News Falcons Team Notes

NFC South Week 4 review: Falcons fly high as the rest of the division falls

imagn-27195941.jpg


The Atlanta Falcons were the only team in the division to walk out of Sunday with a win; the team couldn’t have asked for a better result. Here’s the Week 4 NFC South Review:

Tampa Bay Buccaneers (3-1)​


Week 4 Result: Buccaneers 25 – Eagles 31
Week 5 Opponent: Seattle Seahawks

The Buccaneers fell for the first time this season, giving others in the division the opportunity to catch up. Fortunately for them, only one team, the Falcons, took advantage of this. Baker Mayfield tried to pull off his routine of late-game heroics, but they fell flat this week.

Tampa Bay has been reeling from all its injuries, and now Bucky Irving is set to get an MRI. While the team has been able to overcome its staffing issues, it might finally be catching up to them. Tampa’s spot at the top of the division is still safe, but they can’t let the losses accumulate. The Buccaneers are set to take on a red-hot Seahawks team that’s on a three-game win streak.

New Orleans Saints (0-4)​


Week 4 Result: Saints 19 – Bills 31
Week 5 Opponent: New York Giants

Talk about YAC ‼️#NOvsBUF on @paramount+ pic.twitter.com/rOOLoZPTSd

— Buffalo Bills (@BuffaloBills) September 28, 2025

A quarter of the season has passed, and the Saints are still looking for their first win of the season. What a shame, what a shame. The Saints were surprisingly competitive with the Super Bowl favorites, but Josh Allen and the Bills eventually pulled away. The Saints have yet to play musical chairs with their depth chart, but that should commence shortly if the losing streak continues. This team can’t worry about the division until they get a win. This week, they’ll take on the Giants and rookie quarterback Jaxon Dart.

Carolina Panthers (1-3)​


Week 4 Result: Panthers 13 – Patriots 42
Week 5 Opponent: Miami Dolphins

The Panthers fell back to Earth this week with an abysmal performance against Drake Maye and the Patriots. Bryce Young realized he wasn’t playing the Falcons and wanted nothing to do with the event. Carolina remains under .500 after positioning themselves to break even. Dave Canales’ offense looks disjointed, and Young doesn’t look like he’ll be the quarterback of this team a year from now. A lot can change in the coming weeks, but the premature turnaround celebration that took place in Charlotte after Week 3 will be on hold till further notice. The Pathers will try to claw their way back up against the Dolphins, who are coming off their first win of the year.

Atlanta Falcons (2-2)​


Week 4 Result: Falcons 34 – Commanders 27
Week 5 Opponent: Bye Week

Put some mustard on these @Bijan5Robinson cuts 🤯

CBS | NFL+ pic.twitter.com/haoOOoBxlp

— Atlanta Falcons (@AtlantaFalcons) September 28, 2025

After the worst performance in Michael Penix Jr.’s career, the quarterback turned in one of his best against the Washington Commanders. The entire Falcons offense came alive and flirted with their ceiling as a group. The Falcons needed a win after firing a coach and promising to flip the script. They’ll now go into the bye week sitting 2nd in the division at .500 with their playoff hopes intact. Hopefully, players like A.J. Terrell can heal up and be ready to go for Week 6 when the team will take on Josh Allen in primetime.

Only one team walked away with a win this week, and it was your Atlanta Falcons. The first quarter of the season has wrapped, and the team is in a good position to make a run out of the bye. It won’t be easy, but nothing in this league is.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...ns-fly-high-as-the-rest-of-the-division-falls
 
Deadline deal proposal would land Falcons Raiders WR

imagn-27197878.jpg


The last time the Falcons traded for a Las Vegas Raiders wide receiver, the result was pretty disastrous. That’s more about the receiver than the trade partner, however, as Bryan Edwards was supposed to give a lousy depth chart a major boost but instead caught just three passes for 15 yards over seven games and never again appeared in an NFL game. Oof.

This time out, Bleacher Report’s Alex Kay pitches a deal that would bring Jakobi Meyers to Atlanta, pointing to a shaky wide receiver depth chart and recent injuries to Darnell Mooney as rationale.

I’ll get the trouble spot out of the way early: A fourth round pick is probably too rich for Atlanta’s blood, considering they’re already down a first rounder thanks to their draft day James Pearce Jr. trade with the Rams. Atlanta needs more picks rather than less, but that price becomes more palatable the further you go into the draft. It’s not that price is unfair, per se, so much as that the Falcons may not really be able to afford to pay it.

But in Meyers, you’d be getting a fantastic short-term salve for the team’s receiver woes, one who would provide Atlanta with reliable hands—he had the league’s lowest drop rate in 2024—and a proven, consistent track record of high level receiver play. Meyers has at least 800 yards receiving in four consecutive seasons despite having Mac Jones, Jimmy Garoppolo, Aidan O’Connell, Gardner Minshew, Brian Hoyer, and Desmond Ridder throwing him passes over that span, with 20 touchdowns to go with them. He can and does win deep, something that will appeal to Penix, and is a credible if not spectacular yards after the catch threat.

He also has completed two out of three passes for the Raiders the past two years with a touchdown, making him by far the highest-rated passer Las Vegas has had over that span, which I found funny.

Meyers is not the best receiver in the NFL in terms of run blocking, however, which is one item that might give this Falcons team pause. The other is compensation and contract cost; Meyers would be a one-year rental with a chance to re-sign, and is making $11 million this year. The Falcons would have to feel pretty confident they’d be good enough with Meyers to make the trade worthwhile.

But with Darnell Mooney struggling and hurt, Ray-Ray McCloud off to a slow start and likely to be hit by the regression monster in 2025 after a major career year in 2024, and the team’s depth looking somewhere between suspect and unproven, it’s a question of whether the Falcons trust Casey Washington to take a major step forward and think their practice squad crew can offer plenty in a pinch. If not—and if this passing game ends up in a place where reinforcements are clearly needed—Meyers is probably the best affordable option out there for Atlanta.

Pencil it in as a speculative sort of longshot at this point, and we’ll see where the Falcons are before the deadline.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...e-deal-proposal-would-land-falcons-raiders-wr
 
Week 5 NFL Sunday open thread

imagn-25067623.jpg


While the Falcons are indeed off today, the rest of the NFL rolls on, including all three NFC South rivals.

If you’re watching Giants-Saints (ew) or Dolphins-Panthers (yikes) in the early slate, talk about it here. If you’re skipping those games for something resembling quality NFL action, talk about that here too. If you’re waiting and tuning in for Seahawks-Buccaneers, an actual compelling matchup that might have real NFC South implications, then know that you’re more than welcome to, you guessed it, talk about it here.

Enjoy a Falcons-free Sunday, folks!

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/game-day-threads/87538/week-5-nfl-sunday-open-thread
 
What do the Falcons need to fix to make the 2025 season a success?

imagn-27195598.jpg


We know what the Atlanta Falcons have done well in 2025 thus far. They have run the ball very well three out of four weeks, their pressure has been pretty consistent and far better than at any time in recent memory, and they’ve had timely turnovers and a handful of big plays to help them pilot their way to a pair of wins.

All of that matters, but I know we’re not alone in believing this team is far from a finished product. With that in mind, and with battles against motivated Buffalo Bills and San Francisco 49ers teams on deck, it’s worth asking how the Falcons can better and fully realize their considerable potential.

Tre’Shon Diaz, Saivion Mixson, and I took a swing at naming three things the Falcons can fix that will help them get there. Let us know your three in the comments, and we’ll get in the swing of Bills week soon enough.

Tre’Shon Diaz

#1: Curb volatility


The team’s worst and best performances of the season occurred just a week apart. It may be October, but a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde dynamic won’t lead to sustained winning. The Falcons have to continue to focus on details and execution. This team can stay in any game if they play smart and clean football. The splash plays and high-scoring affairs are fun, but those things don’t happen if the little things aren’t completed.

#2: Fix field position woes


Atlanta’s field position woes stem from a myriad of issues. Trouble fielding knuckle balls against the Panthers (kicker Ryan Fitzgerald is already prolific at this technique), missed field goals, bad coverage and lane discipline on punts and kickoffs, and an offense that has stalled out or turned the ball over. Some of these are bigger strains than others, but all need to be mitigated as much as possible. The team can’t keep putting its defense in tough spots while making it harder on themselves to score points.

#3: Improve play-action


While the offense did see a significant improvement in Week 4, the play-action offense is still leaving a lot to be desired. Outside of two positive plays, the rest were duds.

The Falcons ran six play-action plays yesterday (5/6 from pistol)

– 15-yard dagger
– Ray-Ray reverse, loss of 7
– Sack
– Incomplete deep shot
– Pitts redzone TD
– INT

Offense did not fundamentally change yesterday, and still needs to be more efficient on play-action plays pic.twitter.com/urptQPApEx

— Tre’Shon (@tre3shon) September 29, 2025

The volume is as low as the efficiency. The touchdown to Kyle Pitts was a step forward, but Zac Robinson needs to pick up the pace if he wants to see sustained success on offense. The Falcons current play-action playbook doesn’t mesh well with their run game. The play-action concepts they run don’t mirror the run-actions that are a staple of the offense, and that’s holding back the full potential of play-action. If Robinson doesn’t make this adjustment, these plays will continue to yield more busts than booms.

Saivion Mixson

#1: Continue Spreading the Ball Around


As much fun as it is to smash the Bijan button, if Sunday was any indication, this offense is at its best when everybody is involved. Sunday marked the first time that the trio of first-round picks, Bijan Robinson, Drake London, and Kyle Pitts all had a touchdown. With that, it was the 10th-most efficient game played by any team, generating an impressive 0.25 EPA/play and a 12th-best 6.8 yards per play. Atlanta’s ability to move the ball and attack the Washington defense from so many different angles forced Washington out of their run-first plan and into the inconsistent arm of Marcus Mariota, leading to Defensive Rookie of the Month, Xavier Watts’ 2nd interception of his young career.

#2: Clean up Special Teams


It feels like overkill, but, seriously, the special teams have to improve. Atlanta is 8th-worst in the NFL with 1.81 points per drive. Part of that is because the Falcons have that uphill battle, giving up almost two yards on average on offense and allowing opposing offenses almost three yards before the drive even begins. It can’t continue. This is a talented football team that should be able to make a run at the playoffs. However, there are some key areas for improvement, including fielding kicks cleanly, improving punt coverage, and making field goals more consistently.


#3: Keep playing aggressively


The Falcons have a back-to-back primetime stretch after the bye week of maybe the best team in the NFL, the Buffalo Bills, and a San Francisco 49ers team that looks to be getting hot, even with Mac Jones instead of Brock Purdy at quarterback. But that can’t stop you from continuing to push the ball down the field, like you did against the Commanders. Atlanta needs to find a way to continue to dictate the pace, like they did against Washington, whether that means finding matchups with Bijan Robinson on an unsuspecting linebacker or Kyle Pitts and Drake London bodying a smaller defender in the intermediate parts of the field. This team has the talent to go toe-to-toe with virtually any defense in the NFL right now, but they have to plan and play like that.

Dave Choate

#1: Improve the run defense


Atlanta’s just 18th in rushing yards allowed, but 10th in yards per carry, and they’ve allowed over 100 yards in three of four weeks thus far. That’s not to say the run defense has been terrible, but we’ve seen poor tackling at the second level and not enough push up front, and that’s concerning with some great rushing attacks like Buffalo and San Francisco on deck. Yes, I know Christian McCaffrey has had a shaky year. No, I don’t trust that to continue against Atlanta.

The Falcons need to ensure they’re handling their gap assignments effectively and that they find the best early down combination up front to keep opposing rushing attacks in check, or teams will lean heavily on the ground game to avoid having to pass against a defense that has mostly done quite well. Getting Ta’Quon Graham back should help the Falcons further solidify their early down run defense, but they need a bit better from everyone to ensure they don’t get gashed in the coming weeks.

#2: Lean on the run on offense​


Bijan Robinson is hurtling toward a career year, and Tyler Allgeier has been every bit the ill-tempered bowling ball this Falcons team needs late in games against dispirited defenses. While the Falcons have the talent to be a high-flying passing attack, they’re best when they don’t need to rely on it (and create pressure-packed situations) for that attack.

The proof is in the numbers. The Falcons are 6th in the league in rushing yards per game, Bijan is 10th in success rate and Allgeier is 22nd, and both are excelling at powering through first contact, with Robinson fourth in the NFL in yards after contact and Allgeier sitting at 18th out of 44 qualifiers.

Running is working, so the Falcons should continue to prioritize it until teams prove they can stop it, with the added benefit of increasing your chances of catching teams off guard when you do utilize play action.



#3: Clean up special teams issues


It would be much easier to score and prevent teams from scoring if the field position battle was not being lost so regularly. As Saivion noted on Twitter, the Falcons are the 7th worst team in opponent starting field position and the 4th worst in terms of their own starting field position, which makes life harder for the offense and the defense alike.

Falcons are 7th-worst in opponents average starting position with opponents starting at approximately their own 34-yard line, 3 yards over average

Atlanta is also 4th-worst in starting field position starting at approximately their own 29-yard line, 2 yards under average… https://t.co/rXaa3wdkAC

— Saivion Mixson (@saivionmixson) September 29, 2025

If Parker Romo can be consistent and the Falcons can start pinning teams deeper while getting 5-10 precious extra yards to help the offense out, the Falcons will be more dangerous than they are now. That’s a worthwhile goal, and one I trust Marquice Williams and company to figure out.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/gener...need-to-fix-to-make-the-2025-season-a-success
 
Falcons greats once again up for Seniors Pro Football Hall of Fame consideration in 2025

imagn-2165261.jpg


The Pro Football Hall of Fame announced its list of Senior candidates for Canton, and there are once again several Atlanta Falcons on the list. We’d like to see all of them make it, but hell, we’d settle for one. Here’s a look at who is eligible to don a gold jacket in 2025.

Mike Kenn​


We’ve been writing about Kenn’s case for depressingly close to a decade, and despite that fact that he’s a slam dunk, no-brainer Hall of Famer, I’m not hopeful his fortunes will change in 2025.

Why? He was an offensive lineman for a franchise that flew under the radar, two knocks against his case despite his obvious greatness, and ones that contributed to his relatively low Pro Bowl total. Only 57 players—not linemen, players—have appeared in more games than Kenn did during his three decade-spanning career, and only five of those players are offensive linemen. He was a five-time Pro Bowler, a two-time first-team All-Pro, and a three-time second-team All-pro who started every one of the 251 games he appeared in for the Falcons, and was known for his ability to handle some of the legendary defensive ends of the 70s and 80s.

Kenn made his second first-team All-pro squad 11 years after his first, in a 1991 season where he allowed just one sack in a pass-heavy offense after making his bones as an elite run blocking left tackle throughout the early part of his career. The league kept changing around Kenn, and Kenn kept being a great offensive lineman right up until the day he retired. He has a legitimate case as the best Falcon ever with Matt Ryan, Julio Jones, Tommy Nobis, and Jeff Van Note, certainly belongs in the conversation as one of the best 15-20 tackles in NFL history, and has durability and excellence very few players in the league can touch.

His peers knew it, and unfortunately the passage of time is making it harder to make his case. In the article linked above—a very worthwhile read, by the way—John Turney quotes NFL great Art Shell, who seemed confident Kenn would be an easy inductee.

He’s a future ‘Hall’ guy, sure,” Shell told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “If the folks who do the voting have any sense about them, he’ll walk right in when it’s his time.”

Mike Kenn should be in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. One day soon, I hope he will be.

Tommy Nobis​


Another player who was overshadowed by the long ineptitude of the franchise he played for, Nobis was widely considered one of the greatest defenders of his era. Mr. Falcon played in an era where many statistics were not counted the way they are today, and that plus the swirling mists of time have obscured his impact.

But Nobis hasn’t gotten real consideration, despite being considered as good as Hall of Famers Dick Butkus and Ray Nitschke in his prime by peers. He was a five-time Pro Bowler, two time All-Pro (once first team, one second team), and a member of the 1960s All-Decade team despite not entering the league until 1966. Those awful early Falcons teams play a role in his relative obscurity, but he was lauded as one of the best run defenders and open field tacklers of his era, as John Turney recounts here. Add in 9.5 sacks, 12 interceptions, 13 fumble recoveries, and an unknown but likely absurd number of tackles, and Nobis should have garnered more consideration than he ever has.

Billy “White Shoes” Johnson​


A revolutionary in the return game, Johnson pioneered the Funky Chicken as a celebratory touchdown dance, once scored the first punt return touchdown in 1983 after six seasons where no other player scored one, and led the Falcons in receiving twice. He’s just 39th in combined return yardage, but only three players who were of his era or played before him have more, and his six punt return touchdowns are tied for the ninth-highest total in league history all these years later.

Because he was flashy during an era where the league discouraged it, blazing the way for the many inventive celebrations we see today, and was a quality receiver and top-flight returner in his day, Johnson deserves a lot of credit for his impact on the game that he doesn’t always get. It would be great to see him in Canton.

Chris Hinton​


Hinton played four seasons for Atlanta, serving as Mike Kenn’s bookend at right tackle from 1990-1992 before shifting to right guard in 1993. A seven-time Pro Bowler, one-time first team All-Pro, and two-time second team All-Pro, Hinton was one of the premier do-it-all linemen of his era, playing both guard and tackle spots during his 13 year career and appearing in 177 games, starting 172.

Kenn should be in first, but Hinton’s as good as any other tackle on the Seniors list and deserves serious consideration.

Clay Matthews Jr.​


The father of the more famous Clay Matthews III, who was dominant for the Green Bay Packers in the 2000s and 2010s, Matthews Jr. finished his career with three years in Atlanta. Prior to that, he was a longtime Cleveland Brown and put up 82.5 sacks, one of the highest career tackle totals ever, and the 36th-highest forced fumble total. He’s a legitimate great who played for a very long time, and has suffered the same fate as many of these other senior nominees who get lost in a shuffle of terrific players and the passage of time.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...e-shoes-johnson-chris-hinton-clay-matthews-jr
 
Bijan Robinson could jump cut his way into the record books

imagn-27194423.jpg


Only three running backs in the long history of the NFL have achieved 1,000 yards rushing and 1,000 yards receiving in the same season. The legendary Marshall Faulk is one, likely future Hall of Famer Christian McCaffrey is another, and the underrated Roger Craig is the third. Bijan Robinson has a real shot to become the fourth member of that exclusive club in 2025.

How? He’s currently on pace for 1,335 rushing yards and 1,148 receiving yards, totals that don’t feel unreasonable given his production to this point. Bijan just had 1,456 rushing yards a year ago, so I feel very comfortable projecting him to clear 1,000 this year with continued good health. The receiving mark is trickier—his previous career high was 487 yards in 2023, so it would be unprecedented—but he’s being used as a legitimate, frequently targeted weapon in the passing game.

While that would be an all-time honor, Robinson is also working his way up the franchise leaderboards. For example:

  • A modest 700 rushing yards the rest of the way will see him surpass Dave Hampton for seventh all-time on the franchise career rushing yards list. He’s only 1,150 yards away from Michael Vick and, from there, just 114 yards behind Devonta Freeman for fifth all-time. This is his third season, remember.
  • If he manages 500 receiving yards the rest of the way—again, not an unreasonable expectation—he’ll fly by Jason Snelling, Art Malone, Gerald Riggs, Bob Christian, Warrick Dunn, and Jamal Anderson for receiving yards from a Falcons running back. At that point, only Devonta Freeman and William Andrews would be ahead of him.
  • Six more combined touchdowns would put him at 25th all-time in scoring for the franchise, ahead of Jim Mitchell, T.J. Duckett, and Jason Elam. Ten more would have him passing Tony Gonzalez and Alge Crumpler, settling in right behind Warrick Dunn. Three rushing touchdowns would put him past Michael Vick for 9th all-time in that metric.

I lay all this out not to say he’s going to achieve all these marks—though he certainly could—but to illustrate that we are watching a truly special player doing remarkable things. I always urged fans to enjoy the magic when Matt Ryan was in his prime throwing darts everywhere, when Julio Jones was dusting hapless cornerbacks on a regular basis, and when Michael Turner was mashing defenders to a fine paste beneath his mighty cleats. We should be doing the same with Bijan, whose cuts and vision are already legendary among his peers, and who is sometimes single-handedly keeping this offense afloat and competitive on a weekly basis. Not only is he great, but he’s the engine this team needs to keep running if they want to be successful at last in 2025.

Fingers crossed that when the season ends, we’re celebrating a playoff berth and Robinson joining a very exclusive club of running backs at the same time.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...-could-jump-cut-his-way-into-the-record-books
 
Falcons fans give 2025 NFL Draft class an A for performance so far this season

gettyimages-2237652328.jpg


Don’t you love the bye week? We get a whole Sunday of stress-free football.

But there’s still plenty to talk about regarding the Atlanta Falcons, and one of my favorite topics right now is the performance of Atlanta’s four defensive 2025 draft picks. This week we asked you to grade them, and those results are blow.

The Falcons threw UGA fans a Dawg bone in the first round with the selection of EDGE Jalon Walker. Walker has played 102 snaps this season, which is about 46.5% of the defensive snaps so far this season, notching 10 tackles and one sack so far. Fans give that performance a B.

Atlanta_2_100125.png

Next up is the second of the Falcons’ first-round selections in 2025, James Pearce Jr. out of Tennessee. Pearce has played 84 snaps so far, with two tackles and .5 sacks. That’s 38% of the defensive snaps this season.

Atlanta_3_100125.png

A couple of things that stand out to me so far about the grades: Bs seem fair to me for both of Atlanta’s young pass rushers. They don’t have eye-popping stats just yet, but they are getting pressure on opposing QBs, and they are contributing early on. Love to see it.

On to Atlanta’s two rookie DBs, starting with CB Billy Bowman Jr. Bowman has been all-caps FUN to watch this season. He’s getting a lot of playing time (178 snaps, almost 82% of the total defensive snaps), and he has 10 solo tackles, seven assists, two pass breakups, one interception, one forced fumble and .5 sacks. What a rookie stat line!

A majority of fans gave Bowman a B grade, but the votes between A and B were very close — 44% gave him an A, with just 2% more giving Bowman a B.

Atlanta_4_100125.png

Safety Xavier Watts has gotten the attention of more than just Falcons fans. He earned September Defensive Rookie of the Month honors for his four pass breakups, two picks, and 23 tackles (17 solo) over 217 snaps — 99% of the defensive snaps so far this season. He’s the only rookie who overwhelmingly got an A grade from fans this week — a grade I enthusiastically agree with.

Atlanta_5_100125.png

(Yes, I know it’s Watts and not Watt — I didn’t see the typo until Sunday morning and our Reacts guru Kyle Thele is not able to correct it until tomorrow!)

Overall, this draft class is exceeding my expectations both in terms of playing time and performance. And the majority of fans giving the class as a whole an A. Intrepid fans will notice I did not include a grade for Jack Nelson — I don’t think it’s fair or particularly interesting to grade a guy with zero snaps this season. But if you disagree with me, drop your grades for Nelson in the comments.

Atlanta_6_100125.png

Is the high estimation of the rookie class impacting fans’ confidence? I think so, and in a positive way.

Atlanta_1_100125.png

What are your thoughts on the rookies and their grades? What would you like to see from this group over the rest of the season? Share your thoughts in the comments!

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...nfl-draft-2025-rookie-draft-grades-nfl-week-5
 
Can the Falcons upset the Bills in primetime? Falcoholic Live, Ep349

gettyimages-1362424090.jpg


Can the Falcons pull off the upset over the AFC-leading Bills on Monday Night Football? Kevin Knight and Adnan Ikic discuss Atlanta’s injury situation coming out of the bye, the potential for the Falcons to take down Buffalo in the national spotlight, and thoughts on the team’s trajectory over the remainder of the 2025 NFL season. Fellow Falcoholics, welcome to another episode of The Falcoholic Live!

Watch the stream below or on YouTube beginning at 8 PM ET​


You can also listen to all of our video shows in an audio-only podcast format, available on all your favorite podcast platforms or by using the player below. The podcast typically posts a few hours after the live show records.

If you’re interested in supporting the show, become a Channel Member or check out our Patreon page to unlock access to exclusive perks including Patron Q&A sessions, Discord perks, live shout-outs and more!

Be sure to check out the new community Discord server here! Come chat with your fellow Falcons fans about the show, the team, the NFL draft, and more.

You can watch the show here on The Falcoholic, but we recommend watching on YouTube for the best experience—including full 1080p HD video and access to the live Q&A in the chat. You can also access the show using your smart TV or device using the YouTube app for the real big-screen experience!

We hope you enjoy the show! If you have comments, we’d love to hear them. Send them to us on Twitter (@FalcoholicLive), leave them below, or e-mail the show at [email protected].

Thanks for watching!

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...week-6-2025-can-falcons-upset-falcoholic-live
 
Zac Robinson mum on Oklahoma State job he has been linked to

imagn-27193960.jpg


Frequently maligned Atlanta Falcons offensive coordinator Zac Robinson got to go into the bye week with a little cheer and grace from this fanbase, thanks to a 30-plus point explosion from his offense that keyed a victory over the Washington Commanders. The scrutiny will start anew after Thursday, however.

That’s because as Robinson and company are preparing for a huge primetime matchup against the Buffalo Bills, Robinson fielded a question from Garrett Chapman at Falcons Sports Illustrated about whether he had been contacted by his alma mater, Oklahoma State, regarding their head coaching vacancy, something that has been rumored for a few weeks now. A simple no would have quelled any further inquiry, but Robinson’s response made it seem like the answer is “yes.” Hey, at least he’s not going to lie! From Terrin Waack with the team’s website:

Falcons offensive coordinator Zac Robinson was asked by @gchapatl whether he has been contacted by Oklahoma State for the head coaching job: "I'll kind of leave that. But just honestly, I'm focused on today and progressing this week."

— Terrin Waack (@TerrinWaack) October 9, 2025

This does not mean Robinson is accepting the job at a place where he thrived from 2005-2009 as the team’s quarterback, but it certainly implies he’s been contacted and is considering it. The leap from NFL offensive coordinator undergoing growing pains to head coach at a program where you’re still beloved is a considerable one, so it’s difficult to blame Robinson for at least thinking about it. If he did bolt during the season, especially early in the year, it would leave the Falcons offense looking for an internal replacement without significant play calling experience, which would have them relying on a first-time play caller like they did with Robinson in 2024, just with less notice and more pressure. If Robinson is Oklahoma State’s top choice, I’d expect him to seriously entertain the job.

Fans would be split on their reaction to it, though I’m sure the team would hate to lose him midseason. Robinson has had stretches where he’s done a very nice job getting the run working throughout 2024-2025 and did a nice job last year fueling a stretch of real success for Kirk Cousins and some quality play early on from Michael Penix Jr. in his early starts, all of which he deserves real credit for. He’s also been criticized for an overreliance on pistol formations and an associated abundance of predictability in the team’s offense, a lack of play action, a dearth of answers in short yardage and red zone situations, and inconsistent reliance on this team’s strengths through the air and on the ground. All of those criticisms have been fair to some degree; on balance he’s been a frustrating but inexperienced play caller who has shown an aptitude for improvement but real inconsistency in terms of that improvement, which led to the team summoning him to the sideline before Week 4 against Washington.

If he takes the Oklahoma State job, the internal options are limited. T.J. Yates has been picking up responsibilities in Atlanta for years now, and is probably the most logical candidate to assume duties. He would presumably be assisted by Tim Berbenich, the pass game specialist who has two decades of coaching experience in the NFL in mostly offensive roles, and Dwayne Ledford, the run game coordinator and offensive line coach. Quarterbacks coach D.J. Williams, who was a longtime offensive assistant with the Falcons (in 2024) and Saints (for five seasons before that), could also take on an expanded role in game planning. It seems like the job would likely go to Yates, though.

This is a lot of speculation, I realize, fueled by a noncommittal answer offered by a coach who justifiably wants to keep the focus on a big matchup. But Robinson had to know that any answer but no would fuel that speculation, and the fact that he chose a non-answer tells you there’s probably some smoke associated with this particular fire. It’s very likely that we haven’t heard the last of Robinson and Oklahoma State being linked.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...m-on-oklahoma-state-job-he-has-been-linked-to
 
Falcons Reacts Survey Week 6: How confident are you heading into this Bills matchup?

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Falcons fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

You know the drill! Take our survey, and share your thoughts in the comments!

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlanta-falcons-game-information/87589/falcons-fan-survey-week-6
 
Back
Top