
Michael Vick Says He Would 'Love' to Coach in NFL
Former NFL quarterback Michael Vick revealed Friday that he has interest in a potential NFL coaching career.
In an interview with ESPN's Adam Schefter on the Know Them From Adam podcast (h/t ESPN.com), Vick expressed his desire to work with up-and-coming quarterbacks as a coach:
"I would love to coach in the National Football League one day. ... At some point, I'd definitely love to help work with young quarterbacks and develop them and still compete, you know, with the team and with the coaches."
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Vick also expressed his desire to use coaching as an outlet to pursue the championship he never won as a player:
"It's another way to chase a championship. You know I'm not done. I'm not done by any means. You know I didn't get the championship when I was playing, so, hey, maybe I'd get lucky one year, maybe fortunate enough to join the staff that may be good enough."
After sitting out the entire 2016 season, Vick told ESPN's Josina Anderson in February that he was officially retired from playing.
Vick told Schefter that he hasn't yet held official discussions with teams about coaching, and that he wants to "let it happen naturally."
The 36-year-old spent 13 seasons in the NFL with the Atlanta Falcons, Philadelphia Eagles, New York Jets and Pittsburgh Steelers.
He was the No. 1 overall pick in the 2001 NFL draft out of Virginia Tech, and he went on to reach four Pro Bowls.
Vick retired with a career record of 61-51-1 to go along with 22,464 passing yards, 133 touchdowns and 88 interceptions.
He also rushed for 36 touchdowns, and his 6,109 rushing yards are the most in NFL history among quarterbacks.

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