The NFL recently named Mike Vick as one of the 2020 Pro Bowl Legends Captains for the all-star game to be played during the weekend between the conference championships and the Super Bowl. The move has sparked controversy, in the form of online petitions opposing the move and, in response, online petitions supporting it.
Some would say Vick didn’t make a “mistake,” but that he engaged in a multi-year lifestyle of dogfighting, which included training dogs to fight, actively participating in dog fights, and killing dogs deemed unfit to fight. And while he indeed spent time in prison for federal crimes related to dogfighting and gambling, Vick at no point faced criminal legal scrutiny for multiple instances of animal cruelty arising from the killing of dogs that were deemed to lack the requisite ferocity to fight other dogs to the death. Inexplicably, the Virginia prosecutor failed to obtain an indicment on those charges, despite a signed, written admission from Vick that he had indeed killed dogs that were judged to be too weak and placid to fight other dogs.
Dozens of former players had the requisite skill and fame to justify an assignment as a Pro Bowl Legends Captain. Why Vick?
Yes, he paid his debt to society — or at least part of that debt. Does that wipe the slate clean? Does it erase the abhorrent actions that were the product not of an isolated bad decision but of the creation and maintenance of a dogfighting (and dog killing) operation at a rural estate in Virginia?
Some believe it does. Others believe it doesn’t. From the league’s perspective, why invite the scrutiny that goes with acts of animal cruelty that would be regarded by many football fans as unforgivable?