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How Lamar Jackson surpassed Michael Vick as the fastest QB in Madden history

The Ravens superstar has accomplished another feat — on the virtual gridiron

The conversations actually first began on April 26, 2018 — the night the Baltimore Ravens selected Lamar Jackson, the Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback from the University of Louisville, with the 32nd overall pick in the NFL draft.

At the NFL combine nearly two months prior, Jackson opted out of running the 40-yard dash because of skepticism about his ability to be a pro quarterback, as well as nudges from scouts to work out as a wide receiver. “I would’ve run a 4.3,” Jackson proclaimed the day of the combine. At Louisville’s pro day a few weeks later, he declined to run the 40 again. Jackson wanted to be a quarterback at the next level — not a wideout or running back.

Before he played a single down of football in the NFL, Jackson’s speed became somewhat of football folklore. Everyone knew he was fast — but how fast exactly? Developers and “ratings adjusters” at EA Sports, who work on football’s most popular video game, Madden NFL, asked themselves this question, while also posing another: Should Jackson surpass Michael Vick as the fastest quarterback in the history of the game?

“We’ve been talking about it since the day Lamar Jackson was drafted, believe it or not,” Clint Oldenburg, a former NFL offensive lineman turned gameplay producer at EA, told The Undefeated. After retiring from football, he joined the company as a design intern in 2012 and has worked there ever since. “There were strong debates about giving Lamar the highest-ever speed rating in the game straight out of college. That was an internal struggle between the development team and the ratings team. Really what it came down to was, ‘We know this guy has unreal speed. We know eventually he’s going to be electric. Let’s not just give away this rating that’s potentially going to unbalance the game. Let’s see what he has and make sure he earns it.’ ”

Jackson has certainly proven his case this season, while changing the perception of the makeup of a successful NFL quarterback. He’s led the Ravens to a 9-2 record as the league leader in total QBR (81.9) and the front-runner for MVP. He’s rushed for 60 or more yards in nine out of 11 games. And he’s on pace to break Vick’s record for most rushing yards by a quarterback in a single season.

Soon, he’ll achieve Madden immortality as the fastest quarterback ever in the game. On Nov. 25, Vick served as an honorary Madden ratings adjuster, attending Baltimore’s 45-6 win over the Los Angeles Rams on Monday Night Football — during which Jackson posted a 99.7 QBR after tying a career-high with five passing touchdowns and rushing for 95 yards. The day after the game, Vick delivered the news that as of Madden‘s next weekly roster update on Thursday, Jackson will now possess a speed rating of 96 — one point higher than the retired quarterback’s 95 speed rating from the timeless Madden 2004. Vick also revealed a custom pair of Nike Vapor Untouchable cleats — featuring both Jackson’s new speed rating and his trademark quote from the beginning of the season, “Not bad for a running back” — which were given to the Ravens quarterback to celebrate the Madden milestone.

“I’ll always be legendary on the game,” Vick, who was a big proponent of passing the torch to Jackson, told The Undefeated. “But right now, it’s a different time. It’s something special for Madden. And it’s special for Lamar. So why not?”


On Aug. 12, 2003, Vick’s life and the world of video gaming forever changed. That day marked the release of Madden 04, featuring the Atlanta Falcons’ then-23-year-old star quarterback as the cover athlete.

“I couldn’t believe I was on the cover of a video game,” Vick told The Undefeated. “When I first started playing Madden 92 when I was 12 years old, the game made me dream about playing in the NFL. Making it on the cover showed how much effort I put into being the best quarterback I could be. … It exemplified my opportunity in life and couldn’t have come at a better time. I was young and being on that cover made me more determined. It made me want to accomplish more.”

Vick in Madden 04 was an absolute cheat code. With a 97 arm strength rating, 95 agility rating and 95 speed rating, he became the best player in the history of Madden, perhaps even the greatest video game character of all time.

“Michael Vick literally broke the game in Madden 04,” Oldenburg told The Undefeated. “He was such a dual-threat quarterback. He was the meta. Everybody used Vick online, because his speed was unstoppable, plus he had a cannon. He could throw the ball really far. So, on defense, you had to commit to taking away one or the other — you couldn’t take away both.

“When I came to join the Madden team years later, the stories I heard about the things they had to do in Madden 05 and Madden 06 to balance the game for Michael Vick were pretty amazing. That’s when some of the mechanics for QB Spy and QB Contain were invented — things like that we had to build into the game to balance mobile quarterbacks.”

After Madden 04 released, Vick had one rule — he didn’t play the game against anyone using himself. It quite simply wouldn’t have been fair.

“I could never play with myself because I used to always just try to take off and run around the edge,” Vick recalled. “Running is instinctive, even on a video game … I was like, ‘I’d just beat everybody with speed.’ ”

Vick’s unprecedented speed rating of 95 (“I think I could’ve been faster, honestly,” he jokes) was unstoppable. So much so that he remembers players from across the league approaching him with some form of the same message: Look … I play with you when I’m playing against somebody and I wanna win some money,” Vick’s NFL counterparts would tell him. Yet to this day, he takes pride in covering Madden 04 — and the legend of his avatar’s abilities in the game — for another reason.

“I saw how that game affected kids all across the world,” Vick told The Undefeated, “how they idolized me, and wanted to be like me.”

One of those kids who idolized Vick was a young Lamar Jackson, who was 6 years old when Madden 04 dropped. “I love Michael Vick,” Jackson said at the combine in 2018. “That’s my favorite player of all time.”

After his NFL career ended in 2015, Vick tuned in to a Louisville game one weekend and saw Jackson play for the first time. “The similarities between us were there,” Vick recalled. “I reached out to him on Instagram. We exchanged numbers and became good friends. … I told Lamar what the game was gonna be like at the next level. I told him it wasn’t going to be hard. He just had to play his game and don’t do anything different.” And of course, Vick noticed how fast he could run with a football in his hands.

“Lamar’s speed is uncanny,” Vick told The Undefeated. “You don’t see most guys who are able to pick up 20 and 30 yards a pop downfield, and make guys miss while he’s doing it. It’s a freakish style of play. It’s something that we’re not used to seeing, but that we’ll probably see for a long time. As long as he can keep it up.”

Though Jackson’s speed received the attention of Madden developers and adjusters before he even suited up in the NFL, it took some time for him to take Vick’s place as the fastest quarterback in game history. When Madden 20, covered by Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, was released in August, Jackson received a speed rating of 94, though his overall rating was only a 76. Yet as the NFL season progressed and Jackson began to take over games on the real-life gridiron, his overall rating climbed to a current high of 87, while more and more gamers worldwide began playing with him. According to EA Sports, since Madden 20 launched, Jackson has the most rushing yards in the game with 704 million, and the most rushing touchdowns with 6.3 million.

Then came a Week 10 matchup between the Ravens and the Cincinnati Bengals — and Jackson’s internet-breaking 47-yard touchdown run.

“That spin move,” Oldenburg said, “that was pretty impressive. … We knew increasing his speed rating was coming, and that play kind of cemented it. There was no debate after that play where we could say, ‘We can’t really give this to him.’ … If Lamar Jackson is doing things that aren’t fair in the real NFL, we have to break our own limits.”

Lamar Jackson (right) of the Baltimore Ravens runs with the ball during the game against the Cincinnati Bengals at Paul Brown Stadium on Nov. 10 in Cincinnati.

Andy Lyons/Getty Images

For the first time in more than 15 years, Vick is not the fastest quarterback in Madden. It’s now Jackson, who’s emerged as the second coming of his childhood hero in both the real and virtual games of football.

“Michael Vick is still the greatest quarterback in Madden history,” Oldenburg said. “But I do believe if Lamar Jackson keeps going on the trend he’s going on, he may overtake that crown.”

Aaron Dodson is a sports and culture writer at Andscape. He primarily writes on sneakers/apparel and hosts the platform’s Sneaker Box video series. During Michael Jordan’s two seasons playing for the Washington Wizards in the early 2000s, the “Flint” Air Jordan 9s sparked his passion for kicks.