July 29, 2009 3:00 PM

Double Standards And Michael Vick

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Ben Domenech is editor in chief of The New Ledger.

Anyone who lived in Virginia in the 1990s heard plenty about Michael Vick. It was impossible not to. He was another child of the Tidewater region, famous for producing some of the best athletes in the country, even to the point of rivaling California, Texas and Florida in producing football stars, at least at the collegiate level.

Vick never got the national coverage he deserved prior to going to Virginia Tech - back in those days, and still to some extent, the Washington, D.C. newspapers were more interested in covering Maryland sports than southern Virginia - but once he was in college, he took off like a rocket. Virginia Tech alumni were invigorated by Vick's arrival - he made the Hokies matter nationally, and for all Virginia sports fans. And his performance on national TV in a loss against Florida State made him matter to the whole nation.

It's amazing to look back at some of the coverage of Vick prior to the 2001 NFL draft and see how much of what was to come was already being implied. Even then, the questions were lurking in the background: could he handle it?

In the first few seasons after Vick's arrival in the National Football League, it looked like the San Diego Chargers had made a huge mistake passing on him to select LaDainian Tomlinson (he fell to number 5 - can you believe it?) and Drew Brees. He was the Human Highlight Reel. He did things that were just incredible, superhuman - I remember watching a game against the Carolina Panthers where, down to their last play and needing a touchdown, Vick somehow managed to hover an inch above the ground as he flew in to score. His amazing ability revitalized football in Atlanta, coming off 5-11 and 4-12 seasons - his jerseys were everywhere - and put him on the cover of Madden, even though the curse of that video game ultimately doomed his next season.

But in 2006, he broke a 34-year-old record for rushing yards by a quarterback, breaking the century mark. That's an incredible achievement, especially for a kid who just a few years ago was being wheeled around with a cast on his foot by owner Arthur Blank. He was already considered one of the best mobile QBs of all time by many in the NFL. Vick wasn't just a sideshow - he won, too. In 2002, when he was just a 22 year-old kid, Vick did what no other starting quarterback had ever done - winning on the road at Lambeau Field in the playoffs, a performance that, if it ended today, would probably go down as the biggest game of his professional career.

My own favorite Vick clip from his time in the league came in a different game against the Panthers when he staged a fourth quarter comeback by levitating like Superman, inches above the turf (go to the 1:40 mark) to dive into the endzone on a fourth down scramble. So much of his career is encapsulated in that moment - incredibly close to failure, but somehow managing to pull off what was, for others, impossible.

Then, it all came to an end. Vick was foolish enough to commit and fund a series of dogfighting-related criminal activities, mostly by paying for the activities of friends and relatives who turned on him the minute they were arrested, that had only recently become federal offenses. Roger Goodell's announcement this week of his decision on Vick's suspension has riled the sports radio stations and opinion pages across the country once again. Just two years ago, a lifetime ban was being discussed openly. Now, some are crying racism that he was suspended at all.

Let's be clear about this: Michael Vick deserved to go to jail. He broke the law, and he's suffered a major penalty. For a football player, he missed two of his prime seasons. But there is no question in my mind that he deserves a shot to resume his career. And on balance, Goodell's decision is an understandable one, if still - as with all this Commissioner's decisions - a bit heavyhanded.

At the time, I think Gregg Easterbrook took what was a pretty brave stand on this point. While I don't agree with him or with Howard Bryant about the racial nature of this crime - I think that any player would have experienced this sort of reaction and coverage if, say, Jeremy Shockey had committed the same crime, or if Tony Gonzalez was running a cock-fighting ring - I do agree that there's a distinct lack of perspective on this. Looking back, PETA and their lobbying forces successfully convinced the sports media to turn dogfighting - a vile activity, to be sure, but one that's engaged in all too frequently in the South - into the worst possible crime an athlete can engage in. And that's just ridiculous.

Here's the truth: the NFL has had more than its fair share of thugs, criminals, and drug pushers in its recent history. Easterbrook cites the obvious examples of two murderers - that you can still purchase an O.J. Simpson or a Rae Carruth jersey, and that the former is still in the NFL Hall of Fame. But there's far more than that. There's thief and attempted murderer Barret Robbins, there's Lawrence Taylor and Lawrence Phillips, drug dealers like Jamal Lewis and Terrence Kiel and Bam Morris, there's Brian Blades, Nate Newton and his pounds and pounds of pot…and of course, there's former ESPN analyst and newest NFL Hall of Famer Michael Irvin, whose long litany of drug related offenses reach a new level of ridiculousness each year. And then we have the examples of self-destructive embarassment, like Plaxico Burress and Pac Man Jones…but enough has been said about them already (and remember, it's the NBA that's supposed to have "thug" problems).

But perhaps the best example of the double standard Michael Vick experienced is one Leonard Little, defensive end and sack machine for the St. Louis Rams. With a pattern of DUI offenses, the intoxicated Little plowed through a red light into an intersection and killed a middle-aged wife and mother. Little got 90 nights in jail (work-release), and 1,000 hours of community service. When he was picked up in 2004, speeding again and drunk out of his mind, Little could've been prosecuted for a felony. Instead, he just got more probation, and a brand new multi-million dollar contract. ESPN's coverage of Little was muted at the time, and his past crimes are rarely referenced if at all during broadcasts of Rams games. Dogfighting is round the clock - alcohol-fueled vehicular dual-manslaughter, let's just pretend it didn't happen.

Michael Vick, by action and inaction, did horrible and illegal things, yes. He has received the punishment for his crime. But his crime should not end his career simply because of the political pressure of a powerful lobby or the hot lights of round the clock sports coverage. Vick is still a competitor, and having served his sentence, he deserves the chance to compete and win a shot with another team in the future. That team - and I do believe there will be a team who eventually takes the shot - will likely have to endure protests from the animal rights lobby. But it shouldn't.

Let's be honest about what this all means for this young man. Ending the prospect of a possibility to play football again will, in all likelihood, take Vick down the sad path toward despair and self-destruction. Commissioner Goodell's choice on this matter hasn't just determined the future of an athlete, a commodity for his sport - it determines the future of a young man who has hoped for, worked for, and risked his body for one singular goal since he was just a kid, playing tag in the inner city streets, and dreamed of the gridiron and the bright lights of Monday night.

Whether Michael Vick ever reaches the big stage again or not, he should have the chance to sink or swim on his own abilities - not simply because some view his crime, unlike those perpetrated by the rest of his fellow players, as unforgiveable.


By Ben Domenech:
Reprinted with permission from The New Ledger

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 17 Comments
by tigersrule1988 August 16, 2009 7:48 PM EDT
Apparently Frank Beamer has developed amnesia about what life was like "handling" the thug known as Michael Vick when he was pillaging his way through Blacksburg. Bad Newz kennels came along with the NFL contract. Michael has always surrounded himself with thugs,when he had the chance to rise above, he dug himself in deeper.How about all the trouble he got into in Blacksburg? His new handlers are bring out all of the stops trying to turn Vick into a reformed choir boy. Of COURSE he is sorry NOW. Wait and see, dogfighting is over but he is still the same Micheal Vick.


Half of you people who are bringing up abortion, DUI etc. would sign Osama Bin Laden if he could bring a win to your team. That is crap! The NFL needs to clean up its game. There is enough talent to go around without retaining a bunch of felons--and I am NOT just talking about dog fighters.

Sure, give Mikie a second chance. I am all for it! Hire him to the city of Brotherly Love to the sanitation dept. (apologies to the good hardworking folks who work hard for a good living). To create a media storm, adding ridiculous pressure to Donnovan McNabb is nuts.

NFL, I quit.
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by emald August 6, 2009 12:03 AM EDT
And yet it's perfectly legal for mushers to subject sled dogs to heinously cruel training, to kill dogs who don't run fast enough, to mutilate them by debarking, to run them to death in the Iditarod and other races, and subject 85% of the dogs who survive to lung damage, and bloody ulcers.

http://www.helpsleddogs.org/remarks-crueldogtraining.htm
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by EmilyS2 August 5, 2009 7:05 PM EDT
oh poor MIchael Vick.. such a victim. His worst crime is that he isn't as BAD as other NFL players? sheesh. But as usual with most defenders of Vick, this one misses the point. Vick wasn't even convicted of dogfighting, but only of bankrolling it. And his case has NOTHING to do with euthanizing animals (which by definition is "humane"). Vick pled INNOCENT (and was allowed to get away with) his worst crimes: unspeakable cruelty to animals. No, NOT just the dogs who fought. The dogs who DIDN"T fight.. the ones he tortured by beating, hanging and electrocuting, laughing all the time (according to the witnesses). He has never admitted to, or apologized for that behavior which can only be termed sociopathic.
http://badrap-blog.blogspot.com/2009/05/op-eds-on-vick-news.html

So sure, Vick served his time and under our society's laws, now has a right to rejoin society. He has NO right to any particular job, however. And those who object to him being held up as a model, or hero, just because he's a football player... well, WE have a right to boycott, protest and publicize his real crimes in all the way our society provides, too.
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by emald August 1, 2009 12:29 PM EDT
Dogs are not just "put to sleep". I've spoken with many former kill-technicians who explained dogs somehow know they're going to be harmed (either they smell death or sense the attitude of the staff), and they don't give up their lives willingly! They fight the technicians with all they've got, then they are restrained, and killed.

It's not pleasant or peaceful or compassionate, and it doesn't excuse dogfighting.

But it shows how some killing is accepted and some is condemned. It's missing the point, imo, to only focus on what happens to be legal or not. Instead of condemning Vick, we should examine our own beliefs about dogs. At the bottom line, dogfighting exists -- not because Vick is a monster -- but because humans believe we're entitled to use and kill other animals.
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by brooke50 August 1, 2009 5:40 AM EDT
Well, I am going to take a different stace than most posts. It appears from these posts, that people say it was only dogs and dogs are put to sleep everyday. They also ask about abortion - strange, but ok.

I am going to take the stand as why is he so special - he plays football - woooooo hooooo - big deal - there are plenty of others out there to take his place -

Look, he got his NFL shot, got his mega million contract, then as rich people do, decided he was better than everyone else and got caught. So, what the commissioner does not want him back - no big loss -
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by steeepe July 31, 2009 1:09 PM EDT
Vick paid for his crime. Personally, I would not watch any team he plays for because he mistreats animals, but you can't make him pay forever for a crime. If someone uses dogs to fight, it shows a basic character flaw that may not easily be changed. But, hey, ethics are old-fashioned, right?
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by drthvader July 29, 2009 9:42 PM EDT
oh kum ba yah! What Vick did was foolhardy, cruel and illegal. I say give him a chance to play again, but perhaps he should also have a job counseling youth on what NOT to do in their personal lives. These civilian kids (street kids) who choose to lionize their sports heroes will go to jail for these crimes and there won't be any cameras around unless it's for a mug shot or a perp walk.
Again what Vick did was cruel and illegal. It's not Peta's fault. You can count all the dogs euthanized all over this country, hopefully they go quickly and don't suffer as these dogs did.
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by dwilson59 July 29, 2009 6:23 PM EDT
Who is with me I have my $75 (for the Jersey) in my pocket for the first team to sign him
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by didserve July 29, 2009 5:30 PM EDT
these idiots who squander their talents should be treated no better or worse than any other American before the criminal justice system. The fact that some get off is a travisty of justice...but then Justice is for sale in America just like our politicians!
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by Sunny98502 July 29, 2009 4:12 PM EDT
What Michael Vick did to those dogs was horrific. He should not be allowed to be a role model and play in the NFL again! It is all about money for the NFL and Networks. The way to cause change is by not attending NFL games and supporting sponsors of Michael Vick. Nike needs drop Vick if they haven't already, otherwise those against the crimes of Vick need to buy Adidas. Goodall has no morales. I will never watch football while Vick is playing. Advise others to do the same.
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