<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div><div class='quotemain'>But for now, it's pots and pans and playing quarterback for two prison teams in the same game with teammates who have criminal records, not touchdown records. Vick has traded in his No. 7 jersey for a Federal Bureau of Prisons register number with eight digits.</div> http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/football...n_football.html
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (The Joker @ Apr 6 2008, 02:04 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div><div class='quotemain'>^You stole my idea.</div> You could've remade my joke, by posting this:
People might see that article and laugh, but it's one of the only ways he can keep in shape until he is released and possibly seeks a comeback. And yes, that is the Great Khali from WWE in football gear, in the upper right corner in the second poster.
Vicks career as a QB is over. He was never that good at throwing the ball and by the time he gets out of prison he will be lot older and a step slower.
http://sportstwo.com/NFL/Story/NFL/1996895 Vick playing prison football Monday, April 7, 2008 01:54 PM NEW YORK (Ticker) -- Michael Vick is playing on a different football field these days. In an interview with the New York Daily News, Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank said Vick is playing football in prison to keep his body in shape, his arm limber and to pass the time. "He is staying in shape," Blank told the newspaper. "Apparently, there was a prison football team and he played quarterback for both sides." The disgraced and suspended quarterback of the Falcons, Vick is serving a 23-month term at a minimum security prison camp in Leavenworth, Kansas after pleading guilty in August to federal dogfighting charges. Vick, who began serving his sentence in December, is scheduled to be released from prison in July 2009. Blank, who has been communicating through letters initiated by Vick, said the quarterback also wrote that he has a job washing pots for 12 cents an hour. "He's written me a couple of times," Blank told the Daily News. "I've written him back, he's stayed in touch." In 2004, Blank signed Vick to a 10-year contract worth a reported $130 million. "I just try to be supportive and as understanding as I can be," Blank told the Daily News. "He talks about the process he is going through and what he has learned, the lessons of life, how he's going to come out a different person. "He's sorry he has affected so many people in a negative way - the league, our club, our fans. He feels awful about that. The letters sound quite sincere to me. From a mental standpoint, he sounds good." Vick's state trial on dogfighting charges is set to begin to June 27.
Apparently the original story exaggerated. He's not playing organized football. It's more like "let's play catch." Link: http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=3335675
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Pack Attack)</div><div class='quotemain'>It's more like "let's play catch."</div> I wonder if Vick's the pitcher or the catcher.