Atlanta Falcons with the Atlanta Falcons during the 2006 season At his
Pro Day workout, Vick ran the
40-yard dash in 4.33 seconds; his time has been clocked as low as 4.25, the fastest-ever for an NFL quarterback. Vick was selected
first in the
2001 NFL draft by the
Atlanta Falcons, becoming the first
African-American quarterback to be taken with the top pick. The
San Diego Chargers had the number-one selection, but traded it to the Atlanta Falcons the day before the draft for the Falcons' first- and third-round picks in 2001. Vick was selected in the 30th round of the
2000 Major League Baseball draft by the
Colorado Rockies, despite not playing baseball since the eighth grade. He signed a six-year $62 million contract.
2001 season Vick made his NFL debut against the
San Francisco 49ers on September 9, 2001, and saw limited action. He completed his first NFL pass to
wide receiver Tony Martin in the second quarter against the
Carolina Panthers on September 23 and scored his first NFL touchdown on a two-yard rush in the fourth quarter to help the Falcons to a 24–16 victory. Vick made his first start against the
Dallas Cowboys on November 11 and threw his first touchdown pass to
tight end Alge Crumpler in a 20–13 victory. He accounted for 234 of Atlanta's 255 yards in the season finale against the
St. Louis Rams on January 6, 2002. In two starts and eight total games played that season, Vick completed 50 of 113 passes for 785 yards with two touchdowns and three interceptions. He rushed 31 times for 289 yards (9.3 avg.) and one touchdown.
2002 season Vick made 15 starts in 2002, missing one game against the
New York Giants on October 13 with a sprained shoulder. He completed 231 of 421 passes for 2,936 yards and 16 touchdowns. He had 113 carries for 777 yards and eight rushing touchdowns. Vick set numerous single-game career highs during the season, including in passes completed, pass attempts, and passing yards. Vick also set a then-NFL record for most rushing yards by a quarterback in a single game with 173 against the
Minnesota Vikings on December 1, broken by
Colin Kaepernick (181) in 2013. He tied for third in team history for the best touchdown-to-interception ratio in a season. He had a streak of 177 passes without an interception as the Falcons finished with a 9–6–1
win-loss-tie record and reached the
playoffs. On January 4, 2003, Vick led the Falcons to an upset victory over the heavily favored
Green Bay Packers 27–7 in the
NFC Wild Card Round. The Falcons lost 20–6 to the
Donovan McNabb-led
Philadelphia Eagles in the
NFC Divisional Round the following week. Vick was named to his first
Pro Bowl after the season.
2003 season Vick suffered a fractured right
fibula during a preseason game before the 2003 season against the
Baltimore Ravens. He missed the first 11 games of the regular season, making his debut in week 13. Vick substituted for quarterback
Doug Johnson during the third quarter in a game against the
Houston Texans on November 30, completing 8 of 11 passes for 60 yards and rushing for 16 yards on three carries. He started his first game of the season against the
Carolina Panthers on December 7 and amassed the third-highest rushing total by a quarterback in NFL history with 141 yards on 14 carries and one touchdown. The Falcons won the game 20–14 in overtime. Vick ended the season with a 21–14 victory over the
Jacksonville Jaguars on December 28 in which he completed 12 of 22 passes for 180 yards, two touchdowns, and an interception.
2004 season Vick returned to form in 2004, passing for 2,313 yards, 14 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions. He also added 902 rushing yards and three touchdowns as the Falcons finished with an 11–5 record. On October 31, 2004, in a game against the
Denver Broncos, he became the first quarterback to throw for more than 250 yards and rush for over 100 yards in the same game. Vick set an NFL postseason record for a quarterback with 119 rushing yards in the first round of the
2004 NFL playoffs; Atlanta beat the
St. Louis Rams 47–17 in the
Divisional Round, but lost the following week 27–10 to the
Philadelphia Eagles in the
NFC Championship. Vick, whose single-season rushing total was the third-highest for a quarterback in NFL history, was named to his second
Pro Bowl after leading Atlanta to their third division title at the end of the season. He signed a nine-year $130 million extension on December 23.
2005 season Vick made his third Pro Bowl after the
2005 season, during which he passed for 2,412 yards and 16 touchdowns while rushing for 597 rushing yards and six touchdowns. The Falcons, however, finished with an 8–8 record and missed the playoffs.
2006 season In
2006, Vick became the first quarterback to ever rush for over 1,000 yards in a single season. He also set a record by rushing for 8.4 yards per carry. Vick and teammate
Warrick Dunn became the first quarterback-running back duo to each surpass 1,000 rushing yards in a single season. Despite Vick's record-setting season, the Falcons finished with a 7–9 record and again missed the playoffs.
Suspension In August 2007, hours after Vick pleaded guilty to federal charges in the
Bad Newz Kennels dog fighting investigation, the NFL suspended him indefinitely without pay for violating its
player conduct policy. In a letter to Vick,
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said the quarterback had admitted to conduct that was "not only illegal, but also cruel and reprehensible." While Vick was technically a first-time offender under the league's personal conduct policy, Goodell handed down a harsher suspension because Vick admitted he provided most of the money for the gambling side of the dog fighting operation. Goodell left open the possibility of reinstating Vick depending on how he cooperated with federal and state authorities. Goodell had barred Vick from reporting to training camp while the league conducted its own investigation into the matter. At his July 26 arraignment, the terms of his bail barred him from leaving
Virginia before the November trial– effectively ending any realistic chance of Vick playing a down in 2007. On August 27, Falcons owner
Arthur Blank said at a press conference that the Falcons would seek to recover a portion of Vick's signing bonus. He said the team had no immediate plans to cut Vick, citing salary-cap issues. It initially appeared that Goodell had cleared the way for the Falcons to release Vick, since he ruled that Vick's involvement in gambling activity breached his contract. On August 29, the Falcons sent a letter to Vick demanding that he reimburse them for $20 million of his $37 million bonus. The case was sent to arbitration, and on October 10, an arbitrator ruled that Vick had to reimburse the Falcons for $19.97 million. The arbitrator agreed with the Falcons' contention that Vick knew he was engaging in illegal activity when he signed his new contract in 2004, and that he had used the bonus money to pay for the operation. In February 2009, the Falcons revealed that they were considering trading Vick to another NFL team. Atlanta general manager
Thomas Dimitroff said NFL rules allowed teams to trade the contractual rights to suspended players. The Falcons released Vick in early June, however, making him an unrestricted free agent.
Philadelphia Eagles After his release from prison, Vick was mentored by former Indianapolis Colts coach
Tony Dungy. The prospect of his return to professional football was the subject of much conjecture as his suspension and incarceration continued. In 2007, ESPN's
John Clayton said few general managers were in a strong enough position to consider taking a chance on Vick, and even then most NFL owners would be concerned about a fan and media backlash. There was also no chance of Vick resurrecting his career in the
Canadian Football League, he said. Following a furor in 2007 over
Ricky Williams playing there while serving a suspension, the CFL banned players currently suspended by the NFL. In any case, Clayton said it would be nearly impossible for a convicted felon to get a Canadian work visa. He did think, however, that Vick would be "unstoppable" if he decided to play in the
Arena Football League.
2009 season Vick signed a one-year contract with the
Philadelphia Eagles on August 13, 2009. The contract was worth $1.6 million, with no money guaranteed. It contained a team option for the 2010 season worth $5 million. Vick was allowed to participate in all team practices and meetings as well as the Eagles' last two preseason games. He was eligible to play in the third week of the regular season. Starting quarterback
Donovan McNabb told reporters he gave coach
Andy Reid the idea to sign Vick. Vick was activated to the 53-man roster in mid-September and played sparingly for the rest of the season as McNabb's backup. In week 13 against the
Atlanta Falcons, Vick both threw and ran for a touchdown, his first scores since December 2006. Vick was voted by teammates as the winner of the
Ed Block Courage Award in December. The award honors players who "exemplify commitment to the principles of sportsmanship and courage". "It means a great deal to me," Vick said at the time. "I was voted unanimously by my teammates. They know what I've been through. I've been through a lot. It's been great to come back and have an opportunity to play and be with a great group of guys. I'm just ecstatic about that and I enjoy every day." The Eagles finished the season with an 11–5 record, making the
playoffs. In the team's NFC
Wild Card Round game against the
Dallas Cowboys on January 9, 2010, Vick threw the longest touchdown pass of his career to rookie
Jeremy Maclin for a 76-yard touchdown. The Eagles lost the game 34–14.
2010 season Reid named Donovan McNabb the Eagles' starter for the 2010 season, but McNabb was traded to the
Washington Redskins and
Kevin Kolb was named the starter. While relegated to a second-string role, Vick said he knew he could still play at a high level. Asked if he wanted the Eagles to pick up the second year of his contract, he said, "I hope so...I feel like I'm probably better than I ever was in my career, as far as the mental aspect of the game." The Eagles exercised his option for 2010 in March and Vick received a $1.5 million roster bonus. Reid named Vick the Eagles' starting quarterback on September 21 after Kolb suffered a concussion, and Vick performed well in his stead. In his second game as an Eagles starter versus the
Jacksonville Jaguars, Vick led the Eagles to a 28–3 win, throwing for 291 yards and three touchdowns and rushing for another touchdown. He was named the NFC Offensive Player of the Month for September. Vick suffered a rib cartilage injury in a week 4 game against
Washington, and was replaced by Kolb. Vick had passed for 49 yards with three carries for 17 yards in the game prior to the injury. In a Week 10
Monday Night Football matchup against the Washington Redskins on November 14, Vick passed for 333 yards and four touchdowns, while rushing for 80 yards and another two touchdowns. Vick threw an 88-yard touchdown pass to
DeSean Jackson on the first play from scrimmage in the game, and went on to help lead the Eagles to a 59–28 victory. Vick was named the NFC Offensive Player of the Week following his performance, and the
Pro Football Hall of Fame asked for his game jersey to display after he became the first player to pass for three touchdowns and rush for two touchdowns in the first half of a game.
In a game later in the season against the
New York Giants, Vick led a fourth-quarter rally to erase a 21-point deficit. He accounted for three touchdowns to tie the game with under two minutes left. DeSean Jackson returned the Giants' last punt of the game for a touchdown to win the game for the Eagles as time expired. Vick finished the season with 3,018 passing yards, 21 touchdowns, and six interceptions with a passer rating of 100.2. He had 100 carries for 676 yards and nine touchdowns. Philadelphia finished with a 10–6 record in 2010 and made the playoffs, but lost to the eventual
Super Bowl XLV champion
Green Bay Packers 21–16 in the
Wild Card Round. Vick made his fourth Pro Bowl after the season and was named the Eagles' starting quarterback. The
Associated Press and
Sporting News named him the
NFL Comeback Player of the Year. He also won the
Bert Bell Award on March 4, 2011. Vick finished second in the
NFL Offensive Player of the Year with 11 first place votes and
NFL MVP both awarded to
Tom Brady who won MVP unanimously. In early 2011, the Eagles placed their
franchise tag on Vick. He signed the one-year tender on March 2. On August 29, however, Vick and the Eagles announced they had agreed on a 6-year, $100 million contract with almost $40 million in guaranteed money. Vick was ranked 20th by his fellow players on the
NFL Top 100 Players of 2011. on October 16, 2011
2011 season In Week 4, against the
San Francisco 49ers, Vick had 416 passing yards, two passing touchdowns, and one interception to go along with eight carries for 75 rushing yards. The final game of the season was a 34–10 victory on January 1, 2012, at home against
Washington. Vick completed 24 of 39 passes for 335 yards and three touchdowns. In the 2011 season, Vick appeared in and started 13 games. He finished with 3,303 passing yards, 18 passing touchdowns, and 14 interceptions to go along with 76 carries for 589 rushing yards and one rushing touchdown. Led by Vick, Philadelphia finished the 2011 season with an 8–8 record. The team began with a 4–8 record before winning four games in a row to finish the season.
2012 season Vick came into week one of the
2012 season as the starter, despite a solid showing from rookie
Nick Foles in the preseason. Vick led the Eagles to a 17–16 victory in week one against the
Cleveland Browns despite throwing four interceptions. The Eagles won the following game against the
Baltimore Ravens, but lost 27–6 in the third week of the season to the
Arizona Cardinals. Facing former teammate
Kevin Kolb, Vick completed only 17 of 37 passes with no touchdowns and two lost fumbles. After the third loss against the
Atlanta Falcons on October 28, calls for coach Andy Reid to replace Vick with Foles intensified. Reid refused to make the move. The Eagles lost another game against the
New Orleans Saints, and Vick remained the starting quarterback for a week 10 game against the
Dallas Cowboys. Vick was injured in that game, which the Eagles lost, and was replaced by Foles. On December 3, after Vick had already been sidelined for three weeks, Reid officially named Foles the starter for the remainder of the season. After a Foles injury in week 16, Vick was named the starter for the season finale against the Giants in New York. Vick went 19 of 35 for 197 yards, a touchdown, and an interception, and also ran five times for 25 yards. The Eagles, however, lost the game 42–7, to end the season with a 1–5 division record and 4–12 overall record.
2013 season On February 11, 2013, the Eagles and Vick agreed on a one-year restructured contract worth up to $10 million. New head coach
Chip Kelly announced that Vick, Foles, and rookie
Matt Barkley would compete for the starting job. After a stellar preseason, Vick was able to reclaim his starting job from Foles, who was named Vick's backup. Vick started out well, winning his first game against
Washington and throwing his first career 400-yard game in a close loss to the
San Diego Chargers, with four passing touchdowns, two rushing touchdowns, and no interceptions in the two-game stretch. After that, Vick suffered losses against the
Kansas City Chiefs and
Denver Broncos, where he threw for one touchdown and three interceptions in that stretch (all three were thrown against Kansas City). In a game against the
New York Giants, Vick was 6 of 14 for 105 yards, when he suffered a hamstring injury. Nick Foles played stellar in his place, going 8–2 as starter, while throwing 27 touchdowns and only two interceptions with a 119.0 passer rating. Vick saw his only playing time in a 15–7 loss to the Giants, where he was 6 of 9 for 30 yards and an interception, but he again suffered an injury, this time to his quadriceps, and was replaced by rookie Matt Barkley, who played even worse. Foles returned the following week, and Vick spent the rest of the season as the backup, making only one more appearance in a blowout win over the
Chicago Bears.
New York Jets Vick signed a one-year $5 million contract with the
New York Jets on March 21, 2014, the same day the Jets released
Mark Sanchez. The Eagles signed Sanchez one week later. Vick chose to wear #8 as a tribute to
Steve Young, although several days later he decided to change it to No. 1, as #7 was already taken by
Geno Smith. Vick became the first quarterback in franchise history to wear the number. During Week 5 against the
San Diego Chargers, Vick came in relief of a struggling Geno Smith following halftime and finished the game with 47 passing yards as the Jets were shut out by the Chargers, 31–0. After seven consecutive losses,
Rex Ryan named Vick the starter over Smith for the Week 9 game against the
Kansas City Chiefs. Vick became the first quarterback to reach 6,000 rushing yards during Week 10 in a 20–13 win over the
Pittsburgh Steelers, which was one of three games that Vick started for the season.
Pittsburgh Steelers On August 25, 2015, Vick signed a one-year contract with the
Pittsburgh Steelers worth $970,000. The
Animal Rescue League of Western Pennsylvania made a subtle jab at the team on
Twitter by saying that they were now more proud to support the
Pittsburgh Penguins and subsequently moved an upcoming fundraiser event from
Heinz Field to
Consol Energy Center. Steelers president
Art Rooney II defended the Vick signing on
KDKA-TV, saying that they felt that Vick had proven himself since being released from prison. The Steelers had considered signing Vick in 2009—both Vick and Steelers head coach
Mike Tomlin are from the
same part of Virginia and know each other well personally—but decided against it due to potential backlash since Vick at the time hadn't proven himself following his release from prison. In Week 3, Vick was brought into action against the
St. Louis Rams after Roethlisberger sustained a knee injury that sidelined him for 4–6 weeks. In five weeks, Vick went 40 for 66 with two touchdowns and one interception, also rushing for 99 yards on 20 attempts. Vick suffered a hamstring injury in a win against the
Arizona Cardinals and was replaced by
Landry Jones. Vick would miss six games, and Roethlisberger eventually returned to his starting role. Vick would be inactive the remainder of the season, leading some sports commentators to speculate that Vick's playing career may be over.
Retirement In 2016, Vick announced he would play one more season in the NFL. However, after not signing with a team all season, he officially announced his retirement from professional football on February 3, 2017. On June 12, 2017, Vick retired as an Atlanta Falcon.
Post-NFL career On June 28, 2017, Vick began participating in the newly formed
American Flag Football League, serving as captain of Team Vick. The following year, he captained the Roadrunners, who ultimately lost to
Chad Johnson's team in the AFFL semifinal 26–13. ==Career statistics==