was renamed to jointly honor both U.S. President Abraham Lincoln and Dr. Martin Luther King after the race riots in Newport News (and elsewhere across the United States) following Dr. King's assassination in 1968.

Even though the area is, by all accounts, troubled, several people interviewed were disbelieving that dog fighting was a local activity there. Kevin Brown, a minister who has organized a storefront after-school program called "Operation Breaking Through" told reporter Ress that in the low-income housing projects where Vick grew up, there isn't much money for buying and betting on dogs. Reverend Brown stated: "Folks in this community are just in survival mode...They don't have money for gambling." Another man interviewed by the newspaper, a 25-year-old who was hanging around with a group of a dozen friends by the Harbor Homes public housing project on Jefferson Avenue, seemed to agree. "There's no dog fighting around here," he told Ress.[6]

Early amateur athletics[]

During the early years of his family, Michael Boddie's employment required a lot of travel, but he taught football skills to his two sons at an early age. Michael Vick was only three years old when his father, nicknamed "Bullet" for his blinding speed during his own playing days on the gridiron, began teaching him the fundamentals. He also taught younger brother Marcus.

As he grew up, Michael Vick, who went by "Ookie" back then[5], also learned a lot about football from a second cousin 4 years older, Aaron Brooks. Vick and Brooks both spent a lot of time as youths at the local Boys and Girls Club.[7][5] As a 7-year-old throwing three touchdown passes in a Boys Club league, his apparent football talents led coaches and his parents to keep a special watch over Vick.[6]

Vick told Sporting News magazine in an interview published April 9, 2001: "Sports kept me off the streets...It kept me from getting into what was going on, the bad stuff. Lots of guys I knew have had bad problems."

College career[]

After high school, Michael Vick attended Virginia Tech. In his first collegiate game as a redshirt freshman against James Madison in 1999, he scored three rushing touchdowns in just over one quarter of play. His last touchdown was a spectacular flip in which he landed awkwardly on his ankle, forcing him to miss the remainder of the game in addition to the following game. During the season, Vick led a last-minute game-winning drive against West Virginia in the annual Black Diamond Trophy rivalry game. He led the Hokies to an 11-0 season and to the Bowl Championship Series national title game in the 2000 Nokia Sugar Bowl against Florida State. Although Virginia Tech lost 46-29, Vick was able to bring the team back from a 21 point deficit to take a brief lead. During the season, Vick appeared on the cover of an ESPN The Magazine issue.

Vick led the NCAA in passing efficiency that year, setting a record for a freshman (180.4), which was also good enough for the third-highest all-time mark (Colt Brennan holds the record at 185.9 from his 2006 season at Hawaii). Vick was awarded an ESPY Award as the nation's top college player, and won the first-ever Archie Griffin Award as college football's most valuable player. He was invited to the 1999 Heisman Trophy presentation and finished third in the voting behind Ron Dayne and Joe Hamilton. Vick's third-place finish matched the highest finish ever by a freshman up to that point, first set by Herschel Walker in 1980 (Adrian Peterson has since broken that mark, finishing second in 2004).

Vick's 2000 season did have its share of highlights, such as his career rushing high of 210 yards against the Boston College Eagles in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Against West Virginia in the Black Diamond Trophy game, Vick accounted for 288 total yards of offense and two touchdowns in a 48-20 win. The following week, Vick led the Hokies back from a 14-0 deficit against Syracuse at the Carrier Dome - where the Hokies had not won since 1986. Vick put the game away with a 55-yard run with 1:34 left.[8]

The following game against Pittsburgh, Vick was injured and had to miss the rest of that game, the entire game against Central Florida, and was unable to start against the Miami Hurricanes - the Hokies' lone loss of the season. Vick's final game at Virginia Tech came against the Clemson Tigers in the Toyota Gator Bowl, where he was named MVP of the game.

With the opportunity and huge financial benefits as an option, Vick elected to leave Virginia Tech after his redshirt sophomore season to become a professional football player. Aware that the rest of his family was still living in their 3 bedroom apartment in the Ridley Circle Homes, Michael Vick stated that he was going to buy his mother "a home and a car."

Professional career[]

NFL Draft[]

Vick was selected in the first round of the 2001 NFL Draft with the first overall pick. The San Diego Chargers had the number one selection spot in the draft that year but traded the rights to the first overall choice to the Atlanta Falcons a day before the draft, for which they received the Falcons' first round pick (5th overall) and third round pick in 2001 (used to draft CB Tay Cody), a second round pick in 2002 (used to draft WR Reche Caldwell) and WR/KR Tim Dwight. With the Chargers' downgraded spot (the 5th overall), they selected Texas Christian University running back LaDainian Tomlinson, who went on to become league MVP in 2006 (although Vick has never become league MVP, he finished second in voting in 2004).[9] In this way, Tomlinson and Vick are linked as having been "traded" for each other, although the transaction was actually the result of traded draft picks and contract negotiations.[10]

Early NFL career[]

Vick made his NFL debut at San Francisco on September 9, 2001, and saw limited action. He completed his first NFL pass with an 18-yard strike to WR Tony Martin in the second quarter vs. Carolina on September 23 and first NFL touchdown on a two-yard rushing score in the fourth quarter to help the Falcons to a 24-16 victory. Vick made his first career start at Dallas on November 11 and threw the first touchdown pass of his career on a nine-yard toss to TE Alge Crumpler in a 20-13 victory. In his two starts of the eight games played that season, Vick completed 50 of 113 passes for 785 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions, including accounting for 234 of the team's 255 yards at the team’s season finale at St. Louis on January 6, 2002. He also rushed 29 times for 289 yards (9.9 avg.) and one touchdown.

In 2002, Vick became a bona fide star and MVP candidate in his first season as a full-time starter at the age of 22. He was named to his first Pro Bowl after starting all 15 games played, only missing a game to the New York Giants on October 13 due to a sprained shoulder. He completed 231 of 421 passes for 2,936 yards (both career-highs) and 16 touchdowns, while he also tallied 113 carries for 777 yards and eight rushing touchdowns. In this season, Vick established numerous single-game career-highs, including passes completed with 24 and pass attempts with 46 at Pittsburgh on November 10, as well as passing yards with 337 vs. Detroit on December 22. He also completed a career-long 74 yards for a touchdown to WR Trevor Gaylor vs. New Orleans on November 17. Vick registered an NFL record for most rushing yards by a quarterback in a single a game with 173 yards at Minnesota on December 1. Vick also tied for third in team history for the lowest interception percentage in a season at 1.90 and continued a streak of consecutive passes without an interception that began at St. Louis on January 6, 2002 in the season-finale of the 2001 season and extended to the first quarter vs. Baltimore on November 3, 2002. His streak covered 25 straight quarters and 177 passes without an interception. On January 1, 2003, Vick led the Atlanta Falcons to an upset victory over the heavily favored Green Bay Packers 27-7 in the NFC playoffs, ending the Packers' undefeated playoff record at Lambeau Field. The Falcons would later lose 20-6 to the Donovan McNabb-led Philadelphia Eagles in the NFC divisional playoff game.

2003-2004 NFL seasons[]

During a pre-season game against the Baltimore Ravens on August 16, Vick suffered a fractured right fibula and missed the first 11 games of the regular season. In Week 13, Vick made his season debut in relief of QB Doug Johnson in the third quarter at Houston on November 30, completing 8 of 11 passes for 60 yards and recording 16 rushing yards on three carries. He posted his first start of the season vs. Carolina on December 7 and amassed the third-highest rushing total by a quarterback in NFL history with 141 yards on 14 carries and one score to lead the Falcons to a come-from-behind 20-14 overtime victory. The 141 yards trail Tobin Rote's 150 yards on November 18, 1951 with Green Bay and his own NFL record of 173 at Minnesota December 1, 2002 on the NFL's all-time list for quarterbacks. He also completed 16 of 33 passes for 179 yards and accounted for 320 of the team's 380 total yards worth of offense. On December 20, Vick engineered a 30-28 victory at Tampa Bay completing 8 of 15 passes for 119 yards and two touchdowns for a passer rating of 119.2. Vick closed out the season with a 21-14 victory vs. Jacksonville on December 28, where he completed 12 of 22 passes for 180 yards with two touchdowns and one interception. Ending the season starting four of five games played, Vick completed 50 of 100 passes for 585 yards with four touchdowns and three interceptions and also rushing 40 times for 255 yards and one touchdown while guiding the Falcons to a 3-1 record in the final four weeks of action.

In 2004, Vick was named to his second Pro Bowl after starting all 15 games played and completing 181 of 321 passes for 2,313 yards with 14 touchdowns and 12 interceptions while he also posted career-highs with 120 carries for 902 yards along with three rushing touchdowns. The 902 rushing yards with a 7.52 average per carry ranked third and second, respectively, in NFL annals for quarterbacks. Vick was also named NFC Offensive Player of the Week on two separate occasions during the season, one for his performance at Denver on October 31 when he became the first quarterback to throw for more than 250 yards and rush for over 100 yards in the same game. He led the team to an 11-4 record, which was the third-best record for a starting quarterback in team history behind Chris Chandler (13-1 in 1998) and Steve Bartkowski (12-4 in 1980). Overall, the Falcons finished the season with an 11-5 record, earning a first-round bye in the NFL playoffs for only the third time in franchise history. The Vick-led Falcons rushed for a playoff record 317 yards. (Vick himself had 119 of them, setting an NFL playoff record for a quarterback). He also threw two touchdown passes against the Rams in the NFC Divisional Playoffs. However, the Eagles again played the role of heart breaker, beating them in the NFC title game 27-10.

On December 23, 2004, Vick signed a 10-year contract with the Atlanta Falcons worth $130 million with a $37 million signing bonus, making him the highest paid player in NFL history at that time and one of the highest paid ever in sports.[11] Vick's deal surpasses the $98 million contract the Indianapolis Colts' Peyton Manning signed in March 2005. Manning, who signed for seven years, is guaranteed $34.5 million in bonuses. Vick's $130 million potential value tops Philadelphia's Donovan McNabb's 12-year, $115 million deal that runs through 2013.

2005-present[]

File:Vick Scanning the Field.jpg

Vick scans the field against the Saints

In 2005, Vick was named to his third Pro Bowl after starting all 15 games played and completing 214 of 387 passes for 2,412 yards with 15 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. His 597 rushing yards on 102 carries (5.9 avg.) with six scores led all NFL quarterbacks and his 5.9 average yards per carry led all NFL rushers with at least 100 carries. Vick also helped three players have career years in RB Warrick Dunn, TE Alge Crumpler, and WR Michael Jenkins.

File:Georgia Dome - Falcons vs. Giants.jpg

Vick (#7) watches from the sidelines while the defense is on the field against the Giants

On October 22, 2006, against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Vick had his first game in which he threw three or more touchdowns. After three quarters, Vick had four touchdowns, three of which went to Alge Crumpler. The following week against the Cincinnati Bengals, he threw three more with no interceptions and was honored with the NFC Player of the Week award. Vick also had a career high-tying four TD passes vs. Dallas in Week 15. During the 2006 season, Vick connected on 204 of 388 passes for 2,474 yards with a career-high 20 touchdowns. He was also third in the league in rushes of ten or more yards with 44, behind only the Giants' Tiki Barber (50) and Kansas City's Larry Johnson (49). However, he had several incidents during the 2006 season, such as the obscene gesture incident, which ruined his sixth season in the league. In fact, he was denied a selection to the Pro Bowl, which would have been his third straight and fourth overall.

Only Randall Cunningham and Steve Young have more rushing yards at the quarterback position than Vick, who is ranked first in career rushing yards among active QB's.Template:Fact Vick is also first among QB's all-time in rushing yards per game, at 53.5 yards per game.Template:Fact Vick also holds several NFL quarterback rushing records, including most rushing yards in one game (173), most 100-yard rushing games (7), and most rushing yards in a single season (1,039).Template:Fact

Personal[]

Minor controversies and incidents[]

Between his selection by the Atlanta Falcons in the 2001 NFL Draft and early 2007, Vick was allegedy involved in number of smaller incidents or events:

  • In 2007, Michael Boddie, his father, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that around 2001, Michael Vick was staging dogfights in the garage of the family's home in Newport News and kept fighting dogs in the family's backyard, including injured ones which the father nursed back to health. Boddie said his son had been urged to not engage in the activity, but continued. He stated "This is Mike's thing. And he knows it." [12] Within days, Michael Vick's mother, Brenda Vick Boddie, disputed her estranged husband's published statements. She told the Newport News Daily Press "There was no dogfighting [at our home]. There were no cages." [13]
  • In early 2004, two men were arrested in Virginia for distributing marijuana. The truck they were driving was registered to Michael Vick. The Falcons coach Dan Reeves recalled that he lectured Vick at that time on the importance of reputation, on choosing the right friends, on staying out of trouble for the good of his team. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution quoted Reeves as having told Vick: "You are an Atlanta Falcon...Whatever you do is going to be a reflection on all of us, not just you."[14]
  • On October 10, 2004, Vick and the other members of his party were at Atlanta's Hartsfield International Airport on their way to board an AirTran afternoon flight to Newport News, Virginia. While they were passing through a security checkpoint with Vick, a security camera caught Quanis Phillips and Todd Harris picking up an expensive-appearing watch (either a Rolex or a fake) which belonged to Alvin Spencer, a security screener.[15] After watching the theft on a video tape, Spencer filed a police report. However, he claimed that Billy "White Shoes" Johnson, known as the Falcons "fixer", interfered with the investigation.[14] It took six days for Spencer to get the watch back, according to the Washington Post.[15]
  • In March 2005 a woman named Sonya Elliott filed a civil lawsuit against Vick alleging she contracted genital herpes from Vick, in the autumn of 2002, and that he failed to inform her that he had the disease.[16] Elliot further alleged that Vick had visited clinics under the alias "Ron Mexico" to get treatments and thus he knew of his condition. On April 24, 2006 Vick's attorney, Lawrence Woodward, revealed that the lawsuit had settled out of court with an undisclosed amount.[17]
  • November 26, 2006 - After a Falcons loss to the New Orleans Saints in the Georgia Dome in apparent reaction to fans booing, Vick made an obscene gesture at fans, holding up two middle fingers.He was fined $10,000 by the NFL for his obscene gesture, and agreed to donate another $10,000 to charity. [18]
  • January 17, 2007 Vick surrendered a water bottle which had a hidden compartment to security personnel at Miami International Airport. "The compartment was hidden by the bottle's label so that it appeared to be a full bottle of water when held upright," police said. Test results indicated there were no illegal substances in the water bottle and Vick was cleared of any wrongdoing.[19] Vick announced that the water bottle was a jewelry stash box, and that the substance in question had been jewelry. [20]

Bad Newz Kennels investigation[]

Beginning on April 25, 2007, widespread media publicity was drawn by discovery of evidence of unlawful dog fighting activities at a property he owns in a rural county in southeastern Virginia.[14] Vick was accused of financing the operation, directly participating in dog fights and executions, and personally handling thousands of dollars in related gambling activities. As of August 17, the situation was under continued investigation at both the federal and local levels.

By July, some charges had already been made at the federal level, with four cooperating witnesses and three co-defendants having agreed to testify by mid-August. Others charges were anticipated at both federal and local (state) levels, according to statements by authorities. On August 20, Vick's legal team announced that he would plead guilty to a single felony count. [21]

In July 2007, Vick and three other men were charged by federal authorities with felony charges of operating an unlawful six-year long interstate dog fighting venture known as "Bad Newz Kennels" at Vick's 15-acre property in Surry County, Virginia. Vick was accused of financing the operation, directly participating in dog fights and executions, and personally handling thousands of dollars in related gambling activities. By August 20, Vick and each of the other three co-defendants had agreed to separate plea bargains for the federal charges.[22] They are expected to each receive federal prison sentences between 12 months and a maximum of five years.

Many companies have suspended or terminated his endorsements and withdrawn Vick-related products from sale.[23][24][25][26]

On August 27, U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson accepted Vick's guilty plea; he will be sentenced on December 10. He faces a maximum of 5 years in prison, a fine of $250,000 and 3 years of supervised release; prosecutors will ask the Judge to consider a lesser prison sentence (estimated 12-18 months) if Vick cooperates with the government as he has agreed.[27] Additionally, separate Virginia charges against all four men and possibly others will be considered when a Surry County grand jury meets on September 25.[28]

Endorsements[]

During his NFL career, Vick became a spokesperson for many companies; his endorsement contracts have included Nike, EA Sports, Coca-Cola, Powerade, Kraft, Rawlings, Hasbro and AirTran.[29][30] His contract along with his endorsements had Vick ranked 33 among Forbes' Top 100 Celebrities in 2005.[29] However, two years later, he was not even listed on the most recent Forbes Top 100 Celebrities. Even before the animal cruelty case surfaced in 2007, Vick's corporate status had deteriorated, apparently due to extensive bad press. Among the negative incidents cited by observers of this was his middle finger gesture to Atlanta football fans in 2006.[31][32] His endorsement deals with at least six companies (Coca-Cola, EA Sports, Kraft Foods, Hasbro and AirTran) have expired over the past few years and have not been renewed.

AirTran[]

AirTran did not renew their relationship on May 8, 2007. This was after both his missed appearance on Capitol Hill on April 24 and the police search at his property near Smithfield, Virginia later the same week, when the dog fighting investigation became widely known, but well before the most damaging allegations and the federal indictments.

AirTran has made no public statements regarding the reason for ending the endorsement relationship with Vick. However, ESPN reported on May 31 "especially stinging to AirTran was that Vick's publicist blamed the airline when the quarterback known for his quickness failed to arrive in Washington to speak before Congress. AirTran said Vick had ample opportunities to get to his destination on AirTran but chose not to."[33]

Impact of publicity, federal indictments[]

On July 18, 2007, following extensive media coverage of the content of Vick's 18-page federal indictment of July 17, Neil Schwartz, director of marketing for SportScanInfo, which tracks sporting goods sales, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: "I just think it's going to be really hard for Michael to somehow repair his public image unless these charges are totally false... American people are incredibly forgiving, but the heinous nature of what went on here may be a whole different ballgame." The same article also quoted Bill Sutton, a professor of sports business at the University of Central Florida: "You won't find him anywhere" in advertising or marketing in the near future.[34]

MSNBC quoted David Carter, founder of the Sports Business Group, a Southern California-based provider of strategic sports-marketing services: "Number one, animal cruelty is something no one will tolerate. Number two, you have the underbelly of possible gambling. Number three, you have the strength of [animal] advocacy groups. They aren't going away."[35]

Product marketing reactions[]

According to the Virginian-Pilot in a July 19, 2007 article, Vick's biggest marketing deal is with Nike.[36] Later on the same day, USA Today reported that Vick's legal troubles have prompted Nike to suspend the release of its latest product line named after him, telling retailers it will not release a fifth signature shoe, the Air Zoom Vick V, "this summer."[37]

On July 27, Nike announced it "has suspended Michael Vick's contract without pay, and will not sell any more Michael Vick product at Nike owned retail at this time." However, the company said it had not terminated the contract, as animal-rights activists had urged.[38]

On July 27, Adidas announced its Reebok division would stop selling Vick football jerseys and the NFL said it had pulled all Vick-related items from NFLShop.com,[39] including Falcons jerseys customized with Vick's name and number.[40]

Within days, Donruss, a trading card company, has decided to pull Vick's card from any future 2007 releases, according to Beckett Media, which covers the collectibles industry.[41] Upper Deck, another trading card company, took similar action.

On July 31, St. Louis-based sporting goods manufacturer Rawlings, which used Vick's likeness to sell merchandise and modeled a football using his name, ended its relationship. The same day, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that Dick's Sporting Goods and Sports Authority stores, part of a major chain, have also stopped selling Vick-related goods.[26]

On August 24, Nike terminated his contract upon the filing of Vick's Plea Agreement and Statement of Facts with the federal court in Richmond. [42]

Charity work[]

In June 2006, Vick, along with his brother Marcus Vick and mother Brenda Vick Boddie, established The Vick Foundation, a nonprofit organization that supports at-risk youth and the after school programs that serve them in the Metro Atlanta and Hampton Roads areas. The announcement of the organization came just before the start of the foundation’s first fundraiser, the Michael Vick Golf Classic. The inaugural event was held at the prestigious Kingsmill Golf Course in James City County near Williamsburg, Virginia in partnership with The Virginia Tech Alumni Association Tidewater Chapter, and netted more than $80,000 for charity.[2]

After the Virginia Tech massacre in April 2007, Vick teamed up with the United Way to donate $10,000 to assist families affected by the tragedy.[43] Vick explained, "When tragic things like this happen, families have enough to deal with, and if I can help in some small way, that's the least I can do." The Vick Foundation is collecting donations from local communities in both Atlanta and Virginia that will be placed in the United In Caring Fund for Victims of the Virginia Tech Tragedy and the special fund at the United Way of Montgomery, Radford and Floyd counties, which serves the Virginia Tech area. Vick's foundation said the money will be used to provide help with funeral expenses, transportation for family members and other support services.

On April 24, 2007, Vick was scheduled to lobby on Capitol Hill, hoping to persuade lawmakers to increase funding for after-school programs. Vick missed a connecting flight in Atlanta on Monday to Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, and then failed to show-up for another seat booked for him later that evening. On Tuesday morning, he did not attend his scheduled appearance at the congressional breakfast where he also was to be honored for his foundation's work with after-school projects in Georgia and Virginia.[44] Vick's mother, Brenda Vick Boddie, accepted an award from the Afterschool Alliance on her son's behalf.

It was announced in June 2007 that the "Michael Vick Football Camp" to be held at Christopher Newport University in Newport News was canceled for the summer 2007 session because of "scheduling issues."[45] The university on Warwick Boulevard in Newport News is partially located on the site of the former Homer L. Ferguson High School (which closed in 1996), the school where Vick began his football fame. He also canceled participation in another football camp to be held at the College of William and Mary. According to that university, his place was to be taken by Washington Redskins quarterback Jason Campbell.[46]

On June 22, 2007, a charity golf tournament featuring Vick, intended in part to raise scholarships in memory of Virginia Tech's shooting victims, was rescheduled for September.[47] The tournament at Kingsmill Resort & Spa had been set to begin on June 29, and a reason for the change was not announced. The tournament is the latest in a series of Virginia appearances either canceled or delayed since Vick's name surfaced in a dog fighting investigation.

Public impact upon community youth, leaders[]

The revelations of Michael Vick's activities with the Bad Newz Kennels drew widepread negative public reactions, but possibly hurt nowhere more than in his old neighborhood. Until August 24, there could be some comfort in disbelief. In the aftermath of Vick's guilty plea agreement, in Newport News, mentors and others working with underprivileged youth sought to identify lessons to communicate to those who had seen him as a role model.

"It's difficult, because Mike (Vick) is someone who we held up as doing it right," Bernard Johnson told the Newport News Daily Press. Johnson, who has coached kids, including Vick, in the Boys and Girls Club football program for 28 years, said the lesson to kids now is all about responsibility and accountability.[48]

Vernon Lee, co-founder of the Peninsula All-Star Football Camp, said the Vick situation should be a wake-up call "for anyone coming into contact with a young person...we can try to plant the seeds necessary so that this doesn't happen again...not assume that there is a direct correlation between athleticism and real-life skills."

Lee said a key part of Peninsula All-Star Football Camp is a semi-private session in which parents and coaches are ordered out of the auditorium while college and professional athletes tell the high school players how to get their personal lives in order. In the session, the campers are warned about potential dangers from parties to drugs to girls to friends. [48]

Noting the reality that Vick is likely to do prison time, the Boys and Girls Club's Johnson told a reporter:

"Now we explain that you can't depend on somebody else to take care of your responsibility...and sometimes money will get in the way of right and wrong."[48]

See also[]

  • List of career achievements by Michael Vick

References[]

  1. NFL suspends Vick. cnn.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-31.
  2. Vick's Hokies profile. hokiesports.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-31.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Vick signs. findarticles.com. Archived from the original on 2012-06-29. Retrieved on 2007-08-31.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Falcons seek $20 million. espn.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-31.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Michael Vick. JockBio.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-04.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 David Ress (2007-07-25). Vick case puzzling. inRich.com. Retrieved on 2007-07-31. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Puzzling" defined multiple times with different content
  7. Dave Forster, Bill Burke and Kyle Tucker (2007-05-26). Is Michael Vick friendly to a fault?. The Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved on 2007-06-04.
  8. Robertson, Jimmy (2000-10-22). Tech puts end to Carrier Dome hex. hokiesports.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-29.
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  15. 15.0 15.1 A Commonplace Case Complicated by Fame. The Washington Post (2005-03-13). Archived from the original on 2012-09-18. Retrieved on 2007-08-25.
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  20. 3/22 QB Michael Vick Interview
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External links[]

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