WFLA News Channel 8 The Tampa Tribune CentroTampa.com

Sports

Print This Print Bookmark and Share XML Feed For This Channel

TBO > Sports

WHAT'S NEXT?

ADVERTISEMENT

Published: December 11, 2007

Updated: 12/11/2007 12:12 am

ATLANTA - Michael Vick knows where he will be spending most of the next two years, locked away in a federal prison, doing his time for dogfighting.

Once he's a free man - probably in the summer of 2009, assuming he gets time off for good behavior - what comes next?

First, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell must lift Vick's indefinite suspension.

Then, how many seasons will the quarterback miss beyond this year and next, which are a given?

Another team must be willing to take a chance on Vick, which isn't a given.

If he does get back on the field, will he still be the same electrifying player?

Will he even be a quarterback?

"No one knows," said Dan Reeves, who was Vick's first pro coach with the Atlanta Falcons. "A lot depends on him and what he does with these next two years. I don't know if anybody knows what's going to happen. Either he comes out a better person or he comes out a bitter person."

Reeves is right. It's impossible to predict what might happen two years from now, after Vick has served the 23-month sentence imposed Monday by a federal judge in Richmond, Va.

Most seem to believe Vick will at least get a second chance in the NFL, assuming he keeps his nose clean in prison and comes out with the proper amount of remorse for taking part in a gruesome dogfighting ring.

But one thing seems certain: Vick won't get his second chance with the Falcons.

The team kept him on the roster only while it pursues efforts to recover nearly $20 million in bonus money. The Falcons already won the first round of the legal fight, which has now gone to a federal judge in Minnesota.

Owner Arthur Blank, who gave Vick what was then the richest contract in NFL history near the end of the 2005 season, sounded as though the Falcons are moving on without any plans for bringing back No. 7.

"I would never use the word 'never,'" Blank said in an interview broadcast over the team's Web site. "I would say there's always a chance. But quite candidly, we as an organization, as a football team, we have to look forward. We have to go forward assuming Michael will not be back."

Blank predicts Vick will miss three full seasons. After all, the quarterback still faces state charges in Virginia that could mean more time behind bars. And Goodell has not indicated when he will lift the suspension, which could run longer than any prison sentences.

"If Michael makes a mistake and eats fried chicken and French fries in prison every day and comes out at 250 pounds, he's not going to be able to play football," Blank said. "How he's able to keep himself in shape, stay athletically tuned and mentally tuned, I don't know."

But Reeves, who coached Vick from 2001-03, sees no reason why he can't return. Even if he misses three full years, he only would be 30 entering the 2010 season.

"I don't think he would lose his ability to throw the football," Reeves said. "It's sort of like riding a bicycle. Once you learn how to throw the football, you know how to throw the football."

But Gil Brandt, who helped assemble the Dallas Cowboys' dynasty, wonders if Vick might be better suited for another position when he comes out of prison. Perhaps wide receiver. Or maybe a slash-type player who lines up all over the field.

"If you're a student and you drop out of school for two or three years, it's really hard to reacquire the study habits that make you successful," Brandt said. "I don't think there's any question, whether it's 2009 or 2010, that somebody will take a chance on him. I'm not sure that somebody will take a chance on him as a quarterback. I think it would be a lot easier for him to come back at a different position."

If Vick is cleared to play again, he will have to deal with jeering fans and the constant burden of being the guy who fought and killed dogs. Any team that signs him knows he will be a huge distraction, which might mitigate the enormous talent he brings to the field.

Share this:
Loading Comments...
Loading
Print This Print Bookmark and Share XML Feed For This Channel
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

IYP and SEO vendors: SEO by eLocalListing | Advertiser profiles
Oops! Your email could not be sent because of the following errors: