Atlanta Falcons: Birds Squeak by Raiders to 6-0

Another Win with a Sloppy Effort

Falcons defensive end John Abraham forces a fumble with a hit on Raiders quarterback Carson Palmer during the third quarter Sunday at the Georgia Dome. Falcons defensive end Ray Edwards recovered the fumble and advanced it to just short of the end zone.

Thank Goodness for Abe (AJC)

The Atlanta Falcons are the only undefeated team in the NFL, so why do fans feel so nervous or unfulfilled? After roaring out of the gates to a 3-0 start and looking excellent in all phases of the game, the Birds have come back to Earth a bit and looking pedestrian in all areas of the game, especially on offense. On one hand, the team is showing mettle, heart, and determination in finding ways to win, even if very ugly. However, if it continues for several weeks, a disturbing trend begins to take shape and what once was a strength starts to become a weakness because the team is putting itself in positions to have to win at the last minute due to the overall poor play. The fact is that the Falcons are 6-0, even though they’ve not looked very good lately. But isn’t getting a win, however you attain it, better than losing? Many teams thought to be “dominant” by the media elite talking heads have suffered losses to teams believed to be at the bottom. That speaks to NFL’s parity and winning the first 6 games, however it’s done, is a testament to the Falcons, their coaches, and their players. Whether or not it will serve to benefit or harm in the future is yet to be determined, but the reality is that the Falcons are undefeated and 31 other teams are not. A look at the Raiders game……….

Once a Strength is Becoming a Weakness

At first, it was a great strength showing determination, mettle, and finding a way to win at the last second. The Falcons didn’t play great against an inspired Panthers team coming off a bye week. They willed themselves to a win with less than a minute. Then came a Redskins game that was filled with major mistakes, slogging around, until they finally put together a TD drive and subsequent defensive stand to win the game. OK, it’s on the road and the Redskins have shown a lot of promise. A third week in a row of not playing good is a disturbing trend and is now becoming a weakness. Fact is, the Falcons are putting themselves in these situations where they must scratch and claw from behind to win the game. No other series identifies it better: Asante Samuel makes a beautiful pick six to seemingly put the game away. Then the Raiders offense commences to go right down the field to score with two minutes and not needing any of their 3 timeouts. Once a great strength of character and will is simply becoming a product a weak and sloppy play.

Matt Ryan’s Bad, Bad Day

Quarterback Matt Ryan picks up yardage on a quarterback keeper, escaping the pressure from Raiders defensive tackle Richard Seymour during the second half.

This is About Right (AJC)

Let’s all hope it was just one of those days because it was a really bad one. Ryan threw 3 interceptions (all weren’t necessarily his fault), but some were. He seemed to have happy feet due to poor offensive line play. Not all was on him, but he had plenty of bad throws and misfires all on his own. He missed open receivers, threw the ball high, and generally had an awful day all around. Maybe it was just a bad day against a well-schemed defense. Perhaps the play-calling didn’t help any. The lack of running game surely isn’t helping and neither are the drops. Ryan’s had an excellent year to date, but he needs a game like he had vs. San Diego to erase the Raiders performance.

Abraham the Ageless Wonder

Thank goodness the Falcons found a way to keep John Abraham. The guy is a complete stud and is warming up his Ring of Honor flag as we speak. We as fans always mention Tony Gonzalez when discussing a Falcon that defies age. But Abraham deserves that praise too. He turned 34 this year and many (including this author) wondered how much he had left in the tank. Well, he’s proving once and for all just how awesome he is and by default how anemic our pass rush is without him. He notched 3 sacks, forced a fumble at a crucial time, and got several holding calls against him. In short, he was unblockable. Already, he has 6 sacks in 6 games. Abraham is the man.

Does the Offensive Line Need a Shakeup?

No, it wasn’t the worst performance of the year (that would be Carolina with 7 sacks in one game), but this offensive line is causing heartburn for Falcons fans looking forward on the schedule when they play really good defensive lines. They weren’t outright terrible in pass blocking in the beginning of the season, but now they’re looking as bad as last year. And run blocking is another nightmare altogether. But really, how much should have been expected with the EXACT SAME starting offensive line as last year?

Baker is a little better, but not dominant. Blalock is the only rock on the team. Todd McClure is on the downside of 35. Garrett Reynolds is only slightly better than last year and that’s saying very little and many think he would be better at his natural position of tackle anyway. And then there’s Tyson Clabo. He has had an absolutely atrocious year. They’re just not getting it done and it shows. Sure, Michael Turner and the running backs aren’t making plays and the play-calling seems mediocre at best recently, but this is what most fans expected when literally no changes were made. Thomas Dimitroff deserves some criticism for the past of the this line, but he used his first two picks (2nd on Peter Konz, 3rd on Lamar Holmes) on offensive linemen. Why not try these guys out for a few series and see what happens? Why not mix it up some and move some of these guys around? Is one of the best overall linemen in the entire draft (Konz) really not good enough to start somewhere on this offensive line? Of all the issues that’s most maddening fans: Mike Smith and the coaching staff’s refusal to try anything different regarding the offensive line two years running.

Speed Needed at Running Back

This may just be an excuse in trying to make up reasons why the offense has been doing so poorly, but here goes: the Falcons need more speed in the backfield. It’s been well documented here in The Cage about Michael Turner and his slowing down or not fitting in this new offense among many other things. The Falcons coaching staff decided to go with Turner as their feature back this year and, even though a few times he’s done OK, mostly he’s looked completely out of sorts with this new offense. Gone are the days of one of the best lead blocking (and highest paid) fullbacks in the league clearing holes, the days of a power-run first offense, and offensive line opening “garage-sized holes” as Cage member SOMEBODY said. The best running backs in the league simply slow down as they approach 30 years old and especially with Turner having so many carries in such a short amount of time.

Falcons running back Michael Turner is brought down by Raiders safety Tyvon Branch, right, for short yardage during the second half Sunday.

Running Game is Anemic (AJC)

The issues go beyond Turner, however. Jacquizz Rodgers was thought to be somewhat of an answer and may even contend for close to 40-50% of Turner’s touches, but that surely has not been the case. Maybe it’s play-calling or just lack of playing time, but Rodgers has not turned into the player many fans expected. On the 3rd and 1 toss play to Rodgers, he had room to get the first down, but was easily caught and dropped for a loss. Even his specialty of catching the ball in space had issues when he bobbled a well-timed screen that could have gone for many yards. The odd man out has definitely been Jason Snelling. Many ream the call to give Snelling the ball on 3rd and short, but many times he tends to run just as hard as Turner and does a better job of hitting the hole. The cold truth is that the Falcon simply don’t have speed at running back and haven’t for quite some time. Antone Smith has shown some serious speed in pre-season only to never get touches in a game. What could it hurt? Look no further than Alfred Morris of the Redskins and Andre Brown of the Giants (filling in for Ahmad Bradshaw) tearing it up this year alone. Like the OL issue, that’s a major thorn for fans as well, a refusal to mix it up and give some guys a few chances. From where it stands now, running back surely could be a candidate for a 1st or 2nd round pick in 2013.

Defensive Tackle Could Use a Corey Peters Boost

Peria Jerry, Jonathan Babineaux, and Vance Walker have done a good job getting penetration in the backfield so far this season. Thought to be a possible weakness, they’ve done an admirable job overall. But they sure could use a boost, especially in the run game from a guy by the name of Corey Peters. Believed to be the best overall defensive tackle for the Falcons by many fans, Peters has been out the entire season going all the way back to training camp. He may not be ready for the Eagles game, but getting him back on a defense that could tighten up will be a nice shot in the arm.

More Issues at LB

Not having Stephen Nicholas at full strength really has shown just how fragile the Falcons linebacking corps is. Akeem Dent and Mike Peterson were on the field at the same time many times throughout the game, with Dent playing the entire game. Dent occasionally shows some promise as a very young player in the run game, but he’s just as lost as Curtis Lofton was in pass coverage. As the season wears on, the decision to not sign a linebacker for backup purposes may end up biting the Birds at some point.

Why is the Offense Digressing?

Falcons fans cheer as wide receiver Roddy White (right) celebrates his touchdown catch from Matt Ryan  with Harry Douglas for a 7-3 lead over the Raiders during the second quarter.

Happening Much Less than it Used to (AJC)

Is it the anemic run game? Is it the offensive line? Is Matt Ryan simply coming off his hot start? Are defenses figuring out what the Falcons want to do? Is it just execution, or is it bad play-calling? Who knows exactly why the Falcons have continued to devolve on offense the last three weeks, but this much is certain: it definitely has. The Falcons looked unstoppable against a pretty good San Diego defense, but has hit a wall of sorts since. They left many points on the board vs. Carolina and gave up 7 sacks. They played 3 quarters of weak offensive football in DC before finally getting it together. And they looked as bad as they ever have against the Oakland Raiders on Sunday. Whatever the reason, the coaching staff and offense better get some things figured out before a tough part of the schedule starts coming up.

Harry Douglas Needs More Snaps

This is nothing new and it has nothing to do with that spectacular off-the-helmet catch he made on the ground, but Harry Douglas should get not only more snaps on offense, but more touches as well. The idea is that it’s impossible to cover all of the Falcons aerial weapons, but despite only a few occurrences, Douglas just doesn’t get that many looks. Either that or Dirk Koetter doesn’t know how to use him correctly. Seemingly, it would be a coordinators dream to have such an explosive slot man (and to his credit, he’s giving him more looks than Mularkey did), but he never seems to get chances to do what he does best which is to catch and run in space. Perhaps this is more of a critique on formations (3 receiver, 1 TE, single back) sets than anything else, but if you’re going to be an explosive passing team, you have to maximize all your weapons and the slot doesn’t seem to be getting enough snaps or targets. No disrespect intended, but do we really want to see Mike Johnson / Joe Hawley as a 3rd TE, Lousaka Polite, or Tommy Gallarda get on the field instead of HD?

The Tight End Cupboard is Bare After Gonzalez

This is really more about going forward than this year, but Sunday’s game brought to light just how bare the tight end cupboard will be when Gonzalez does finally hang up his cleats. Michael Palmer is hurt and there’s a belief that he can at least bridge a gap until a new tight end is developed, but after that, there’s not much. Tommy Gallarda is about exactly what he was coming out of college: an undrafted free agent. And this is really more on Dimitroff than anyone. He’s not invested any consequential draft picks on tight ends since 2008. In fact, the only tight end he’s ever drafted was Keith Zinger in the 7th round. Palmer may can get it done, but the position as a whole looks to be getting a huge hit when Gonzalez leaves.

Falcons Must Develop Another Defensive End

Matt Bryant kicks the game-winning field goal with the Raiders bench looking on with only a second or two to go in Sunday's game.

Bryant Makes Another Late Save (AJC)

As mentioned above, thank goodness for John Abraham, because without him, the Falcons wouldn’t have much of any pass rush from the DE spot. As with tight end, the Falcons have failed to develop any significant production or player from the defensive end spot not named John Abraham. This is year 5 of the Mike Smith / Thomas Dimitroff regime and despite all the supposed talent at DE, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of promise. Ray Edwards appears to be looking more and more like a weak free agent move (as many fans, including this author admit through gritted teeth). Kroy Biermann should move permanently to linebacker, his natural position, most fans believe and is too light to make an impact at DE. Then there’s Lawrence Sidbury who some thought may see an increased role under Mike Nolan, only to continue his disappearing act in 2012. Jonathan Massaquoi and Cliff Matthews may hold some talent, but they’re always ending up on the inactive list every Sunday. The Falcons signed Abraham to a 3 year contract, so theoretically they have a few more years, but they’ve already had 5.

Fans Seem to Be Pretty Evenly Split

Here in The Cage, it appears to be pretty evenly split among fans and their beliefs / opinions. Some feel that the NFL is the most parity-driven sport in the entire world and that “Any Given Sunday” is a true reality in that each win is special in the National Football League. Hard to argue when you see teams like the Patriots, Packers, 49ers, and Steelers losing games many think they shouldn’t. The Falcons may not be flawless, but they’re finding ways to win and are, so far, the only undefeated team in the NFL. It’s hard to argue against that belief.

On the other hand, fans rightly point to similarities to 2010 when the Falcons were “finding ways to win” as they are now, while not playing great football, went 13-3, and got downright embarrassed in the Debacle in the Dome. In other words, not only losing in back-to-back playoff appearances, but getting blown out and humiliated has corroded the idea of “getting the benefit of the doubt.” There’s nothing the Falcons can do about the postseason right now but win and get there, but those 2010 Falcons seemed to be getting worse as the postseason approached, not better. It’s also hard to argue that point as well.

The Bird Cage Faithful’s Turn

1) Simple Kickoff – where’s your confidence level after week 6?

2) Are the come-from-behind wins still a strength or are they now a weakness?

3) What was up with Matt Ryan’s bad day: one awful game or disturbing trend?

4) Is John Abraham nearing potential Ring of Honor status soon? Can he keep up this pace all season?

5) Is the Falcons offensive line finally due for a shakeup? What would your starting 5 be at Philly?

6) What should the Birds do @ RB? Is more speed desperately needed?

7) What’s your thoughts on the DT play?

8.) Are the LB issues keeping you up at night? Thoughts on Dent?

9) It’s an impossible question, but why is the offense digressing so bad?

10) Should Harry Douglas or others get more touches?

11) What should the Falcons do about TE after Gonzalez retires?

12) What is the deal with the Falcons failure to develop ANY OTHER defensive end?

13) What side do you fall on: happy to 6-0 and plenty of time to correct problems or seriously worried about what the future holds?

468 comments Add your comment

Paddy O

October 19th, 2012
5:03 pm

However, I DO consider the Carolina game pure luck. No way that ball should have been fumbled back to us. But, sometimes . . . . .

Paddy O

October 19th, 2012
5:11 pm

UB – is actually making an exceptionally valid point – if it simply off of quantity, and not % of passes thrown, it is a bogus stat.

Matty Bicep

October 19th, 2012
5:37 pm

Well, it was bad luck we did not recover the previous fumble.
It was bad luck we did not recover the last fumble
It was bad luck the ball got downed on the 1 foot line (Still not sure that was never reviewed, it looked like the guy might have touched the goal line) Oh yea, more bad luck.

But, in spite off that bad luck to offset the good luck of Cam dropping the ball, Roddy made a great play, and we made a good kick. We took advantage of a mistake, and overcame our own bad luck.

Unca' Bob

October 19th, 2012
6:14 pm

Paddy O,

That’s all it was ever meant to be. I never seem to catch me any luck.

JB FALCON

October 19th, 2012
6:33 pm

UB, great point. Why isn’t ESPN keeping up with the guys that played an entire career and NEVER dropped a pass (because they were never thrown one)

Unca' Bob

October 19th, 2012
6:53 pm

JB FALCON,

If I could explain that I would be a very rich ol’ man. Seems to be to their convenience…Just a thought.

DePlane

October 19th, 2012
7:04 pm

JB…I get it. I’m the eternal optimist myself. And big and strong is big and strong but converting Travian could be a little bit of a reach. I’d rather see a switch of Reynolds to RT if Clabo can’t go and Konz in his place at guard. I think Konz could learn a lot playing next to mud and listening to how he calls the game on the line. There is a reason duck is still at C. And I think it has to do with MR2 and his comfort with him as much as anything else. I wonder how ol’ Lamar is doing with his toe. Heck they’ve cross trained everyone else so make him a guard too.

Ultimately, I will be shocked if we see any changes on the line. We all know Smitty can be stubborn about a player. If he remains true to form we won’t see a shakeup of the line.

About that drag racing….I’ve been around a few tracks and enjoyed myself thoroughly. As a young man we used to go down to Stone Mt. Industrial park when it was just roads and watch the local muscle cars race railroad track to railroad track….until the police showed up. Back then they even sat and watched a couple of races before they broke it up. No tickets…just clear on out!

My old man sponsored some dragsters and we’d go up and watch em’ at commerce…in the hospitality suite right above the starting line. Sweet!

Unca' Bob

October 19th, 2012
7:10 pm

D3,

Did you get my email? Please respond.

DePlane

October 19th, 2012
7:22 pm

Since some of you are talking about luck…and how lucky we have been:

There is no such thing as luck.” – from “Star Wars”…haha!

But wait! From the guy with weird hair:

Everything in life is luck.” – Donald Trump

Really! Then how about:

The only sure thing about luck is that it will change.” – Wilson Mizner

Ok…so its gonna change! Then how about:

“All of us have bad luck and good luck. The man who persists through the bad luck — who keeps right on going — is the man who is there when the good luck comes — and is ready to receive it.” – Robert Collier

But really the truth is:

Luck is a dividend of sweat. The more you sweat, the luckier you get.” – Ray Kroc

And that:

“Good luck needs no explanation.” – Shirley Temple Black.

So it boils down to the fact that:

“The champion makes his own luck.” – Red Blaik.

The Atlanta Falcons have made their own luck.

JJ

October 19th, 2012
7:42 pm

DePlane, well done!

falcon21

October 19th, 2012
7:47 pm

I just wish we could have a little of that luck in the playoffs, it always seems whatever can go wrong does go wrong!

Matty Bicep

October 19th, 2012
7:54 pm

DePlane, correct, I would rather be lucky than good……And if we are going to measure drops as a % of passes, we should measure TD Passes, Picks, yards, etc as a percentage of passes too.

If we measure dropped passes as a percentage of total passes, the differences would be the 3rd digit after the decimal, just not too sexy. Got to remember, us cagers are not your average fan.

DePlane

October 19th, 2012
7:54 pm

Thanks JJ!

And F21 I hear ya! After all: An ounce of luck is worth a pound of gold” in the playoffs!

Matty Bicep

October 19th, 2012
7:55 pm

21, you got a point, maybe our 13-3 was correct, and our playoff losses are flukes. lol.

DePlane

October 19th, 2012
8:03 pm

MB, I would rather be lucky AND good!

As far as measuring drops as a %…statistics can be mis-guiding. The stock market proves that every day. Are they important? Sure. But some things cannot be measured in stats. Like the whether or not a team has the courage of a lion or the heart of a champion.

DePlane

October 19th, 2012
8:04 pm

But to be clear; you can certainly measure drops as a % and if you derive anything useful, use it.

JB FALCON

October 19th, 2012
8:15 pm

UB, I didn’t expect you to answer the question, I was just expounding on the point your were originally trying to make before BL tried to turn it into an arguemnt.
They should keep track of percentages instead of drops. Perfectly clear.

DePlane, I don’t have any idea how I could do any better than what the what’s being done with the Falcons. Some of my ideas and posts are not even concievable. I trust in the organization and have faith, and sometimes, or always, have to let the “other” thoughts creep in.

As far that the drag racing thing, you have to own the car, put every penny you have into it, and each race is like football whereas each race is like there is one second on the clock and it’s either win or go home. Balls to the wall. If the Falcons can learn that on every play we would be unbeatable.

Of course that would be impossible, or unbelievable, but “That’s just the way I am.”

JB FALCON

October 19th, 2012
8:28 pm

DePlane, love the luck posts. You make your own luck but you can call it whatever you like!

DePlane

October 19th, 2012
9:34 pm

Matty Bicep

October 19th, 2012
10:03 pm

But really, we yanked the ball out of Cams hand twice in the 4th quarter, and we did not recover either, both bounced right to the Panthers. Luck?

Then they pinned us on the 1 foot line with 40 seconds, boy, sure got lucky on that punt.

But our resolve and never giving up is a credit to our coaching staff.

Let the media say it was luck, screw them, but I don’t want to hear fans trying to discredit our wins.

Paddy O

October 19th, 2012
10:31 pm

Nice convo on luck! De PLane has an excellent expose on it. I would agree – you make your own luck, if you believe you control your own destiny – if you think you are a victim of fate, luck controls you. Matty – I think you are starting to consider yourself as BL stated part of the brethren. BL does not yet feel a part of the brethren – which is too bad – he has a good perspective – for the most part. However, regarding the fluke – the first lost was pure “getting the feet wet” – no expectations, and not horrible disappointment – the 2008 team was WAY beyond their station; now, I thought the 2010 butt whooping by GB a fluke – but, I had nagging worries about our lack of adjustments – in game, and apparently in the 2nd game (bad game planning). The Giants loss made most reassess the conclusion that the GB game was a fluke – it is tough to have consecutive playoff horrific game plans. GB at least had an excuse – we played them tough the first time, and they learned (just like the Giants with the Patriots). Now, back to luck – you are right – the kick that got us on the 1 – a lot of luck for opposition – I do not think it was properly reviewed. Now, the fumble – not much luck there – typically, that type of play can go either way – NOW, against SF – where Roddy strips Clement if I recall and Dahl falls on the ball – that is exceptional “make your own” luck. Luck is a lot like obscenity- you know it when you see it. Finally, if you watched the Braves play off game – and I had a ringside seat – you know the Cardinals got lucky with an utterly BS umpire call on that “infield fly rule” – which is designed to protect the offense, not inept defensive players.

Paddy O

October 19th, 2012
10:33 pm

Regarding drag racing – i’ve only done it once in Steel, Alabama – I’ve got a 2010 PCP R/T challenger – my friend had a RSS Camaro – we went up to try our luck. Got whooped all four races, but I did beat him off the line 50% of the time. Very intense.

Paddy O

October 19th, 2012
10:36 pm

Any game that folks say boiled down to a single play can be potentially declared good or bad luck. Which is why most folks want their team to blow the doors off the competition – luck is fickle.

Paddy O

October 19th, 2012
10:39 pm

Regarding the % of drops – if baseball can track BA, drop % is childs play. If Roddy is targeted 115 times, and has 15 drops, his drop % is 13%; now, if you are Mike Turner, and you only have 5 drops, but are only targeted 25 times, your drop % is 20%. Obviously, much worse. Hawley, targeted twice, 2 drops – 2 sound like a nice low number; but his % is a perfect 100. Dealing in just pure quantity, it appears Hawley is the best receiver.

Paddy O

October 19th, 2012
10:41 pm

Matty – I would measure picks by # of attempts; TD’s are much tougher – and an more widely acknowledged statistic – you play all season and have 30 TD’s – you had a decent year. 40+ – you’ve got an explosive offense. More picks than TD’s (or close)? you are Eli Manning.

Matty Bicep

October 19th, 2012
11:18 pm

Baseball BA is different in that you have enough attempts to get a “real” sample. When you have a guy targeted 5 times and he drops 2, that is about as statistically significant at a guy batting .1000 because he went 5 for 5. Statistically the sample is not meaningful.

Actually, a team can easily lead the league in TDs AND drops, especially if they have a QB who can really throw the ball down the field. In other words, the number of TDs or Drops as a percentage of total passes thrown is not enough to register a meaningful stat…like a guy who bats 1.000 who goes 5/5. So, if you want to measure catch percentages, you really have to measure types of passes, for it is easier to catch a 5 yard pass than a 45 yard one….My point, (if I have one), oh yea, sometimes you just gotta accept things as they are. WE DROP TOO MANY BALLS!

And for luck, the media never said the 6-10 falcons were “unlucky” even though you could point to 4 plays over the course of a season that would make them 10-6, so I will be dammed if I am going to say we are lucky now. We sucked before, and we are good now (not great, or elite) Your what your record says, and you are as good today as you play today. Just got to trust the process.

Matty Bicep

October 19th, 2012
11:42 pm

And yes Pad, I do feel I am part of the brethren. I do stretch it to challenge thought, and sometimes I am off base, but other times I think I provoke thought. If we all just agreed, it would get a little boring. But D3 did tell me I need to be sure to show respect, and if I do get belligerent, I apologize, I just like my thought to be provoked too. We are 6-0 for the first time in history, even if we go 0-10 going out, we still reached one more franchise milestone, all part of the process…and I ain’t putting any asterisks with it.

Paddy O

October 20th, 2012
12:27 am

I try to be objective and see other perspectives. IMHO, we have some exceptionally talented guys on our roster – I focus far more on offense – MR2 is near elite, Tony G is the best TE in the history of football; RW84 top 5 I’d say; JJ terrific potential – so, when we don’t play well, I blame coaching in general. Smitty now has a track record – and sadly, familiarity breeds contempt. But, when I think of us and say TB or the Rams – who both looked like they were up & comers in 2010 – or, even Vince Young – just because you start out on the path to sustained excellence does not mean you will stay there. Long term, Smitty has done an excellent job of keeping our team grounded. Back to drops – the drops, to me, and an indicator of WR quality – and is pretty easy to calculate. But, you can’t make that stat portable throughout the league simply by quoting the quantity – it needs context – such as a drop % – RW gets targeted a TON, so his drop #ers should be higher than say HD; so that is where the % is key. The Falcons leading the lead does not bother me too, too much – we have thrown a ton this year – plus, Hawley’s & Turners drops factor into that, and nobody in their right mind should be throwing to those guys much at all. The “distracted” player drops are the ones we need to clean up – and JJ has some catchable ball drops – at least 2 I can think of – but, then he has some eye popping receptions. He may run a little on the heels of his feet, which gets the eyeballs bouncing more. I also notice we appear to have decreased our down field tosses some. I like em – keeps the defense honest – but, you need decent O line protection. it is good to get different perspectives. I now am more cognizant of execution failures. but, I consider that part of the game; and would prefer to blow out our opponents even with some execution failures!!

Paddy O

October 20th, 2012
12:29 am

regarding the brethren – this is the best place to discuss all things Falcon. when I first started reading the AJC pro sports articles, they were painfully generic – what I call lobotomized parrot journalism. D3 writes an honest article about the teams play, and it is a pleasure to contemplate his angle and the other folks in the cage. I’m outta here – have a good weekend, folks!

Big Lou

October 20th, 2012
1:31 am

JB Falcon

How the heck was I trying to turn into argument? Percentages wouldn’t change anything. Drops are drops. Also, percentages doesn’t take into consideration when the drops happened, which usually were potential points.

Unca’ Bob

Come on now, you are smarter than the average blogger. You might not talk much, but you know the points of your posts. I’m just stating that there are some things you cannot look glass half full, and one of those are dropped passes.

Wings

October 20th, 2012
7:56 am

Big Lou not everything on this blog is a debate. JB and UB are trying to give you a few hints how to recognize.

Wings

October 20th, 2012
8:08 am

Definition of ANTAGONISM
opposition of a conflicting force, tendency, or principle

Synonyms: animosity, animus, enmity, antipathy, bad blood, bitterness, gall, grudge, hostility, jaundice, rancor

Big Lou

October 20th, 2012
10:32 am

Wings

That must be you. Because, every time you jump on here to say something to me… you are attacking and saying stupid crap. Do I have to remind you the previous two times that you chimed in against me and looked like a tool? Big Ray had to correct you on one(involved UB), and the other you didn’t get all the facts.

You assume that every post I make is for argument sakes, yet I have plenty of posts where I agree with a certain individuals(even the sarcastic and funny, SP) or do not even comment at all. Do you just jump in to throw wood into the fire when it involves me? So please, do yourself a favor and ignore my posts. I am going any where. I do not give a %^&* if you like me.

Big Lou

October 20th, 2012
10:35 am

Moving forward…

What do you guys think of our rivals this weekend?

I am taking the Panthers on an upset over the Cowboys.
Saints over the Bucs(but I am wishing for an upset).

D3

October 20th, 2012
11:48 am

Great Saturday Morn’ Cage Fam! — Well, I guess it’s technically closer to afternoon, but still. Finally a chance to catch up with you guys and rap a little about our Birds. I’ll take my own opinions on our questions………..

1) Simple Kickoff – where’s your confidence level after week 6?
Well, it’s obviously decent considering we’re 6-0. If we had this conversation after the San Diego game, than it would be sky-high, but 3 weeks of barely scraping by has shot it down pretty good. The Carolina game didn’t bother me that much. It was just one of those NFC South rivalry games that can come right down to the wire. Their backs were against the wall, were embarrassed on national TV, and gave us their best shot.

The Redskins game really doesn’t bother me that much and actually still doesn’t. We held RG3 completely in check, and that says a whole lot right now after seeing what he did to the Vikes last week. It was a road win against an up and coming team with a very talented QB. The offense just seemed to be having one of those days and I was OK with that because we did what we needed to, to win the game.

And then we come to the Raiders game. At first I wanted to say, “it’s OK………” and give a littany of excuses. The Raiders were on bye and I really do think their offense is more talented than their record indicates, but then we come to our offense.

Our offensive line is the EXACT SAME as the trainwreck that occurred last year. We all said all the way back to even mini-camp that if we trot out this same ol’ BS with no changes whatsoever. Matt Ryan was 12 for 15 with his 3 misses being interceptions I believe (something I read somewhere else). But he still looked off and misfired on many throws, not just the one where he was hit. I remember an open Julio (I think) in the endzone when we had to settle for a FG. I think this is a product of several things and the drops may not be the whole story, but they sure as the hell are adding up (this was a problem last year as well), but honestly I think it comes down to the running game as much as anything.

We all knew that ol’ Smitty would be riding Turner one more time (and he’s technically under contract through 2013, which is an error some think he’s done after this year). We all had questions about whether he would fit in this new offense and that question was mostly answered in preseason. I’m not saying that Quizz and Snelling are the future and can be Pro Bowlers behind this OL, but I truly believe that Turner is simply done. It really is nothing against him whatsoever, just like all the other Falcons who hit the wall, but it’s a business, not a college or high school team. He’s not getting production, not hitting the hole hard, he’s sure as the hell not elusive, rarely breaks tackles, and is just generally slow.

Again, I’m not trying to beat down on the man, because Lord knows how terrible our OL is. You don’t pay a feature running back $7.5 million a year (due $8 mill next year) to only be good in the 4th quarter. I know got way off on the offensive woes tangent, but in general, I’m “pretty” confident right now. It’s fantastic to be 6-0, you really have to savor every single NFL victory. But at the same time, if we don’t get some major things fixed, we could be looking at 1-2 or maybe even 0-3 really quickly over the next few weeks. Really, we’ve beaten the entire AFC West, Redskins, and Panthers. As much as I want to say, “we’ll be OK,” I keep getting woken up by those two playoff nightmares “The Debacle in the Dome” and the “Meltdown in the Meadowlands.” We go up and beat Philly (anyway possible), and my confidence will be right back to the top.

D3

October 20th, 2012
1:18 pm

BL — Is there any chance for all 4 teams to lose? Those are 4 of my most hated teams in the NFL. Throw in Philly and the Bears and you got my top 6 most hated. In all seriousness, I would love it if the Bucs beat the sAINTS, but they’ll probably win this game in their “us against the world” BS after they beat SD. I’d rather the Cowgirls go ahead and beat the Panthers and just bury their season before it gets started, but I also really love seeing the Cowgirls lose.

2) Are the come-from-behind wins still a strength or are they now a weakness?

Finding ways to win and coming from behind in the last few minutes can’t help but build confidence, character, and mettle. I do hope that will pay dividends later in the year, but at the same time, we are putting ourselves in this position too many times and can easily avoid this. A win’s a win’s a win. Period. But we haven’t exactly played the best of our schedule just yet.

Big Lou

October 20th, 2012
2:20 pm

D3

I wouldn’t mind if they all tied. Lol

As for the coming behind and winning, we will see how good this team really is with the upcoming schedule:

Eagles
Cowboys
Saints
Giants

Unca' Bob

October 20th, 2012
4:24 pm

For a dome team our two best wins have come on the road. So much for home team advantage.

JJ

October 20th, 2012
5:07 pm

UB, Good point, also wondering if some of the players have been a little over confident when they play weaker opponents…buying into the media hype after the first 3 games? Hopefully the oakland game took care of that, if it even existed.

Unca' Bob

October 20th, 2012
5:36 pm

JJ,

I don’t know, but I would hope not. And I do hope it has been put behind us.

JJ

October 20th, 2012
6:01 pm

UB, Have never had any animosity to SC until Spurrier…hate that coach with a passion due to his fla days. One of the greatest college coaches of all time but the cockiest sob of ALL coaches!!!

The only college coach I dislike as much as the aints!!!

JB FALCON

October 20th, 2012
6:21 pm

BL. I’d love to see Freeman outgun Brees and the Panthers mess up the Boys’ record.

JB FALCON

October 20th, 2012
9:03 pm

Well, I watched SC kick the Dawgs butt last week and I saw the Gators kick SC’s butt today. I am now watching teh Dawgs struggling against KY. Am I supposed to look forward to seeing the Dawgs kicj the Gators butt next week.
I have more optimism on the Falcons breaking Vick’s leg.

JB FALCON

October 20th, 2012
9:19 pm

The more I watch this GA game the more I am glad the NFL didn’t let the college refs fill in. The DAwgs are playing bad enough and the refs are going to make sure they keep calling indivisble plays. Even when they replay it, the penalty is not there.

Wabe

October 20th, 2012
10:02 pm

No UGA fan here, but seriously, what does it say about Mark Richt and the Bulldawgs when the team that blew you out has lost in consecutive weeks to two other SEC rivals, one of which just blew the doors off of SC, who blew the Dawgs out.

Really, it’s time for Richt to go. Urban Meyer won the Gators two titles, and then he leaves, and in comes Muschamp, who has the Gators positioned again for another title run this year. The coaching turnover, the recruiting obstacles that he must’ve faced, and they’re still back and better than Richt and the Dawgs.

Get rid of the dude man. He hasn’t done anything deserving more time. He gets ‘top 10 recruiting classes’ year after year, and they still fall behind most, if not all, the SEC powerhouses. Bama, LSU, SC, and Florida all stay ahead of UGA.

If somehow the Dawgs manage to beat the Gators next week, you can hang onto your ‘keep Mark Richt’ hopes for another week, but, it’s about time they make a coaching change.

Cecil

October 20th, 2012
10:34 pm

Enter your comments here

Matty Bicep

October 20th, 2012
10:34 pm

Richt is a good man who just might be meant to do more than coach football. Time to go, Governor Richt.

Big Ray

October 20th, 2012
10:35 pm

Paddy O and Matty Bicep ,

Enjoyed reading y’all’s posts on the evening of the 19th….good stuff there…good discussion.

Big Ray

October 20th, 2012
10:37 pm

Wabe – on Mark Richt – that be a fact, my friend…

JB Falcon

October 20th, 2012
10:45 pm

Wabe, thought there for a while that I was only one doing football. I totally agree that Richt is mismanaging a good team.
The Falcons are still to be seen. We can either come out against the Iglles like we did the first part of the year or we will be proven to be another also ran.