Tag Archives: Mike Vick

Vick to be sentenced @ 10 AM

Yah, we’ve been real quiet about this around here… for many reasons… but the culmination is upon us as Mike will be sentenced this morning at 10AM.. for more details go to the story here but I am thinking that if the other 2 guys got 18 and 21 months, Mike will probably get 24-36 months, perhaps, around there… he’s already been serving, so immediately the sentenced will is reduced. Without getting ahead of ourselves with anything, Mike should be in jail for at least a year and change before any sort of early release and even a thought of returning to football.

Know this first, I love dogs and especially my dog. Know this second, I love the Falcons and whatever it takes for my Falcons to win. Know this third, I am hoping for a Brohm/Ryan/etc rookie coming in and being the next great leader of the Falcons (an actual pocket QB who can also effectively lead unlike anything Vick ever was). Know this lastly, I have forgiveness in my heart for a player I once loved. I wish for whatever is best for Mike as a man.

To even use the english language to define this as a “mistake” barely grasps the surfaces of how atrocious and horrible dog fighting is. The thought alone, that there are people in this world that actually think this is okay behavoir and that its okay to kill dogs or encourage dogs to want to kill one another, is sick and disgusting. Mike has messed up. He deserves to be in jail. I only hope he is able to pay retribution and in some way becomes a better person because of this. If he is ever able to play in the NFL ever again, even if its not for another 2-3 years, then that’s in the future and first things first.

Regarding My Falcons.

Today is opening day of Falcons training camp. As many of you may or may not know I am an extremely huge Falcons fan. And as many of you also may know, I have also been a big fan of #7. I have been a fan of the team for almost 20 years now dating back to the days when Neion Deion split time between the Falcons and the Braves. The Braves have been great for the entire time but it’s been a rough time for my Falcons. They’re good one year, horrible the next, mediocre the year after that, and then bad the next year. They’re never consistent year after year. One year, they finally make it to the Super Bowl and because I was traveling, I wasn’t even able to watch the game live. So, the Media usually ignores the Falcons and I’m only able to get my info either directly from the team and it’s message board or from the Atlanta media like the AJC.

Unfortunately and horrificly the Falcons have been pushed to the top of the mainstream sports media. I would be glad if they had the spotlight because they just won the Super Bowl, or brought in some fresh faces, or just had a great chance to be the next team on the rise. Unfortunately they have been pushed to the spotlight because their signature player is connected to some of the most completley atrocious crimes a person could ever commit (short of rape and murder). I’m going to skip over the debate of whether or not to use the word allegedly. All I can simply say is that I am extremely dissapointed to have someone I’ve held so much stock in over the last 6 or so years be even the slighest bit connected to this complete mess. When the truth comes out and the verdict is in, if he is proven guilty I will find it hard to agree with the maximum sentence of 6 years. That’s not enough in my opinion. As a dog owner, dog lover, and animal lover myself it’s completely frustrating to have every story about my team opening their preseason be connected to a story as horrible as this.

I am really glad that the NFL took preventative action to ban the player from training camp. With that news, PETA decided to cancel their protests that would have also occured at camp. I am glad that the players, despite the fact that their team leader is not at camp, can at least try and go on without the distraction. I really hope my team can win this year, but the outlook isn’t very good, so therefore my expectations are much lower than they would have been otherwise.

P.S. (Friday 9AM) – Understand first and foremost, I support what’s best for my Falcons to win.

Why can’t Vick, Falcons win it all?

By Michael Smith ESPN.com Archive
Updated: Oct. 24, 2006, 4:54 PM ET

Michael Vick isn’t the most accomplished passer and certainly qualifies as an unconventional quarterback but, still, it’s amusing to hear predictions that the Falcons never will win a Super Bowl. At least, not until Vick becomes more of a pocket passer. Or learns to beat teams from the pocket. Or however the doubters phrase it.

Never mind that Vick has played in and lost the same number of conference championship games as Peyton Manning. Or that Vick’s .630 winning percentage as Atlanta’s starter is better than every active quarterback not named Tom Brady, Donovan McNabb, Marc Bulger or Manning (Peyton, that is).

In fact, the top five quarterbacks in career passing yards have only two titles among them. Take it a step further: Among the top 20, only five have won a Super Bowl. Point is, just because a primarily scrambling quarterback hasn’t won the Super Bowl doesn’t mean it can’t happen, especially considering Vick and the Falcons already have come within one win of reaching the Super Bowl. You can doubt whether a running QB like Vick can win the Super Bowl, but acknowledge that doing it the other way doesn’t guarantee ultimate victory, either. If it were that simple Dan Marino, Warren Moon, Fran Tarkenton, Dan Fouts and Jim Kelly each would have a title to show for all those yards they passed for from the pocket. There are plenty of conventional QBs who didn’t win it all.

However he does it, Vick just gets it done. His head coach, Jim Mora, has said it time and again: You can’t judge Vick the way you do other quarterbacks, you have to focus on the results. Vick on Sunday improved to 35-21-1 as a starter. I’ll take the odds that if he stays healthy, one year Vick will win a few games in succession in the postseason.

For now, though, Atlanta is 4-2 and 2-1 in the NFC South with New Orleans and Carolina still having to visit the Georgia Dome. I’m not sure whether Vick’s doubling his career high with four touchdown passes in the Falcons’ 41-38 shootout win over Pittsburgh means that he’s turned the corner as a passer. We’ve jumped the gun and believed he’d done that before, so we’ll wait and see. But what I’m sure I saw Sunday was a leader. That’s an area in which Vick has seemingly been lacking in the past, especially in terms of work ethic, and he’s been criticized for it. But I don’t know how anyone can say Vick isn’t a field general after what he did against the Steelers.

As if Vick isn’t scrutinized enough, he shone the spotlight even brighter on himself last week by saying in an HBO interview that he wished the Falcons’ coaches would show more trust in his passing ability and allow him to throw more. He also acknowledged that he sometimes wished, if even for a day, that he played with an elite wide receiver, such as Marvin Harrison.

Tight end Alge Crumpler told me it was a very quiet — and not in a good way — week in Flowery Branch, Ga.

Perhaps Vick’s comments qualify as throwing one’s coaches and teammates under the proverbial bus. But when it came time to play, Vick drove the bus. And his teammates got on. That’s leadership.

Juxtapose that with Edgerrin James of the Cardinals. Two weeks ago, after a last-minute loss to the Chiefs, the Arizona running back complained publicly about not getting the rock more in crunch time. The following week, with his team trying to hold on against Chicago, James had a fumble returned for a touchdown and apparently blew a pass protection assignment that led to a sack and another fumble returned for a touchdown.

With the onus squarely on him, Vick backed up his demands by tossing three touchdowns to Crumpler and another to wideout Michael Jenkins. Vick’s best play, though, was an improvisation on the game-winning drive in overtime that saw him elude Pittsburgh’s Troy Polamalu and find Crumpler for a 26-yard completion.

Leaders don’t always do so from the lectern, the podium or “Inside the NFL.” Not all leaders say what’s politically correct all the time. But leaders show up and sometimes just will their teams to wins on game day. That’s what Vick did Sunday.

I spoke to Vick the day after Atlanta’s season-opening win at Carolina, when he was efficient in passing for 148 yards and two touchdowns. He talked about how he was beginning to understand not only what he was being asked to do, but what defenses were trying to do in terms of coverage. He acknowledged being a little too happy with himself after his 2002 season, when he passed for nearly 3,000 yards and rushed for nearly 800. He admitted to not applying himself to learning Greg Knapp’s offense the way he should have. So he and his receivers worked hard together in the offseason. It sounded like Vick had come to understand his responsibility as the quarterback.

He had a responsibility to hold up his end of the bargain Sunday after he pleaded for more opportunities to throw, and he delivered the way a leader should.

Vick deserves more props than skepticism after his career performance. The same teammates he dissed earlier, he encouraged when they weren’t playing well or when things weren’t going well against Pittsburgh.

Give credit to Knapp, too, for putting Vick in the best position to succeed against the Steelers. What Knapp did was get Vick out of the pocket and have him throw from the perimeter. It’s called “moving the launch pad.” That way Vick wasn’t as much of a sitting duck and had more of an opportunity to set his feet.

“When Mike sets his feet, he throws balls better than any QB out there,” Crumpler said. “He was throwing darts out there.”

I’m certainly not ready, after one outstanding performance, to say that all is well with the Falcons or that they should change their identity from a running to a passing offense. But Atlanta with a passing game is scary. It already was difficult enough to stop the run without the threat of Vick’s throwing for four scores. Still, teams will continue to try to force Vick to beat them by throwing the football. If he can keep making them pay for that strategy there are sure to be more 40-point games in the Falcons’ future.

We have to remember that Vick is just 26 years old. Manning likes to tell his critics to wait until his career is over before we put it into the context of what he didn’t accomplish. Same with Vick. Maybe he doesn’t do it the way we’re accustomed to, but he’s a quarterback. Sunday he did what quarterbacks are supposed to do, what Vick does a lot for the Falcons. He led his team to a victory it desperately needed.

Michael Smith is a senior writer for ESPN.com.

Six to Hawaii


Six Atlanta Falcons – LB Keith Brooking, DT Rod Coleman, TE Alge Crumpler, RB Warrick Dunn, CB DeAngelo Hall, and QB Michael Vick – were selected to the NFC’s Pro Bowl squad based on their outstanding individual performances during the 2005 regular season.

Atlanta’s six Pro Bowl selections represented the highest number of Falcons chosen to play in the NFL’s annual all-star game since 1998 when the Falcons also sent six players to Honolulu, Hawaii. The Falcons have had more players selected to the Pro Bowl just two other times in franchise history (seven in 1969 and 1981).

Brooking will make his fifth consecutive trip to the Pro Bowl – tying the franchise record held by defensive end Claude Humphrey (1970-74) and offensive tackle Mike Kenn (1980-1984) – after recording 115 tackles through the first 14 games of the season. An eight-year veteran, Brooking also tallied 2.5 sacks, three interceptions and a career-high nine passes defensed.

Coleman, in his seventh NFL season and second with the Falcons, will make his first trip to the Pro Bowl. Coleman leads the Falcons with 9.5 sacks and has recorded 38 tackles and five passes defensed. Coleman registered 12 tackles, four sacks, and two forced fumbles in four games en route to earning NFC Defensive Player for the Month of September honors. Additionally, Coleman was Atlanta’s most sought-after free agent acquisition during the free agency period in the 2004 offseason and the first major free agent signing by President & General Manager Rich McKay and Head Coach Jim Mora.

After being named to the past two Pro Bowls, Crumpler returns to Honolulu for the third straight year after a season in which he broke his own single-season franchise record for the most receptions by a tight end and leads the Falcons in receiving with 58 receptions for 793 yards and five touchdowns.

Dunn was selected to his third Pro Bowl after having a career season. The nine-year veteran from Florida State has rushed 259 times for a career-high 1,328 yards (5.1 avg.) and three touchdowns. The reigning Walter Payton Man of the Year Award honoree, Dunn has also caught 26 passes for 205 yards (7.9 avg.) and scored one touchdown. Of running backs who have carried the ball more than 150 times this season, Dunn ranks tied for first in the NFL in yards per attempt (5.1). Dunn was initially drafted by McKay in Tampa Bay in 1997.

Hall, in just his second NFL season, makes his first trip across the pond to the Pro Bowl after a stellar 2005 season that has seen him tally 64 tackles, five interceptions, and four passes defensed through 14 games. The youngest player on Atlanta’s roster (11-19-83), Hall was McKay and Mora’s first draft selection. He continues to establish himself as one the NFL’s most dominate shutdown cover cornerbacks.

Vick, in his fifth NFL season and third as a full-time starter, will be making his third trip to Honolulu. One of the NFL’s most dynamic players, Vick has won 31-of-49 games he has started in his career, and has been the catalyst behind Atlanta’s move from the worst offense in the NFL two years ago to the League’s 11th best so far this season. Vick has completed 183-of-337 passes for 2,136 yards and 13 touchdowns, while rushing 90 times for 534 yards (5.9 avg.) and six scores in 14 games in 2005.

With five selections last year and two new selections this year (Coleman, Hall), there have been a total seven different Falcons who have earned Pro Bowl trips under McKay and Mora.

Michael

So far so good tonight…

The first touchdown run especially.

Wow.. How about that catch by Roddy White too?

I’m pissed SuperDeMario caused a roughing penalty negating that awesome DeAngelo HAll TD.

And now TD number two to MV Smooth

Bithday Boy!

Happy Birthday Michael Vick

Falcons season ends.

What a great season. The Atlanta Falcons fall short of the Super Bowl by 1 game reaching the NFC Championship in Philadelphia. What a great season! The only direction this team will go is up. Congrats Eagles, but you are going to have a hell of a time against the Patriots.

In all seriousness, I am happy for the Eagles… we couldn’t lose to a better team.

1. You cant lose 4 straight NFC Championship games.
2. Ive always liked McNabb (he’s an SU boy)
3. Respect
4. Lots of Eagles fans now can skip their Plan B Suicide plans.
5. T.O. will play in the Super Bowl (cool)
6. The Falcons were never supposed to get that far.
7. The Falcons were playing with the House’s money.
8. Vick gained more big game experience.
9. The Falcons are a super young team.
10. Good luck to them.

FLY LIKE A FALCON

Time keeps on slippin�, slippin�, slippin�
Into the future
Time keeps on slippin�, slippin�, slippin�
Into the future

I want to fly like a falcon
To the sea
Fly like a falcon
Let my spirit carry me
I want to fly like a falcon
Till I�m free
Oh, lord, through the revolution

Feed the babies
Who don�t have enough to eat
Shoe the children
With no shoes on their feet
House the people
Livin� in the street
Oh, oh, there�s a solution

I want to fly like a falcon
To the sea
Fly like a falcon
Let my spirit carry me
I want to fly like an falcon
Till I�m free
Fly through the revolution

Time keeps on slippin�, slippin�, slippin�
Into the future
Time keeps on slippin�, slippin�, slippin�
Into the future
Time keeps on slippin�, slippin�, slippin�
Into the future
Time keeps on slippin�, slippin�, slippin�
Into the future

I want to fly like a falcon
To the sea
Fly like a falcon
Let my spirit carry me
I want to fly like a falcon
Till I�m free
Fly through the revolution

Time keeps on slippin�, slippin�, slippin�
Into the future
Time keeps on slippin�, slippin�, slippin�
Into the future

Vick and the Birds

Michael Vick and the Atlanta Falcons host the St. Louis Rams this Saturday at 8pm in an NFC Divisional Playoff matchup

Vick: Falcon for Life

The Atlanta Falcons today announced that they have extended the contract of Pro Bowl QB Michael Vick. Terms of the contract were not disclosed.

Michael Vick chats with reporters Thursday after signing a long-term contract extension with the Falcons

“This is a terrific day for Michael, for Atlanta Falcons fans, and for the entire Falcons organization,” said team owner & CEO Arthur Blank. “We’ve said on numerous occasions that this franchise is committed to bringing a world championship to the city of Atlanta and the state of Georgia, as well as to building a sustainable winning organization consistently in the hunt. Today’s contract extension for Michael, in our opinion, moves us closer to achieving these goals.

“Michael is arguably the NFL’s most exciting football player. He’s a tremendous competitor, a winner, and an outstanding young man who is well deserving of this extension,” Blank continued. “History shows that great teams that are able to win over long periods of time are anchored by tremendous quarterbacks. Coupled with the coaching staff, front office, and players we have in place, as well as the players we will add in the future, we feel our team is well-positioned for long-term success.”

“Our object will always be centered and focused on keeping together our core players and clearly Michael Vick is one of those players,” said Falcons president & general manager Rich McKay, who orchestrated Vick’s contract extension.

“At a relatively early stage in his career, Michael has established himself as one of the best players at his position and that is very hard to do. Arthur (Blank) has made it clear to me that he will do whatever it takes to bring a championship to the city of Atlanta, and extending Michael’s contract is obviously an important piece of that pursuit. From a football standpoint, we’re always going to be looking for ways of improving our team, and when you have an exceptional guy who plays the pivot position, known in football as the quarterback, you’re going to have a chance to be very successful year in and year out.”

Vick, 6-0, 215 pounds, was chosen by the Falcons with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2001 NFL Draft out of Virginia Tech. The Falcons made a trade with the San Diego Chargers on the eve of the draft in order to acquire the pick to draft Vick. The NFL’s fifth-winningest active starting quarterback (minimum 35 starts) with a .671 winning percentage, Vick’s play has been a vital component for the Falcons, who have now secured two playoff berths in the last three years.

With a style of play which cannot be completely measured by statistics, Vick’s unique combination of athleticism and instinct has contributed to him being one of the NFL’s most recognizable superstars despite being only 24 years of age.

Earlier this week, Vick was named to his second Pro Bowl for his performance during the 2004 season, which to date has included 2,278 yards passing and 889 yards rushing, along with 16 combined touchdowns (13 passing and 3 rushing).

Vick’s 889 rushing yards this season currently rank him third on the NFL’s all-time list for the most rushing yards by a quarterback. He needs 80 more yards to break Chicago QB Bobby Douglass’ 32-year-old record of 968 yards set in 1972. Vick’s rushing total includes three 100-yard games in 2004, which ties the single-season modern day record for the most 100-yard rushing games by a quarterback. His 104 yards rushing in the Falcons 14-10 win over the New York Giants on November 21 gave him the fifth 100-yard rushing game of his career, the most for a quarterback in NFL history. Twice named the NFC Offensive Player of the Week in 2004, Vick became the first player ever to throw for more than 250 yards and rush for more than 100 yards in the same game in the Falcons 41-28 victory over Denver on October 31.

In his first full season as a starter in 2002, Vick led the Falcons to a 9-6-1 record, enabling them to earn a playoff berth as a Wild Card entry. In the NFC Wild Card Game at frigid Lambeau Field, the Falcons made history in becoming the first team ever to defeat the Green Bay Packers in a home playoff game.

Vick’s 2002 season culminated with him being named to the NFC’s Pro Bowl squad, making him – at 22 years, seven months and seven days – the second-youngest quarterback (Dan Marino, 22 years, four months, 14 days) ever selected to play in the game. The Pro Bowl honor came on the heels of a season in which Vick set four NFL records and five team records as a first-year starter. As a passer, Vick’s 2002 statistics included a 55-percent completion rate (231-of-421 passes) for 2,936 yards and a two-to-one touchdown-to-interception ratio (16-8). Vick did not throw an interception until the first quarter of the season’s eighth game at Baltimore.

What separated Vick from the rest of the NFL’s quarterbacks was what he could do with his legs as he finished the 2002 campaign with 777 yards, the third-highest total for a quarterback at the time (since surpassed by his 889 yards this season). Vick’s play was the catalyst during an eight-game unbeaten streak (7-0-1) in the middle of the 2002 season, which culminated with a 30-24 overtime victory at Minnesota. Against the Vikings, Vick set single-game NFL records for the most rushing yards by a quarterback with 173 yards and the highest single-game rushing average (17.3 yards per carry). His 46-yard touchdown run in overtime capped off a game in which he combined for 325 yards in total offense (173 rushing, 152 passing) and three touchdowns (two rushing, one passing).

In 2003, a broken right fibula suffered in the second preseason game against the Baltimore Ravens sidelined Vick for the first 11-plus games of the regular season. Vick made his first start of 2003 in the season’s 13th game against the Carolina Panthers. Despite more than three months of inactivity, Vick accounted for 320 (179 passing, 141 rushing) of the Falcons 380 yards in total offense, including the second 100-yard rushing game of his career (14-141) as the Falcons upset the eventual NFC Champion Panthers 20-14 in overtime.

Vick would eventually lead the Falcons to a 3-1 record over the last four games of the season, including a 30-28 victory over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, which snapped a six-game losing streak to the Buccaneers.

4 Falcon Pro Bowlers

Four Atlanta Falcons players – LB Keith Brooking, TE Alge Crumpler, DE Patrick Kerney and QB Michael Vick – were named to the NFC’s Pro Bowl squad, according to an announcement by the NFL on Wednesday.

Atlanta’s four Pro Bowl selections represent the highest number of Falcons selected to play in the NFL’s annual all-star game since 1998 when six Falcons players made the trip to Honolulu, Hawaii.

Brooking will be making his fourth consecutive trip to the Pro Bowl after leading the Falcons in combined tackles (130) for the fourth consecutive season in addition to tallying 2.5 sacks and tying his career-best in interceptions with two. Brooking has played a central role in the Falcons’ defensive turnaround from last season. In 2004, the Falcons defense has given up 7.4 fewer points per game and 54.5 fewer yards per game than it did after 14 games in 2003. Seven times this season, the Falcons defense has limited the opposition to 17 or fewer points.

After being named to his first Pro Bowl in 2003, Crumpler will be returning to Honolulu for the second straight year after a season in which he broke the single-season franchise record for the most receptions by a tight end (Junior Miller, 46 receptions in 1980). Currently leading the Falcons in receiving with 48 receptions for 774 yards, Crumpler has led the Falcons (or shared the lead) in receiving nine times this season. Twice this season he has eclipsed his career high in receptions. He caught six passes for 82 yards at San Francisco (Sept. 12) and then caught a career-best seven passes for 86 yards at Denver (Oct. 31). Known for his big-play ability, Crumpler has caught 17 passes of 20 or more yards, which leads all tight ends in the NFL. He also leads all tight ends who have at least 30 receptions with a 16.1-yard per-catch average, and has had at least one reception of 20 or more yards in 11 of 14 games this season.

The Falcons most consistent pass rusher the last three seasons, Kerney will be making his first trip to the Pro Bowl following the third double-digit sack season of his career. Earlier this season, the NFL recognized Kerney in naming him the NFC’s Defensive Player of the Month (September). Kerney’s play was a key during the season’s opening month as he tallied five sacks in helping the Falcons get off to a 3-0 start. In the Falcons’ 6-3 win against Arizona (Sept. 26), Kerney posted a career-high 3.0 sacks and seven tackles. In a 34-17 win against St. Louis in the 2004 home opener, Kerney posted 2.0 sacks and six tackles, as the defense limited St. Louis to 280 total yards. In addition to leading the team in sacks (10), Kerney is also third on the team in combined tackles (75) and also has three passes defensed and one interception to his credit. Kerney’s 10 sacks have quickly moved him up on the Falcons’ all-time sacks list. At the outset of the season, Kerney was eighth on the Falcons’ all-time list. Kerney needs four more sacks to pass former Falcons DE John Zook (47 sacks from 1969-75) for third on the team’s all-time list.

Vick came out in 2004 and led the Falcons to a 4-0 start despite learning the intricacies of a new offense. Vick’s play would eventually help the Falcons clinch their third division title in team history. Three times this season, Vick rushed for more than 100 yards – 109 vs. St. Louis, 115 yards at Denver, and 104 yards at N.Y. Giants – tying the modern-day single-season record for the most 100-yard rushing games by a quarterback. The three 100-yard outings gave him five for his career, which set a record for the most 100-yard rushing games by a quarterback in NFL history. Currently second on the Falcons in rushing with 889 yards, Vick needs 80 more yards (40.0 yards per game) to set the NFL single-season record for the most yards rushing by a quarterback (Bobby Douglass 968 yards rushing for Chicago in 1972). Twice this season, Vick was named the NFC’s Player of the Week after leading the Falcons to wins vs. St. Louis (accounted for 283 yards in total offense – 174 passing, 109 rushing) and at Denver, becoming the first quarterback ever to throw for more than 250 yards and rush for more than 100 yards in the same game.

In addition, Vick has led the Falcons to comeback victories when they were either tied or behind in the fourth quarter, most recently last week’s 34-31 overtime win over Carolina in which Vick forced an extra period when he scrambled 12 yards for a touchdown on fourth and goal to tie the game at 31-31 with 1:37 remaining. The Falcons are 9-0 in games they have led at the half in 2004, due in large part to Vick’s efficiency. In the first half of games this season, Vick has completed 58 percent of his passes (99 of 171) for 1,223 yards with eight touchdowns and a 81.1 passer rating. In addition, Vick has also rushed 64 times for 524 yards (8.2 avg. per carry) in the first half of games this year.

View the complete Pro Bowl roster for both conferences

Super Vick

Michael Vick, Mr Amazing, ties up last Saturday’s game against the Carolina Panthers. Jay Feely kicked the game winning kick in overtime and Atlanta clinched the number 2 seed in the NFC playoffs.

Vick and several other starters will rest this weekend in anticipation of the offseason.

Vick Era

With Vick the Atlanta Falcons are 21-10-1
When Vick Runs for 100 12-1
When Vick Runs for a TD 8-1-1

Top Ten Quarterbacks

how would you rate them?

Quick List

1. Peyton Manning
2. Tom Brady
3. Donovan McNabb
4. Brett Favre
5. Daute Culpepper
6. Michael Vick
7. Jake Plummer
8. Ben Roethlisberger
9. David Carr
10. Drew Brees

This is based on who I would want in the game if I were trailing and less than 2 minutes left..
Manning obviously first. Brady is proven. Tough call between McNabb and Favre. Culpepper ahead of Vick. Plummer is Elway re-invented but does make mistakes. Ben is still young. Carr has a gun. Brees I guess is good.

Vick to Crump

I’m Back in Michigan.

This is the best thing we got going as far as a passing game. But I gotta say.. It’s a pretty good thing.

Atlanta Falcons tight end Alge Crumpler, top, jumps to avoid New Orleans Saints’ Mel Mitchel after making a catch late in the fourth quarter Sunday, Nov. 28, 2004, in Atlanta. Atlanta won 24-21. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Heating Up

Michael Mad Dog Vick and the dirty birds face the bucs tomorrow at home. The Falcons look to improve their 4th best record and go to 7-2. Should be no sweat.

Life is Good

I have yet to really express how excellent this season is going. Vick still needs to learn a lot. He has to make better deciscions, but… The Falcons have started 6-2 and have a commanding lead in the NFC South division and that is excellent. more later.

Growing the Fro!


Vick will go to and fro until he wins Super Bowl Aug. 2, 2004 / By Pete Prisco / SportsLine.com
GREENVILLE, S.C. — Michael Vick doesn’t quite have the Ben Wallace look yet, but it’s moving in that direction.
Getting a helmet over his growing hair might soon be a problem for Vick, the Atlanta Falcons do-everything quarterback. Yet, there will be no trips to the barbershop this summer or this season, not after what happened last summer.
“I’m growing my hair out it, and I’m not going to cut it until we win a Super Bowl,” Vick said. “I was going to let my hair grow last season, but I cut it three weeks before I got hurt. I’m really superstitious, so I’m going to let it grow. As bad as I want it off my head, and as hot as I am, I won’t cut it off until I win a Super Bowl. I will win a Super Bowl — someday.”
Revealing this piece of information as he sat comfortably in a golf cart at Furman University doing an interview, Vick wasn’t kidding. His hair is considerably longer than it has been for most of his career, which might be good for a bandana endorsement or two, but the preference would be for a nice, neat trim come next February.
Vick is coming off a nightmare season, one in which he became the poster-boy for why stars should be protected in the preseason. While scrambling in the Falcons’ second preseason game last summer, Vick suffered a broken leg, news that devastated a city and his growing legion of fans.
The NFL’s new poster boy, a weapon of the like the league has never seen, was shelved because of a meaningless game running a meaningless play.
It led to a year of mostly watching for Vick, and a year of losing for the Falcons. It ultimately cost coach Dan Reeves his job. One year after a playoff season and an upset of the Packers, the Falcons finished 5-11.
Maybe this was a one-man team? It sure looked that way.
We know better because football is a team sport, and Vick is quick to give a wave of the hand when the one-man band and savior talk is brought up.
“Just because I’m back doesn’t mean everybody else can simply not show up,” Vick said. “This is a team game. You need all 11 guys every play to succeed. We all have to play together.”
That sounds good, but without Vick this is a six-victory team. With him, they have playoff-and-beyond possibilities.
“The things he does amaze me every day,” Falcons coach Jim Mora said. “He’s getting better and better everyday. He’s a special player, and you can see him getting more and more confident with what we’re doing.”
Mora took over for Reeves and quickly made an offensive hire he believed he needed to win in coordinator Greg Knapp. That meant Vick would be learning a new offense, the West Coast with some varying principles to take advantage of his ability to get outside the pocket.
It is a timing offense, meant to get the ball in a rhythm. It’s an offense that made Joe Montana, Steve Young and Brett Favre great. But there are questions whether it’s an offense for Vick.
He has a bazooka for an arm and he would seem to be more of a big-play passer than one that would feast in the West Coast’s short passing game. Some have said he’s miscast as a West Coast quarterback. Don’t tell him that.
“I really don’t know what that means,” Vick said. “We have a system and you play within the system. It allows you to get the ball out of your hands. In Reeves’ system, we had plays similar to this. So, I don’t understand that.”
To help acclimate himself to the new system, Vick spent three days a week in the offseason with Knapp studying the offense, while also working on his mechanics.
Said Mora: “That tells you he wants to be great in this offense.”
The end result is a quarterback who appears comfortable with what he’s doing. While he still sometimes holds onto the ball too long — earning a scream from Knapp to get the ball out — Vick seems to be enjoying the new offense.
He’s also still moving outside the pocket, which might or might not be a good thing. Let’s put it this way: He isn’t about to change that, despite the injury last summer.
“Can’t stop, won’t stop, never will stop,” Vick said.
Why should he? Isn’t that like putting weights around the leg of a thoroughbred?
During one practice last week, Vick sprinted outside the pocket, saw a defensive back in front of him, put a move on to drop him to the ground and kept on trucking. How can anyone expect that Michael Jordan-like ability to be stifled?
“In any offense you put me in, when things break down, I’m going to get outside the pocket and move,” Vick said. “Just because this is a timing offense doesn’t mean I’m just a pocket passer. I’m going to get outside. That’s the way Michael Vick plays the game.
“When things break down, you won’t see a different side of me. West Coast, East Coast. It doesn’t matter. I’m taking off if I have to, to make things happen.”
When he does move outside the pocket, he will look to throw first, then, if that breaks down: “Of course, I will try to get out of bounds and get down to protect myself. I don’t want to have a repeat of what happened last year.”
That injury broke more than just a bone. It broke the spirits of the Falcons and it also led to some criticism for Vick, who was coming off such a wonderful season in 2002. When it took more time than expected for Vick to return, some questioned his desire. Was he working hard enough? Was his rehab working?
Normally easygoing and approachable — on the day of this interview, he gladly signed anything put in front of his face — Vick bristled at the notion he didn’t want to return to play, which he did for the final four games.
“I came back at about 80 percent because I was tired of sitting at home and hearing people saying I wasn’t taking my rehab seriously,” Vick said. “I took that as an insult and I wanted to get back and prove that I could play even though I wasn’t 100 percent.”
He’s back to 100 percent now and says there are no lingering physical effects from the injury. It’s a good thing when the only problem is a blister on his throwing thumb, which will force him to miss a day of practice.
“No problems with the leg at all,” he said.
That’s what the Falcons and their fans want and need to hear. The backups are impressive rookie Matt Schaub and veteran Ty Detmer, which says everything about the importance of Vick.
“Vick gets a tremendous amount of credit and has a lot on his shoulders from the media and the fans because of the perspective that we’re nothing without him,” linebacker Keith Brooking said. “Vick is the best athlete in the NFL, there’s no doubt about that. And we can’t afford to lose him again. But we also have to play better around him if this team is going to be better.”
The Falcons play in the tough NFC South, but Vick’s athletic ability makes them a division-winning threat. How much deeper they can get than that depends on his health and the improvement of the defense.
Vick said he plans to play in the preseason, but he will obviously defer to what the coaches want him to do. Vick needs to get work in the new offense, but risking a player of his magnitude in a meaningless game is a fine line.
At least this year, he has something else going for him in that growing hair, which is certainly going to get bigger and bigger each week.
“It’s staying,” he said, “until I win a Super Bowl. I mean it.”
The Falcons have their new motto: Hair’s to You, Michael Vick.
Or course, they’re hoping he gets a nice cut come next February.

Happy Birthday Mike Vick

Michael is now 24 years old. He has a new coach, a new system, and new weapons. I can not wait until football season begins.

He was named to Sports Illustrated’s “101 Most Influential Minorities In Sports” in May of 2003 at #77, the highest-rated current football player. This list is comprised of “men and women who are reshaping the sports industry and opening doors through which others will follow”. He was chosen to be the EA Sports cover athlete and spokesman for (John) Madden NFL 2004. Vick has always been a big fan of the game. He is the second cousin of Saints QB Aaron Brooks. He became the 11th quarterback selected with the top overall pick in the NFL draft since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970 and the first African-American quarterback ever taken with the #1 overall choice. He was ironically drafted by the Colorado Rockies in the 30th round of the 2000 MLB draft despite not playing baseball since the 8th grade.

from AF.com

Vick Offseason Update

Ahhh yes, NBA Finals. Perfect time for a Vick update!

AP reports Falcons starting QB Michael Vick was quick in his drop and even quicker with his release on Tuesday, almost always getting rid of the ball as soon as he had reached his last drop step. Vick also showed a distinct willingness to throw the ball away and take an incompletion to move on to the next play.

Ooooh!

Quarterback Michael Vick on practice
“It feels good to be back out here another day, another day of learning, another productive day. We came out here and worked on a lot of situational things and those are things that we have to do to be successful in this league. It’s a good system we’re working in and I can’t say enough about it.”

Vick on adjusting to the Falcons new offense
“I have adjusted. I still have to sharpen up on some things protection-wise and we’ve got all of training camp for that. I’ll use that time to make sure I have that down before our first preseason game when we open up at Baltimore. It’s a lot that I still have to work on, but not too much. I’ve pretty much got the basics down.”

Vick on what part of the system he is most comfortable with and what he needs to work on
“I’m just comfortable with the system overall. Like I said (I need to work on some things) protection-wise, knowing who’s blitzing. Certain teams pick up fronts and do things a certain way, so it’s just about adjusting to the way we pick up blitzes and the way we call out protections and the way we try and pick up those schemes.”

Vick on taking something off of his throws
“I have to for certain throws that we have to make in this system. You don’t have to gun the ball in there all the time; you can take something off it, which is good. It’s helpful for the receivers and it gives them an opportunity to catch the ball. No, it wasn’t difficult (to learn to do). I think all quarterbacks can adjust to making throws when you have to shoot it in there and throws you have to take something off. It’s just like throwing a check down to the running backs and tight ends, where we don’t have to throw as hard because they don’t get tight coverage. As a quarterback, it’s just something that you have to work on, but if you’re a natural quarterback, it only takes about an hour to do.”

Vick on the competitive nature of practice
“Every practice almost feels like a game. You hear some coaches refer to practice as being harder than the games and I can relate to that. You get out there playing the game and everything seems to click. In practice, it seems sometimes like you’re seeing ghosts, like 13 or 14 guys are on the defense because everything is moving so fast. It’s all about competing every day, coming to practice daily, being ready to work and ready to put in that time to take this thing to another level.

Vick on Ed Donatell’s new defensive scheme
“One thing they stress on the defensive side of the ball is getting takeaways, turnovers. Those are things that help you win football games in this league. The team that forces the most turnovers always ends up in the Super Bowl. If they’re stressing that, then I’m all for it. It’s going to allow the offense a chance to get the ball in the end zone more times than usual.”

Vick on throwing the ball away
“Growing up as a quarterback, it almost comes naturally. Throwing the ball away is something I did last year, it’s something I did in the 2002 season, it’s something a quarterback has to do in this league or else you’re going to throw a lot of interceptions and you’re going to take a lot of shots. That’s something I realize I can’t do as I grow and I mature as my career continues. Throwing the ball away is going to be a big part of my game and taking something off of it is going to be a big part of my game. I have to adjust to the system.”

Vick on his leg
“It’s feeling good. I haven’t had any problems with it the last two months. I don’t want to jinx myself, but I almost feel like it’s back to 100 percent. I haven’t had any problems. I’ve been icing it every day and doing everything I’ve been supposed to be doing: icing every day, getting treatment in the morning and icing at night, so it helps when you do what you’re told.”

Vick on Dez White
“He brings a lot to the table. He’s got exceptional speed and can catch the ball. The one thing we really like about Dez is the way he runs his routes. He’s up there with the best of ‘em. He runs some of the best double-stick moves in the league. Those are things that we’re looking for Dez to bring to the table. Some big play ability, going over the top to catch some balls…that’s what I saw him do in Chicago when I watched film on him, so I think he’s going to catch a lot of balls for us and he’s going to be really valuable to us.”

Vick on what excites him most about the new offensive system
“It’s just being able to become a quarterback, playing in this system that I think I’m going to play in for the next three or four years of my career, hopefully longer. That’s a blessing: to be able to stick within one system and play that system out. That way, you learn the ins and out of the system, what you can do and what you can’t do, and by the time you grow and you mature in this system, you can almost go out there and throw the ball blindfolded. Those are the things I’m excited about, just playing in one system consistently.”

Vick’s Truck in Trouble; But Vick isn’t

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — Two men are facing drug felony charges after they were stopped by police while driving a pick-up truck co-registered to Michael Vick.

A patrol officer stopped the white truck on the evening of Feb. 3 because the license plate looked as if it had been tinkered with, a police spokeswoman told the Newport News Daily Press. She said the registration on the 1997 Ford F-150 expired in June 2003, but the plate had a 2004 decal.

The driver, Harry Leon Snead, Jr., was carrying $1,420 in cash. The passenger, Jerry Lee Garner, 23, had about 1½ ounces of marijuana with a street value of $400 to $500 hidden in his pants, police told the newspaper.

Snead and Garner were jailed on various charges including possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and conspiracy to commit a felony.

There is no evidence to connect the Falcons quarterback with the arrests, police told the newspaper. The truck is registered to Vick and Charles W. Reamon, Jr., a nephew of Vick’s former Warwick High coach, Tommy Reamon.

Continue…

Falcons switch to Red Jerseys

The Atlanta Falcons today announced a change to their uniform specifications for the 2004 season. The team will switch its primary ‘home’ jersey to red after wearing black at home for the past 14 seasons. The Falcons will continue to wear white pants during the 2004 campaign. The black jersey will serve as the team’s alternate third jersey.

The Falcons first wore red jerseys in 1971 and kept them all the way through the 1989 season. Declared the team’s alternate third jersey in 2003, red jerseys were worn twice last season, against the Tennessee Titans on November 23 and again in a nationally-televised 20-14 overtime win against the Carolina Panthers on December 7.

“I’m a big fan of the red jerseys,” offered Falcons quarterback Michael Vick, who made his first start of the 2003 season against Carolina and rushed for 141 yards. “They’ve got a really nice look to them. I know that our fans love them, too.”

Last year the Falcons introduced a new logo and changed their uniforms for the first time since 1990. The home uniforms consisted of black jerseys and white pants, while the road attire featured white jerseys and white pants. The team also introduced modified versions of the uniforms, which included wearing black jerseys with black pants at home and white jerseys with black pants on the road.

Damn it John Elway

nah actually im a fan.. ive always liked john elway.. i just watched on tv, the recap of super bowl 33. the only one the falcons were ever in and it takes me back to that time.. see, that whole month (january 1999) i spent at San Salvodor Island in the Bahamas for school and i was completely away from everything. it was cool. but different for sure. you definately had that feeling of isolation because you were stuck on an island for three weeks, which is just about the length necessary before it almost drives you crazy.. i remember watching the NFC championship game at the Riding Rock Inn and hanging out with some chick who was the only other person in the whole group who cared about football. It was the one day we had off really for the whole trip. We did stuff everyday like snorkeling on the beach, checking out local places and what not.. ahh.. it was nice. and also the best possible way to ever earn a college lab credit.
super bowl sunday was the day we left the island, it killed me that i could not watch the game live. we flew back through Miami on our way North and this was where the Super Bowl was. I remember leaving Miami and looking down and seeing Joe Robbie Stadium where the end zones were painted Broncos and Falcons. i tried so hard to not hear what the score was during the game. I slept some on the plane and listened to music but every so often the pilot would say the score to everyone on the plane. there werent that many on the plane either. ahh.. but anyway. the flight is over and i still dont know the final score. my parents were cool to not tell me. even though they knew. i get home and im an idiot cause ive been on an island for three months without the internet and email and such.. so im stupid and go on aol or some shit and saw john elways picture right there. i knew they had won but didnt want to admit to myself. i went upstairs with the tape and watched the game.. it was a blowout. the falcons were coming back in the end but john elway spoiled it. i wasnt mad at him though, i was happy to see him end his career that way even if the falcons had to be the team to lose it to him. it was great just to be in the super bowl.
so when the falcons come back next year. and mike vick is healthy and we have improvements all the way around the roster, it will be great. i cant wait to root for my team in the super bowl soon.

Aggressive, Attacking, Intense Football Team

Jim Mora Jr is the new head coach of the Atlanta Falcons. Greg Knapp has also come on board to be the offensive coordinator. Both of them coming over from the 49ers.

“We’re going to devise the best system to get the ball in the hands of our playmakers,” Mora said. “We’ll be an aggressive, attacking, push-the-ball-down-the-field type of team.

“Michael Vick is one of the most exciting players in the NFL, and this system will allow Michael Vick to excel.”

from CNNSI.com

Dear Arthur Blank:

I’d like to officially announce my candidacy to you as the future Atlanta Falcons Head Coach. I feel that I am fully qualified for the job. I know a lot about football and believe I have a great understanding of how the team should be built to usher in the new and exciting phase of Falcon football. I have used my playbook in several real-game situations and it has proved to be successful each time. I have some great things in mind to further Michael Vick’s ability and improve upon his already impressive base set of skills. I respect the job that Dan Reeves has done to get the team to the level that it has come to and I have several ideas on how to proceed from here. I can’t disclose all of these ideas, here, in this medium because I am afraid that potential competitiors Nick Saban and Lovie Smith could capitalize on my ideas and take advantage of their public knowledge. Trust me, they are not public knowledge. I have it all planned out. It’s certain to be successfull. Again, I have spent many years watching football at the high school, college, and professional level. Please contact me to talk about specifics regarding when I can come for an interview. I am the right man for the job.