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Old 10-22-2006, 09:28 PM   #29
#1MavsFan
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Originally Posted by Five-ofan
Oh really now? I am a huge vince fan, we all know that. However since Vince hasnt played enough NFL games to make a comparison there, so for now all i can go by is their college numbers and what I see. Vince was literally twice the runner Vick was in college. Vick is a little faster but its not a huge difference(Vick runs a 4.3 something and Vince runs a 4.4 something) Vick can make more people completely miss him than vince but if you can get your hands on him hes going down. Vince on the other hand can make people miss too but cant be arm tackled(no not even in the nfl). Overall, considering how much better Vince was as a runner in college, I expect him to be better in the nfl as well.
As much as I love Vince, I have to say that you can't compare their college careers since Vick left as a sophmore. Here's a bio of Vick's college career:

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One of the most exciting athletes to ever play college football. Applied for early entry into NFL draft (as a redshirt sophomore) after two seasons as Virginia Tech’s starter and one appearance in National Championship Game. Led the Hokies into the National spotlight for two seasons and carried the school (on his arm and legs) to compete in the National Championship Game in his first season as a college starting quarterback in 1999. Captured the first-ever Archie Griffin Award as college football Player of the Year as a redshirt freshman that season when he led the nation in passing efficiency at 180.37, the second-highest total ever, and guided the Hokies to a perfect 11-0 regular season record. Set an NCAA record for a freshman in the process and established single-season school records for highest yards passing per completion (20.4), per attempt (12.1), highest completion % (59.2) and most yards per play (9.3). Appeared in 10 games, completing 90 of 152 passes for 1,840 yards with 12 touchdowns, and rushed 108 times for 585 yards with eight more scores. Averaged 242.5 yards of offense per game. His incredible performance in the Sugar Bowl vs. Florida State for the National Championship included completing 15 of 29 pass attempts for 225 yards with a 49 yard touchdown pass, as well as gaining 97 yards on 23 carries with a three yard score, to total 322 yards of offense in almost single-handidly engineering an upset before falling, 46-29. Finished third in the balloting for the coveted Heisman Trophy (matching the highest finish ever by a freshman) while coming away with the hardware for Big East Conference Offensive and Rookie of the Year and finished runner-up in voting for the Associated Press Player of the Year. Became the first player in Division I history to win a league’s Player of the Year Award in the same season he won Rookie of the Year. As a sophomore in 2000, he completed 87 of 161 passes for 1,234 yards with eight touchdowns while carrying 104 times for 607 yards. Finished his career with a 20-1 record as starter at Virginia Tech.
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