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Motivation Quote by Michael Vick

"The good thing is I don't put the ball in my right hand and I'm predominantly left-handed when I'm running the ball. I just have to take care of the football and even if I have two hands that are 100 percent, I still can't turn the ball over. It's just something I have to mentally prepare for, and I think I'm strong enough to do that"

About this Quote

Michael Vick frames ball security as a matter of discipline rather than circumstance. As a left-handed quarterback who often ran with the ball in his left arm, he notes that a right-hand injury does not change his core habit. That detail offers a glimpse into the mechanics behind his improvisational style: even at top speed, there is a deliberate choice about where the ball lives and how it is protected. Yet he immediately undercuts any relief the injury detail might offer. Whether both hands are healthy or not, turnovers are unacceptable. The standard remains the same.

The emphasis on mental preparation reveals a veteran’s understanding of risk management. Running quarterbacks face constant judgment about recklessness; the difference between a highlight and a turnover is often a few inches of ball placement or a split-second decision to clamp with two hands through contact. Vick identifies that thin margin and locates it in the mind as much as the body. Technique under pressure is a product of rehearsal and resolve: high and tight, two hands in traffic, smart slides, and a willingness to live for the next snap. Mentally preparing is not abstract toughness; it is a commitment to repeatable habits when chaos hits.

Context matters here. During his Eagles years, Vick played through injuries, including to his non-throwing hand, while also facing scrutiny for fumbles and interceptions. A quote like this is a bid for accountability and leadership. He refuses the easy out of injury and accepts the quarterback’s responsibility to possession and field position. It is maturity distilled: awareness of his own tendencies, an acknowledgment of past mistakes, and confidence that focus can close the gap.

Beneath the specifics of handedness lies a universal athlete’s truth. You cannot control every hit, but you can control your preparation and your choices. Vick’s assertion is ultimately about owning that space, and trusting that mental strength can harden technique into habit.

Quote Details

TopicTraining & Practice
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The good thing is I dont put the ball in my right hand and Im predominantly left-handed when Im running the ball.
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Michael Vick (born June 26, 1980) is a Athlete from USA.

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