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Tag Archive | "Michael Vick"

Michael Vick (Sorta) Reinstated to the NFL


As expected, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell has reinstated Michael Vick to the NFL, but with conditions. He is allowed to practice, but will not be eligible to play until week six at the earliest. That is assuming any NFL team will sign him and give him a second chance. Vick was suspended before the 2007 season amid dog fighting allegations to which he later pleaded guilty and served 23-months prison sentence.

Despite support from several high profile NFL players and even the respected former coach Tony Dungee, Goodell felt that an additional six week suspension to start the season was appropriate. I never thought I’d say this, but I agree with Buffalo Bills wide receiver Terrell Owens – this added suspension is just kicking a guy while he’s down (actually, TO said ‘kicking a horse’ but that’s neither here nor there).

Vick served his time and has already missed two full seasons and now Goodell is basically suspending him for another half of a season. He’s already on a short leash (pardon the pun) so what good is another six games? Regardless, I am glad to see Vick get an opportunity to get back in the league and prove that he can change. And I sincerely hope that a team will give him a shot and that PETA and its cult of followers will give him the benefit of the doubt. PETA, afterall, believe that vicious pitbulls can become docile house pets, so why can’t a human being change for the better as well? Huh, PETA?

Read more at sports.Yahoo.com.

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Does Michael Vick Deserve a Second Chance?


Michael Vick is back home in Hampton, Va., after being released from prison yesterday. The disgraced and supposedly penniless former NFL star will begin work at one of W.M. Jordan Co.’s 40 commercial construction sites earning $10 an hour as a general laborer. The company’s president, John R. Lawson, is an ‘75 grad and a member of the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors. Clearly he believes that Vick deserves a second chance, as do I.

Here’s the thing that really bothers me: Michael Vick did more time in prison, 19 months, for killing pitbulls, than St. Louis Rams defensive lineman Leonard Little did for killing a woman in 1998 while driving drunk. Little served 90 days in jail, four years probation and 1,000 hours of community service… He KILLED a woman. A mother. A wife. A 15-year-old boy lost his mom and a husband, who had already lost a daughter to a car accident lost his wife. And all Little got was 90 days in jail.

The NFL suspended him for eight games. Vick has already missed two full seasons and could very well get a suspension from current no-nonsense commissioner Roger Goodell, but he has said that he will not even meet with Vick until the former star’s home confinement is completely on July 20.

Following Little’s 90 days in jail, he said that he would never forget what he had done. Apparently he did because in 2004 he was arrested for driving drunk and speeding. He failed three sobriety tests, but somehow the charges were dismissed and he walked away with a mere speeding charge. Unbelievable.

So, what can we take from this? That killing a dog, while unthinkable and detestable, is a greater crime in our society than killing a human being. Some will argue that in Little’s case he didn’t intentionally mean to kill someone. Bullocks! He got in the car while drunk and he should be responsible for his actions. In my opinion, Little deserved more jail time than Vick and so does Dante Stallworth of the New Orleans Saints, who faces DUI manslaughter charged after killing a man while driving drunk. And now for the head-shaking bit of news from Yahoo! Sports, according to Jason Cole’s article Stallworth may get break on manslaughter charge:

Stallworth, who is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday, may still have to serve time in jail and reach a civil settlement with the family of Mario Reyes, who was killed when Stallworth hit him in the early morning hours of March 14. However, Stallworth’s jail time could be only a matter of two or three months rather than the possibility of up to 15 years in prison under state law, two NFL sources said this week. Beyond that, Stallworth could play this season, one of the sources said.

Only a matter of two or three months? He could play this season? For killing a man? Am I the only one outraged by this? Thankfully I’m not alone , but it seems like we’re in the minority. Kill a man and you can be out of jail in 2-3 months and play that season. Kill pitbulls and go to prison (not jail, there is a difference) and serve nearly two years and miss 2-3 seasons. Yeah, America, our priorities are completely out of whack. Stallworth should be suspended for the season, at least!

The other things that bothers me about this whole thing is that PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) says Vick doesn’t deserve another shot at the NFL until he passes a psychological evaluation. Really? Really, PETA? Your whack job zealots go around throwing blood on people … perhaps you need to undergo psychological evaluations before you start mandating who can and cannot return to their job after paying their debt to society as prescribed by their sentence.

What Vick did was horrible and as a dog lover I do not condone what he did. But he paid his debt to society. He paid more for his crime than his peers did or will for their crimes of killing a human being. Vick deserves a second chance and I can’t wait to see him get his life together, show repentence and then get back on the field.

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2010-2011 Schedule

09/06 vs. Boise State (8pm ESPN)
09/11 vs. JMU (1:30pm ESPN3.com)
09/18 vs. ECU (1:30pm ESPN3.com)
09/25 @ Boston College
10/02 @ NC State
10/09 vs. Central Michigan
10/16 vs. Wake Forest
10/23 vs. Duke
11/04 vs. Georgia Tech (7:30pm, ESPN)
11/13 @ North Carolina
11/20 @ Miami
11/27 vs. Virginia
12/04 ACC Championship Game

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