
Dirk Koetter (Associated Press)
FLOWERY BRANCH – New Falcons offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter participated in a conference call with the local media today.
He met with quarterback Matt Ryan for about an hour during the interview process.
Koetter said he has more film study to do on the Falcons, but stated that he’s a proponent of the vertical passing game, running the football and that he’s been ordered to improve the team’s screen passing attack.
Here’s what he had to say:
Q: What are your thoughts on being named the offensive coordinator of the Atlanta Falcons?
A: (Laughs!) Obviously, I’m thrilled to be named. It’s a chance for me to work inside a great organization with a tremendous coaching staff led by coach [Mike] Smith and a team that’s got a great group of players. Who wouldn’t be excited about that.
Q: Will you bring your offense? Or will you be keeping what’s here? And, where does the no-huddle fit in your operation?
Well, I think probably a combination. I don’t know if anybody owns any offenses out there. There is a lot of good offense out there. I think it would be a combination of things that I have done in the past and things that Atlanta has done well in the past. I think it would be foolish to not build on some of the things that Atlanta is already doing very well and take advantage of those coaches that are going to remain on the staff and what they’ve done. Definitely, watching from afar, Atlanta played well in the no-huddle. Talking to Matt Ryan, that is something that Matt is excited about so the no-huddle will certainly be a part of it. What percentage is still to be determined.

Atlanta Falcons Tony Gonzalez is upended by Saints defenders after catching a pass. Curtis Compton, ccompton@ajc.com
A:
Q: Have you gone back and looked at that film of the Jacksonville game?
A: That is one of the few films that I have seen because with the coaching change, I haven’t been able to get to all of my film the last few days. I’m anxious to watch all of the games. That will be one of my first orders of business when I get there. I did watch that game. Obviously, the Falcons played tremendous that night when we played them. They were on fire that night. I’m anxious to watch all 16 of them.
Q: What can you share about your conversions with Matt Ryan?
A: I’m looking forward to working with Matt. I had studied Matt when he came out of Boston College four years ago. I loved him at the time. Since we practiced against Atlanta the last two years, I got to see him in those settings as well. I had met him a couple of times before. I’d always been impressed. I had a chance to sit down with him the other day for about an hour or so. You can tell that Matt is a guy who really understands offensive football. He’s got a great passion for not only playing, but winning. I couldn’t be more excited to work with Matt as well as some of the excellent players that they have on that offensive group.

110812 Atlanta - Smoke and fire surround Atlanta Falcons rookie wide receiver Julio Jones as he enters the stadium to take on the Miami Dolphins at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta on Friday, August 12, 2011. Curtis Compton ccompton@ajc.com
Q: Have you studied some of the other offensive personnel, other than the big wideouts and Tony [Gonzalez]? Players like Kerry Meier, Harry Douglas and Jacquizz Rodgers and how they might fit into the operation?
A: I’ve been locked out of my film. I haven’t had a chance to look at them. Julio for example, I studied him coming out for the draft a year ago. Guys that I studied for the draft, I have watched their college tape. . . . what some of those guys have done statistically, speaks for itself. Roddy [White], Tony Gonzalez, Michael Turner with back-to-back 1,300 yards, everybody can read the stats and know that those guys have excellent skill players there. How everything fits together, that will be stuff that we’ll be working on once I get up there.
Q: Folks want a playoff win badly. What would you say to this fan-base about what you hope to do given that you all have not been extremely successful on offense in Jacksonville?
A: Sure, yeah. Well, the Falcons have done very well over the last four years. You’ve got to make it to the playoffs first. They’ve done a good job of that. I’ve got to come in there and just do the best job that I can in trying to help everybody be the best that they can be. That’s all any coach can do. The fact that I’ve

101024 Atlanta - ONE HANDED CATCH - Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Roddy White makes a one handed catch against Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Adam Jones for a 1st down during 2nd quarter action at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta on Sunday, Oct. 24 , 2010. Curtis Compton ccompton@ajc.com
got experience working [with] Mike Smith and I have tremendous respect for him as a leader and as a coach as well as the other members of that coaching staff and what they’ve already done . . . there is pressure everywhere. Nobody puts more pressure on me than I put on myself. All I can say is that I’ll be extremely dedicated to the task at hand and I’ll understand the task at hand.
Q: Are you still convinced that running the football is that big a part of professional football?
A: Running the football is definitely a part of professional football. That’s never going to go away. I’m a big believer in the vertical passing game. Every where I’ve been we’ve had an element of the vertical game. Your offense is always going to be dictated to some extent by your personnel. Every team in the NFL knows that you have to be able to run it even when they know you’re going to run it. You have to be able to throw it even when they know you’re going to throw it. Running the football, there’s definitely still a place for that in the NFL. You ask any defensive coach and one of the hardest things to defend is balance. Balance is difficult to defend. When you have got the weapons that Atlanta has in the skill positions, both in the pass game and the run game, I think you’d be foolish not to take advantage of everything that has to offer. But there are various ways to get guys the ball. You have to get playmakers the ball with a chance to make plays. There are different ways to do that. Obviously, the no-huddle, the screen-game, the play-action game, but there is definitely a time and place to run the football. In my five years in Jacksonville that was the strength of this team. When I first came here we had two tremendous backs in Fred Taylor and Maurice Jones-Drew. It continued after Fred left with Maurice. Obviously, they have a similar situation there in the running game with Michael Turner.
Q: What is your timetable for being on site here?
A: Soon. Those details are being worked out today. I expect to be in Atlanta sometime later this week. The details of that are still being finalized as we speak. I’m anxious to get there and get started.
Q: With Green Bay and New Orleans losing, the two flashiest offenses in the NFL are out of the playoffs. What are you observations just watching this scenario over the last couple of days?
A: That’s why you play the games. Everybody wants to say it’s a passing league. Defense doesn’t matte

Atlanta Falcons running back Michael Turner (33) rushes in the first quarter of an NFL football game against the New Orleans Saints in New Orleans, Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. AP
r. Running the ball doesn’t matter. But then look at what happened this weekend. The 49ers played a tremendous game and they are more of running and defensive team. They knocked out New Orleans, who was as hot as anybody. Then you know, Green Bay, arguably the best passing offense on the planet, gets beat at home by a hot Giants team. You guys know all too well how hot the Giants are. Again, that’s why we play the games. There are so many big things that go into winning and losing; the chemistry of the team, being hot at the right time, injuries, who’s healthy and who’s not. There are so many things that go into it. Today, here we are [and] we’re talking about little specifics of are we going to be a vertical passing team, are we going to be no-huddle team; in today’s NFL you have to be able to do everything well. It’s such a matchup game and it’s such a situational game, you’ve got to be able win some games in shootouts. You have to be able to win some games when there is bad weather and you’ve got to grind it out and run the ball. There are going to be some bad weather games not in Atlanta, but on the road. There are just so many possibilities and I think this weekend, this playoff scenario, just made that obvious to everyone.
Q: The Falcons struggled with the blocking while trying to throw the vertical passes early last season and the screen game didn’t work arguably because of the blocking. How do you coach that up or try to add that to the attack here.”
A: Some of these questions, I’ll be more prepared to answer after I’ve studied the tape a little bit more. I’m a big believer in the screen game and I don’t know anything about the issues [with pass protection.] But I’m a big believer in the screen game. Coach Smith has mentioned to me that he would like us to be a better screen team and that’s definitely a part of what we’ll try to do there. As far as the pass protection,

Atlanta Falcons head coach Mike Smith, right, shakes hands with New York Giants head coach Tom Coughlin before their NFL wild card playoff football game Sunday, Jan. 8, 2012, in East Rutherford, N.J. AP
until I take a look at the tape and study that a little bit more, I’m just not able to say at this point in time.
Q: Who were your coaching influences?
A: Definitely, if you look around, there are a lot of guys that are the sons of coaches and I’m one of those guys. My father was a high school and a college coach. I grew up a football junky. I wanted to be a coach because I wanted to be like my Dad. Then after getting on the move and moving around the country as a college coach I had the good fortune of working for Vic Rowen at San Francisco State and it was a three man staff. Vic Rowen, myself and Andy Reid. Andy and I coach together at three different schools – San Francisco State, UTEP and Missouri. I’ve been around Andy. I went to Boston College. I was hired by Tom Coughlin and then retained by Dan Henning. I learned a lot of football from Dan Henning. Dan had won two Super Bowls as the offensive coordinator under coach [Joe] Gibbs with the Redskins. I learned a lot of football from Dan, who was a very successful coach in the NFL. Also, in the college ranks [I was with] Mike Bellotti at Oregon. Mike certainly did a lot of things that were a little bit ahead of his time. He did a lot of offensive things. I’ve been fortunate that I’ve been a play-caller for like 25 years. I’ve been able to experiment and do a lot of things and come up with things that I like to do. Now, after five years in the NFL and working with some great coaches and great players, I think I’ve learned a lot. I’ve been able to study all of the best coaches in the NFL over the last five years. I feel like I’m prepared for this job and I’m looking forward to it.
Q: How much credit do we give you for establishing the winning foundation at Boise

Ryan in the preseason against the Steelers.
State?
A: (Laughs) That’s up to you, how much credit you give me. But, we got that Boise State thing going. I was the head coach there for three years and had an awesome staff. When I left, Dan Hawkins took it. Dan had been on my staff. Chris Peterson and I were together at Oregon. Chris took it from Hawk and I’m very, very proud of what Boise State has accomplished over the last 12 years. I’m proud of the role I played in it. But Coach Hawk and Coach Pete have definitely taken it higher and higher. Coach Pete is doing a tremendous job there now.
Q: Where did your dad coach?
A: My Dad was a high school coach at Pocatello, Idaho and later was the head coach at Idaho State.
Q: At Jacksonville you had some uncertainty at the quarterback position for the last couple of years. What’s it like from your perspective, coming into a situation where you have an established front-line quarterback and you know what he can do?
A: This is a quarterback-driven league right now. So much is put on the quarterbacks each week, not only throwing the ball, but getting you out of bad plays, avoiding turnovers. Matt has proven over his first four years that he belongs in the upper echelon of quarterbacks in the league. It’s a great opportunity for me to come in there and work with Matt. I think the teams in the league, and there are several, that don’t have what they consider to be an elite quarterback are always trying to get one. Teams that do have one are glad that they have one and are trying to build around them. The Falcons have done a nice job of building around Matt. I’m looking forward to getting in there and working with those guys.
Q: Did you speak to Matt before or after you were hired?
A: Before.
–D. Orlando Ledbetter, The Atlanta Falcons beat blog
310 comments Add your comment
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
7:35 pm
How many years did it take Dan Reeves to get the NFC Champ win and a shot at the Superbowl ?
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
7:36 pm
See Michael…Waste of time…….LMAO!
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
7:37 pm
One year. Care to take a guess as to what he did in the five years after?
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
7:37 pm
3 years if memory serves correctly? I did not look it up..
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
7:38 pm
I’ll give em a little bit of time to figure it out..about an hour should be well longer than enough
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
7:38 pm
LOL!
NATIVEBIRD
January 16th, 2012
7:38 pm
Welcome coach. It is what it is.
Please get Matt to work out and to build more arm muscle mass so that he CAN throw the vertical passes we know we need to be successful in this league. Everyone knows he has a noodle arm. Compare his arms to Drew Brees, Alex Smith, Ben Roth, etc. He arms look like a woman’s with no definition and skinny. He’s too weak to throw the ball downfield especially under duress. JUST SAYING.
Good luck and as long as you coach like you will only be in Atlanta 1 year if this offense stays predictable, you’ll be fine. Because if you don’t protect Matt, get him in a physical condition that he can avoid the rush and still be accurate downfield, improve our screen and rushing attack, and improve our explosive play ratio, YOU AND SMITTY WILL BE SHIPPED BACK TO JACKSONVILLE FOR A GRAND REUNION WITH YOUR NEW BOSS MIKE (you know exactly which play I’m gonna call) MULARKEY!
Anyway again welcome.
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
7:39 pm
Smith will be 0-4! lol
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
7:39 pm
I just told you the answer. It’s one year. He became HC in 97, won the NFC in 98. That’s one year for those of us who can count
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
7:40 pm
Okay then………..heres the toughie ……………….Why hasn’t Atlanta got to the Superbowl yet with a better Team than the 98 band of ragtag misfits and some trade offs,etc,etc ????
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
7:41 pm
Matt cant be helped..Its more than arm strength with him..
His pocket awareness is horrific, He’s non athletic also…He’s a throw back to the good ole days..
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
7:42 pm
That’s a hard one there………..
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
7:43 pm
It’s not that tough at all really. The 98 team had tremendous heart. And as big a supporter of the Falcons as I am, I actualyl can admit they had no heart this year. Unlike your new friend CGD suggests, I’m no homer, I just know football, and I’m a Falcons supporter, but I can actually do it objectively, without being an obnoxious tool. The 98 team had heart.
Fun fact, It also only took Mora one year to reach the NFC championship. Now, for comparisons sake, would you care to take a guess at what either of those coaches did after those seasons?
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
7:45 pm
Hey Michael your new homer knows football but cant see a tree standing before him while hanging out in the FOREST!!! LMAO!!!
Awesome…..
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
7:48 pm
0-4. Mr Smith ya got those bags packed yet..Maybe you should ask Melt to give ya a hand?
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
7:49 pm
I just tell it like it is when the new Season unfolds and its a bad start again say first 4 or 5 gaes dont nobody say I didn’t tell you so………..I hate to see broken hearts again and fingers pointing everywhere but at the real source
Mike
January 16th, 2012
7:50 pm
Only way I would have brought this guy in is if MJD were coming with him.
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
7:50 pm
ohhhhYEAH I posted an answer but it had V in it and got put out there in the internet airwaves somewhere
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
7:51 pm
Thought you didn’t respond to “homers” CGD?
Or is that only when you can’t give an opinion? You stay away from answers that involve actual facts right? Because they can’t be interpreted differently.
Here’s a question. How many times have you seen me say today that Ryan is an elite QB? You haven’t. Because I never said it. I said he has been handcuffed by a terrible offensive coordinator who hasn’t given him a chance to just go out and either win the game or lose it. It’s always been a product of Mularkey. THEN, I said, I’ll give him one more year and if, under a new system, he fails, then I will admit he is nothing but an average QB at best. But you see, that kind of talk isn’t good enough for you, because all you want to do is talk your nonsense and give your half hearted opinions that rarely make sense.
So its fine, you can think what you want, because at the end of the day I sleep perfectly fine, and never give you a second thought once I close my lap top.
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
7:53 pm
Michael you have a break through Sir!!!!!!!!!!
Good work!!
Sir Crap A Lot
January 16th, 2012
7:55 pm
@UGA Bugkiller,
Please quit talking about BVG at UGA. The NFL is NOT college football. BVG’s defense putting up good stats against Vandy, Ole Miss, and the other crappy schools don’t have any relevance with the pro game. I will guarantee that against the likes of Florida, Auburn, Tennessee, etc, UGA’s D was at best marginal. Week in and out in NFL, there isn’t very much of a drop off from team to team – hence BVG’s crappy stats every year. Open your eyes and realize it has nothing to do with Mike Smith. UGA played a zone blitzing scheme the whole time he was there with virtually no man-to-man press.
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
7:57 pm
All I have done is get some folks mad at me for speaking the truth and next Season they going to be sayin ” Oh, Why did we let Mularkey go we should have kept him , I knew this was going to happen “, they sound like my ” Mother n Law” all doom and gloom when the Team fails to excel !
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
7:57 pm
Had nothin to do with Micheal, I said it way earlier in the day, before Mike even started talking about pointing fingers at Ryan. That’s the kind of half-brained mentality I’m talking about.
When I said earlier I can be objective, that’s exactly what I meant. I never once said that Ryan was elite, it’s just people like you who have nothing better to do than start nonsense and fail to realize some people can be objective AND supportive at the same time.
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
7:59 pm
Whoa there, Sir Crap….
Dont go spitting FACTS like that around on this blog…..there are some people who simply can’t handle truths. They only like opinions that they can mold to fit whatever lame idea they have about what’s going on.
Keep it real friend!
Sir Crap A Lot
January 16th, 2012
8:00 pm
@NATIVEBIRD, the distance that Matt Ryan can throw has nothing to do with the size of his arm. It has to do with the tightness and anatomy of his rotator cuff, his core and leg strength. Your logic would dictate that Hulk Hogan could throw further and harder than John Smoltz or Nolan Ryan. If you want to talk about skinny arms but someone who has a cannon, look back at Pedro Martinez or Jim Kelly.
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
8:01 pm
Preach on Michael!.. You’re convertin em one mind at time….
Ego is a tough nut to crack…LOL!
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
8:02 pm
Wish we had a Jim Kelly for QB …..lol
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
8:03 pm
About 2/3 ’s of the way through next Season, I think they will be quite a few conversions then
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
8:03 pm
Man that “Tree” is hard to see? Must have some shielding technology in operation?
Samuel
January 16th, 2012
8:05 pm
We all know in the business world that we usually hire people you worked with before, or there’s a trust factor there. Being said that, Mike Smith is on the clock. He fully knows per- Mr. Blank that winning in the post season is imperitive. I’m not concerned with the coordinator, my concerns are the execution of plays with the players. Coming out the gate with stupid penalties and the lack of focus, should not be tolerated. Now that the Falcons have changed coordinators, hopefully we can began the process of weeding out players who aren’t productive on the offensive side of the ball.
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
8:06 pm
The homers ignore the “facts” that don’t fit their excuses…Hmmm…nothing new there….
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
8:06 pm
New York Times: Hobo Dies on Corner of 7th and Broadway, CGD Now Has Lowest IQ on Planet.
It’s official, congrats buddy! Your lack of intelligent rhetoric and failure to comprehend has landed you at the top! We all know you worked so hard
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
8:07 pm
By the way, tell me exactly which “fact” of yours that I’ve ignored. I’ll be more than happy to adress them one by one.
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
8:07 pm
address*
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
8:07 pm
News Flash: Coach Smith already has his next job lined up when his buddy Mularkey became the HC of Jacksonville Jaguars….Nice
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
8:08 pm
See Michael: waste of time…….
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
8:09 pm
See Micheal: He has no proof of any “facts” that he has said that I’ve ignored, so I then become a waste of time. Good one
CGD..
January 16th, 2012
8:10 pm
Ah poor guy has lame jokes…so sad….lol
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
8:11 pm
Enter your comments here
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
8:13 pm
I shoulda never said nothing and just went along with it for another year and then read all the fire him fire her crap again………..
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
8:13 pm
I wasn’t even aware that I had tried to joke. What’s sad is your inability to point out ANYTHING to back up whatever pathetic point it is that you are trying to make, and then when someone calls you on it, the best you can come up with is “waste of time.” We get it, really. You like throwing out stupid opinions that you can’t back up, and then when people call you on it, you say they’re a homer or uneducated, and that’s fine. But sooner or later, you really shuold try to back up the nonsense you speak.
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
8:19 pm
It will be alright, Atlanta’s going deep in the playoffs and Ryan’s going to throw over 5000 passing yards with 45 touches to boot this coming Season
D. Orlando Ledbetter
January 16th, 2012
8:20 pm
Y’all be kind to one another.
“Three things in human life are important: the first is to be kind; the second is to be kind; and the third is to be kind.” — Henry James quote
ohhhhYEAH
January 16th, 2012
8:21 pm
Oh well….as fun as it’s been making you look like an ignorant troll to everyone not named CGD, I have to be going now. And remember, real men don’t blog behind other men’s backs, wait until I get online tomorrow and we can pick this back up
That should give you some time to (maybe) find some numbers and throw out some new “facts” for me to discredit.
Micheal, keep it real man. And remember, you’re better than CGD, don’t stoop to that level. Support our Birds and let the chips fall where they may! PEACE!
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
8:21 pm
that’s what we wanna hear……” Dream a Dream ” !
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
8:22 pm
Alwaysssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
Michael M.
January 16th, 2012
8:32 pm
3 things important in football for the Quarterback too ..number one) throw with accuracy and hit the intended target………..number two) avoid the Sack……………..number three) don’t throw the interception
Manny
January 16th, 2012
9:00 pm
My $0.02-
The screen pass may work well with this team, but you need upgrades on the line. Matt Ryan would be perfect for that kind of attack.
Running, screens and outs and slants will make Matt Ryan look really good. But he needs to stop the insistence on vertical passing. Mularkey had many vertical passes in the package, but Matt Ryan would always either audible out of it or check down.
But we can probably dink and dunk our way to a playoff win and that would be a good system.
NFL Notebook: Koetter excited by talent in Atlanta – Florida Times-Union | Football News Pro
January 16th, 2012
9:23 pm
[...] Atlanta Journal Constitution [...]
Football Bat
January 16th, 2012
9:24 pm
If this guy has enough brains not to run a draw on 2nd and 23, he will be an improvement over Mularkey.