Atlanta Falcons: Birds Dominate Eagles

Falcons Crush Eagles in Philly

Atlanta Falcons outside linebacker Sean Weatherspoon (56) reacts during the second half of an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Michael Perez)

BOOM! (Michael Perez)

Everyone in the world has seemingly questioned their record and asked whether they are “for real” or not. Any unbiased and logical person has their answer from Sunday in Philadelphia. The Atlanta Falcons dominated the Eagles, a great source of anguish the last few years, on the road in Philly. The Birds excelled from the opening whistle and only let up a touch when the game was essentially out of reach. Matt Ryan and the offense got back to their old ways and lit up the scoreboard, not even needing Matt Bosher’s punting until the fourth quarter. The defense shut down a “hungry” Eagles offense ready to explode with all their talent. Special teams took care of their business in a hostile environment with less-than-ideal conditions. Simply put, yes this team is for real and anyone who says they aren’t after Sunday shows their true biased opinion. This is not to say that the Falcons won’t have their bad days, but they are every bit deserving of their undefeated record. A look at the huge win……….

Ryan, Offense Back to Awesome

Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan (2) and fullback Jason Snelling (44) react after Ryan threw a three-yard touchdown pass to Snelling during the first half of an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Ryan and Co. Rolling Again (Mel Evans)

After the blowing the doors off their opponents offensively the first three weeks, the Falcons looked rather pedestrian the following three. With a particularly weak performance against the Oakland Raiders at home. Many hoped the bye week would provide some help and answers. It certainly did. Matt Ryan was back to his surgical self at QB, slicing and dicing the Eagles defense, completing 22 of 29 passes for 262 yards and 3 touchdowns. All the while, Ryan spread the ball around to 7 different receivers in the process. Major kudos to Dirk Koetter for calling an excellent game, complete with many screens that kept the Eagles pass rush in check. Julio Jones had a huge day. Michael Turner, Jacquizz Rodgers, and Jason Snelling piled on 146 yards rushing and the offensive line looked as good as it has all season. Here’s to hoping the Falcons offense keeps on rolling along.

Running Game Split Looked Great

Michael Turner may not be the happiest player in the world now that he’s had his touches and carries cut back, but the Falcons rushing attack finally had a big day. Turner still got almost 50% of the carries, but the Birds gave both Jacquizz Rodgers and Jason Snelling plenty of touches in the game and it paid off. A trend in the NFL has developed to using a two back, or even three back, system that doesn’t depend solely on one feature back to carry the entire load. A question was posed back in the off-season on what kind of split would be best for the Falcons in 2012 and the games against the Eagles may have provided the best blueprint to date.

Credit to the Offensive Line, Konz

No position has been beat up more than the Falcons offensive line. Some thought an imminent collapse was coming with the Falcons and their problems on the OL. Well, they put some doubters to rest in Philadelphia on Sunday. They were much better in run blocking, protected Matt Ryan as good as they have all season, and overall had an excellent game. Many had been clamoring for the Falcons to inject something new into the OL in order to give it a much needed boost. Peter Konz shouldn’t get all the credit the improved play, but he looked pretty darn good in his first start in the NFL. He got overpowered one time that led to Ryan’s only sack, but otherwise he added a nice boost to the offensive line, perhaps in visual imagery alone. Tyson Clabo and Sam Baker both held up well against the Eagles talented pass rushers and Justin Blalock was his normal solid self. Todd McClure gets much of the credit for leading this OL through dark times and, hopefully, to brighter days. It was only one game, but it sure was a sight for sore Falcons fans eyes. An improved rushing attack coupled with many screens also helped out the OL.

Can’t Throw the Deep Ball, eh?

Philadelphia Eagles tight end Brent Celek, center, is tackled by Atlanta Falcons free safety Thomas DeCoud (28) and defensive end Kroy Biermann (71) during the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Here Comes the Bier Truck! (Mel Evans)

Noodle arm. Weak arm. Can’t throw the deep ball. Has no deep game. These have been many trolls favorite garbage excuses when trying to denigrate Matt Ryan. It’s true he didn’t have a cannon like Jeff George or Matthew Stafford, but he could always throw the ball plenty far enough. Can those ridiculous attack lines finally be put to rest already? He’s thrown plenty of deep balls throughout his career, but after putting in a ton of work over the off-season, Ryan has a new comfort in the deep game and it shows. Look no further than his last minute bomb to Roddy White against the Carolina Panthers, from his own endzone nonetheless. But the cherry on top was the beautifully thrown ball to Julio Jones on a 63 yard touchdown strike zooming by supposedly one of the very best cornerbacks in the NFL, Nnamdi Asomugha.

Biermann Shouldn’t Come Off the Field

Some scoffed at the price the Falcons paid Kroy Biermann to come back to Atlanta, saying it was way too much to pay a “backup.” Some thought that Biermann may very well be the biggest beneficiary of Mike Nolan’s new defense, and sure enough, he’s right up there. His stats won’t blow you away (30 total tackles, 2 sacks), but he’s been all over the field the entire season. Biermann has played with his hand in the dirt rushing the QB, but he’s also been playing as a standup LB where he has plenty of freedom to roam around the outside or move to the inside. His hustle and tenacity was on full display against the Eagles. With Philadelphia in desperation mode towards the end of the game, Biermann turned one of the best plays of the game. He rushed Vick from the outside and beat not one, but two-to-three defenders and chased him down for a sack. With all due respect to Ray Edwards, Biermann should be on the field all the time. His toughness and versatility is one of the Falcons best strengths.

Robert McClain’s a Keeper

Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan (2) throws a pass against the Philadelphia Eagles during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

OL Looked Fantastic (Mel Evans)

It was one of the bigger surprises when roster cut day came down. Robert McClain, a rarely known cornerback from Connecticut who had bounced around the NFL for several years, had won one of the coveted 53 man roster spots. Not too many gave much thought to it since the Falcons boasted Asante Samuel, Brent Grimes, and Dunta Robinson. But when Brent Grimes was lost for the season in the opener and Chris Owens suffered a concussion against the Broncos, McClain was forced into action as the nickel back. His first play only resulted in a Peyton Manning interception. McClain has taken advantage ever since. McClain is quick, tough, and always seems to be in the right position. He had good coverage and some nice hits, with his most important one coming when he forced Michael Vick out of bounds right before the 1st down marker. He already has 3 passes defensed on the year. McClain is moving out of “roster backup” territory and into possibly having a future as a potential starter. For a team searching so long for youthful talent at cornerback, the Falcons may have finally found one.

Love that 3 DT Front

Not only was it fantastic to see Corey Peters back in action, it was also great to see Mike Nolan mix it up on a defensive front. Instead of having the traditional 2 defensive tackles and 2 defensive ends, Nolan put a 3 defensive tackle front on the line, mostly with Peters, Jonathan Babineaux, and Vance Walker. It paid dividends and held one of the league’s most dynamic backs, Lesean McCoy, pretty well in check. Many wondered early on whether or not Babineaux was athletic enough to hold the end in a 3-4 type look and the early returns are promising. Above all, it was nice to see Nolan mixing it up on defense after having 4 years of standard deployment week in and week out.

Drew Davis Takes Advantage

Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan, center right, reacts with wide receiver Drew Davis, center, after the two connected for a 15-yard touchdown pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Philadelphia.

Drew Davis Earning a Role (Michael Perez)

Like McClain, Drew Davis has earned his chance the hard way. A former Oregon standout, Davis worked on the Falcons practice squad all year last season. He was thought to be in a two way battle with Kevin Cone for the 5th and final spot. At the time, most thought spots 1 through 4 were taken, with Kerry Meier being penciled in at the #4 wide receiver position. Funny thing was that Meier ended up getting cut, Kevin Cone made the roster, but late signee Tim Toone grabbed the 5th and final spot. Davis was relegated to practice squad duty again only to get called up soon after with Toone getting injured. To make a long story short, Davis put in his time, finally got his chance when Harry Douglas was injured, and made the absolute most of it. He only caught two passes, but one of them was a thing of beauty hauling in a touchdown and tapping the sidelines. The Falcons have always been set at receiver with Roddy White, Julio Jones, and Harry Douglas, but it turns out it may be even more talented than some thought.

Falcons Need to Lock Up Vance Walker

Perhaps the most underrated Falcon on the roster outside of Justin Blalock, Vance Walker is steadily turning into one of the most solid players on the defense and the overall team. A 7th round draft pick out of Georgia Tech, Walker has always been excellent role player, but he may be growing out of that role and into a more prominent one. He already has 12 tackles, 2 sacks, and a forced fumble on the season. He’s listed as 6’2, 304, but he certainly looks bigger than that. In his last year of a restricted free agent contract, the former Yellow Jacket will be set to hit the free agent market in 2013. Walker seems like a perfect candidate to bring back and develop alongside Corey Peters, Peria Jerry, and maybe Travian Robertson. The Falcons may not have that enormous beast at nose tackle that some defenses do, but collectively, it’s looking like a very strong group and Walker is one of the main reasons.

The Media-Talking-Heads-Elite “Excuse Rolodex”

Atlanta Falcons fullback Jason Snelling, right, gestures as teammate Drew Davis (19) reacts after Snelling scored on a three-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Matt Ryan, not pictured, during the first half of an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Snelling's Got it Right Regarding the "Media Elite" (Mel Evans)

For the most part, Falcons fans have accepted and come to peace with the Media-Talking-Heads-Elite seeming bias against Atlanta both in the past and this current edition. It seems to be moving goalpost or that they have an “excuse rolodex” where the Falcons shoot down one of their biased opinions, they simply insert another one. First it was a soft schedule the Falcons played. Then it was Peyton Manning throwing those interceptions all on his own. Then it was the Falcons can’t run the ball. Then it was the Falcons can’t stop the run. Then it was the Falcons should be ashamed for having to come back to beat the lowly Panthers. Then it was Robert Griffin III getting injured and then the Falcons eeking out wins and possibly being the worst early undefeated team in history. With a great road test against a quality opponent, the Falcons dominated in every aspect of the game. And what was the story line after the game? The Eagles “collapsing, Vick possibly getting benched, and Andy Reid’s job security.” Did the Falcons even play in that game?

Of course when all else fails, just go to the fail-safe “they haven’t won in the playoffs” standard attack line. Or if that’s not your cup of tea, just ignore, ignore, ignore. The day after the game (Monday) a check of NFL.com had not one snippett, headline, buzz feed, article, opinion, nothing on the Falcons, but had all you can eat of the drama with the Jets, Cowboys, and Eagles. Maybe wins don’t matter that much anymore, but rather soap-opera style stories. Perhaps the NFL can merge their network with SoapNet and it would be a fantastic coup for everyone. Fact is, most Falcons fans find it humourous and don’t really get that bothered by it anymore. As Todd McClure said referring to the “media elite”: “I hope it stays that way,” McClure said. “I’m sure it will come to a point where they’ll start talking about us. The only time we really want them talking about us is in February.” Hopefully, it’s at least providing the players some motivation this season.

The Bird Cage Brethren’s Turn

1) Simple quick draw: how big was this win?

2) Is the offense back to normal……for good?

3) How did you like the RB split? Should it change more?

4) Happy with the offensive line? Thoughts on Konz?

5) Matt Ryan can’t throw the deep ball, right?

6) Should Biermann play an even more prominent role?

7) Does Robert McClain have a future as a starter?

8.) Thoughts on the 3 DT front?

9) Has Drew Davis cemented a role even when HD comes back?

10) Should the Falcons bring back Walker to a multi-year deal?Y

11) How do you like the Media-Talking-Head-Elite’s “Excuse Rolodex?” Gotta hate those Falcons, right?

747 comments Add your comment

Coop

November 5th, 2012
6:45 pm

On the question of whether play calling is DK or MS, the answer is simple. The head coach is responsible for everything the team does. He either dictates the style of play calling or he allows it. He’s the boss. It’s called Smittyball for a reason.

DePlane

November 5th, 2012
7:08 pm

My take on the Turner and a yard thing is this. You have to run the ball in this league to keep defenses honest. Otherwise they just pin back their ears and have your QB for lunch ala Ware.

Coach knows Turner may only get a yard. DK knows this. Could be its part of the game to keep the opposing D busy while we cook up a nice pass play. Then maybe he breaks one every now and then like he did last night and it evens it out some. 20 carries for 100+ yards is kind of what you can expect as a peak from Turner these days; a rookie he’s not. If he has a better game than that it will be a rare day. I’m not saying it makes sense to pound the rock for a yard on 1st down but that’s what your gonna get. Every now and then you throw the rock at him and maybe he catches it. If he doesn’t tippy toe and gets up a head of steam he’s like a bowling ball and if he gets behind you he can ignite whats left of the jets and get some good yards. So maybe its by design and its the expectation….for now anyway. But the coaches aren’t stupid are they? They see lots of 1 yard runs and know why its happening right? Right? I still see tired defenses in the 4th quarter get all they want from Turner. I still see his value. Do I wish for something more ala Doug Martin?

Who doesn’t. But right now we got MT and JR and if we’re going to the promised land then thats who is gonna take us there from a running perspective. Those Turner plays didn’t bother me after the first few times they ran for a yard. I started to look at them differently. Eventually he broke one and when he did I was one happy fan. Turner is a fighter…he keeps trying. He wants it bad. He has something to show…that he’s not washed up and wants people to STFU. Hey, I’m an old guy and I know how he feels.

JB Falcon

November 5th, 2012
7:13 pm

At the risk of condensing an entire football game — not to mention two teams’ seasons thus far — to one play, Sunday night’s Dallas-Atlanta game hung in the balance when Jacquizz Rodgers caught a pass from Matt Ryan, turned and found himself a good four yards from a first down on 3rd-and-6. Between Rodgers and the first-down marker was Orlando Scandrick, the Cowboys’ safety who had a shot to make a tackle, force an Atlanta punt and get the ball back to his offense, down three points with four-plus minutes left.

Read the rest at;
http://nfl.si.com/2012/11/05/falcons-narrow-win-over-cowboys-a-familiar-result-for-both-teams/?sct=nfl_t11_a6

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:18 pm

DePlane. Have to agree, we broke Dallas’ back, we took the ball with 5 minutes and broke their back. Not fumbling the ball, not having penalties, having a game plan that makes the other team beat has been quite successful in the regular season for CS, and it is the regular season. Really, have a 4 game lead, no reason for us to show anything right not. Just grind it, play smart, and roll up Ws. As we saw in the Philly game, we will come out with a different plan. Really, at this point, there is not reason to do show anything different.

DePlane

November 5th, 2012
7:19 pm

Dirk Koetter ain’t going to Kentucky unless he’s a fool and I don’t think he is. He’s 8-0 in the NFL and will be an NFL head coaching candidate if he keeps it up. If he wants a college job surely he can find one better than that. In the mean time, he’s on an unprecedented run and that’s what coordinators live for. I’d highly doubt he is in a position contractually to bolt at this point and his name would be mud if he did.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:22 pm

Agreed JB, I would like to see Quizz on the field a lot more, and at the same time as Turner.

DePlane

November 5th, 2012
7:27 pm

Matty Bicep, I have to agree…its called game planning and I think they are doing a great job of it. CMS 5 or 7 keys to playing fundamentally sound football are rules to live by. I think Smitty and DIrk complement each other.

Its great they have a board at Flowery Branch with everyones penalties on it; nobody wants their name up there. Smitty keeps em’ grounded and focused and DK and MR2 spice it up. The D schemes and is athletic and they have a plan on what they’re going to do to the opposing O and most importantly, they believe they can do it, and they do!

MR2 passed for 342 yards but rushing late was the key to the win.

Dallas D is no patsy and the Falcons sustained a late drive that broke their will and TOOK that game.

I’m loving me some Falcons football!!!

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:27 pm

Turners best play is the delay handoff where they seal block. If we drift quizz out on the flat causing the LBs to flow that way, then seal the backside and hand the ball to Turner….Teams will start game planning to stop quiz, or at least account for him every time he is on the field. That will benefit MT.

falcon21

November 5th, 2012
7:30 pm

Agree DePlane.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:32 pm

I imagine Kentucky would pay around 8-10 mil over 4 years….IDK, that would be pretty hard to turn down to be honest.

DePlane

November 5th, 2012
7:32 pm

JB, that was definitely a pivotal play….and Quizz came through. Still, no TD from Turner and that play isnt as relative, unless they go down and score a TD…which we’ll never know.

DePlane

November 5th, 2012
7:34 pm

Yeah…that’s a bunch of money! But if its there now, wouldn’t someone else will pay it later? But as they say, a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.

Unca' Bob

November 5th, 2012
7:34 pm

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:27 pm

Don’t know why Kentucky’s lookin’ for Dirk when they could have you.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:36 pm

For 2 mil a year, they sure can.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:39 pm

Tried to find what DK is paid now….Anyone know? I would imagine about 500k or so. I guess it just depends on what he wants. But like Unca says, they can have me.

falcon21

November 5th, 2012
7:39 pm

Give me a quarter of a mil. and I will do it!

Slant Pattern

November 5th, 2012
7:44 pm

“I imagine Kentucky would pay around 8-10 mil over 4 years….IDK, that would be pretty hard to turn down to be honest.” – MB

I am currently ambivalent about Koetter staying or going until it becomes clear he is just more than a minor upgrade over MM. I see people saying he will never leave for Kentucky but money can make people do strange things. We will get to learn a lil more about Koetter it seems…can he figure out cover 2 and is money more important than a talented roster.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:45 pm

I am in a quandry, I can’ t decide who I want to lose more tonight….

Unca' Bob

November 5th, 2012
7:47 pm

Being on SS, I’m only allowed to make $14,400 without penalty. I’d have to pass.

Unca' Bob

November 5th, 2012
7:49 pm

The aints!!!!!!!

falcon21

November 5th, 2012
7:51 pm

As much as I dislike the Eagles, I still hate the Saints much more. Problem is after next week the Saints will be done. If the Eagles win tonight they are still in the playoff picture.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
7:56 pm

21, that is what I was thinking. I hate the saints more, but I think a defeat would be a larger blow to the Eagles. Plus I love to watch Vick quit.

Paddy O

November 5th, 2012
8:00 pm

BL: You can’t change a person’s perspective – that is the culmination of their experiences and wisdom. Some are unexplainably optimistic, some harshly cynical, and then of course there are the realists. At one time I was an idealist – but that ethos is like being a whistle blower – nobody genuinely appreciates it short term, and in the long term you simply get the rep as a non-team player. However, long term being idealistic pays substantial dividends to self – you generally don’t exploit others and have a clean conscience. However, due to the last 30 years of life in America, I am necessarily cynical – this takes a ton of BS out of life – those who think you are mean are simply naively pollyanna. For the sake of civility, you simply have to take comments – at least from long term posters here who have a rep and are not taking shots at the Falcons for enjoyment (loyal Falcon fans who ID shortcomings easily and can easily verbalize those failings – many times in jocular ways!) – with a grain of salt – you can argue the content, but attacking the messenger simply generates hard feelings, and it just is not necessary. When I first came here, there was a guy named crab apple joe – I thought he was a Falcon hater – but, he just has a nice case of paranoia. GO FALCONS! Still amazing, half way through the season, and we’ve only played a single intra-divisional game.

Paddy O

November 5th, 2012
8:06 pm

Regarding the doofus runs between the tackles – I assume everyone witnessed Quizz get hammered for a loss of yardage – that was probably our stupidest play – or, the screen to either Polite (diminishing returns – REALLY missing Ovie) or Turner – both dropped – if you want a screen to a RB – Snelling is your man – and, Snelling can block -why not use him at FB?

falcon21

November 5th, 2012
8:08 pm

Don’t wake the monster Paddy O. I know you know who I mean.

Paddy O

November 5th, 2012
8:10 pm

Most of Turners big gainers come from off tackle scoots – if you can call a Turner rumble a scoot. However, that delayed hand off – I call it a draw – was successful due to Konz holding his block. We don’t typically run too many draws.

Paddy O

November 5th, 2012
8:11 pm

I thought Akeem Dent did a very decent job. Dunta had his worst game – but still managed some nice hits – which I think affected #19 of Dallas when he dropped that pass in the middle. Falcons are a good, solid team who can be spectacular. The yardage we ran up was pretty amazing – I am bummed that Ryan’s 22 game consecutive TD streak ended!

D3

November 5th, 2012
8:15 pm

Great Win Night Cage Family! — Working on a new post, but wanted to say that a win is a win. Not a beautiful one, but luckily garbage style points don’t count. Not perfect by any means, but yet again they find a way to win against another desperate team.

Back to new post. See ya’ll in a few……….

DePlane

November 5th, 2012
8:21 pm

Paddy O, Quizz did get hammered that play. He’s not gonna bust a run when the D line gets that kind of penetration. He’s better in space for sure. Snelling had a few opportunities but I don’t think he did much.

Dent did do a nice job.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
8:22 pm

I like the Snelling screen too, he looks fluid, the anti Turner… and he makes nice looking plays, but his production is never there. In 6 seasons his longest run was 31 yards, longest pass 38….Quizz has done that the past 2 games. We all has high hopes for Quizz, but when he did not immediately meet expectations, we sorta soured on him a little. But the last two games he has made some key plays.

DePlane

November 5th, 2012
8:23 pm

falcon 21, I feel ya! Either way it’s like having two desserts to choose from.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
8:26 pm

It was a unique plan for Dent, Nolan used him like the Bears use Urlacher, dropping back to patrol the middle of the field. I get the feeling Dent is just one of those players who is willing to do whatever it takes to get better, it is picking brains, studying tape, and putting in the time.. I think the “he played average” comment by Nolan was a huge compliment to be honest.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
8:29 pm

Nolan understates things, just like at the beginning of the season he was non committal as to who good he thought we would be. He is a heck of a D coordinator, he was a real coup.

JB Falcon

November 5th, 2012
8:31 pm

UB, I tried that $14k deal but gave it all back when I found out you can wait until 65 and make all you want.

Paddy O

November 5th, 2012
8:46 pm

I agree with those that say Welcome Back leaving would be a BAD professional move for him – Kentucky in football is like Vanderbilt. This year has been a lot of fun – at least in the Dallas game, the offense had a sense of purpose/rhythm. That Oakland game still ranks as worst game of the year.

Paddy O

November 5th, 2012
8:51 pm

MB- Snelling won us the Ravens game – pretty much single handed. I think he would be a MUCH better option at FB than Polite. Real bummer about losing our drafted FB. Snelling is hard nosed; can’t say he is exceptionally quick. But, I think if given the chance, he would get the job done. I’ve dreamed about Snelling and Quizz in the backfield for 2 years now – seldom happens (maybe twice?). OK – have a great night!

Slant Pattern

November 5th, 2012
8:55 pm

Woot! Call went against the Taints so hopefully Katrina refs became Sandy refs.

D3

November 5th, 2012
8:57 pm

Paddy — I agree with you on Snelling. No disrespect to him, but Polite is not a great option at FB. I always loved Ovie, but for what he was making it simply was too much. We just were very unfortunate to lose Bradie Ewing. He was, after all, the best FB in the draft and would be yet another option on offense.

Koetter to Kentucky? — No way in Hades. He’s probably having the time of his life right now with all the weapons he has and finally getting a shot with a great team after being in Jax forever. Kentucky’s going to have to go the route that Vandy and Ole Miss did, get a young coach at a smaller school that will breathe new life into that program. Getting a big name to come to Kentucky and have to play Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, and Tennessee (not so much lately, but still)……….please.

Slant Pattern

November 5th, 2012
8:58 pm

Vick already crushed and fumbles. This may well be the two worst teams in the league.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
9:05 pm

I like Snelling too, always have, he just never seems to just get over the hump to follow up when he shows promise, but I am glad to see him get a new more touches this year….But I see quizz starting to be the guy we all hoped when we drafted him. I think that dimension is what is going to make us a different team to defend…..Night.

Matty Bicep

November 5th, 2012
9:13 pm

Now that was classic.

Lmao Major : The Latest Fuzz

November 5th, 2012
9:20 pm

[...] Atlanta Falcons: Birds Dominate Eagles – Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog) [...]

D3

November 5th, 2012
9:53 pm

Some great news on P.Jerry

http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-falcons-blog/2012/11/05/atlanta-falcons-mike-smith-says-no-major-injury-for-peria-jerry-knee/

Also says that he hopes to get Spoon back practicing this week, at a minimum a game-time decision.

JB Falcon

November 5th, 2012
10:03 pm

Just checked in to see the Aint’s leading 21-3, first half. That’s better than we did. Worry?
H3LL NO. They ain’t seen us yet.

Wabe

November 5th, 2012
10:06 pm

Man, Philly is turrrrrrrrible.

D3

November 5th, 2012
10:07 pm

Looks like sAINTS are running away with this one. A 99 yard interception return will do that for you. Even more reason for the douchebag media elite to de-value that win.

Regarding the hated sAINTS, I sure hope that many of our players remember that embarrassing performance and how they rubbed our faces right in the sh!t last year on MNF.

D3

November 5th, 2012
10:52 pm

NEW POST UP CAGE FAMILY!!!!!!!!!! ——-

See you over there, but it will have to be tomorrow. Have a great night ‘all!

http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-falcons-fans/2012/11/05/atlanta-falcons-birds-beat-cowboys-stay-undefeated/