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98 Stories on Michael Vick
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SI.com: Falcons show off makeover in training camp

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. (AP) -- Michael Vick was busted. Bobby Petrino was a bust.

SI.com: Imprisoned Vick files for bankrputcy protection

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -- Imprisoned quarterback Michael Vick filed for bankruptcy protection while serving time for federal dogfighting charges, saying he owes between $10 million and $50 million to creditors.

Vick surrenders early to begin dogfighting sentence

Michael Vick turned himself in to authorities on Monday to get a head start on serving his sentence for running a dogfighting ring, the U.S. Marshals Service said.

Vick's fighting dogs get second chance at life

Ellen doesn't look like a top-fighting dog.

SI.com: The Year in Sports 2007: Stories of the NFL

As a sports culture we like to throw our arms around the pursuit of history. Record chases bind us to an athletic heritage that lives on in yellowed paper volumes (along with Google searches and, blessedly, the occasional YouTube video) and connects to greatness in a language that we can understand and speak at picnics. How about those Celtics? And such. Whatever the milestone, we usually want to see it, touch it, remember it, celebrate it.

Michael Vick to judge: 'I am not the beast'

Disgraced former NFL star Michael Vick declared that "I am not the bad person or the beast I've been made out to be" in a letter to a judge asking for leniency.

SI.com: George Dohrmann: Vick punished more for not telling the truth

Think back to August, to the day Michael Vick went before the cameras after reaching a plea agreement with prosecutors on charges that he financed and participated in a dogfighting operation. He expressed remorse for what he had done and the many fans he had disappointed. Afterward, pundits remarked how Vick had been "forthcoming" and "honest" and "contrite." His supporters said he was accepting responsibility for his mistakes, the first step in rebuilding his image and life.

SI.com: Don Banks: Will Vick ever play in the NFL after jail sentence?

As we have been virtually from Day 1 of the long Michael Vick saga, we're once again in uncharted territory. The length of Vick's prison sentence has finally been determined, but it's still hard to know how much time, if any, will be left in his NFL playing career when he's done paying for his involvement in that sordid dog-fighting ring.

SI.com: Michael McCann: Analyzing the Vick sentence

On Monday, Judge Henry E. Hudson sentenced Michael Vick to 23 months in prison -- exceeding the 12-18 months that prosecutors recommended. SI.com caught up with legal expert Michael McCann to answer some important questions about the ruling.

Vick sentenced to 23 months for dogfighting

Michael Vick, once one of the highest paid players in the National Football League, was sentenced to 23 months in prison for financing a dogfighting ring and helping to kill pit bulls that did not fight aggressively.

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