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Vick has a plan, and so far it's working E-mail
Written by Associated Press   

To hear Roger Goodell tell it, the decision to conditionally reinstate Michael Vick to the NFL came only after much soul searching and consultations with everyone from Vick's third grade teacher to the guy who gasses up his Range Rover.

Even then, Goodell said he didn't finally make up his mind until Sunday, which seems somewhat surprising because there were a number of media reports filed well before that predicting the commissioner would do pretty close to what he ended up doing.

Then again, it wasn't all that tough to figure out. Goodell may fancy himself as a disciplinarian, but there wasn't a lot of upside to keeping Vick out of the league when even the PETA types had quieted down and the growing consensus seemed to be that Vick had already paid a heavy price for his crimes.

The initial reaction to Goodell's move on Monday confirmed that. No one was screaming — at least too loudly — that Vick should be put in a pit with dogs who still hold a grudge, and the heads of two animal rights groups reacted by saying little more than they hoped Vick would continue seeing the error of his ways.

Even PETA seemed to realize this fight is about over, which is good news for any NFL club still wary about the ramifications of signing Vick. Instead of holding a protest march in front of NFL headquarters, the activist group put out a statement saying it would simply continue to "watch him like a hawk."

That, of course, was all part of the master plan crafted by Vick's advisers long before he got out of prison in Kansas. Vick began by co-opting the animal groups by promising to work on anti-dogfighting efforts even as he resurrected his football career, and he and his people seem to have worked every angle just right to convince Goodell that he is truly a changed man.

Time has been on Vick's side, too. It's been more than two years since we learned about the horrific things that happened at the Bad Newz Kennels, and the images that so sickened animal lovers across America are no longer nearly so vivid in our minds.

The dogs have also all moved on, for the most part. Vick paid nearly $1 million for the continuing care of the survivors, and some have even gone on to cushy lives as family pets.

As for the others? Well, dead dogs tell no tales.

Just for the record, I was one of those who thought Vick's crimes — and no matter what you think of Vick they are vicious, despicable crimes — should keep him both out of society and out of football for a long time. I had read all the grisly details of how dogs were maimed and killed in the name of sport, and was especially troubled by the statement of an informer who said Vick and his buddies sometimes put family pets in with the fighting dogs just to see them slaughtered.

But we live in a society where second chances are almost a birthright and, no matter how heinous Vick's actions were, it's hard to argue against giving him one. He's done all the right things since being locked up, and seems to have replaced the people who formerly rode with him with a solid group of advisers and mentors such as former Indianapolis coach Tony Dungy that he can seek counsel from.

For some people, that won't be good enough. For some people, nothing will ever be good enough.

But Goodell promised to make a decision when Vick's sentence was up, and he didn't waste a lot of time doing it. What he came up with was a well-conceived plan for reinstatement that relies heavily on the good intentions of both Vick and the people around him, putting the onus on the former star quarterback to prove himself every day.

If Vick does what he promises, he likely has a career in the NFL once again. If he doesn't, there's always that $10-an-hour construction job to fall back on.

The speculation now shifts to what teams might want Vick and the baggage that he still brings. Some have already said they're not interested, but good quarterbacks are always in short supply in the NFL. And, suddenly, a Vick signing does not look nearly as risky public relations-wise as it might have before.

What may scare teams away more than the idea of a dog killer behind center is the idea Vick may not be the quarterback he once was. He's a running quarterback who lost two years of his prime, and teams might just want to wait until he proves he still has his legs in, say the new UFL, before making a move.

Indeed, Vick's future remains uncertain, despite Goodell's ruling. A lot of things still have to happen before he takes a snap in the NFL again, and there's no guarantee he'll be successful along the way.

At least for now, though, everything is going exactly to plan.

 
Pinch-hitters lead Marlins past Dodgers 6-3 E-mail
Written by Associated Press   

Pinch-hitter Jeremy Hermida drove in the go-ahead run in the seventh inning, pinch-hitter Chris Coghlan homered in the eighth and the Florida Marlins kept rolling up the West Coast with a 6-3 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday night.

All-Star Josh Johnson (9-2) pitched seven resilient innings as the Marlins followed up a three-game sweep in San Diego with a victory over the major league-leading Dodgers, whose five-game winning streak ended.

Two days after Manny Ramirez's pinch-hit grand slam beat Cincinnati, the slugger went 0 for 3.

After Andre Ethier's two-run double in the sixth tied it at 3 for Los Angeles, Cody Ross singled off reliever James McDonald (2-2) before Hermida drove him home with a single off Brent Leach.

Coghlan then led off the eighth with the first pinch-hit homer of his career. Jorge Cantu added an RBI single moments later for Florida, which had 14 hits.

Leo Nunez pitched the ninth for his seventh save.

The Marlins also handled Clayton Kershaw, the Dodgers' 21-year-old left-hander who hasn't lost since June 10. Kershaw never retired the side in order, allowing nine hits and three walks in six innings while yielding two earned runs for just the second time in eight starts.

Johnson allowed five hits and three runs while winning for the sixth time in seven decisions. He hasn't allowed more than three earned runs in 17 consecutive starts — and the right-hander even put the Marlins ahead in the sixth, getting a hit and eventually scoring on Kershaw's wild pitch.

Casey Blake tripled and scored on an early wild pitch for the Dodgers, whose bullpen follies emphasized their need for another reliever in the final days before the trade deadline. Ramon Troncoso was particularly ineffective in the eighth, giving up three hits and hitting two batters with pitches.

Ramirez was back in the Dodgers' starting lineup after a bruised hand reduced him to the role of dramatic pinch-hitter Wednesday night. He was hit by Johnson's two-strike pitch in the first inning before popping out in the fourth, grounding back to the mound with two runners on in the sixth, and fouling out in the eighth.

Kershaw gave up just his second earned run in 28-plus innings on Wes Helms' RBI double in the fifth, and Johnson catalyzed the Marlins' two-run rally in the sixth with a two-out single.

After Johnson scored on a wild pitch, Emilio Bonifacio walked home moments later when Orlando Hudson's cutoff throw bounded into the Dodgers' dugout.

 
Will Michael Vick return to the NFL? E-mail
Written by Sports Know It Alls Staff   

Michael Vick might soon get another chance to play in the NFL.

Sources say that the NFL commissioner, Vick, his agent Joel Segal, and two other suspended members of Vick’s team had a meeting last Wednesday at a security firm in New Jersey. The two people requested anonymity because the league has not acknowledged the meeting.

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello did not confirm the meeting when he was contacted by The Associated Press last Thursday. Aiello insisted that there has been no confirmed decision about the future of Vick’s career.

“This is a serious matter,” Aiello wrote in an e-mail. “We are engaging in a careful and thoughtful process.”

In an interview last Tuesday, Roger Goodell said that he hopes to reach a decision about Vick’s case in the near future.

Goodell suspended Vick indefinitely in August 2007 after the quarterback admitted funding an underground dog fighting operation. Goodell says that Vick should show remorse and change before he is to reinstated, if ever.

Bloggers reported that Vick was recently seen touring a strip club in Virginia beach. Vick’s attorney, Lawrence Woodward, released a statement to clear Vick’s name.

“It is absolutely, categorically false,” Woodward told the Associated Press. “He has been spending time with his family and friends and working with his advisers on legal matters and trying to get back to playing football.”

Vick also denied the rumors. He said: “That's crazy. That is the last place on my mind. I was out of town. I guess it's just someone trying to be hurtful.”

 

 
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