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Falcons move forward, but ghost lingers
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Arthur Blank spent the outset of his opening statement Monday explaining why the Falcons were not officially going to cut Michael Vick, even if every ounce of his soul, his retailing prowess and a very itchy trigger finger screamed otherwise.
“Cutting him today may feel better emotionally today,” Blank said at a press conference held after Vick formally entered a guilty plea in federal court. “But it’s not in the best long-term interest of our franchise.”
As it turns out, some people actually think before the act.
So there Monday night in the Georgia Dome was Vick, sort of. A Falcon, in paper only. A ghost.
He will haunt the team this season in merchandising sales and the salary cap. He will remain a part of the franchise until Blank can convince a series of judges and arbitrators that he deserves $22 million in bonuses back — or until Judge Henry Hudson covers Vick with gravy and orders him to run ahead of the Iditarod field, which ever comes first.
To what extent Vick haunts the Falcons this season remains uncertain. But consider their first home game minus Vick the first step in a year-long exorcism.
Joey Harrington threw two touchdown passes in the first half against the Cincinnati Bengals. He had a potential third touchdown dropped in the end zone in the third quarter by Roddy White (whose drops have not yet equated to a felony).
By the time he left the game in the third, Harrington had thrown for 164 yards on 13-of-21 passing with no interceptions (though three sacks). It amounted to a quarterback efficiency rating of 118, which team officials were so proud of that they announced it in the press box.
Life goes on. A team goes on. The Falcons got to wear uniforms and play a game and everything. They even won. Go figure.
“We don’t want to overblow this,” coach Bobby Petrino said. “It was a preseason game. But it was important.”
How about this for a foreign concept: After his teammates had left the team’s facility Saturday for time off, Harrington stayed back to draw up plays and study more video, according to Petrino. “With all of the adversity and controversy, it was important that he come out and play well,” he said.
It was a rare moment of joy for Blank, who earlier in the day looked worn down from another long news conference at his home office. NFL owners just aren’t built for this many off-season spin sessions.
“A lot of people have asked me how I feel about this,” Blank said of Vick’s exit. “But it’s not about me. It’s about animals that have died. It’s about players who were with Michael for six years. … It’s about moving forward.”
His heart tells him to remove any reminder of Vick in this city, even if it means knocking on doors to collect old Nikes and No. 7 jerseys. But he can’t.
Think of Vick this way: He’s a car you financed over five years that broke down after two. The bank says it’s still yours, even though you’re now riding the bus. Or Harrington.
In Richmond, Vick suddenly showed contrition when he addressed the media after his plea. But Blank has experienced Vick saying one thing and doing another. It’s not about words, it’s about actions.
If there was any doubt about how Blank feels, it became apparent when somebody asked him about Vick claiming he had “turned my life over to God.”
“You have to match that up with personal responsibility, in addition to turning your life over to God,” Blank said. “This isn’t a religious sermon. But I don’t think God is saying, ‘OK, it’s up to me from this point forward.’ God gives us the ability to make choices and what we do with those choices is our responsibility, not God’s responsibility.”
Meanwhile, back down here on Earth, an NFL team tried again to move on. The replacement quarterback looked passable. The offense functioned, certainly better than some on the defense (cornerback DeAngelo Hall didn’t appear to be all here in coverage, in mind, body and spirit).
In two weeks, the Falcons will start things for real in Minnesota. Vick will still be awaiting sentencing. Before long, he’ll be in a cell. For now, he’s a ghost. Some spirits you can’t get rid of so easily.
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