
Cool Cage Poster by Arno!
***Super Cool Cage Poster that Fellow Cage Member Arno Created!***
Sure, it was a good year and it will be an even tougher road back for many fans after this one had the feeling that it could finally be “the year,” but alas it was not in the cards yet again. It was a good year that saw the Falcons starting to take a step further and they did finally rid themselves of the playoff albatross (although no one really cares about that now). Even though it may seem as though it’s the end of the world, it really isn’t. There are a ton of teams that would gladly trade places with our current franchise in being competitive every year and giving themselves a chance every season. It should be acknowledged that this regime has reached heights never before seen in it’s history (they only had back-to-back winning seasons back in 2008 and 2009). But it should be a wakeup call to everyone involved, including Arthur Blank, that changes will need to be made and all apart of the Falcons organization will have to work even harder to finally get to that next level. A look at the game and a peek ahead to the off-season……..
Total Team Loss, Not All Ryan (AJC)
The sensationalist, craven writer and pundit crowd have been waiting for this moment since the kickoff of the 2012 NFL season. Most writers love nothing more than to beat up on a franchise with a terrible history and a known penchant for falling short. The biggest line that is out there is that it’s all Matt Ryan’s fault and he’ll never win the big, never win a Super Bowl, he regularly plays the Grinch at Christmas, and is solely responsible for everything wrong in the world. Sure, he picked a bad time to make a fumble and threw an interception in the second half, even though Roddy White took full responsibility for tripping and that’s exactly what happened on replay. The fact is that this was a complete team loss from top to bottom, including General Manager Thomas Dimitroff as well.
All involved are to blame. The coaches got outcoached halfway into the 2nd quarter and completely overwhelmed in the second half. There literally seemed to be no adjustments to either side after their initial schemes were figured out. The defense had another epic failure, having no answer for really any of the offensive players, particularly Vernon Davis. Seems like the TE was an issue in the Seattle game also, right? The running game stalled. The play-calling became more predictable and less aggressive. Julio Jones was dominant, only to never to be seen from in second half. Roddy White trips on a route, leading to an interception. Harry Douglas trips on a wide open route that would have seen him walk into the endzone. The defense was exposed as being weak and the largest indictment on this regime of all, lack of pass rush, was finally taken advantage of.
Emotional Loss (AJC)
And yes, Matt Ryan isn’t doing himself any favors with his mistakes in the postseason, but in case you haven’t noticed, even the super-elite QBs (Brady, Manning, Rodgers) couldn’t do it all by themselves this year either. There was a reason that the vast majority of pundits picked the Niners, because in almost all aspects save quarterback and wide receiver, the 49ers had better players and more depth. Still, after finding a way to win at the end, the Falcons found a way to lose. It’s not the end of the world, but the Falcons have some big, and perhaps painful, decisions to make if they want to take the whole thing.
Yes, there were two second half turnovers and a stall in the red zone to end the game, but as fellow Cage Member Coop said, being up 17-0 in the first half, playing at home with the crowd going nuts, and allowing the Niners to literally do whatever they want for 3 quarters has epic fail written all over it. In was a mirror repeat of the Seattle game where once the defense seemed to be “figured out” there were no answer to be had. The only problem was that instead of one quarter against the Seahawks, it was essentially 3 quarters vs. a more talented and battle-hardened team in the 49ers. The easy and obvious place to go is to Mike Nolan as defensive coordinator. He’s the one designing the scheme and calling the plays, so he gets much deserved criticism and rightly so.
Mike Smith gets some as well for being a defensive minded head coach working with an excellent DC, only to get completely exposed two weeks in a row on defense. The defensive players get some blame too. There was literally no pass rush (see below) and a less-than 100% John Abraham wasn’t to be found. Of course no one assisted him whatsoever in rushing the passer, but what else is new. The defensive tackles weren’t good either after doing a decent job of keeping Frank Gore and Colin Kaepernick in check early on. They, along with the linebackers, allowed the Niners run game to get on track somewhat and it opened up the pass. Speaking of the linebackers, they were terrible in coverage all night. Coverage was atrocious including all cornerbacks and safeties. Kaepernick had a great second half, but the receivers were so wide open that a high school QB may have completed them.
Tough Way for Gonzo to End It (AJC)
The net was cast wide and far, this was a defensive collapse from top to bottom. Frankly, you don’t deserve to win any championships when you play defense that poorly. Last but not least, Thomas Dimitroff deserves some blame as well. We can talk about schemes and missed assignments all day long, but it was painfully obvious in the second half that this defense simply was overmatched personnel wise, especially along the defensive line. He’s missed on some draft picks on defense and will have to find a way to rectify it both through the draft and free agency if the Falcons will ever take the last step.
The Falcons can take some solace in looking at the team that just beat them to advance to the Super Bowl. The 49ers hosted the Giants just last year and came up just short in their bid to go to the big dance right at the end. They dedicated themselves to pushing through, building themselves up during the regular season vs. good opponents, making some moves in free agency, and using that experience to push down that final barrier. The same can be said of the Packers when they lost the NFC championship at home in 2007 in OT. 3 years later, they were Champs. The Eagles actually lost three straight NFC Title games (two of them at home) before they finally went to the Super Bowl, albeit falling short. Maybe those teams made tweaks, maybe they made overhauls, but they fixed what went wrong in the NFC Title game.
Will Falcons Learn from Niners? (AJC)
This will be discussed at length from now to free agency to the draft and training camp, but the Falcons do have some serious, and perhaps painful decisions to make. The question is whether they have the willpower to make those decisions, which has a mixed history at best the past 4 off-seasons. The opposite is obviously also possible as well. If the Dimitroff, Smith, and Co. feel as though they don’t need to make many fixes and were just a play away from the big dance or make the wrong choices than they could be in for a nosedive. The Bears, Cardinals, Eagles, and Seahawks are all examples of teams that were one game away from the Super Bowl and either did too much, didn’t do enough, or simply made the wrong choices and fell back to playoff obscurity. Coincidentally, all four teams got rid of their coaches soon thereafter.
Every single person associated with the Falcons defensive side of the ball deserves blame on this one, save John Abraham. For the past five years, no one in the organization has been able to muster ANY pass rush whatsoever other than Abraham. That is simply inexcusable on all levels. Thomas Dimitroff and Mike Smith deserve the most blame because, ultimately, they’re the heads of the ship. Dimitroff has drafted Lawrence Sidbury, Peria Jerry, Jonathan Massaquoi, Cliff Matthews, Travian Roberston, and signed Ray Edwards. Rich McKay isn’t absolved either because the Jamaal Anderson pick at #8 overall set this franchise back years. Dimtroff may have the best intentions and picks skill players pretty well, but he has been abysmal on both sides of the trenches. Matthews and Massaquoi have shown some potential, but that hasn’t translated into results. Which leads into the next point.
Tough Day, but Good Ones Ahead (AJC)
If Dimitroff has failed at drafting defensive lineman, than Mike Smith has failed equally bad with his “Witness Protection Program” (see below). It would be one thing if every single defensive linemen drafted by Dimitroff showed absolutely no potential whatsoever, but that simply isn’t the case either. Sidbury showed some flashes in his very limited time as a Falcon (seemingly coming to an end). They can’t figure out what to do with Kroy Biermann and is a little too light for an every down DE. Robertson showed flashes during preseason only to never be heard from again. Matthews and Massaquoi never saw the field until Abraham got hurt and that’s only a handful examples. They have drafted extremely light defensive tackles that never draw double teams and allow every DE drafted to not see single coverage blocking and only
The fact remains that whatever the issue, the Falcons have failed miserably at all levels to address the pass rush situation. The defensive coordinators have been part of the problem, but they haven’t had a ton to work with for whatever reason. Nolan did a pretty good job early on to generate a pass rush, only to see it submarine yet again towards the end and in the playoffs. If the Falcons organization can’t find some way, any way, to fix it than the Falcons will either be in for a bad year or will not take the next step anyway.
Tony's Great Run in Atlanta (AJC)
This one goes to no one other than Falcons Head Coach Mike Smith. We can talk about the coordinators, schemes, players, and personnel all day long, but the truth is that this is Smith’s problem and his alone. The Falcons have long been good for a quarter, a half, or even 3 quarters, but just cannot find ways to put teams away. Sure enough, it came back to finally bite them big time at the worst moment imaginable. Fans knew it was just a matter of time. It’s true that sometimes the ball doesn’t bounce your way and other times teams make good adjustments, but this is not only a trend, but an every game certainty. There was one exception with the Giants shutout, but that was about the only one in memory of the last five years.
Some refer to it as a killer instinct. That’s a part of it for sure. Smith has presided over teams with two different sets of coordinators that exemplify the exact same thing of letting teams back in the game. Most times Smith has found a way to win anyway, but that luck finally ran out in the playoffs, as many thought it would. Many times its becoming hyper-conservative with a decent lead. Others it’s trying to run out the clock and others it’s just becoming undisciplined and tensing up. If Smith can somehow find a way to fix this, it could be the final piece in getting over the hump. If he can’t, he might be looking for a new job in the near future.
Plenty of Long Faces (AJC)
The Falcons and Mike Smith could take a cue from Jim Harbaugh, whose on his way to his first Super Bowl. Harbaugh took a lot of heat for changing quarterbacks very late into the season and it’s paid off. Meanwhile, Smith and Co. either can’t make the tough decisions or their changes are at a glacial pace. This will obviously be discussed a ton over the next several months, but there there is some doubt that Smith and, to a lesser extent, Dimitroff that they are unable or unwilling to make the needed changes necessary to take the Falcons to the next level. And Arthur Blank needs to be honest about what he wants as well. He pronounces that only championships will be accepted, but the cold fact is that Mike Smith has led a franchise out of the abyss, but also is 1-4 in the playoffs, has been the #1 seed in the NFC two out of three years, and has yet to grace the Super Bowl. Is Blank prepared to make a hard decision himself if the Falcons have hit a plateau?
Fellow Cage Member Big Ray came up with one of the most poignant, and funny, descriptions of Mike Smith’s Player Development System: Witness Protection Program. Their inability to develop draft picks and get them meaningful playing time is deftly abhorrent. Maybe it’s all on Thomas Dimitroff for drafting poorly, but when fans see players do well at training camp in Flowery Branch and in preseason only never to be seen or heard from again, it’s supremely frustrating. On the surface, it seems that it’s simply Smith’s conservative nature taking hold in every aspect of this team. The list is infinite on seeing potential and never to be seen again: Antone Smith, Drew Davis, Kevin Cone, Lawrence Sidbury, Chris Owens, Dominique Franks, Travian Robertson, Mike Johnson, Lamar Holmes, Dominque Davis, Kerry Meier, Jonathan Massaquoi, Cliff Matthews, Charles Mitchell, and there’s likely plenty more.
Major Changes Needed on D (AJC)
Some of these listed maybe unfair since they were likely just bad picks (Johnson), but others have shown flashes and never seen the field. Not only that, but other players must “wait their turn” and be an apprentice before earning their chance (DeCoud, Moore) or only seeing the field when someone gets hurt (Peter Konz, Matthews, Massaquoi). This is not saying that these players would have necessarily made a difference in the grand scheme of things, but unless you’re a 1st round draft pick, you’re likely to be placed firmly in the Witness Protection Program. As Big Ray has said many times, either keep them, develop them, and let them play or cut them loose.
There can’t be that many things wrong with a team that goes 13-3, gets the #1 seed in the NFC, and is only a play or two away from going to the Super Bowl, right? Well, they had to do something right, but at the same time, his team has some major areas to address in the off-season and it will take an honest, objective, and sometimes difficult look at every single aspect of this team. Successful organizations do it on a regular basis and this is no different. The Falcons are seemingly good in several areas including quarterback, wide receiver, maybe safety, and perhaps cornerback. Even in those areas, the window is either quickly closing (Roddy White, Asante Samuel, Dunta Robinson over 30) or needs another look (is Harry Douglas a legitimate slot receiver? How big of a contract should Ryan get? What happed to the safeties in playoffs?). Those are the best case scenarios. The others, not so much.
One of like 3 Good Plays on D (AJC)
Like mentioned several times above, this will get a long and detailed look in the off-season, but everything else is up for debate. Defensive tackle needs a major overhaul. The Falcons must do something, anything, to solve the defensive end problems. The linebackers, once thought to be a strong area, looked awful in the playoffs. The offensive line played well in the playoffs, but weren’t a Super Bowl caliber unit in the regular season and needs some strength, youth, beef, and overall change to the unit. The running back situation is one of the biggest areas of need. Tony Gonzalez is likely retiring and leaving an enormous void on offense. Punt returner was a joke the entire season and the list goes on and on. Some areas may need tweaks, while others will require major overhauls, and still others will face difficult and sometimes painful decisions. This has been a great run for this franchise, the best in it’s history, but loyalties cannot get in the way of finding the best 53 man roster to make another run, especially on defense. This looks to be the most critical of all the off-seasons to date, seeing the Falcons getting so close, but now looking so far away if some things aren’t fixed in a major way.
We’ve discussed this before in The Cage many times the past several seasons in that the Falcons are reaching one part of a phase where the window is closing for many players that have helped to reach this level of success. Tony Gonzalez is likely retiring. Todd McClure will be 36 in February. Roddy White will be 32 next November. Asante Samuel just turned 32. John Abraham will be 35 in May. Dunta Robinson will be 31 in April. Jonathan Babineaux will be 32 in October. Michael Turner will be 31 in February. The list goes on and on.
Turner's Last Game? (AJC)
This is not to say that the Falcons don’t have a few good years left and some (White, Samuel) have shown no signs of decline while most of the others have. Will the Falcons organization try to go piecemeal and only tinker for one more year or will they make some fairly dramatic changes to set themselves up for the future? It would be tempting to go with the former, but the Falcons are at a point where some major changes are needed in certain areas. This will be a big point in the off-season.
If you are masochist or glutton for punishment than this is your Christmas and Birthday all wrapped into one. You won’t have to venture very far to see that there are literally hundreds of hatchet jobs, gleeful revenge, “I told you so’s,” and “Same Old Falcons” as an ESPN writer said. Matt Ryan is the worst QB to ever grace the playoffs. This is worst franchise to ever play professional sports and should be burned at the stake for even attempting to win. They should have gone 3-13 like those true “same old Falcons.”
Sure, some of the points they make are valid and some major questions will take hold this off-season and some major weaknesses must be addressed, but these are the times why most Falcons fans (and many non-darling team fans) despise national, sensationalistic, and even sometimes, downright hateful sports media. The fact is, these AREN’T the same old Falcons. This regime hasn’t taken the final step, but it has pulled a broken and historically terrible franchise from the ashes to being an annual contender. They completed back-to-back winning seasons for the first time in it’s 40+ year history. They have made the playoffs 4 out of 5 years. They are only second to the New England Patriots in regular season wins (who, by the way, aren’t doing that great themselves in the posteason lately). They finally won a playoff game after everyone said they couldn’t and were a play away from going to the Super Bowl. Sure, this sounds like complete justification and rationalization and, to an extent, it is.
Great Game by JJ (AJC)
The Falcons haven’t figured out how to get over the final hump and Mike Smith and Co. will start entering a much more critical mode this off-season and coming regular season. And if they don’t make certain fixes and tough decisions they could slip right back into mediocrity, but they aren’t those “same old Falcons.” Those would be the ones that never even sniff the playoffs. This is a long-winded way of saying that getting rid of the hateful, virile, infantile, and sensationalistic national sports media may help getting past this loss.
Some great resources Atlanta Falcons news instead of biased, Entertainment Sports News:
http://www.thefalcoholic.com
http://bloggingdirty.com
http://falconsgab.com
http://gritsblitz.com
For those of you who are new to The Cage, we ask that you stay with us because even though it won’t have as much to talk about in terms of games, wins, and losses, it can be just as much fun to discuss about all the possibilities for free agency, the draft, off-season questions, and the upcoming 2013 season. The Cage already has a ton of topics ready to roll for the off-season.
No questions, just let it go on the crushing loss, your thoughts on the season that was, a look ahead to the off-season, and anything else about your favorite team………..
706 comments Add your comment
Big Ray
January 25th, 2013
12:16 pm
Agreed….get Davis in at the #2 spot. No reason not to.
I don’t know that Lacy or any of the RBs go in the first round, to be honest. One might, but I’m thinking there’s a good run on them in the 2nd round.
I’d still go DT in the first. My second choice in the first round? An OL position….preferably on the interior. Mr. Barrett Jones at OC for instance.
Third choice is a RB or LB.
More opinion on this later….
Big Ray
January 25th, 2013
12:44 pm
Ok here goes a couple of arguments.
Well, the argument on the defensive side is already pretty much set.
DEFENSE :
If you believe the largest difference between the Falcons making a SB appearance and not is about defense, then you draft a DT (maybe two) in addition to a LB and/or DE. The DT just about has to come first, however, unless maybe you’re staring at an absolute top tier DE…or more likely, a top tier LB. You can insert whatever draft day names you think are most qualified for this description, but I think all the top tier LBs are gone by pick #30, and the DE class is thin in my opinion.
Regardless, you build along the Line and then add the playmaker LB if it fits right, because we have to do something in that area as it is, especially if we’re going to a 3-4, which I fervently hope is the case.
OFFENSE :
If you believe the offense is the biggest difference between a successful SB appearance and not….then you gotta go like this:
1) This is a little scary. It’s usually not the best idea to go RB in the first round. There was a time where it happened more often. Not now. Adding a rook RB in the first round means you have to believe that all of your core/interior pieces are fine. Such is not the case with us.
So you go interior offensive line instead. OC or RG, whichever is better talent-wise, and whichever is a better fit. The guy you draft needs to be a starter just about immediately. Not sitting behind some lame-ass incumbent. STARTER MATERIAL. The other prerequisite is that whoever it is needs to be interchangeable with Peter Konze. In other words, either that person keeps Konz at starting RG, or that person moves him over to OC. Nothing less will do.
2) Don’t even breath the words “Tight End.” Replacing Gonzalez, should he retire, is impossible. Therefore, do not try it. . Gonzalez’s talent at the TE position helped get us as far as we’ve gone, but it cannot get us over the hump.
If drafting a TE, do so in the later rounds and spend the pick on a fast and athletic guy who can catch the ball but needs to be coached up on blocking. Then actually follow up on that…develop him hard, fast, and continuously. Do not put him in a corner with a tackling dummy and a blocking sled for 2-3 years so that he forgets how to catch the damn ball.
3) After drafting either an OC or RG, then draft a RB. If you need a name like Lacy, Ball, Bernard, or one of the other prominent and proven types, you may be out of luck at the bottom of the 2nd round. However, you might be able to take a gander at Stepfan Taylor, Joseph Randle, or Le’Veon Bell…somebody of that type.
This also doesn’t have to happen in the 2nd round, necessarily. That said, a guy like Taylor, if he’s there at the bottom of the 2nd….might not be a guy you want to pass on. A RB can be picked up at the bottom of the 3rd, or it may be prudent to trade up in the same round to get one if there’s a good one on the board at that time (example – JaQuizz Rodgers).
4) It doesn’t hurt to pick up another OT at some point. Again, if a good one is still on the board as the middle rounds approach…snag him. Or wait for a stronger draft class and go back to drafting defense.
These are just my ideas on doing some re-tooling. I personally think that we can draft both sides of the ball in the first 3 rounds, but it may not work out that way. We might need to commit to one side of the ball for a while (first 2-3 rounds) then move to the other side after that.
The purpose behind the defensive argument? It’s solidifying and improving the line significantly thereby improving the potential dynamics of the 2nd level of the defense (LB corps) and even the back end (secondary) will enjoy a residual effect. Of course, improving the 2nd level of the defense can also happen via draft, and should.
The purpose behind the offensive argument? A good running game involves a good RB, but we avoid premature issues (injuries, wear and tear) by solidifying the interior offensive line, which can and does make an average running game “decent” or “solid.” What does it do for an above average running game? It makes it a “good” running game. Not only that, but better interior play on the OL gives any half-decent QB more time in the pocket to do the damage that kills opposing defenses.
Since we have a QB that is obviously better than “half-decent”, imagine what happens when the interior OL gets more solidary in pass protection and more push in the running game….along with a quicker RB who can bounce to the outside if necessary and also get in those lanes that allows him to gash a defense.
Suddenly 30-35 points per game is not so hard to imagine, and you’re NOT forced to do it all through the air….
Big Ray
January 25th, 2013
12:48 pm
Afterthoughts …..
If we move to a 3-4, we may have to do it a little slowly, but we’ll see.
In this case, the philosophy may be that the best defense is a very good offense. A dominating one, in fact.
The counter argument partially entails the suggestion that a good defense doesn’t require an offense to play mistake-free and high-charged all the time, therefore scoring 30+ points is not a requirement t assure a win in each contest.
Many here have noted that you need to be dominant on one side of the ball. Which side do you figure we can be dominant on quicker? Offense, or defense? Make your arguments.
And we’re talking plugging in pieces here, not “oh well if Ryan would quit throwing picks” or “If Ryan would stop locking in on WRs” and things of that nature. That argument is no good…we can talk about how much better of a decision maker under center we all are, but that has nothing to do with the draft or free agency.
Big Ray
January 25th, 2013
12:50 pm
Afterthoughts …..
If we move to a 3-4, we may have to do it a little slowly, but we’ll see.
In this case, the philosophy may be that the best defense is a very good offense. A dominating one, in fact.
The counter argument partially entails the suggestion that a good defense doesn’t require an offense to play mistake-free and high-charged all the time, therefore scoring 30+ points is not a requirement t assure a win in each contest.
Needless to say, neither argument is all-inclusive, nor are any of them mutually exclusive.
Jimbo73
January 25th, 2013
1:01 pm
D3
I have been following you since the inception of this blog. I used to respond, but am now really more of an avid reader. I tried to locate the blogs from the ajc main sports section but notice the Brid Cage or Cage is not listed. Is there a url I can add to my favorites to assure I can still find you easily. I am currently using http://blogs.ajc.com/atlanta-falcons-fans but find that sometimes it doesn’t work.
D3
January 25th, 2013
1:22 pm
The Cage Logo — Arno’s fantastic work will be our new logo on each new post. His fantastic work brightened my day right up after that crushing loss.
Great Commentary — The Cage is rolling right along, and I want to thank all of you for helping me absorb that awful loss that I keep thinking about. Comfort in The Cage is a fantastic place to drown sorrows and look to the future.
Ken Strickland
January 25th, 2013
1:27 pm
We all know changes must be made on our OL. I have 2 suggestions. (1) resign LT SBaker, move PKonz to OC, TClabo to RG, and put LHolmes at RT. (2) We put LHolmes at LT, move Konz to OC & put Manley at RG.
I have to totally agree with this WITNESS PROTECTION idea. Almost every player not drafted in the 1st rd is relegated to special teams. Since losing our RG to FA, we’ve unsuccessfully 2 OCs & 2 OT to replace him. We’ve yet to try an OG, like MJohnson, JValdez or AJackson.
We’ve drafted entirely too doggone many developing DLinemen & OLinemen that aren’t being developed. And guess where we’re having most of our OFF and DEF issues. The fact is, all of them have shown excellent special teams ability, and have done well whenever they’ve been given snaps, which is usually during preseason.
Why, and at what point, do they decide to give up on a player and draft his replacement, only to have the same BS happen all over again? Take DE for example. We’ve drafted KBierman, LSidbury, CMathews and JMassaquoi in successive drafts, and we’re still looking to draft another one this yr.
I find it damned hard to believe that any of these DEs prospects could have done worse than REdwards. Yet Smitty and Co continued to run his crippled nonproducing butt out there ahead of them all. They could have gotten better with more snaps, while REdwards actually got worse.
On OFF, it seems only 1st rd picks get any serious consideration under Smitty, like LT Baker, RG PKonz, QB MRyan, WRs RWhite & JJones. Everyone else is either a holdover or lower rd pick that’s not developing or being developed. This crap must stop if we intend to continue any future success.
Paddy O
January 25th, 2013
1:33 pm
coop – you need a dose of sunshine!! Without the Ryan muffs – and really, just the fumbled snap, we hang almost 500 friggin yards on a tough SF defense. I’ll give Koetter a big compliment – he did a hell of a game plan for both playoff games. WE have a very, very good entire franchise. We made some small improvements, provided no injuries, and bring Tony G back – we should find ourselves back in the dome next year.
Paddy O
January 25th, 2013
1:35 pm
arno – being a mic – i’d really like to have little shamrocks bopping around my handle! – at least have it flash green and then gold ! Seriously though – it is a most excellent logo!! I’d buy a t-shirt of it! Need my handle on the back though – and #22.
Matty Bicep
January 25th, 2013
1:35 pm
Gonzalez’s talent at the TE position helped get us as far as we’ve gone, but it cannot get us over the hump.
For giggles, go to google images and type on “Tony Gonzales Open”….You will see and Arial photo of the 4th down play and see that TG was more than capable of getting us over the hump …..I posted the link, but it was removed, my guess is it is a Google Image trademark violation….
D3
January 25th, 2013
1:41 pm
Jimbo73 — Great to see you again. That RSS should work and this Falcons page on the AJC should have it listed
http://www.ajc.com/s/sports/falcons/
If all else fails, you can just google “Bird Cage Falcons” or “The Cage Falcons” and it should come up.
Arno
January 25th, 2013
2:03 pm
Paddy O–
“Being Irish, he had an abiding sense of tragedy, which sustained him through temporary periods of joy.” –W.B.Yeats ….So now I know why you are a Falcons fan! lol
About t-shirts, etc– NFL doesn’t like their logos stuck on unofficial gear. I tried to make the Cage falcon different, but it may not be different enough.
Paddy O
January 25th, 2013
2:05 pm
D3- some 2 cent psychiatric advice: don’t rewatch on NFL replay. it makes you all depressed again. we played exceptionally well. well enough to win.
Nookah
January 25th, 2013
2:10 pm
Big Ray, great points. My preference is the defensive argument. We know we can score but we also know we have a hard time preventing people from scoring.
Don’t get me wrong we need some tweeks on offense but they are tweeks especially on the OL and RB.
Mark it down, TG will be back for one more ride. I am feeling it. As someone mentioned before, he is irreplaceable. Ther is no TE in free agency or in the draft that can do what that guy does. What h lacks in straight line speed he makes up in body positioning and the softest pair of hands ever madfe on a TE bar none. The only thing standing in his way and the HOF is the 5 year wait. With that said and whether he comes back or not, we do not need a TE in the first round. There are many more needs we have that are of higher priority.
D3, sign me up for a Cage T-shirt. I’d be the talk of Toronto modeling that baby – boom!
Go Falcons!
D3
January 25th, 2013
2:12 pm
MB — Wow, and just as I was starting to get over the sickness. But look at Roddy White getting interfered with BEFORE RYAN HAD EVEN THROWN THE BALL! I understand refs don’t want to insert themselves in games, but is a legitimate foul still not a foul?
Nookah
January 25th, 2013
2:14 pm
Ken Strick,
I hear you Brother. I am sure MS is a part of our problem. I keep making the anology of the CEO who can take your company to a particular level but unable to move it into the big-time. For our sake I hope he has not hit his ceiling and his development is also part of the “process”.
Arno
January 25th, 2013
2:16 pm
Yeah– I saw that screen shot yesterday from MB. Been in a thick gloom ever since.
Nookah
January 25th, 2013
2:16 pm
Qustion Cagers? –
I haven’t been able to see the replay but was TG open on that 4th down play behind the LB’s?
Did anyone get a chance to look at that part of the post mortem?
D3
January 25th, 2013
2:26 pm
Nookah — Great to see you my Good Vibrations Brother! Go to Google Imgages https://www.google.com/imghp?ie=UTF-8&hl=en&tab=wi and type in “Tony Gonzalez Open” and you’ll see that he was pretty wide open and that Roddy was already getting interfered with before Matt even throws the ball.
Nookah
January 25th, 2013
2:43 pm
Thanks D3. Nuff respect.
Hamad Meander
January 25th, 2013
3:04 pm
Bad news – we lost the game on Sunday. Good news – we improved our draft position. (sarcasm).
So in that, I’m offering my extremely premature 2013 Mock Draft:
1. Margus Hunt – DE – SMU
2. Larry Warford – G – Kentucky
3. Joseph Fauria – TE – UCLA
4. Andre Ellington – RB – Clemson
5. Shawn Williams – S – Georgia
6. Xavier Nixon – OT – Florida
7. A.J. Klien – MLB – Iowa State
LRD
January 25th, 2013
3:10 pm
Thanks Guys.. Had to post that up about Gonzo, Had to tempt me to go look at the picture. Just had to put a thump on the head into my friday afternoon.. .and its not even happy hour yet.
Thanks
Arno
January 25th, 2013
3:18 pm
http://dvzyjrqhqfwpz.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Optimized-Tony-Open.jpg?afbedd
Hamad Meander
January 25th, 2013
3:22 pm
Blog Monster – begone!
Bad news – we lost on Sunday, good news – we improved our draft position!!!
With that, my completely premature 2013 Mock Draft:
1. Margus Hunt – DE – SMU (maybe with a trade down?)
2. Larry Warford – G- Kentucky
3. Joseph Fauria – TE – UCLA
4. Andre Ellington – RB – Clemson
5. Shaun Williams – G – Georgia
6. Xavier Nixon – OT – Florida
7. A.J. Klein – MLB – Iowa State
Both teams in the Superbowl suffered heartbreaking losses in the Championship games last year. Next season – we are due.
D3
January 25th, 2013
3:26 pm
Got so much I want to say and it’s on the tip of my tongue, but my job keeps getting in the way……
Speaking of the referees……
I have no intent on saying that the refs cost us the game, because it should have never been that close and I hate using that as an excuse on not winning games, especially when you’re up 17-0, your defense literally can’t stop anyone, and your QB freezes up at the wrong time. All that being said, however……….
The refs were clearly calling a game of “let them play,” and truth be told they did a pretty good job overall. I’d rather see that style of reffing, than inserting themselves way too far into a big game.
But…….
We can sit here and say, “they weren’t going to make that call at that time and situation in the game” all we want to, regarding the interference on Roddy White (which the freeze angle clearly shows interference and holding before Matt even throwns the ball). But if we’re going to say they weren’t going to inject themselves in the game, let’s take a look at two other “non-injecting” calls:
1) The Falcons defense gets a stop (FINALLY!) on the Niners in the second half for Cliff Matthews barely touching Kaepernick’s facemask. Talk about not injecting yourself into a game. If I’m not mistaken, they use that penalty to go down and score a TD.
2) OK, so maybe that’s the call officially and the refs had to call that since Cliff Matt grazed his facemask. OK, fine. Then you have Matt Ryan get his shoulder dislocated well after the play is over where the dude lays his entire body down on his shoulder. A roughing the passer right there gives us a new set of downs and yards away from the goal-line.
If you’re going to either inject yourself in the game or “let them play” then you have to do it for both sides……period.
Again, I’m not blaming the refs outright, but those calls in that last quarter, specifically that last drive were completely one-sided.
D3
January 25th, 2013
3:32 pm
Again, also not trying to make excuses, but those last few plays Matt Ryan’s shoulder was dislocated. Does he do a better job when his shoulder is healthy? Not to mention the fact the GD penalty wasn’t even called.
D3
January 25th, 2013
3:35 pm
Big Ray / Hamad x 2 / Nookah — All posts are out!
D3
January 25th, 2013
3:37 pm
Both teams in the Superbowl suffered heartbreaking losses in the Championship games last year. Next season – we are due. – Hamad
Very true. Let’s hope our coaching staff uses this as motivation to push that last barrier down, but I have my doubts under Smitty.
Arno
January 25th, 2013
3:41 pm
So what do we do? Say the Falcons are a Super Bowl team in our hearts? Feels pretty sick. I’m left with this– that one of the necessary qualities of a Super Bowl team is the ability of coaching staff to overcome terrible calls. In this case, how? What if Luke or Dom had played in the TB game? When Matt got hurt, CS would have been ready to plug one of those guys in.
Nookah
January 25th, 2013
3:58 pm
D3,
On the Cliff Matthews call, yes they did go down and score a TD and that play would have got our defense off the field because they did not complete the 3rd down play.
You also brought up the “late hit” on Matty by Gholdson. I did nt want to bring it up but that was my immediate reaction when I saw that play. I guess the refs were saying at that point, “I won’t be the one to give a penalty at this point in a game as important as this.”
If that penalty was called then maybe we would have been in the SBowl with McCown as our QB. Go figure.
Nookah
January 25th, 2013
3:59 pm
D3,
Have some faith in your coach amn
. It’s a “PROCESS”! hehehe
JB Falcon
January 25th, 2013
4:36 pm
Just got caught up and now I want to put my hands over my ears and say LA LA LA LA LA “I can’t hear you!” (3 yr old) I refuse to look back at what might have been. It just plain old doesn’t do my mood any good at all.
I’m looking forward to FA, the draft, training camp and another winning season with better results. We’ve been doing that for 47 years now so we ought to be getting pretty good at it. That don’t mean we like losing but looking forward offers more positive things that can happen than looking backward at negative things that have already happened and we can’t do anything about.
Looking forward to see what trick TD has for us this year. Someone already said that we have more needs than we can attempt to fullfil so let’s just see how far we can go with what we have and can make.
I will be happy with three OL & DL linemen, at least 325 lbs each, a durable RB with 4.3 speed, and whatever else TD can come up with.
Nookah
January 25th, 2013
4:43 pm
How much cap space do we have? Any early calculations?
The Time is NOW
January 25th, 2013
5:36 pm
JB Falcon – I always appreciate your perspective.
Thanks to all in the Cage. You have helped pull me up from a deep depression over an unexpected end to an excellent season.
JB Falcon
January 25th, 2013
5:59 pm
Thanks Time. I learned my optimism at an early age when picking up coke bottles on the side of the road with my Mom. She would say, At least we can eat now!
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
6:45 pm
What’s up Cage..
Big Ray, I am going shock you my brother but I AGREE with you. Defensive tackle HAS to be addressed in either free agency or in the April draft. The Falcons are simply pathetic on the DL with an inability to stop the run consistently or generate a consistent pass rush.
The running back pick is easy and the Cocoa Mel has already identified his personal choice. I want Stefan Taylor of Stanford. I also think he could be had in the second or third round depending on his combine numbers. He is the total package at RB; i.e, a clone of Doug Martin, last year’s first round selection by Tampa (mind you they traded up to get him).
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
6:49 pm
As far as the linebacker corps goes, Nicholas is a quality reserve at best and should be moved to special teams full time. He is inadequate in pass coverage, average at best in all other areas. From what I have seen of Dent, if the play is in front of him, he is solid. He offers nothing on the outside so perhaps a shift to the 3-4 will benefit his play and reveal his true value as a linebacker. It was in a 3-4 I think (correct me if I am wrong, UGA fans) that he rose to stardom at UGA.
The secondary…..still waiting on the first move there. The IMMEDIATE termination of secondary coach Tim Lewis.
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
6:51 pm
Nookah, we have a head coach? I am on record as proposing the following new title…
Mike Smith – Chief, Football Administration
Unca' Bob
January 25th, 2013
7:29 pm
Marko, SeminoleWarrior and Nookah,
Welcome back my friends. Long time no see.
SW,
Mike Smith- Coach of the year, as voted by his peers. But, what do they know?
Unca' Bob
January 25th, 2013
7:52 pm
Arno
January 25th, 2013
3:18 pm
What that shot doesn’t show is a 49′er in the end zone to our left and closing. What I agree with is MR2 made the wrong option.
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
7:54 pm
My favorite Gunny, it is good to be back. Had to take some serious time to get myself back together totally and completely from a very tough latter half of 2012.
The coach of the year selection for CFA Smith is a very nice gesture by his peers.
The TeePee’s issue with the CFA is that his team has not shown any change in overall defensive aggression and potential in THREE years. It regressed this year against the run, remained simply pathetic in terms of a pass rush, and could not cover a baby’s bottom with a Pamper.
Someone has to account for the shortcomings. The buck starts with the CFA. He is the final check and balance for all things on this team. Player development….scheme approval…time management…all these factors rest with the CFA. And for the third time in five years, we are left with more questions from the “direction” of the CFA than we have answers.
Not saying that he should be terminated….but I am saying to quote a certain marketing phrase, the CFA needs to do the same thing he is requesting of all of us…..RISE UP.
E43
January 25th, 2013
7:54 pm
Sometimes I think the idea of filling needs becomes a problem because of the falcons development style. Say we draft a SS/FS because he was the best available. Decoud and Moore are both 27/28. It means that guy probably wont see the field until they both turn 30/31. It sounds like a long time. But this situation gives a guy a chance to take away the starting position from Decoud and Moore.
Instead, they shove rookies on the bench and put even more rookies on the future bench. I dont know who is better between
Walker, Peters, Jerry
Owens, Franks
Mathews, Sidbury
This is bad because you need someone making an impact. Instead, you take a year to find out who you will favor. Not unleash… Favor. We have many options. They just never turn the corner. My theory is that its because needs and solid players are not the same thing. New needs always surface. Example is with DE Anderson. None of the guys from his draft are bonafide ends. Just like that, the falcons missed out on what could be a pro bowler with that pick. Its just too risky to put all eggs in the same basket because of the KGB.
.
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
8:02 pm
E43, I will agree with you and ask the following question?
Can anyone name a player that the Falcons have truly DEVELOPED since CFA Smith has been in command? When I say developed, can you name a player that has truly become the class of his position in this league since being brought into the league byCFA Smith?
The only one that I can see that most will cite is QB Matt Ryan…..
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
8:12 pm
I see the Sean Payton is wasting no time on his new defense. While a flop as a head coach, Romeo Crennel is a solid DC.
The hidden one in this in the possibility of Eric Mangini being available. The Tee Pee would LOVE to see this guy as the defensive backs coach for the Falcons. He did an outstanding job as the DB coach for the Patriots where he coached up several players that we scouted by TD, drafted by the Patriots, and went on to win THREE Super Bowls. Among those drafted players were Eills Hobbs, Brandon Merriweather, Asante Samuel, and Eugene Wilson.
Could he (Mangini) do the same with the ATL secondary? It can’t get any worse than what Tim Lewis has done that’s for sure.
Unca' Bob
January 25th, 2013
8:17 pm
SeminoleWarrior,
First and foremost, I hope and pray you and your’s have turned the corner. Please understand, we, my wife and I, have done nothing but given to your family the very best.
I can’t dispute any thing you stated. But, I still have the utmost confidence in Coach Smith and I will continue to do so up to the point he has truely failed in my minds eye. Perhaps it’s just me.
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
8:20 pm
Nookah, according to Bleacher Report, the Falcons are in cap trouble…..a point noted over the last two season by the TeePee.
BR estimates that we will have about $5 million in cap space to use. And what is worse, we finished the 2012 season reportedly just under a half million under the cap.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1482116-calculating-2013-cap-space-for-every-nfl-team#/articles/1482116-calculating-2013-cap-space-for-every-nfl-team
If anyone knows of another source regarding the cap, please share.
Chop Buster
January 25th, 2013
8:31 pm
SW, Dled posted this on his “5 key offseason questions for the Falcons” article concerning the salary cap:
FOR YOU JSS — 2013 SALARY STATUS AS OF 9:40 A.M. 1/25/2013
Current Contracts: 55
TR Share: $0.00 Adjusted Cap: $1,307,540.00
Benefit Share: $0.00 Team Cap: $118,585,890.00
Salary Cap: $0.00 Cap Room: ($117,278,350.00)
Adjustments: $1,000,000.00 Previous Year Carryover: $307,540.00
Player Position Contributor Type Disposition Cap Value Cash Value
TOTAL — – — $118,585,890.00 $89,611,868.00
AVERAGE/PLAYER — – — $1,108,279.35 $837,494.09
Abraham, John DE Contract Current $7,250,000.00 $6,500,000.00
Babineaux, Jonathan DT Contract Current $5,200,000.00 $4,700,000.00
Biermann, Kroy DE Contract Current $3,433,333.00 $2,400,000.00
Blalock, Justin OL Contract Current $7,660,000.00 $4,500,000.00
Bosher, Matt P/K Contract Current $578,950.00 $555,000.00
Brown, LaMark TE Contract Released $667.00 $0.00
Bryant, Matt P/K Contract Current $2,962,500.00 $2,400,000.00
Calvin, Michael WR Contract Released $1,334.00 $0.00
Clabo, Tyson OL Contract Current $6,050,000.00 $4,500,000.00
Coffman, Chase TE Contract Current $630,000.00 $630,000.00
Cone, Kevin WR Contract Current $480,000.00 $480,000.00
Council, Rico LB Contract Released $1,000.00 $0.00
Davis, Dominique QB Contract Current $480,666.00 $480,000.00
Davis, Drew WR Contract Current $480,000.00 $480,000.00
DeCoud, Thomas S Contract Current $2,500,000.00 $1,900,000.00
Dent, Akeem LB Contract Current $760,725.00 $625,000.00
Douglas, Harry WR Contract Current $2,645,833.00 $2,750,000.00
Edwards, Ray DE Contract Released $4,650,000.00 $0.00
Ewing, Bradie RB Contract Current $451,048.00 $405,000.00
Faulcon, Chad S Contract Released $1,000.00 $0.00
Franks, Dominique CB Contract Released $52,764.00 $0.00
Franks, Dominique CB Contract Current $630,000.00 $630,000.00
Frey, Robbie RB Contract Released $667.00 $0.00
Gallarda, Tommy TE Contract Current $480,000.00 $480,000.00
Gruder, Max LB Contract Released $1,000.00 $0.00
Gunn, Harland OL Contract Current $480,000.00 $480,000.00
Hansen, Matt S Contract Current $480,000.00 $480,000.00
Harris, Bryce OL Contract Released $667.00 $0.00
Harris, Jerrell LB Contract Released $2,667.00 $0.00
Harris, Josh OL Contract Current $480,833.00 $480,000.00
Hawley, Joe OL Contract Current $750,795.00 $630,000.00
Holmes, Lamar OL Contract Current $613,400.00 $480,000.00
Horn, Tyler OL Contract Released $667.00 $0.00
Jackson, Marcus WR Contract Released $1,334.00 $0.00
Jackson, Marcus WR Contract Current $405,000.00 $405,000.00
James, Robert LB Contract Current $480,000.00 $480,000.00
Jerry, Peria DT Contract Current $2,010,000.00 $905,000.00
Johnson, Mike OL Contract Current $790,556.00 $630,000.00
Jones, Julio Q WR Contract Current $4,413,750.00 $1,846,250.00
Konz, Peter OL Contract Current $815,591.00 $553,118.00
Manley, Phillipkeith OL Contract Current $480,000.00 $480,000.00
Manley, Phillipkeith OL Contract Released $1,334.00 $0.00
Markett, Marty CB Contract Released $667.00 $0.00
Massaquoi, Jonathan LB Contract Current $522,215.00 $480,000.00
Matthews, Cliff DE Contract Current $566,750.00 $555,000.00
McClain, Robert CB Contract Current $555,000.00 $555,000.00
McClendon, Jacques OL Contract Current $555,000.00 $555,000.00
Meier, Kerry WR Contract Current $614,251.00 $575,000.00
Mitchell, Charles S Contract Current $505,418.00 $480,000.00
Nicholas, Stephen LB Contract Current $3,500,000.00 $2,500,000.00
Nissley, Adam TE Contract Current $406,000.00 $405,000.00
Nzegwu, Louis DE Contract Released $3,334.00 $0.00
Pearcy, Cody WR Contract Released $1,334.00 $0.00
Peters, Corey DT Contract Current $766,750.00 $575,000.00
Regis, Micanor DT Contract Released $2,334.00 $0.00
Regis, Micanor DT Contract Current $405,000.00 $405,000.00
Robertson, Travian DT Contract Current $491,474.00 $480,000.00
Robinson, Dunta CB Contract Current $9,000,000.00 $8,000,000.00
Rodgers, Jacquizz RB Contract Current $602,750.00 $555,000.00
Rodgers, James WR Contract Released $1,334.00 $0.00
Rodgers, James WR Contract Current $405,000.00 $405,000.00
Ryan, Matt QB Contract Current $12,000,000.00 $10,000,000.00
Samuel, Asante CB Contract Current $4,750,000.00 $4,000,000.00
Schiller, Pat LB Contract Current $405,000.00 $405,000.00
Schiller, Pat LB Contract Released $667.00 $0.00
Schillinger, Shann S Contract Current $606,280.00 $575,000.00
Snelling, Jason RB Contract Current $1,208,333.00 $850,000.00
Szczerba, Andrew TE Contract Current $405,000.00 $405,000.00
Tatupu, Lofa LB Contract Released $300,000.00 $0.00
Thompson, Peyton CB Contract Current $405,000.00 $405,000.00
Thompson, Peyton CB Contract Released $667.00 $0.00
Toone, Tim WR Contract Current $480,000.00 $480,000.00
Turner, Michael RB Contract Current $7,500,000.00 $5,500,000.00
Vaughan, Josh RB Contract Current $555,000.00 $555,000.00
Walls, Darrin CB Contract Released $2,834.00 $0.00
Weatherspoon, Sean LB Contract Current $2,348,750.00 $1,047,500.00
White, Sharod WR Contract Current $9,125,000.00 $6,600,000.00
Zimmerman, Dawson P/K Contract Released $667.00 $0.00
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
8:31 pm
UB, as you well know, when a great leader is taken from people, it takes them time to recover if they ever do so. Often, they, the people, remains lost in the wilderness; adrift and detached from all things real. So was the case for many in my family during the Thanksgiving and Christmas season and into the early part of the new year. But with time comes a healing; a conversion. The road is a little easier to travel and we all know that we must move on. Having friends like you and so many others from the Cage that have kept in touch and kept the prayers constant have been critical. I can never thank you enough but know tha from the bottom of my Warrior heart and soul, every thought from you and the First Lady there in the Palmetto State, as well as all those of all those that took the time to care, will never be forgotten.
I appreciate the loyalty and confidence you hold for CFA Smith. He has been at the forefront of a tremendous run. But I want him to search within; there has to be some way he can attempt to fire up this thing. He has to find a way to get more out of this team, especially the defensive side of the ball.
Those last two games were the most painful things I have witnessed in a long time. As I sat in 209 after the SF loss, watching the Halas Trophy leave our field, I cried. I really cried. It hurt so damned bad, my favorite Gunny. Why? To me, there was no way we should have lost that game. We were the superior team that day. And in the words of Dennis Green, “we let them off the hook”.
THREE defensive coordinators on our staff and that was the BEST we could do defensively in two straight weeks. I know the Patriots choked it away; I know Denver choked it away; I know Green Bay choked it away. But all those teams have something I (we) are still dreaming of….that special parade. If CFA Smith does not change something and change it quickly, the window is going to soon start to close.
Love you my brother…thanks for being my brother in arms, my friend, and most of all, my inspiration.
Chop Buster
January 25th, 2013
8:32 pm
D3 I responded to SW’s 8:20pm post and the blog monster ate it. See if you can get him to regurgitate if please. Thanks
SeminoleWarrior
January 25th, 2013
8:39 pm
Will be standing by to review it, Chop. Thanks.