Michael Vick? Really? What could the Philadelphia Eagles have been thinking?
Probably that time and winning can take a bite out of any bad rep. Look no further than the adoration piled on Kobe Bryant when he led the Los Angeles Lakers to the NBA championship in June. No television commentator and very few sportswriters brought up the reason why he isn’t on a box of Wheaties. Bryant’s rape case in Colorado earlier this decade ruined his chances of ever again being a corporate pitchman. He is in the doghouse permanently as far as advertisers are concerned and Vick is in the same predicament, but life throws us all bones and success can be found outside of endorsements.
No. 7 Who Sends Dogs to Heaven won’t sell products, but when unleashed he can win football games. Doing so will silence critics’ barks and bury any public relations problems that hound him and the Eagles at the moment. Vick led Atlanta Falcons’ teams with less talent than the Eagles to the playoffs and while he won’t supplant Donovan McNabb as the Philadelphia starter, he gives the team a unique weapon and as good a backup quarterback as any team has had since Steve Young held a clipboard for Joe Montana.
Vick is going to play this season — possibly in wildcat formations that the Eagles surely are working on. If McNabb, who has injury history, goes down then Vick will be in the spotlight again, but for his football ability. Athletes, unlike other humans, can overcome public humiliation faster than anyone because ultimately all the public cares about is what they do on the playing field. That’s the reason they matter to us to begin with. Vick, a former No. 1 draft pick, has never been an underdog. He won’t be one now for long either. Soon, he’ll be an ascending star again and the Eagles will be commended for making one of the shrewdest moves in NFL history.
Kobe Bryant will always have his critics and detractors. But their words can’t diminish the fact he is the best basketball player in the world. The Los Angeles Lakers’ superstar has accomplished a feat few people in life can lay claim to. He’s survived a