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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
8:35 pm
Yea, you get a sense that Nolan has a pretty good pulse on this D. Should be an interesting game.
JB Falcon
November 1st, 2012
8:37 pm
or at least go down fighting hard somewhere deep in the postseason.- Big Ray
Here is the last part and I do not agree. I will agree with the first part about a perfect record. All I care about, at this point, is winning enough games from here on out to win the NFC South (I need another hat) ang getting into the playoffs. I DO NOT want to go down fighting or any other way.
JB Falcon
November 1st, 2012
8:43 pm
MB, they call me JB. Welcome to the cage.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
9:02 pm
Thanks JB….regular season has always been about getting to the playoffs, preferably a bye, and home field advantage, and that’s it, that’s all it can be.
Unfortunately with our history, some people want to make it into some sort of proving ground to be more than it is, but you cannot accomplish anything more in the regular season than HF advantage, an undefeated season does nothing for me, unless we win it all, and that would be sorta sweet.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
9:06 pm
In the QBR rating, it is Manning-Brady-Ryan….Passer Rating is Manning-Rogers-Ryan. Not bad company halfway through the season. ESPN has Ryan was 5th in the MVP, what nonsense.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
9:10 pm
Saw another article titled “NFC South, land of confusion” Both the Saints and Panthers have a dysfunction rating of 100%, god I love it.
falcon21
November 1st, 2012
9:21 pm
Matty, for you to say the regular season means nothing you sure do give good reasons that it means something. Anyway, we will lose a game, maybe 2 or 3 but thats cool with me as long as we are on a roll before post season, kinda like GB was the year they destroyed us. I hope by games 13 to 16 that this team has everything together and playing at their best.
Coop
November 1st, 2012
9:25 pm
MB – You can accomplish more than just getting to the postseason during the regular season. Just because you don’t recognize it, doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. It’s called gray. In your black and white world it may not exist, but in reality it does.
JJ – I’m not falling into the abyss… I’m jockeying for playoff positioning.
Besides, regular season doesn’t matter. Ask MB, we shouldn’t make any changes or recognize and try to address any deficiencies. Just point to the scoreboard and go blindly along our way.
As for going undefeated, I’m with most in that its not a particular goal for me. However, I would love to shove an undefeated 19-0 season right up ESPN’s @ss! Otherwise, I would prefer that we not lose to the Cowboys. I can’t take a week of “we told you the Falcons weren’t that good”… Especially in Texas.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
9:35 pm
It’s called gray.
Well, the gray does not “Mean” anything until you get the results and go back and apply it to your meaning.
If we win the superbowl, then they gray areas showed meddle and character, if we go one and done, then it showed our vulnerability.
Ask MB, we shouldn’t make any changes or recognize and try to address any deficiencies…There you go putting words in my mouth, I just trust that Smitty will recognize and address deficiencies. You don’t get very far in the NFL if you don’t. That is just flat out silly to assume that.
Coop
November 1st, 2012
9:38 pm
Again, SMH
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
9:38 pm
We can’t tell the nuances on a TV. Last week they ran a 3 tackle set, and not one single person on the blog noticed it, it was not even mentioned until it was written about on Monday. My point, we know about 5% of that is going on, to judge coaches, and draw conclusion by what we think we see is just sorta silly. The Chess game, it is just hard to know what all it going.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
9:41 pm
SMH all you want, it was you who stuck words in my mouth.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
9:47 pm
21, regular season is the means to get to the playoff, and how you get seeded, nothing more. Other than that, playoffs is a new season, a tournament. If you went 16-0, or 7-9, it does not matter. Sure, how you played might be an indicator of how you will play, but since the 9-7 WC teams won the last 2 SBs, I think my opinion is valid. Do disrespect intended.
Matty Bicep
November 1st, 2012
9:56 pm
Last week, the SB champs had a 23-0 lead, then fell behind 24-23, then came back, and then almost lost it again but the guy was out of the end zone by a finger….So yes, there is a randomness to is all, and how you win one game does not really have much impact as to how your are going to compete in 2 months.
John Waynesworld
November 1st, 2012
9:57 pm
“JWW, BT and a few others are not even trying to improve their team thru the waiver wire or trades.”
Heck JJ, I’ve been juggling TEs, LBs and DBs all season. I also headed your advice earlier about the dwindling FA pool and grabbed a backup RB. No matter, I’m still getting snakebit with lousy production by my high draft picks. I’m feeling a rebound though.
falcon21
November 1st, 2012
9:57 pm
Means to get to the playoffs and how you get seeded! It sounds like the regular season kinda means something to me! Later Cagers.
JB Falcon
November 1st, 2012
9:59 pm
MB. I take it back. You seem to have a personality exactly like my ex. You are very knowledgable about football but do not any concept about having a conversation.
falcon21
November 1st, 2012
10:46 pm
Late check in Cage. Big Ray, tune in to 92.9, you will like it. Nite all.
John Waynesworld
November 1st, 2012
10:46 pm
I haven’t tried any trades in this league yet.
Wabe
November 1st, 2012
11:12 pm
Agree with your statements about the next man up mentality. I’m much more confident in Nolan adapting to the loss of Spoon than I would’ve been with a guy like BVG. As you point out, Nolan has a good pulse of his defense, knows what the strengths and weaknesses are, and knows what his personnel can do. Thus, I think whatever gameplan Nolan draws up will take into account a ‘Spoon-less’ defense. But, it doesn’t mean that the gameplan itself will be ineffective. He’ll find ways to use whoever’s out there in an effective manner.
I’m actually happy the Falcons aren’t caught up in the undefeated drama and rush Spoon back. Truth is, as much as we all wanna win this game, and as much as Spoon’s prescence would be a boost, it’s better for him and the team as a whole that he gets fully healthy before returning. I have a feeling if we were playing for something [a game with big ramifications], Spoon might probably try to give it a go. But, because we’re sitting pretty comfortable, he has the benefit to fully heal up.
Wabe
November 1st, 2012
11:14 pm
That last post was in response to BL’s post on the last page…my bad.
Wings
November 2nd, 2012
7:32 am
JB – “MB. I take it back. You seem to have a personality exactly like my ex. You are very knowledgable about football but do not any concept about having a conversation.”
Well said JB, you always speak the truth. And my ex.
Wings
November 2nd, 2012
7:52 am
Big Lou, I finally read the article that you posted yesterday from NFL.com. It was a great read. There was something wrong with the site when I tried yesterday.
JJ
November 2nd, 2012
8:34 am
JWW, Good luck and you know the projected points mean nothing. Hopeing Julio can break his streak and have back to back big games. But if its RW turn and we get a W, Ill be happy. Want to beat the cowgirls as bad as Coop, if thats possible.
JJ
November 2nd, 2012
8:38 am
From ESPN Insider (sorry for length):
“After watching film of both teams, Scouts Inc. breaks down key elements of the Week 9 Cowboys-Falcons matchup.
• Get Turner on track early: Michael Turner is a workhorse back who thrives on getting a lot of carries. He has only one 100-yard game this season and seems due for a big game. A strong run game will help Atlanta loosen things up on the back end for the passing game and control the clock.
• Protect the football: This is going to be a crucial component. The Falcons are one of the best when it comes to a net difference in turnovers, while the Cowboys are one of the most turnover-prone teams in the NFL. Dallas can’t afford to continue to give its opponent, especially one like Atlanta that can convert on mistakes, a short field with which to work.
• Play smart football: The Cowboys have twice as many penalties as the Falcons. Some penalties are forgivable, like holding in order to prevent your quarterback from being sacked, but dead-ball fouls are simply a matter of a lack of concentration. Dallas has been flagged for false starts 16 times, as opposed to just four for the Falcons, and has been flagged for defensive offside seven times, as opposed to three times for Atlanta. Going from third-and-3 to third-and-8, or giving your opponent a free pass to a first down by jumping offside in a short-yardage situation, can make a huge difference. Right now the Cowboys are playing with a serious lack of focus.
• Home QB: Matt Ryan has prototypical dimensions for the position and has done a great job of progressing each year he has been in the league. He is doing a great job of distributing the ball as he has six receivers with 10 or more catches. He has just one game in which he has thrown more than one interception. So not only has he become a difference-maker, but he protects the football, as well.
• Away QB: Tony Romo is a dynamic game-changer who can be electric when he is on his game. He can also look very ordinary when under consistent pressure. He is very athletic and is one of the best at improvising and making plays on the perimeter, and has the foot speed and athleticism to move the chains with his feet. He consistently gives his team a chance to win, especially when he has a solid ground game to work with. However, mistakes continue to be an issue (four INTs in Week 8).
• Key positional battle — Falcons receivers vs. Cowboys DBs: Ryan has an extremely talented corps of receivers at his disposal. They all possess rare size, speed and receiving skills, and Ryan is doing a great job of putting the ball in a location where only his receivers have a chance to catch the ball. Dallas’ secondary will have a serious height disadvantage against this group. The Cowboys will need to do everything possible to throw Atlanta’s receivers off their game; that could include physical play at the line of scrimmage and different looks in coverage.
• Case for the underdog: The running game could give Dallas an opportunity. The Falcons are giving up more than 5 yards a carry, the second-worst mark in the league. Plus, they may be missing their leading tackler in Sean Weatherspoon, who suffered a sprained ankle in Week 8. A strong ground game would not only take some pressure off Romo and the passing game, but would keep the ball out of the hands of Atlanta’s explosive playmakers on offense.
• Film room nuggets: Romo has not been great when it comes to protecting the football. He is forcing the issue as he tries to compensate for a weak ground game and taking too many chances. … Cowboys tight end Jason Witten is about as sure-handed as you can get. He routinely makes acrobatic catches and holds on to the ball when hit just after the catch. He is pretty much a sure thing when Romo needs a first down, but needs to be more involved in the red zone.
Prediction
Atlanta 26
Dallas 20
Ryan is better than Romo at generating points in the red zone, and the Falcons will come out ahead as a result.”
JJ
November 2nd, 2012
8:53 am
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/conversation?gameId=321104001
snacktastic
November 2nd, 2012
9:09 am
Thanks for the article, JJ.
I will say what I’ve always said about Turner: the idea that he needs 26 carries a game just to rack up a significant number of yards is ridiculous. Even if you ignore the run blocking issues and Turner’s mobility, defenses are going to be keyed in on him anyway, just like last season. They KNOW we’re going to go to him. Frankly, he ought to be getting the least carries between the three RBs.
But that’s not even what I’m worried about for Sunday. I will be looking for the pass rush to get to Romo all night, especially with Spoon out. Getting it started early will be a good sign.
BobbyDawg
November 2nd, 2012
9:15 am
Jump to: navigation, search Super Bowl XLVIII
Away Team NFC Champion
Home Team AFC Champion
Date February 2, 2014
Stadium MetLife Stadium
City East Rutherford, New Jersey
TV in the United States
Network Fox
Super Bowl XLVIII will be the 48th edition of the Super Bowl in American football, and the 44th annual championship game of the modern-era National Football League (NFL). It will be held on February 2, 2014 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. This will be the first Super Bowl to be played outdoors in a cold weather environment, and the first played on February 2nd.[1]
Thought I’d post this copied from Wikipedia. We were going to go ahead and make reservations ’till I read this. Now I don’t know. As bad as I want to see our Birds play in a SB I’ve got mixed feelings about this.
Zoomie
November 2nd, 2012
9:23 am
I’m gonna depart from The Cage conventional wisdom here and predict that the ‘Boys are going to force a running game whether Murray plays or not. Stats show Atlanta as very soft against the run, especially in the middle, and with Spoon out, Dallas will work hard to exploit a perceived weakness. A good running attack will open play-action and put Romo in a position to use underneath, controlled passing to complement the run.
Everyone who’s watched the NFL for the last several years knows bad things happen for the Cowboys when Romo is forced into a shootout. This year, the problem seems to be even more pronounced, so Dallas will work hard to beat up the Falcons with the run and remain within striking distance in the 4th quarter without having to resort to Romo’s head and arm.
Dallas has some great cover corners and a great pass rush. They’re going to focus these two strengths against Atlanta. RW84 and JJ11 will see a lot of man coverage while the rest of the backfield spies Atlanta’s other seemingly endless train of offensive weapons. Dallas will come into the game sold on a four-man rush against what they’ll perceive as a a relatively weak Atlanta offensive line. They have the tape on the Eagles game, though, so they’ll be thinking twice about being uber-aggressive considering Atlanta’s propensity to go nuts (and effectively so) with screens.
Ultimately, I believe in Nolan’s ability to get the right players into the right spots, regardless of injuries. I believe we’ll see Dent get a whiff or two and see Peterson be flat-out beat some, but I think the defense will hold up.
As long as MR2 has a solid game, Altanta’s just got too many offensive weapons, even for a good defense like Dallas.
I think Atlanta goes to 8-0 this weekend (but I’d trade a L to Dallas for two wins against the Taints this year).
Paddy O
November 2nd, 2012
9:36 am
alright, coop – i skipped it last time, now its really bugging me: explain smh; i’m just probably a texting moron. For me, it is hard to gel the idea we might be complacent if we continue to win with the simultaneous idea that the pressure to keep winning is increasing. I see the increased pressure – which I agree with – as an anidote for complacency. The increased pressure and continued media disrespect (bias is everywhere in a media dominated by the idjits in NYC and the NE) should also helps us avoid complacency. I’m hoping we keep on winning – we have 7 divisional games left and I”d like to kick TB, NO and Carolina butt in every one of them. That only leaves 2 other games. GO FALCONS!!!
D3
November 2nd, 2012
9:52 am
Paddy — I had no idea for ever either. SMH – shaking my head. SMDH and SMGDH, I’m sure you can probably guess about.
Paddy O
November 2nd, 2012
9:57 am
Try this again. MB does have a unique way of showing his butt. Coop, I let it go last time, but need to know now – translate smh; i’m a bit a texting moron. MB seems to think his anecdotal commentary is innocent, but if you took him seriously, his assertions are that nobody should say anything due to our lack of perfect knowledge. It is a PC way of telling folks to shut up and oppress opinions critical of authority. Who here thinks they know precisely what MIke Smith is thinking? No one. However, if you think that human behavior is so dynamic and utterly un-predictable, then his comments make sense – however, in the “they put their pants on one leg at a time just like you” vein – and, if you have watched football or played football, then you have a good base knowledge to evaluate – or judge – the quality of what anyone or any operation is doing. In this case, the Falcons are the target of our conversation. I’d say most here in the Cage honestly thought that both MM & BVG were utterly – and I mean UTTERLY – failing to get the most out of the talent we had – some backed up and blamed TD for drafting non-quality guys (that works IF MM & BVG were good at their jobs). However, there was some extended worry that the problem was Mike Smith. With Nolan and Welcome Back, the blame for our lousy vanilla play calling is now firmly attached to MM & BVG – unless you think there is no quality difference between this year and last – and, except for Asante (who brought swagger many though was missing last year), this is the same team this year as last, and – we are a much better team. Your perspective is reflected in your commentary.
Wabe
November 2nd, 2012
10:35 am
Heard Chris Dimino on NFL Network this morning talking about the Weatherspoon injury and he mentined that Akeem Dent will be taking over Spoon’s role an QB’n the defense…
I just find that really hard to believe.
Matty Bicep
November 2nd, 2012
12:14 pm
shm means shaking my head.
“his assertions are that nobody should say anything due to our lack of perfect knowledge”.
No, I am never said nobody should say anything, again, putting words in my mouth…Hell, I say plenty…. I think when making analysis, we should account for our limited information and try and refrain from saying things in anger and attacking coaches.. Not these coaches who have done a great job, and even BVD and MM for helping turn us into a consistent regular season winner, for any Falcon fan knows, is not exactly an easy proposition. I think good analysis should account for our lack of insight, should explore all issues, and not jump to easy knee-jerk popular opinion conclusions.
You know when you attack coaches? When they throw in the endzone with 2nd and 1and a minute left and 3 time outs.
When the team seems disorganized and lethargic as they run 2 plays in the last minute on a comeback attempt,
when we can’t get our FG unit on the field,
when they CONSISTENTLY throw some lame Guard as FB screen pass in key situations.
Back a few weeks ago, I wondered why Konz was not on the field, I assumed that Konz had not shown enough in practice to earn the starting position, Maybe he was a little slow picking up the blocking scheme, wondered what Role Ryan and Pat Hill had it it, etc… and I was corrected about how Smitty was blahh blahh blahh. Some insight there.
I can wonder why Antone Smith does not get carries without somehow tracing it back to some Smitty problem, and directly correlate it to past playoff failure. It is not logical analysis.
And yes,i feel there is an large element of randomness in all team sports when it comes to championships, that is what makes sports so great. Did any of you predict the Giants winning the WS when it was apparent Tim Lincecum has lost it? Or when they were down 0-3 in the NCLS?
We just have a different philosophy, I predict the unpredictability is what ultimately goes along with establishing a champion, more times than not the favorite never comes in. Sure you must have a level of competency to get the opportunity, that is coaching, but from there, it is somewhat fruitless to predict who will be on their top of their game in 3 months. Sean Payton was the toast of the town in 09, in 10, they were one and done to an 7-9 team. How do you see that coming?
Personally, that is why I love sports, if I wanted to analyze every clue thinking that it will logically lead me to the outcome, I would just watch law an order.
And for comparing me to your ex wives….lets not go there, I don’t want to be mean.
Wings
November 2nd, 2012
12:20 pm
MB – “…..and even BVD and MM for helping turn us into a consistent regular season winner, for any Falcon fan knows, is not exactly an easy proposition.”
The Falcons turned into a consistent regular season winner in spite of those incompetent coordinators.
Wings
November 2nd, 2012
12:23 pm
I should have said those two incompetent dinosaurs.
Paddy O
November 2nd, 2012
12:32 pm
this is mb in a nutshell – he has a irrational desire to control what other say. regardless of how hypocritical is blatantly paints him. as stated previously, don’t try to control the conversation – either conspicuously or via passive/aggressiveness. It does not work, and simply loses you crediblity. as indicated, you simply make people stop taking you seriously.
snacktastic
November 2nd, 2012
12:33 pm
Wings: Oh, you mean…OC/DC DINOSAURS?!
Even if we weren’t 7-0, talk about vindication. Our coaching at last appears to match our talent. The Jags? Auburn? Stuck in the prehistoric ages.
Paddy O
November 2nd, 2012
12:34 pm
mb – the vast majority of what you say does not pass the logic test. but, you push the BS you believe in.
Paddy O
November 2nd, 2012
12:35 pm
I’m smelling some excellent schizophrenia.
matty Bicep
November 2nd, 2012
12:52 pm
What is not logical?
What is not logical is saying incompetent coordinators and a seeming incompetent coach took a 4-12, laughing stock of the league with a rookie QB and rolled off a 44-19 record over the next 4 years….
JB Falcon
November 2nd, 2012
1:25 pm
“I don’t want to be mean.” – MB
Then don’t! I seldom do things that I don’t want to do, unless I’m getting paid for it.
Matty Bicep
November 2nd, 2012
2:11 pm
Anyway, it has been too quiet in here lately and we have all been in agreement that we are happy with the team….and that is kinda scary, so I figured I would stir things up and get everyone thinking again. SMH
Big Lou
November 2nd, 2012
2:15 pm
Wabe
Yup. Mike Nolan has proven himself thus far. I’m hoping for some deception and picks on Sunday night for Romo. Also, Dent will be the “face QB” of the defense, but the true QB will be in the booth, shouting into his ear. Yet, with Nicholas out there, I think the Falcons can do pretty well against Spoon.
Wings
Thanks. It’s hard to find positive articles on a 7-0 team called the Falcons. I’m hoping he’s right about his prediction.
JJ
Nice article. Enjoyed the read.
Big Lou
November 2nd, 2012
2:16 pm
without Spoon*
Big Lou
November 2nd, 2012
2:20 pm
Zoomie
Great analysis. You are better than half of those nut jobs on ESPN.
William Pallansch
November 2nd, 2012
2:45 pm
Thankyou for this post, I am a big big fan of this web site would like to go on updated.
Birdman
November 2nd, 2012
2:50 pm
http://www.hulu.com/
Matty Bicep
November 2nd, 2012
2:53 pm
Would love to see Dent make a play. He has caught some grief, and from what I could tell, he looked pretty bad when I could isolated on him, but his stats show some hope…I am starting to get a little curious, his teammates seem to have hope, and I get the sense there might be come good chemistry, everyone seems to like him and is pulling for him, he might just be the little engine that could.
Birdman
November 2nd, 2012
2:54 pm
Don’t know how that came up .Here it is !!
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1392689-midseason-awards-for-the-top-players-at-every-position/page/20