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The Many Troubles of Marcus Vick (merged)

CPD

1/12

Column: Someone will take chance on Vick

<table class="byln" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="428"> <tbody><tr valign="bottom"> <td class="byln" width="328">1/12/2006, 4:07 a.m. ETBy TIM DAHLBERG
The Associated Press</td><td width="3"> </td><td width="97"></td> </tr> </tbody> </table> (AP) — Lawrence Phillips thought his chances would never run out, until he drove a car into some guys he had been playing touch football with and ended up with multiple counts of assault.
Maurice Clarett likely put an end to his chances, too, when he was charged with robbing two people outside an Ohio nightclub.
Marcus Vick isn't quite there yet, but that's only because the bar is set high for athletes with talent. Because of that, some NFL team likely will still take a chance on Vick, even when history shows it's not usually a good idea.
<script language="JavaScript"></script> <noscript> </noscript>In the end, it seems, bad character always seems to triumph over great talent.
The St. Louis Rams couldn't figure that out when they drafted Phillips sixth in 1996 even though he beat up an ex-girlfriend while in college and drove drunk. Their faith in his legs over his character was rewarded when he lasted 25 games before being released for insubordination.
No problem, though, because the Miami Dolphins were ready to give him another chance, one that lasted until he was accused of hitting a woman in a nightclub.
When you're a star, extra chances come with the territory. Coaches and general managers will rationalize almost anything if it gets them a player who can win games.
And, really now, doesn't everyone deserve a second chance?
Clarett could have made a case for just that before he allegedly approached two people outside a bar, showed them a gun in his waistband and told them to empty their pockets.
Unfortunately for Clarett, he's well-known in Columbus, Ohio, which led to this exchange between the 911 dispatcher and one of the victims.

Dispatcher: "Ma'am, can you tell me what he looked like?"
Victim: "Oh, yeah. Maurice Clarett, I guess."
Vick will get another chance, too, even though he was charged with pointing a gun at some teenagers he thought insulted his girlfriend. Unless a judge decides a jail cell will be a better place for Vick than a football field, the NFL will come calling.
<script language="JavaScript"></script> <noscript> </noscript>Virginia Tech finally washed its hands of Vick even before the latest incident, cutting its ties to him just four days after he stomped on the left calf of Louisville's defensive end Elvis Dumervil in the Gator Bowl.
But Vick should have been gone a long time ago. This was a player who was charged at various times with marijuana possession, furnishing alcohol to minors, having sex with a 15-year-old girl, and reckless driving.
This was also the most valuable player of a highly ranked team. And, because Vick was such a talent, Virginia Tech kept him even after he made an obscene gesture to fans at West Virginia in October and was caught driving with a suspended license in December.
If anything, Virginia Tech should be embarrassed it used Vick for its own purposes, waiting until after he helped the Hokies win their biggest game of the year before dumping him.
Vick's latest encounter with the law was his most serious. He wasn't going to be a top draft pick. Now, he may not be drafted at all and will have to wait for an invitation to a training camp.
He'll get one. He has too much talent and, besides, he's Michael Vick's brother. Maybe the Atlanta Falcons could use a good backup quarterback.
You can't help wondering, though, how badly this story will end. Will Vick spin even more out of control or will someone, maybe his brother, manage to convince him that even the most talented players have to follow society's rules.

Phillips never learned to do that.
Last August, he went to his former Nebraska coach, Tom Osborne, and asked for help in making it back to the pros.
Osborne said he told Phillips, who starred on the Huskers' 1994 and '95 national championship teams, that he probably had used up all of his chances.
<script language="JavaScript"></script> <noscript> </noscript>"I think he pretty well had run the string out," Osborne said.
Because he's a talent, Marcus Vick still has some left.
At the rate he's going, though, they may not last long.
 
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http://www.sportsline.com/collegefootball/story/9179270

<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr valign="top"><td width="10"> </td> <td>
Virginia Tech president wants handling of Vick looked into
</td> </tr></tbody></table> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr valign="top"> <td width="10"> </td> <td> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr valign="top"> <td nowrap="nowrap"> Jan. 21, 2006
CBS SportsLine.com wire reports </td> <td width="10"> </td> <td align="right"> <script language="JavaScript"><!--// var dclkFeaturesponsor='http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/sponsorships.spln.com/fs/stories/'+vTag+';'+vTarget+';'+uID+';sz=234x42;tile=5;ord='+random+'?'; if (switchDclk != 'off') { if (location.search.substring(1).indexOf('DCLK')>-1) document.write('<input type="text" value="'+dclkFeaturesponsor+'" style="width:">
'); document.write('<script src="'+dclkFeaturesponsor+'"><\/script>'); } // --></script><script src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/adj/sponsorships.spln.com/fs/stories/collegefootball;arena=collegefootball;feat=stories;type=psa;user=Anonymous;seg=nonaol;vpmp=no;adv=a;cust=no;vip=no;u=Q4Dbxgq0DsYAAHm3ck0;sz=234x42;tile=5;ord=34576164691613065?"></script>
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<noscript></noscript> </td> </tr> </tbody></table> </td></tr> </tbody></table> <table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr valign="top"><td width="10"> </td> <td> [FONT=Arial, Helvetica]
<table style="margin: 5px 0px 5px 5px;" align="right" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"><tbody><tr><td style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 8px;"> <nobr> </nobr> </td></tr></tbody></table><!-- T9179270 --><!-- Sesame Modified: 01/21/2006 20:01:32 --> <!-- sversion: 5 $Updated: rbrunner$ -->
[/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] BLACKSBURG, Va. -- Virginia Tech president Charles Steger asked a school oversight committee to look into Tech's handling of former quarterback Marcus Vick, who was tossed from the team for a series of offenses. [/FONT]
</td></tr></tbody></table>
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Vick, the younger brother of Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick, was kicked off the team Jan. 6 following a succession of legal and other problems, including his unsportsmanlike conduct in the Gator Bowl. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Three days after he was booted from the team, Vick was charged with pulling a gun on three people in a restaurant parking lot in Suffolk, Va. He has announced his intention to enter the NFL Draft. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Steger said he will ask a committee to look into how Tech dealt with its former quarterback's indiscretions and see if changes should be made to the 4,000-word document that outlines the state university's rules on student-athlete behavior. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] "I do want to find out what actually happened," Steger told The Roanoke Times for Saturday's editions. "Each person, when confronted with the situation, did what they thought was right. ... Now, are there things that we need to put in place to make the process of handling such an instance more effective in the future?" [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Joseph Tront, the chairman of the University Athletics Committee, told the Associated Press on Saturday he had received the directive from Steger and planned to meet Wednesday with other committee members. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] While he declined to speculate on the outcome of the internal review, Tront said "nothing is ever cast in stone" and the student-athlete code is subject to occasional revision. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Among the issues Steger wants explore are whether athletes should be compelled to disclose when they get in trouble with the law. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Vick, 21, is free on $10,000 bond until a March court appearance on three misdemeanor counts of brandishing a firearm. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Police said the parents of a 17-year-old boy reported that Vick pointed a weapon at their son and two others during an altercation a fast food restaurant in Suffolk, the southeastern Virginia city where Vick's mother lives. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] If convicted of all three counts, Vick could be sentenced to up to three years in jail and a $7,500 fine. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] The final offense that got Vick kicked off the team was his stomping on the left calf of Louisville All-American Elvis Dumervil during the Gator Bowl. He also received a speeding ticket and a ticket for driving on a suspended license in Hampton on Dec. 17 while under a "zero tolerance" policy from Virginia Tech. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] [/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] In 24 career games, the 6-foot, 212-pound Vick threw for 2,868 yards, 19 touchdowns and 15 interceptions. He also ran 184 times for 492 yards and six TDs. [/FONT]
 
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I guess stupidity runs in the family...
:slappy:

Falcons' QB Vick defends his troubled brotherAssociated Press


ATLANTA -- Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick believes Virginia Tech overreacted when the school dismissed his brother, Marcus, from the football team after he stomped on an opposing player during the Gator Bowl.


Michael Vick



Marcus Vick


Marcus Vick later claimed the incident was accidental and that he apologized to Louisville's Elvis Dumervil, but the All-American defensive end denied receiving an apology.

Michael Vick, who led Virginia Tech to the 1999 national title game as a redshirt freshman, was at the Gator Bowl and saw his brother step on Dumervil.

"Sometimes your emotions just take over," Michael Vick said during halftime Wednesday night of the Atlanta Hawks' game against the Cleveland Cavaliers. "I know Marcus. He's not the kind of kid that's going to do something like that on purpose. That's just something he's got to live with, and now it's just time to move on."

Marcus Vick's Gator Bowl antics came after he received a speeding ticket on Dec. 17 in Hampton, Va., for driving with a suspended license.

He had been under a "zero tolerance" policy at Virginia Tech following his suspension from the university for the 2004 season after several legal problems.

Earlier this month, just three days after being kicked off the football team, Vick was arrested and charged with pulling a gun on three teenagers in Virginia.

The 21-year-old is free on $10,000 bond until he makes a March court appearance in Suffolk, Va., to face three misdemeanor counts of brandishing a firearm.

The brothers are living together now in Michael Vick's home in Duluth, Ga.

Michael said he believes Marcus will be exonerated.

"No, I ain't mad," Michael Vick said. "He didn't do anything wrong. The world will all know when the truth comes out."

Marcus Vick was a first-team All-Atlantic Coast Conference selection last year as a sophomore. After being dismissed from the team, he made himself eligible for the NFL draft in April.

Michael Vick hadn't spoken of his brother's problems since the Falcons ended their 8-8 season with a 44-11 home loss to Carolina.

The decision to fire his position coach, Mike Johnson, on Jan. 4 surprised Vick, who made the Pro Bowl twice in the last two years.

"It hurts me to see him go," Vick said. "I wish we could've kept him around. I don't know why he's gone, but that decision was made, and it's just something I've got to deal with."

Vick has not yet spoken to a Falcons official since head coach Jim Mora hired Bill Musgrave as quarterbacks coach on Tuesday. He wished the team had consulted him before making the moves.

"I think it would've been appropriate, but it's all good," Vick said. "I can't make those decisions. That's why they coach."
 
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"I know Marcus. He's not the kind of kid that's going to do something like that on purpose. That's just something he's got to live with, and now it's just time to move on."

He is, however, the type to be busted smoking pot, seduce underage girls with alcohol, drive with a suspended license and flash his piece at some kids in a McDonalds parking lot.

He had been under a "zero tolerance" policy at Virginia Tech following his suspension from the university for the 2004 season after several legal problems.

As he should have been. My math indicates driving with a suspended license + stomping on an opposing players leg, heat of battle or not= 2


"No, I ain't mad," Michael Vick said. "He didn't do anything wrong. The world will all know when the truth comes out."

"It was only a cap-gun, so it's okay!"

The brothers are living together now in Michael Vick's home in Duluth, Ga.

Party at the Vick pad!!

God how I hate Michael Vick, brother or not, how can you publicly defend this thug?
:roll1:
 
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ABJ

Marcus Vick may make Dolphins debut

STEVEN WINE

Associated Press

DAVIE, Fla. - The morning phone call from Miami Dolphins management awakened Marcus Vick, and he didn't mind a bit. Vick was summoned to the team offices and told he was being added to the roster after spending the first six weeks of the season on the practice squad.
Because he was kicked off his college team in January, bypassed in the NFL draft in April and cut by the Dolphins at the end of training camp, Vick found the promotion especially sweet.
"I went through a lot, just to keep fighting and hanging in there and finally getting where I want to be," he said Wednesday.
This week's roster move means Vick might make his NFL debut Sunday when Miami (1-5) plays the Green Bay Packers (1-4). He'll be a reserve receiver and kick returner following a turbulent career as a quarterback at Virginia Tech.
"It's a great opportunity for him," said his older brother, Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick. "I really feel like this is going to be the start of something big for him down in Miami. I know what he can do. I know what type of person he is, what type of player he is. He has all the intangibles to be a great leader. I know he'll do well."
The Dolphins certainly need a spark to reverse their disappointing start. They've scored eight touchdowns and have yet to exceed 17 points in any game.
So they could use an all-purpose threat a la Washington's Antwaan Randle El, and that role sounds fine to Vick.
"It would be great," he said. "Randle El can do so many things - reverses, reverse pass, underneath screens, flea-flickers. He can do it all."
At 6-foot, 216 pounds, Vick was judged too small to play quarterback in the NFL. He signed with Miami in May as a receiver, a position he last played in high school, and impressed teammates and coach Nick Saban with his athleticism and attitude during camp.
But he was released in the last round of cuts before the season, then re-signed to the practice squad.
"Each day he's out there running scout team against the defense and has just gotten better, better and better," Saban said.
Pro Bowl receiver Chris Chambers said Vick deserved to be activated.
"He came here raw as a receiver, but he had some of those intangibles," Chambers said. "I was real shocked how good his hands are. I didn't think he would come in and be able to catch the ball the way he did.
"You see the constant improvement. He doesn't mess up. He prepares every game like he is going to play that week, even though he was on the practice squad. I think the coaches have seen that and gave him an opportunity."
Vick also provides depth at quarterback, while sidelined starter Daunte Culpepper rehabilitates his reconstructed right knee. Joey Harrington and Cleo Lemon are the Dolphins' other quarterbacks.
Vick briefly played quarterback during one exhibition game, but hasn't taken any snaps in practice since the season started.
"He wants to play receiver," his brother said. "Now, he also wants to be a quarterback. But whatever gets him on the field, that's what he needs to do."
Virginia Tech kicked Vick off the team following his junior year, ending a tumultuous college career marred by repeated brushes with the law and other misbehavior. Then he went undrafted, and said he drew motivation from the disappointment.
"I was like, 'I screwed up my chances, so it's finally up to me to put myself where I want to be,'" Vick said.
Embracing the fresh start when he came to South Florida, Vick said he enjoys being out of the media spotlight and going mostly unrecognized in public.
He has won praise from Saban as a model citizen.
"We're really proud of what he has done," Saban said. "Obviously he needs to continue to do that, and we want to support him to do that. Hopefully he'll be an impact player for us sometime in the near future."
 
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Well, he's back at it...

Vick named in sexual battery suit


RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- A 17-year-old girl who claims she had an almost two-year sexual relationship with Miami Dolphins rookie Marcus Vick has filed a lawsuit against him, accusing him of sexual battery upon a minor, fraud and other charges.

The lawsuit -- filed Wednesday in Montgomery County Circuit Court -- states that the girl was a 15-year-old honor student at Christiansburg High School when she first had sex with Vick in January 2004 while he was a quarterback at Virginia Tech.
The lawsuit says Vick and the girl, identified only as Jane Doe, had a sexual relationship through December 2005.

"As a direct and proximate result of Marcus Vick's unlawful sexual intercourse with Jane Doe, the plaintiff suffered, and will continue to suffer, psychological trauma associated with the child sexual abuse perpetrated by defendant Marcus Vick," the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit also says Vick wanted her to have sex with other men and contends that Vick offered her alcohol and marijuana several times. It also names the girl's grandmother as a plaintiff.

The 22-year-old Vick is the younger brother of Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick.

"She's maybe seeing this thing in a different light now," the girl's Christiansburg-based attorney, Stephen Haga, said Thursday. "I think she's now seeing that he misused her."

Lawrence Woodward, a Virginia Beach attorney representing Vick, said Vick is aware of the case.

"We're just going to deal with it through the court process," he said.

Miami Dolphins spokesman Harvey Greene said the team first found out about the suit on Thursday.

"We are just starting to process all of the pertinent information," Greene said.

Vick's mother, Brenda Boddie, refused comment when reached by phone on Thursday.
"We don't want to talk about this," she said.

After-hours calls to Montgomery County Commonwealth's Attorney Brad Finch to see if Vick could face criminal charges were not answered.

The girl accuses Vick of fraud, saying he told he loved her, wanted her to have his child and that having a sexual relationship with someone her age was acceptable.

Vick and two of his former teammates at Tech were convicted in 2004 of three counts of contributing to the delinquency of a minor for giving three underage girls liquor and encouraging them to strip.

Vick confessed to police that he had consensual sex with one of the girls. The girl who allegedly had sex with Vick invoked her Fifth Amendment rights at the trial.

In the lawsuit, the girl identifies herself as the one who had sex with Vick on that night in January 2004 that led to his arrest and conviction.

After an appeal, Vick pleaded no contest in September 2004 to one count of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. He was ordered to have no contact with the teenagers in the case.

Vick was suspended from the team after the incident, but was Tech's starting quarterback in 2005. He was kicked off the team by school officials in January for his on- and off-field behavior.

Vick entered the NFL draft last spring, but was not selected. The Dolphins signed him as a free agent in May.
"The girl accuses Vick of fraud, saying he told he loved her" [sic]

This could be the beginning of an unprecedented number of fraud lawsuits... :biggrin:
 
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The girl accuses Vick of fraud, saying he told he loved her, wanted her to have his child and that having a sexual relationship with someone her age was acceptable.



Just lost all credibility for the girl and that case. It's funny now that he's been in and out of NFL camps she decides that her "childhood was scarred".
 
Upvote 0
Here he goes again...

espn.com

Marcus Vick charged with drunken driving, eluding arrest

Associated Press

Updated: June 13, 2008, 11:13 AM ET

NORFOLK, Va. -- Former Virginia Tech quarterback Marcus Vick has been charged with driving under the influence and eluding police.


Police said a uniformed bicycle patrol officer observed Vick and a female involved in an altercation in the car early Friday. When the officer asked for a driver's license, police say Vick sped away but was stopped minutes later.

Vick failed a field sobriety test and was charged with DUI, misdemeanor eluding police, reckless driving and driving on a suspended license. The passenger, Delicia Cordon of Miami, Fla., was charged with being drunk in public.

Continued....
 
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