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#1
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Posted By: Misunderestimated (Brian H.)
Upper Deck cut Vick from its soon-to-be released set. They can do what they want I have no problem with that. |
#2
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Posted By: Turner Engle
I think that was a great move by Upper Deck. I also just read that Nike suspended his shoe contract, while Reebok took his jersey off of the market so it could no longer be sold in stores. |
#3
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Posted By: Brad
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#4
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Posted By: Ken McMillan
Do you remember is school when you told the teacher that the dog ate your homework? I believe that these would be the cards issued with dog bite holes in them? |
#5
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Posted By: Bob Pomilla
Innocent until proven guilty is a legal concept. The companies are free to employ, or not employ, whomever they choose. They likely saw continued association with Vick as detrimental to their bottom line and thus cut him adrift. Though I would like to think they dumped him on principle. |
#6
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Posted By: davidcycleback
A million dollar contract with Nike is not a right. There's nothing in the constitution that says Nike has to give a contract to anyone. Fair or unfair, it's a given that Nike gives a contract to an athlete based on 'image.' That's why John McEnroe (big mouth American) got paid more than Ivan Lendl (boring Czech), Maria Sharapova (long legged blonde) more than Lindsey Davenport (plain jane). That's why Vick was paid more that better performing quarterbacks. I'm sure Vick knew he was being paid for his image. |
#7
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Posted By: Jim Dale
who in their right mind would want this guy representing them right now.....oh yea - topps - I forgot |
#8
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Posted By: Brad
Let's learn from history shall we, and not hang Vick just yet! |
#9
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Posted By: Turner Engle
Does anybody remember Jayson "Shotgun" Williams? What ever happened to him? |
#10
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Bob and David are right: Vick is innocent until proven guilty in the eyes of the law, not in the eyes of his advertising partners who are in the business of image. |
#11
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I don't see what the big deal is...I mean if guys like Michael Vick didn't raise these fighting dogs then they would probably be extinct in a few years. The dogs are only doing what god intended for them to do. Plus you get to meet Roy Jones Jr. |
#12
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Posted By: Fred C
I'm all for the American way of not convicting someone before they've had a fair trial. In this case the NFL seems to be taking the opposite stance. If the NFL sees him guilty then there must be something to it. They're all about image and convicting someone before there time doesn't make sense unless they know something that the general public doesn't. I guess any video tapes of him attending the dog fights would be explained away somehow.... remember, "you can't convict if the glove doesn't fit" or was it "if the glove doesn't fit you can't convict"... same difference... I guess. |
#13
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Posted By: Jeff D.
Actually Fred, it was "If it doesn't fit, you must acquit." But same idea. |
#14
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Posted By: David Smith
Two words: Don Imus. |
#15
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
It happened well before Don Imus...Bill Maher said something politically incorrect on the show aptly titled "Politically Incorrect" in 2001 and ABC fired him. Same thing goes for the Dixie Chicks and Clear Channnel...I'm pretty sure OJ Simpson was canned from NBC and lost all his endorsements well before he went to trial. There are plenty of examples prior to OJ as well. Companies have to protect themselves from bad publicity and there's nothing wrong with that. Could you imagine the backlash Avis car rentals would have gotten had they stood behind OJ throughout his trial? |
#16
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Posted By: Misunderestimated (Brian H.)
I agree that Vick has become a corporate liability to anyone and that the companies that use him as an endorcer would be foolish not to distance themselves from him. |
#17
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
There does seem to be a double standard here when you consider the charges against Kobe Bryant. Of course I have no idea how UD handled that situation, but I'm assuming they didn't pull his card from their set? |
#18
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Posted By: Joann
Not only is innocent until proven guilty a legal concept, but along with it goes the legal burden of proof, which is guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. That's a very high burden of proof and it exists in criminal cases because often the defendant's liberty is at stake. The system requires that if someone is going to lose their liberty, a very high burden of proof be met. |
#19
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Posted By: Bob Pomilla
Excellent, Joann. |
#20
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Posted By: S Gross
<<<I mean if guys like Michael Vick didn't raise these fighting dogs then they would probably be extinct in a few years>>> |
#21
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Hollywood celebrities have lost commercial contracts because they had flings outside their marriages. Burt Reynolds lost an orange juice contract because of his love life. |
#22
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Posted By: peter chao
David, |
#23
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Posted By: Bob Pomilla
Peter C., |
#24
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Posted By: davidcy
The famous British statistician George E. P. Box said it was amusing attending US Government meetings where American lawyers set the laws for how much chemicals or pollutants or whatever were allowed in the air, water or wherever. After just setting the legal standard for how much arsenic was allowed in the environment, a Congressman asked Box why he was chuckling to himself. Box explained that, while poisonous at certain parts per million, human bodies require a small amount of arsenic. He explained that if the US lowered the arsenic in the environment to the parts per million required by this law, all Americans would have to take arsenic pills to live. |
#25
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Posted By: Glenn
Kobe Bryant, to my knowledge, was not removed from any card sets because of the alleged rape, but he did lose endorsement contracts prior to the trial. |
#26
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Posted By: Rich Klein
I wonder why Topps is taking so long to join the parade. |
#27
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Posted By: Jim Dale
yeah its strange that topps wouldn't announce this either, gotta wonder what the hold up is? |
#28
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Posted By: Chad
When sporting men of honor would get together and fight dogs to death or dismemberment for a few laughs or a six pack of beer. Those must have been good times, before it got all corporate like it is now. |
#29
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Posted By: Kevin Cummings
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#30
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Posted By: Jason L
Vick's first dog food commercial |
#31
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Posted By: leon
IF Vick, and/or his associates, are proven guilty maybe they should get done to them what they did/do to the dogs? The dog fighting is bad enough but the electrocution and body slamming etc...is absurd and pathetic........regards |
#32
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Posted By: Mike
Leon, you couldn't have stated it any better... |
#33
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Chad, well said. Only a moron would get excited about the prospect of watching two animals kill each other. |
#34
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Posted By: Bob Pomilla
Great photo, Kevin. But real poetic justice would have been if Vick was IN the jersey at the time. |
#35
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Posted By: Jim Dale
...most of the morons that would get a thrill or enjoy a "bet" over two dogs killing each other and then watching the loser or even the winner get executed in a grotesque manner don't have much to lose - unlike Vick. When convicted I will enjoy seeing him lose everything; his $100 million contract; endorsements, etc. Sad for Atlanta fans - I'm sure glad the Raiders didn't bite (bad pun) on his trade offers. |
#36
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Posted By: barrysloate
Innocent until proven guilty is an important legal concept, but I am a big fan of the court of popular opinion. |
#37
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Innocent until proven guilty, of course. However, I think a difference between this case and a he said/she said case, is that the FBI may have already determined that a crime was committed. Irrelevant to who was involved, they may have already determined that, beyond doubt, illegal dog fighting took place. The question, of course, is if and how Vick was involved. However, that this was not a fly by night operation (dog condos were built, etc) and it was on Vick's property at least ties him as the property owner, which may have some legal ramifications in and of itself (ala, seized property in drug cases). In fact, in all neighborhoods, it is against the law to have certain things take place on the land, whether or not the owner knows. For example, in many neighborhoods, one can't build a gas station, condo, hotel, tavern, casino or public playground. It doesn't take a legal scholar to deduce that Vick's home probably wasn't zoned for dog fighting and public gambling-- and the property owner will be held to some responsibility, if just financial (read: fines). |
#38
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Posted By: Scot Reader
Did a little research tonight. About 90% of federal defendants nationwide enter guilty pleas. Of those who take their cases all the way to verdict, 87% are convicted . Couldn't find a breakdown between bench trial and jury trial conviction rates. In the Eastern District of Virginia, where Vick has been indicted, the conviction rate is a somewhat lower 78%. The Vick matter is pending before a judge appointed by Bush II in 2002. With these statistics and the guilty plea of his alleged co-conspirator today it does not look good for Mr. Vick. |
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