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Falcons LB JD Bertrand has struggled filling in, why?

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During the Atlanta Falcons two-game losing streak, one player has garnered attention for all the wrong reasons.

JD Bertrand looks like he doesn’t belong out there, and given that the committee Jeff Ulbrich discussed hasn’t materialized, that’s been a major problem for the defense. The Falcons have talked up Bertrand’s ability and effort in the past and clearly like the young linebacker, but if they’re going to rely on him, they need better. What’s causing this performance, and can he be salvaged?

Slow Processor​

buffering… pic.twitter.com/vwDyXT7DiO

— Tre’Shon (@tre3shon) October 28, 2025

The speed of the game is overwhelming the young linebacker, whose strength is supposed to be his brain. If you’re going to be a sub-par athlete, you have to be able to make up for your lack of physical gifts by having a mental edge, but Bertrand is one of the last players on the field to move every snap.

The former 5th-round pick struggles to diagnose his keys and react with the limited time he’s given. This has led to Bertrand getting washed out on runs and picked on in the passing game. Once difficult blocking angles are now a breeze, thanks to the extra step linemen gain from Bertrand’s inability to react. The defense was susceptible to the run before he was placed into the starting lineup, but now teams are ripping off big runs with the second-level defender constantly behind and out of position.

We’re seeing these issues in coverage as well, where teams are continuously attacking Bertrand. Zone coverage requires quick feet and an understanding of leverage and angles. Bertrand is creating windows for the opposing quarterback that did not exist when Divine Deablo was patrolling the middle of the field. He struggles with identifying who is entering and exiting his zone and shows a lack of instincts when the ball is in the air.

coverage liability pic.twitter.com/dO6EOnw7z5

— Tre’Shon (@tre3shon) October 28, 2025

There is nothing the coaches can do to make him react or move faster. Jeff Ulbrich came in and simplified this defense for the front seven; he can’t do anything to make life easier for Bertrand. The player either understands what’s in front of him or he doesn’t.

Small in stature and lacking gifts​


Physical gifts can help you recover on a bad rep, but a lack of gifts can turn a bad rep into an embarrassing one. The thing that is hurting Bertrand most right now is something he cannot change: his size. The big knock on the linebacker coming out of Notre Dame was that he was too small to play on most downs in this league. The multitude of plays that end with a ball carrier or lineman running him over emphasize that

Even when Bertrand is on time, he’s often physically outmatched and washed out of the play. It isn’t just offensive lineman having their way with him either; tight ends and even wide receivers are moving the linebacker with ease. When an offense can get away with blocking a linebacker with their slot receiver, the opportunities to exploit that weakness are endless.


Most modern undersized linebackers offer higher-end speed, like Deion Jones. Bertrand is built like a WILL linebacker (weakside coverage linebacker), but he doesn’t have the speed, agility, or length needed for that role. The team has tried to use him as a MIKE (strongside run defender), but that has also proven disastrous due to his lack of play strength. The player is stuck between a rock and a hard place with his expanded role.

For Bertrand to stick on the field outside of special teams and avoid the ire of fans, he’s going to have to beat blockers to the spot and have a better feel as a zone defender. He’s shown flashes in between his streaks of foul play, but not enough to make onlookers believe he can turn things around.

Raheem Morris said the linebacker’s performance wasn’t good enough, but he was also clear that last week was not the last time we would see Bertrand on defense. Ulbrich is going to have to be more calculated in how he uses Bertrand as he figures out a rotation that stops the bleeding.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...struggled-filling-in-why-divine-deablo-injury
 
Falcons vs. Patriots Week 9 Injury Report: Jessie Bates III, Kyle Pitts limited on Wednesday

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Week 9 is here, and it’s now officially the start of a new week. The Atlanta Falcons are looking to move on from their most recent, embarrassing loss to the Miami Dolphins in Week 8. The team is dealing with some injuries, but they will need folks back if they hope to get back on track against the New England Patriots this week.

Let’s take a look at the current health of both teams.


Falcons injury report, Wednesday, Oct. 29​


Full

• OL Storm Norton (foot)

Limited

• WR Darnell Mooney (hamstring)

• EDGE Jalon Walker (groin)

• QB Michael Penix Jr. (knee)

• WR Drake London (hip)

• S Jessie Bates III (knee)

• TE Kyle Pitts (ankle)

Did Not Practice

• EDGE Leonard Floyd (hamstring)

• DL Zach Harrison (knee)

• WR Casey Washington (back)


Patriots injury report, Wednesday, Oct. 29​


Full

• N/A

Limited

• DT Khyiris Tonga (knee)

• WR Stefon Diggs (ankle)

• C Garrett Bradbury (toe)

• DL Christian Barmore (not injury related)

Did Not Practice

• RB Rhamondre Stevenson (toe)

• OL Morgan Moses (rest)



Looking at the Falcons first, you’ll notice quite a few notable names on the list. It sounds like the team is hopeful that they will be getting EDGE Jalon Walker back this week, with news today that when healthy, he is expected to play a little more inside linebacker. Safety Jessie Bates III is new to the report, as he deals with a knee injury. Quarterback Michael Penix Jr. missed Week 8 due to his knee injury, with news that he was limited on Wednesday, we will keep an eye on that to see if he progresses during the week. Storm Norton, however, is trending to come back.

The Patriots have a few notables who were limited, but the biggest news for them is running back Rhamondre Stevenson missing practice with a toe injury.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...sie-bates-iii-kyle-pitts-limited-on-wednesday
 
Rock Bottom Roundtable: Where do the Falcons go from here?

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There’s been a feeling of the Falcons hitting rock bottom continually since 2019. It started with a 1-7 start that season, followed by losing the first five games in 2020, leading to the firings of Dan Quinn and Thomas Dimitroff. While 2021 was a rebuilding year, the season opener at home against Philadelphia ended in a 32-6 defeat. That’s not how you want to start a new era with Arthur Smith.

Being heavily linked to trading for Deshaun Watson in 2022 was a dark moment in franchise history. Losing to a one-win Panthers team in 2023 essentially ended their playoff aspirations and the plan to develop Desmond Ridder. A four-game losing streak last season, with non-NFL caliber quarterback play from Kirk Cousins, ending in a 42-21 defeat to Minnesota, felt like the latest moment of hitting rock bottom.

It didn’t take long for the Falcons to do it this year. A 34-10 defeat to a dysfunctional Miami team has left everyone wondering what the Falcons can do to rectify what could become another lost season. They looked bewildered in all aspects against one of the worst teams in the league. A roundtable is very much needed to assess the team. Dave Choate, Adnan Ikic, and Aaron Freeman for this month’s roundtable. The previous 2025 season editions were published in September and August.

How can Zac Robinson overcome the lingering schematic issues surrounding the offense?​


Dave Choate: I don’t think there’s an easy, clean answer here. Like Dirk Koetter and Arthur Smith before him, Robinson has shown himself to be inflexible about his preferences. I don’t think he’s going to suddenly abandon the pistol, his preferred pre-snap motions, or his ideal personnel; all we can really expect are tweaks.

I do think the team can rely a little less on the pistol and try to eliminate tells that have made it easy to guess when the Falcons are running, like particular pre-snap motions for Charlie Woerner. I definitely think more Casey Washington and KhaDarel Hodge at receiver in place of David Sills, a willingness to use a little more Feleipe Franks or Teagan Quitoriano if you’re not willing to commit to using a sixth offensive lineman on days where the ground game is struggling, and in general a lighter reliance on three receivers when the Falcons don’t have three worth putting on the field at the same time can only help.

That’s what this needs to be about: Making this offense less predictable and more tailored to helping the guys on the field succeed, rather than what Robinson thinks will work (and has really not). Even modest gains can make a big difference over time.

Adnan Ikic: With pure talent, at this point. The schematic issues are such a hindrance and give defensive play callers such an advantage to know if the next play will be run or pass based on the formation (for the most part). If nothing changes, all we can hope for is for Bijan Robinson to make people miss, for Drake London to make contested catches, and for Michael Penix Jr. to rapidly improve. There’s really nothing else to it if there’s a refusal to make any adjustments.

Allen Strk: Realizing that the offense hasn’t evolved at all from 2024 would be a start. The Y-motion with Woerner into the B-gap. The unbalanced screens where there aren’t enough blockers to take on defenders. The minimal spacing and deception on vertical route concepts. The complete lack of under-center play action. All of this was happening last season. Defenses had plenty of time to prepare for adjusting to what they were successful at in 2024. Robinson hasn’t made the necessary adjustments to expand on what they built from last season and identify troubling tendecies.

A fresh approach with more detail behind their screens and route concepts to schematically create openings can help bolster a passing game that has limitations at wide receiver. Not being fixated on wide outside zone runs would be beneficial for second-level defenders not to key on running plays. There needs to be more ingenuity from a play caller who worked under one of the best offensive minds in the last decade. Sean McVay consistently rises to the occasion when adversity strikes by knowing how to keep defenses unbalanced with a relentless mentality and an open mind. Robinson has to use that as inspiration to help resurrect a rapidly fading season.

Aaron Freeman: One of the biggest schematic deficiencies has been the team’s struggle to consistently incorporate an effective play-action passing attack into the offense. After a season and a half of these same struggles, it may be chalked up as a lost cause. Instead, other areas where the Falcons can continue to grow under Robinson include diversifying the run game and attacking the middle of the field.

Using some of the motions and horizontal runs with Bijan Robinson, as they did against the Bills, while also incorporating new variations of zone and gap runs, will enhance the rushing attack’s diversity. Coaxing Penix Jr. to throw more frequently over the middle should unlock a new area to exploit in the passing attack.

What has hindered the offense more, the lack of pass catchers or progress made on the offensive line?​


Dave Choate: I think that answer has shifted over time; the offensive line feels like the biggest trouble spot right now because both Penix Jr. and Cousins have struggled behind it the past two weeks. If that trend continues–if the Falcons can’t replace Elijah Wilkinson soon with Storm Norton, in particular–that’s at the top of my list.

But the receiver issue has been the bigger one throughout the season. Darnell Mooney has not looked like himself and has either dropped passes or been in the wrong place far too often. Washington, Sills, and McCloud haven’t been getting open consistently and making the most of their opportunities. Hodge, who is an occasionally useful playmaker but not a starting-caliber receiver, looked more dynamic than any of those three receivers did on Sunday, and that’s obviously going to hurt the passing game when those are your best options.

Adnan Ikic: I’d more so highlight the pass catchers. Mooney got hurt on the second day of camp and still doesn’t look healthy. London has been battling his own ailments since the season started. McCloud was released after becoming inactive out of nowhere. Atlanta’s receiver room would have been just good enough with no injuries, but the nonexistent depth has been completely tested and fully exposed. It’s hard to tell what Ike Hilliard could have done given the circumstances, but I think it’s more than clear at this point that he was just Raheem Morris’ scapegoat.

Allen Strk: Ever since McCloud was phased out of the offense, the lack of depth at wide receiver has been glaring. They weren’t able to build on their success against Buffalo because Sean McDermott made second-half adjustments and started sliding his coverage alignments toward containing London. A superhuman effort from Robinson kept them afloat. The issues continued against San Francisco, where there weren’t many clear throwing windows for Penix Jr.

Once London was ruled out against Miami, and the wide receivers couldn’t create much separation against arguably the worst secondary in the league, the evidence was clear on how the coaching staff mismanaged their personnel evaluations. Expecting Casey Washington and David Sills to replace McCloud’s production appears to be a baffling decision. As frustrating as the offensive line has been, the current wide receiver group is nowhere near good enough.

Aaron Freeman: After Kaleb McGary’s injury, it was a given that the offensive line would take a significant step back. They were able to avoid that in the first month of the season, but the chickens have finally come home to roost. The pass-catchers have been the real problem.

Darnell Mooney was one of the most explosive wide receivers in the NFL in 2024, but has been virtually a non-factor through eight weeks in 2025. Until he returns to his previous levels of performance, the Falcons’ offense will have a much lower ceiling than anticipated.

How does the defense move forward at linebacker without Divine Deablo?​


Dave Choate: They have to not just pay lip service to a committee. DeMarcco Hellams is a fundamentally sound player who excels against the run and moves well, making him an interesting player to have on the field instead of JD Bertrand on obvious passing downs. Jordan Fuller, Josh Woods, and Ronnie Harrison all have shown a better ability to read and react to plays more quickly than Bertrand at points in their career. Not all of these players are going to be better than Bertrand as full-time starters, if any, and Fuller and Hellams probably are going to struggle a bit with getting off blocks from offensive linemen.

So has Bertrand, though. The goal should be to mix-and-match based on opponents, situations, and who has the hot hand. The Falcons have already failed trying to replace Deablo with just one player, something Jeff Ulbrich said and has now proved is impossible. It’s time to have Bertrand be part of a mix rather than The Guy and give Hellams, Woods, and Harrison at minimum chances to show what they can do to help.

Adnan Ikic: Not with Bertrand, who doesn’t look capable of being a linebacker at this level. We need to expect subpar play from this position, as there was really no depth to speak of coming into the season. Although the easy answer would be to make a trade, a team already down two picks looking the way they do should not be buyers at the trade deadline. I would give Harrison the next crack at the position, given that he should have some coverage ability. Beyond that, DeAngelo Malone could be an option, albeit not a good one. I don’t expect anything from Troy Andersen, either.

Allen Strk: A rotation of Bertrand, Woods, and Harrison seems like the most realistic option. While Bertrand had a nightmare performance against Miami, it’s unlikely the coaching staff will completely give up on him. He also had some decent moments when forced into action against San Francisco. Inserting him into a three-down linebacker role is a mistake that can’t be made again.

Harrison is willing to take on blocks and be a physical presence. Woods has some experience. They have to work with their options, while not leaving themselves completely physically overmatched. This is an undersized defense to begin with. The idea of forcing a pure safety to play as a WILL linebacker could lead to devastating consequences against the run, particularly with a matchup against Jonathan Taylor looming. They have to prioritize being as physically prepared as possible with suitable linebackers.

Aaron Freeman: Deablo possesses the skills of a complete linebacker, so they’ll have to piece it together without him. They’ll need to get better play from Bertrand or anybody else who may serve as his primary replacement. But at the same time, the team will likely have to limit his exposure, given his struggles against the Dolphins. They can borrow a page from former Falcons defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen’s 2023 playbook, where he had to deal with similar coverage limitations when Nate Landman stepped in for an injured Troy Andersen. Nielsen’s main strategy was to deploy dime defense on the vast majority of third downs, with Kaden Elliss as the lone linebacker on the field and the other linebacker replaced by a sixth defensive back.

Having physical safeties like Hellams and Harrison, who are very comfortable playing in the box, makes them natural fits in that role, and we’ve seen the Falcons utilize both as a “big nickel” in each of the past two games. Unfortunately for Elliss, he’ll likely be forced to take up a larger portion of coverage responsibilities with Deablo out of the lineup, similar to previous years when Andersen went down with injuries. However, with Ulbrich’s willingness to scheme up pressure via blitzes, that can be a helpful tactic, as the threat of Elliss mugged on the line of scrimmage has often created pass-rushing openings for others.

Are there any defensive linemen who should receive more reps to help stop the run-stopping woes?​


Dave Choate: I think trying to get more out of Sam Roberts and LaCale London on early downs is a smart play, with both players faring well against the run. Ta’Quon Graham should be in that conversation, too, but he’s looked a little rough coming back from injury thus far. The Falcons have been rotating heavily, but right now, teams are keying in on Atlanta’s hapless run defense and overpowering them up front.

Roberts and London have been two of the handful of players up front (David Onyemata is another) who have been sound and consistently come up with stops, and having them on the field more early in the game to hopefully help stymie opposing rushing attacks and force offenses to look for more balance is worth a shot. There is no one magic bullet, though; the loss of Deablo and some of the limitations on this roster mean the run defense will probably not be be better than okay in 2025.

Adnan Ikic: I wouldn’t mind seeing a bit more of what London could do. He seems to have fallen completely out of favor and isn’t getting much playing time at all, but he was never a bad run defender before, and could be an in-house option of “seeing what sticks.”

Allen Strk: Moving away from bear fronts and playing a more traditional base front could be the best option before anything else. It doesn’t seem like the team is well-equipped to excel with three interior linemen and two edge defenders. Similar to Zac Robinson, it’s hard to envision Ulbrich drastically shifting away from his preferred alignments. London always seemed like a capable contributor in limited snaps. The same can be said for Roberts, although London has shown to be more of a penetrator than Roberts against the run.

Reinserting London into the rotation in place of Graham could materialize into some progress. Graham has consistently been driven yards away from the line of scrimmage since returning from injury. Not having a nose tackle on the roster who can eat up space and take on double teams has come back to haunt this defense. They have to sensibly experiment to find the best formula to not be dominated in the trenches.

Aaron Freeman: London was giving the team solid work at nose tackle in base defense before his injury. Roberts has continued that for the past few weeks. It’s time the Falcons found ways to get both players on the field at the same time. While David Onyemata has been solid at times for the Falcons this year, he’s also been inconsistent, especially when it comes to holding up against the run.

The Falcons should curb his snaps, giving more opportunities to the younger interior players on early downs, where bigger bodies like London and Roberts could help keep opponents behind schedule. Eventually, it will create more obvious pass-rushing opportunities for Onyemata and others on later downs, putting them in more favorable situations.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...blank-raheem-morris-jeff-ulbrich-zac-robinson
 
How to watch Falcons – Patriots in Week 9

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The Falcons head north to face the Patriots on their home turf, a tough matchup for a Sunday afternoon. We’re all apprehensive about it, but of course we’ll be watching it regardless, so here’s how you can do just that.

Schedule & TV information


Date: Sunday, November 2, 2025

Time: 1 p.m. EST

Channel: CBS

Location: Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts

Announcers: Andrew Catalon, Charles Davis, Jason McCourty, AJ Ross

Radio: 92.9 The Game & affiliates locally with Dave Archer and Wes Durham on the call; Sirius XM nationally

Online streaming


The game will be available on FOX5’s website and app locally, on Fubo nationally, and for re-watch on NFL+ nationally if you have a subscription. You can also sign up for YouTube TV’s NFL Sunday Ticket (that’s what I do) to get all non-primetime Falcons games if you’re out of market.

Odds from FanDuel Sportsbook

Social media links


Falcoholic Facebook: Click here for our page

Twitter: Follow @TheFalcoholic

Live Show: The Falcoholic on YouTube

Podcast: Spotify | Apple Podcasts

2025 Atlanta Falcons schedule (3-4)​


WEEK 1: Loss vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

WEEK 2: Win at Minnesota Vikings

WEEK 3: Loss at Carolina Panthers

WEEK 4: Win vs. Washington Commanders

WEEK 5: BYE WEEK

WEEK 6: Win vs. Buffalo Bills

WEEK 7: Loss at San Francisco 49ers, Sunday Night Football, October 19, 8:20 p.m. EST

WEEK 8: Loss vs. Miami Dolphins, Sunday, October 26, 1 p.m. EST

WEEK 9: at New England Patriots, Sunday, November 2, 1 p.m. EST

WEEK 10: at Indianapolis Colts (Berlin), Sunday, November 9, 9:30 a.m. EST

WEEK 11: vs. Carolina Panthers, Sunday, November 16, 1 p.m. EST

WEEK 12: vs New Orleans Saints, Sunday, November 23, 4:25 p.m. EST

WEEK 13: at New York Jets, Sunday, November 30, 1 p.m. EST

WEEK 14: vs. Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, December 7, 1 p.m. EST

WEEK 15: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Thursday Night Football, December 11, 8:15 p.m. EST

WEEK 16: at Arizona Cardinals, Sunday, December 21, 4:05 p.m. EST

WEEK 17: vs Los Angeles Rams, Monday Night Football, December 29, 8:15 p.m. EST

WEEK 18: at New Orleans Saints, Time and Date TBD

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...atriots-in-week-9-channel-announcers-schedule
 
Falcons vs. Patriots Week 9 Injury Report: Zach Harrison, three others ruled out

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Happy Halloween, Falcoholics! Friday is here, which means we have the final practice reports of Week 9. We have been monitoring the health of both the Atlanta Falcons and New England Patriots all week, and now we have designations on who will, won’t, and might play this Sunday.

Let’s take a look.


Falcons injury report, Friday, Oct. 31​


Full

• WR Darnell Mooney (hamstring)

• QB Michael Penix Jr. (knee)

• WR Drake London (hip)

• RB Tyler Allgeier (knee)

• CB Natrone Brooks (shoulder)

• TE Kyle Pitts (ankle)

Limited

• EDGE Leonard Floyd (hamstring) QUESTIONABLE

• EDGE Jalon Walker (groin) QUESTIONABLE

• S Jessie Bates III (knee) QUESTIONABLE

• OL Jake Matthews (ankle)

• LB Kaden Elliss (rest)

• DL Ta’Quon Graham (calf)

Did Not Practice

• OL Storm Norton (foot) OUT

• CB Billy Bowman Jr. (hamstring) OUT

• WR Casey Washington (back) OUT

• DL David Onyemata (rest)

• DL Zach Harrison (knee) OUT


Patriots injury report, Thursday, Oct. 30​


Full

• WR Stefon Diggs (ankle)

• C Garrett Bradbury (toe)

• DL Christian Barmore (not injury related)

• DT Khyiris Tonga (knee)

Limited

• N/A

Did Not Practice

• RB Rhamondre Stevenson (toe) OUT



We had a lot of updates for the Falcons on Friday. The good news first; quarterback Michael Penix Jr., receiver Drake London, receiver Darnell Mooney, and others are good to go on Sunday after logging full practices today. Now the not-so-good news, there were some setbacks on Friday as lineman Storm Norton, who practiced fully on Thursday, did not practice on Friday and has been ruled out this week. Joining him on the sidelines is corner Billy Bowman Jr. and defensive lineman Zach Harrison.

We will be monitoring safety Jessie Bates III, and EDGE’s Leonard Floyd and Jalon Walker who are all questionable to play after being limited on Friday with their respective injuries.

There were no changes to the Patriots injury report on Friday. The only update is that running back Rhamondre Stevenson, who hasn’t practiced all week, has been ruled out with his toe injury.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...y-report-zach-harrison-three-others-ruled-out
 
Falcons vs. Patriots: A look at the series history going into 2025

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The Falcons travel to Foxborough on a northeastern trip to face off against the team that gave them the most infamous moment in their history. Overall, THAT game was just one out of 16 total meetings between Atlanta and New England in their NFL histories, with the Patriots leading 10-6.

This matchup has always been one sided, it’s just that each side has had their own advantage for a prolonged period of time.

Following two Patriots wins in the first matchups in the ‘70s, Atlanta owned the northeastern ball club, even throughout their putrid existence in the ‘80s and ‘90s. The Birds won six out of seven meetings between 1980-1998.

Then Tom Brady and Bill Belichick arrived, and Atlanta has literally never won again. From 2001 through the present, the Pats have won seven consecutive matchups, including a 28-3 comeback in Superbowl 51, which this franchise will have to carry around its neck like an albatross for the rest of time.


Last Meeting​


The 2021 Falcons followed an emotional victory over the New Orleans Saints to get back to .500, by getting their asses absolutely kicked in Dallas against the Cowboys, 43-3. They met the red hot New England Patriots (who had won four in a row at that point) on Thursday Night Football four days later.

The theme continued, as Atlanta once again got its ass absolutely kicked. The Falcons could get absolutely nothing going on offense all night, with the impressive Patriots defense stifling Matt Ryan and company, as New England gradually put their points on the board mostly through field goals.

Atlanta managed to pass midfield three times all evening. The first time resulted in a missed field goal. The second a turnover on downs. The third an interception. Overall, three Falcons quarterbacks all saw playing time, and all three of them threw at least one interception.

Two of those quarterbacks did not see the field until after the 2-minute warning in the fourth quarter. Josh Rosen threw a pick six on his lone drive. Following the kickoff, Feleipe Franks was inserted and he threw an interception on his lone pass attempt. This game finished as a laugher.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...-a-look-at-the-series-history-going-into-2025
 
Identity Crisis: Are the Falcons physical enough?

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The Atlanta Falcons‘ current struggles stem from a lack of offensive identity, as seen in their Week 8 loss to the Miami Dolphins. The team’s lack of physicality is dooming any chance this offense has of digging itself out of its current predicament.

For the second week in a row, Falcons head coach Raheem Morris used the name of the city as a verb to stand in for being physical when he said the Dolphins “out-Atlanta-ed” the team, just as he had the previous week against the San Francisco 49ers.

The Falcons owe some of their lack of physicality against the 49ers to making minimal attempts to establish the run early on. That was not the case against Miami, where they tried to run the ball but were stymied by a surprisingly stout Dolphins run defense. The Dolphins, of course, were not surprised by the Falcons’ strategy to re-establish a physical identity, which led to accusations of predictability from offensive coordinator Zac Robinson.

However, an opponent expecting a team to run the ball doesn’t guarantee they can stop it. The Detroit Lions are a great example of a team well known for their run-first, physical offensive identity that still achieves success every week.

Play action is an effective counter missing from Falcons offense​


Yet, a reason the Lions can find success despite not catching opponents off guard is that, in addition to their run game, they have an effective counter via play-action passing. Teams can sell out against the run, but doing so makes them more vulnerable against the pass, as the Lions have the highest expected points added (EPA) per pass on play action, according to Next Gen Stats.

Meanwhile, the Falcons rank dead last in EPA added on play-action passes. However, the team did achieve some success against the Dolphins on their lone play-action pass of the game. That came on a 24-yard strike from Kirk Cousins to Kyle Pitts that helped set up the team’s first score against Miami. However, the Falcons did not call another play-action pass the rest of the game.

A hefty dose of runs and play-action passes made for a viable strategy against the Dolphins. Entering the week, the Dolphins’ defense ranked 30th in EPA allowed per rush and 27th in EPA allowed per play-action pass. Yet despite a highly favorable matchup, the Falcons failed to take advantage. In the case of the run, it was due to poor blocking up front; in terms of play-action, it was simply from a lack of effort.

If the Falcons are going to turn their season around, they must be more capable of establishing an identity that they can rely on weekly. Clearly, Morris wants that to be a physical running team led by running back Bijan Robinson. To achieve it, the team will need better play from its offensive line and other blockers, who have been far too inconsistent this year. Those struggles aren’t too surprising given the absence of right tackle Kaleb McGary, but the team still needs to find ways to overcome them.

Yet without an effective play-action passing attack, such an identity is far too one-dimensional to be consistent week to week. Morris will have to rely on Zac Robinson to develop a complementary play-action attack that, so far, he has proven incapable of achieving outside of the team’s win over the Buffalo Bills in Week 6.

Lack of physicality doomed Raheem Morris’ predecessor​


A lack of progress in these two key areas could doom Morris and his coaching staff, as it did for his predecessor, Arthur Smith. Smith also wanted the Falcons to establish an identity as a physical run-first offense off the heels of a very successful 2022 campaign on the ground, leading to the selection of Bijan in the 2023 NFL Draft. However, the Falcons’ 2023 rushing attack fell far short of expectations, and unfortunately for Smith, his choice of quarterback, Desmond Ridder, was unable to compensate. Smith ultimately was dismissed for those shortcomings.

Like Ridder, current Falcons quarterback Michael Penix is experiencing growing pains common among inexperienced passers. While hopes are high that Penix can overcome these early struggles and finish this season strong, as the team waits for that breakthrough, their success will hinge on their physical identity.

If such an identity can’t transform into a reliable foundation for success and the team continues to get “out-Atlanta-ed” by upcoming opponents such as the New England Patriots, Morris might find himself sharing Smith’s fate.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...re-the-falcons-physical-enough-bijan-robinson
 
Falcons late push denied by the Patriots in the Week 9 Snap Reactions

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Slides should be fun, but there’s nothing fun about the Atlanta Falcons losing streak. The team lets a close contest slip away.

Here’s the Week 9 snap reactions.

Penix and London return​


Penix looked healthy and boosted the offense today. It wasn’t perfect; he’ll want that intentional grounding play back, but the quarterback showed some nimbleness in the pocket today and made the passing game functional.

Drake London appreciated that functionality and went off, putting up a hat trick and one of the best individual performances of his career. This duo looks like a legit pairing, but inconsistent offensive line play and coaching thwarted their efforts today and most of this season.

Jalon Walker’s breakout game​

the future pic.twitter.com/iTEzx4O2UP

— Tre’Shon (@tre3shon) November 2, 2025

Jalon Walker was a force of nature today. Yes, he gave up two receptions and a touchdown (showing why he shouldn’t be moving backwards or playing ILB like some fans have begged), but the rookie nearly took over the game and helped keep his team in contention all afternoon. Walker had two sacks, two TFLs, and he continues to set the edge like a seasoned vet.

Nate Ollie deserves a lot of credit for the athlete’s development; Walker is becoming a better EDGE defender every week. Georgia fans should stop begging to move the player and enjoy the work he’s putting in.

OL is a mess​


If you’re blaming the poor OL play on coaching, then it’s time to reevaluate that take. This group is bad, failing to execute the basics and make their reads, and “bad playcalling” has nothing to do with technique failures. If you think Dwyane Ledford, of all coaches, is failing to address technique or these mental errors in practice, think again.

The Falcons went cheap at center, and they are getting what they paid for. The rest of the line has been dealing with injuries and inconsistent play. Today, the team lost Bergeron early and Lindstrom late. Even if Norton returns, there’s a good chance we see Wilkinson kicked inside if these injuries bleed into next week. It’s a lot for an offense to have to overcome, and this staff didn’t need any extra work.

Defense is running on fumes​

Patriots went after Bertrand with the game on the line, good coaching

— Tre’Shon (@tre3shon) November 2, 2025

Young defensive lineman have stepped up and made splash plays, but this defense looks thin, and they are running out of answers to their problems. The Falcons finally installed their by-committee approach at linebacker, but unfortunately, it still left JD Bertrand on the field. The Patriots realized this on the final 3rd down of the game and went right after the LB.

The interior of this defense is a liability against the run and the pass, and Jeff Ulbrich’s beard is getting greyer every week. Getting Zach Harrison back would be a big boost, but these issues run deep; run defense and depth were the weaknesses of this defense coming into 2025, and those weaknesses are now front and center.

The men for the job?​


This staff was supposed to realize the full potential of a roster that people believed was underachieving in a weak NFC South. The bar was playoffs their first year, but it’s been lowered every week of their employment. The roster is as thin as it has been every year of Terry Fontenot’s tenure, and the CEO, aka Raheem Morris, commits a management blunder in every game that makes fans question his competence. The team’s kicking issues were ignored until it was too late, and now they’re costing them points each week.

What this team advertises itself to be hasn’t lined up with reality for nearly a decade. The franchise’s decision makers have not lived in reality since the winter of 2017, and the fans are paying for it.

The Falcons losing streak continues after another game undone by mistakes on routine plays. Injuries are staking, and every mistake is magnified. This staff’s future looks bleak.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...-by-the-patriots-in-the-week-9-snap-reactions
 
Falcons Highlight Reel vs. Patriots

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I mean…they were close.

And I know that doesn’t make it any easier. “Close” doesn’t count for much in the standings, but it does tell a story. Because for all the frustration, the Falcons went toe-to-toe with a very good New England Patriots team and, for stretches, looked every bit their equal.

Michael Penix Jr. and Drake London each delivered their first three-touchdown performances, putting on a show that reminded everyone what this offense can be when it’s clicking. The defense? Pure chaos. Flying around, creating pressure, and keeping Atlanta within striking distance until the end.

It didn’t end the way anyone hoped, but if you’re searching for a reason to believe, or at least something to get the blood pumping again, this highlight reel has plenty of it.

Explosive plays. Relentless energy. Glimpses of what’s possible.

Because sometimes, even in a loss, you can see the foundation of something real.

Pitts hits 3,000-yard mark​


With the 22-yard catch-and-run to put the Falcons in New England territory for the first time, tight end Kyle Pitts made a little history.

Kyle Pitts has just become the third tight end in #Falcons history with 3,000 receiving yards. https://t.co/aAS7gKTsTe

— Kevin Knight (@FalcoholicKevin) November 2, 2025

Pitts joins Tony Gonzalez, Alge Crumpler, and Jim Mitchell as the only tight ends in Falcons history to reach the 3,000-yard mark for the Falcons. Kyle Pitts has been one of the true bright spots of a mostly disjointed effort from the Atlanta offense.

Pitts comes into this week third among tight ends in receptions, eighth in receiving yards, and is fourth in catch % of any tight end with at least 20 targets (83%).

Drake London finds paydirt from a yard out!​


WE HAVE A TOUCHDOWN! The Falcons’ offense showed off its ability through the air as Drake London high-points the ball over cornerback Marcus Jones for the touchdown!

Drake London high points it for a touchdown!

ATLvsNE on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/LVLA4WVmmm

— NFL (@NFL) November 2, 2025

Falcons’ first-rounders give Falcons life with strip-sack/recovery​


The Atlanta Falcons were reeling after the New England Patriots reeled off 14 unanswered points, and were looking for more as the 1st half wound down. Instead, the duo of first-round edge rushers made the play of the day, so far, for the Falcons as Jalon Walker looped around and popped the ball free from quarterback Drake Maye’s grasp. James Pearce, Jr. found the football and ran it back to the Patriots’ six-yard line before being brought down by fellow rookie left tackle Will Campbell.

Falcons first-round rookies combine for the sack fumble & recovery!

ATLvsNE on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/DxpmHCS3of

— NFL (@NFL) November 2, 2025

Now, it’s looking like we have a ball game! The Patriots get the ball after the half, but the Falcons have taken the momentum into the locker room.

This is Drake Maye’s fifth fumble of the season, tying him for third-most with Matthew Stafford and Cam Ward. Atlanta has also gotten some good pressure on Maye, with three sacks in the first half.

London finds the end zone for the second time​


Another red zone drive, another Drake London touchdown over Marcus Jones. Michael Penix, Jr. found his favorite target for a second touchdown from inside the five over the same cornerback, this time from two yards out.

Drake London has another!

ATLvsNE on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/yQe1IEW0Bt

— NFL (@NFL) November 2, 2025

Drake London continues to use that big body like he needs to, as he has only his second-ever game with multiple receiving touchdowns.

Jessie Bates gets first interception of 2025​


Whether it was a miscommunication or not, Drake Maye sailed the ball, and the always opportunistic Jessie Bates made him pay.

PICKED OFF BY JB3 😤

CBS | NFL+ pic.twitter.com/RKvTuMlH3m

— Atlanta Falcons (@AtlantaFalcons) November 2, 2025

This is the first interception for Bates this season, and the Falcons’ defense has been forcing all sorts of havoc for this New England offense. Whether it’s a sack, an interception or a fumble, the Falcons are making life difficult for Maye and company.

Bijan Robinson only needs one hand​


I…I really don’t have much to add. Bijan Robinson may be one of the best football players we’ve seen.

Bijan Robinson secures the pass with one hand 😯

ATLvsNE on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/pfHhFp9fA5

— NFL (@NFL) November 2, 2025

Drake London’s hat trick brings the Falcons within one​


Drake London is having the game of his life. Eight receptions, 92 yards, with not one, not two, but three touchdowns. And London saved his best performance for last.

Drake London one-hands it for the hat trick! 🔥

ATLvsNE on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/cK3oVvGdv2

— NFL (@NFL) November 2, 2025

With the running game being borderline anemic, London has been the driving force keeping this Falcons team in the game. As this one winds down, the Falcons are in a firefight with a borderline AFC playoff lock. Because, of course, they are.

Other Notables​

  • Brandon Dorlus and LaCale London played outstanding ball along the defensive line, both players snagged two sacks and were constantly in Drake Maye’s lap, helping get the Falcons to six sacks on the day.
  • Arnold Ebiketie had an incredible day as a run-stuffing edge player, making multiple plays at or behind the line of scrimmage in the run game.
  • Jalon Walker…nothing else needs to be said.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...lcons-highlight-reel-vs-patriots-drake-londom
 
Falcons snap counts from a heartbreaker against New England

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Hail, traveler! Snap counts, hot and fresh and maybe a little maddening, await you here.

Offense​


Michael Penix Jr.: 56

Jake Matthews: 56

Ryan Neuzil: 56

Elijah Wilkinson: 56

Darnell Mooney: 56

Drake London: 55

Bijan Robinson: 54

Kyle Hinton: 53

Kyle Pitts: 53

Chris Lindstrom: 50

David Sills: 38

Tyler Allgeier: 17

Jovaughn Gwyn: 6

Charlie Woerner: 5

Matthew Bergeron: 3

KhaDarel Hodge: 1

Dylan Drummond: 1



It appears Zac Robinson’s concession to the “Charlie Woerner’s motion tells the defense when the Falcons are running” accusations has simply been to not play Woerner. I don’t think the tight end has had the caliber of year he enjoyed in 2024, but nor do I think the ground game or passing game is better off with Sills out there instead of him. In fact, the obsession with Sills, a player who has three catches on six targets on over 150 snaps this year and has been an inconsistent blocking option, is yet another mystery associated with a Falcons offense that is chock full of them. The Falcons would likely be better off trying to run and no worse trying to pass if the bulk of Sills snaps were replaced by Woerner, Feleipe Franks, or even KhaDarel Hodge.

Injuries hit the line again on Sunday, too. Bergeron left early and was replaced by Hinton, who to his eternal credit allowed just one pressure on a day when Lindstrom (5), Wilkinson (5), Neuzil (2), and Matthews (2) all had really tough moments. Gwyn, who has barely played since arriving in Atlanta as a late pick a few years back, had to fill in late for Lindstrom and was decent in that very small sample size. The hope is that Storm Norton’s return will stabilize right tackle a bit, but having to go without one or both starting guards going forward is probably not going to go this smoothly most weeks.

Mooney is just getting good cardio out there. He has just 27 targets through eight games, or a little over three per game, and just 12 catches to show for it. Penix looked his way just twice against the Patriots, and a Falcons receiving corps that was a real strength a year ago is now just Drake London. That’s an underrated reason this passing game has been struggling, but surely Mooney’s going to get going at some point?

Defense​


Kaden Elliss: 68

Jessie Bates: 68

A.J. Terrell: 68

Mike Hughes: 68

David Onyemata: 47

Jalon Walker: 44

Ronnie Harrison: 41

Ruke Orhorhoro: 38

Brandon Dorlus: 37

Arnold Ebiketie: 34

James Pearce Jr.: 33

Dee Alford: 31

JD Bertrand: 30

Sam Roberts: 29

LaCale London: 28

Leonard Floyd: 16



The rotation up front is finally good enough and deep enough to weather attrition. While the run defense remains a bit frustrating because of a group that’s equal parts undersized and not fantastic against opposing ground games, the pass rush cooks for long stretches on their best days. That was even more impressive Sunday against a good Patriots line and with a Falcons group down Zach Harrison and, past a certain point early in the game, Leonard Floyd. I thought LaCale London, Brandon Dorlus, Jalon Walker, and Ruke Orhorhoro were particularly impressive Sunday, but the good thing about rotating guys heavily and keeping them fresh is that multiple players have a chance to step up and often do.

The other major rotation news, of course, was at inside linebacker. The Falcons threw in the towel one week too late on the JD Bertrand-as-a-full-time-starter experiment, with Ronnie Harrison getting the lion’s share of snaps on Sunday. Neither player was terrific—Harrison allowed 3/5 passes against him to be completed for 23 yards and missed a tackle, Bertrand allowed 3/4 for 40 yards (the second-highest total on the team) and was customarily a step behind most plays he was involved in—but they were a bit better as a mix-and-match duo than Bertrand was as a full-timer. I still think the Falcons need to consider getting them off the field more frequently in favor of DeMarcco Hellams and Jordan Fuller when the latter is ready; having them in coverage as frequently as the Falcons do is asking for and getting trouble, Bertrand in particular.

We have no idea when Billy Bowman Jr. is coming back, but this was the kind of effort from Dee Alford that makes it clear he won’t have trouble getting his job back. Alford has on balance been pretty good filling in, showing how much of last year can be blamed on Jimmy Lake and his scheme, but he’s not an elite nickel option by any stretch of the imagination. On Sunday, PFF “credited” him with a team-high 88 yards allowed on three grabs, highlighting the downfield struggles. Alford can bounce back, of course, but he’s got a tough matchup against the Colts next week if he’s still out there.

Special teams​


KhaDarel Hodge: 22

Josh Woods: 22

DeAngelo Malone: 22

DeMarcco Hellams: 22

Mike Ford: 22

Teagan Quitoriano: 19

Feleipe Franks: 18

Natrone Brooks: 17

JD Bertrand: 16

Bradley Pinion: 14

Ronnie Harrison: 11

Charlie Woerner: 9

Liam McCullough: 9

Jamal Agnew: 8

Brandon Dorlus: 7

Tyler Allgeier: 5

Jake Matthews: 4

Elijah Wilkinson: 4

Kyle HintoN: 4

Chris Lindstrom: 4

Jovaughn Gwyn: 4

David Onyemata: 4

Ruke Orhorhoro: 4

Sam Roberts: 4

Jack Nelson: 4

Parker Romo: 4

Dee Alford: 3



The Falcons now have to make another decision on another kicker. Parker Romo is 21st in the NFL in field goal percentage, 25th in extra point percentage after that ugly, costly miss yesterday, and does not handle kickoffs. He has missed from 30, 40, and 50 yards once thus far and has had a couple of close calls, all indicators that continuing to entrust him with kicking duties will lead to further crises. The problem for Atlanta is the dearth of options out there—they clearly feel like Lenny Krieg is not ready, fellow practice squad option Ben Sauls was inconsistent in college, and guys like Austin Seibert and Matt Prater have only been slightly better options than Romo in the last year—but at some point things will break. I miss the days of stability at the position.

Otherwise, special teams was reasonably crisp, with a couple of really nice Bradley Pinion punts, good tackling outside of a Mike Ford miss, and solid returns. We’ll take progress there.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...ounts-from-a-heartbreaker-against-new-england
 
Falcons showed good effort, but Atlanta’d themselves, in the Week 9 3 up and 3 down

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After sitting at 3-2, the Atlanta Falcons have dropped to 3-5. There’s no questioning the players’ effort in this one, and it yielded some good performances despite the outcome.

Here’s the Week 9 3 up and 3 down.

3 up​

Jalon Walker​

he can run through you, and he can run by you pic.twitter.com/BfoJYvf3ep

— Tre’Shon (@tre3shon) November 3, 2025

Walker put it all together as an edge defender in this game. He was stout against the run and lived in the backfield all game (anything else that happened was woke, off-ball nonsense). The time out clearly did him good; his lower-body explosiveness was noticeable.

Walker was considered a project on draft night; he’s been learning and playing a more defined position and has improved every game. Two sacks every week probably isn’t sustainable, but Walker just needs to keep focusing on doing his job at a high level, and good things will continue to happen.

Drake London​


London went off and tried to will his team to a win with his hat-trick performance. The physical receiver caused problems all over the secondary. He makes every 50/50 ball feel like a 70/30, and he’s proving to be a young quarterback’s best friend. London is going to want top dollar in the offseason, and games like these will command it.

The slow start is behind him, and while teams will certainly adjust and send more bracket coverage his way, it’s going to be hard to keep him bottled up. Even when he’s covered, he’s open.

Michael Penix​


If you can’t be happy about a three-touchdown, zero-turnover game, then that’s on you. It wasn’t a perfect game, but in his 10th start and coming back from injury, Penix did enough to keep his team in the game until his kicker botched it. Penix’s raw completion % will rile up some fans, but his adjusted completion % (accounts for drops, throwaways, and spikes) was 71.9%, according to PFF.

We saw the QB stretch his legs on multiple occasions and hopefully that gives him the confidence to do that more. Penix has mostly struggled on the road as a pro, but he actually did well behind a patchwork line that had him under pressure most of the day. He delivered some good balls and yes, will want others back, but this was a positive step in his development.

3 down​

#ClapGate​


Defensive backs clap in the secondary to grab each other’s attention and communicate all the time, trying to blame that, and initially stating it was done strategically was embarrassing. Ryan Neuzil should’ve owned the mistake, and Raheem Morris should’ve never passed that excuse along.

The issue isn’t this one embarrassing moment; it’s the high volume of hijinks the Falcons find themselves in the middle of that drives their loyal viewers crazy, like having to burn a timeout after a penalty. This is who they are; this is what it means to be a Falcon.

Falcons HC Raheem Morris with an update on #ClapGate:

“This was our players telling us that they simulated a snap out there. They heard something… It’s on us… That was just me being angry yesterday… I was just being honest about what the guys told me.”

(🎥 @AtlantaFalcons) https://t.co/N79NlqymBn pic.twitter.com/rLP990Es2p

— Carlos A. Lopez (@LosTalksPats) November 3, 2025

Injuries​


The Falcons are one more injury away from you playing. Better start stretching now.

Honestly, I was impressed by how much the offense was able to get done behind this battered offensive line, but that doesn’t mean they’re playing well enough to compete week to week. The Falcons are going to have to juggle all these injuries carefully. Right when the defense gets Walker back, Leonard Floyd goes down. I would also like to stop seeing JD Bertrand play defense, but it sounds like Troy Andersen isn’t coming back. Injuries are part of the game, but the Falcons don’t have the depth to absorb all these hits.

John Parker Romo​


There’s absolutely no reason we should be having this conversation in Week 8, but here we are. The Falcons kicking competition never ended, and it feels like it also never started. What more can you say about the situation?

It was bad process to sell an international project player as competition when it’s clear you never intended to play them. Camp was the time to address the issue and be done with it, but the Falcons are in the same spot they found themselves in late last season. The unfortunate truth is that you need to prepare to see a kicker cost them again, even if it is a new one.

The Falcons have to break this losing streak before it breaks them. Atlanta is back on the road in Week 10 against a tough Indianapolis Colts team coming fresh off a loss.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...ntad-themselves-in-the-week-9-3-up-and-3-down
 
Falcons fall short again, Week 9 film review: Tuesday Takes with Tre’Shon

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The Falcons had a quiet trade deadline coming off a loss to the Patriots in Week 9. Kevin Knight and Tre’Shon Diaz bring you trade deadline takes, an in-depth discussion of the issues on offense, special teams, and on defense, and questions about the team’s future under the current regime. Fellow Falcoholics, welcome to another episode of the Dirty Birds and Brews podcast!

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.

If you’re interested in supporting the show, 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...-deadline-nfl-2025-tuesday-takes-with-treshon
 
Falcons – Colts Week 10 2025 Game Coverage

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We’re on to Germany.

The Atlanta Falcons now have lost three games in a row, and have to travel over the Atlantic to face a pissed-off Indianapolis Colts team fresh off an ugly loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers. Atlanta needs a win to avoid dropping to 3-6, a record that would give them no margin of error the rest of the way and likely all but sink an already sinking season.

Here’s all our coverage, rounded up for your reading and viewing pleasure.


Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...8696/falcons-colts-week-10-2025-game-coverage
 
Falcons trade deadline was too quiet: Falcoholic Live, Ep353

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The Falcons did nothing at the NFL trade deadline, which means the team is stuck with the bad Kirk Cousins contract into 2026 and no additional picks coming in the 2026 NFL Draft. Kevin Knight and Adnan Ikic break down the disappointing lack of moves, the mounting injuries on Atlanta’s offensive line, the upcoming Colts game in Berlin, and our thoughts on the teams dwindling playoff chances. 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...cousins-arnold-ebiketie-falcoholic-live-ep353
 
Jalon Walker’s gradual progression gives Falcons’ defense a new dimension

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gettyimages-2244892074.jpg

As satisfying as it was for the city of Atlanta to see the Falcons use a first-round pick on a Georgia Bulldog, there was some trepidation about using a premium pick on a player who isn’t a prototypical edge rusher. It’s no secret that the defense has been severely lacking in the pass-rushing department for nearly a decade. Everyone had become accustomed to the team ranking at the bottom of all pass-rushing categories. Jeff Ulbrich was adamant that those days had to end for the defense to excel.

Drafting Jalon Walker was a true statement of intent, despite the prolific defensive star being undersized for an edge rusher and a starter for only one season at Georgia. Taking a multidimensional defender who can thrive in a variety of ways creates exciting possibilities for a defense that needs talent across all three levels. What left analysts and fans wondering is: where is his best long-term fit? For all the fun Micah Parsons comparisons, placing immediate expectations on him to become a Hall of Fame-level talent is illogical.

It was going to take time for the 2024 first-team All-American to find his niche. Battling hamstring and groin injuries during training camp stunted his early development. Another groin injury sidelined him for two games, affecting his progress after being one of the key players behind Atlanta’s stunning defensive performance over Buffalo in a jaw-dropping victory. Patience is always going to be required for rookies, especially when they don’t traditionally line up in one area. The coaching staff’s persistence in bringing him along slowly is beginning to pay off.

Maximizing a skillset while developing valuable traits​


Considering Walker missed a large portion of training camp, it was understandable why the coaching staff used him primarily as an edge rusher early on. Once he started finding comfort after three games, his versatility had to be unleashed. According to Pro Football Focus, Walker has dropped into coverage on 16 of his 47 snaps on passes over his last three games. His ability to play in space with strong eye awareness and discipline allows Ulbrich to be more expansive with his hybrid defense.

While the Patriots did capitalize on Walker being isolated against DeMario Douglas on a wheel route for a touchdown, that play represents more of New England attacking a simulated pressure with the right play design and personnel. Walker isn’t expected to cover shifty wide receivers emerging from the backfield. He can cover space as a hook defender, filling in voids in zone or spot dropper to create confusion for quarterbacks going through their progressions as a linebacker or defensive back blitzes to generate pressure. That greatly affected Josh Allen, who struggled to connect with his pass catchers in the short and intermediate areas of the field.

For everything he offers schematically to help Ulbrich be more creative, his development as a pass rusher is the biggest priority. Walker is still a work in progress from a technical standpoint. That said, how he uses certain long-arm and hand-swipe moves to collapse the pocket is encouraging. That was on full display on his second sack against the Patriots, where he got under Will Campbell and knocked Drake Maye off balance. Being able to utilize your hands with proper placement and detailed violence helps exceptionally athletic edge rushers become less reliant on their physical gifts and more polished as players.

Showing out in Foxborough​


Walker’s performance was one of the main reasons why the Falcons were able to bounce back from a difficult start and nearly beat New England. It started with his timing on a T/E stunt looping behind Brandon Dorlus, who was also hugely impressive last Sunday, to produce a massive strip sack. Walker paced his rush to glide into the B-gap and dip under Mike Onwenu, creating the game-changing play right before halftime. His high football IQ, combined with the explosiveness and versatility, makes him someone opponents must account for.

On a pivotal third and six late in the fourth quarter, Walker recognizes TreVeyon Henderson is running a swing route of the backfield while being fully engaged with Campbell. Once he sees Maye open up his body to lift the ball over the top to Henderson, the savvy defensive playmaker deflects the pass to force a crucial incompletion. Those instinctive plays show how Walker’s impact is made beyond rushing the quarterback. He can affect games as an all-around defender, which includes his positive contributions against the run.

Considering Walker’s size as an edge defender and the fact that he only played one full season as a starter at Georgia, there were concerns opposing teams would target him on the ground. Walker has more than held his own against the run. How he set the edge against Buffalo prevented James Cook from breaking loose on their signature perimeter runs. The strong play against the run continued, squaring off against one of the league’s better blocking tight ends in Hunter Henry.

There were multiple stops he made for minimal gains and near tackles for losses, where he either obtained leverage on Henry at the point of attack or accelerated past him inside to get into the backfield. How Walker showcased his capabilities against one of the league’s most efficient offenses left a lasting mark coming out of Sunday’s narrow defeat for the Falcons. The coaching staff will have to consider playing him more after averaging between 25 and 30 snaps a game before last Sunday’s stellar performance.

Turning a chess piece into a centerpiece​


Walker described himself as a different chess piece before the draft. As the coaching staff utilizes him as the unique weapon that he is, it will be integral for him to start establishing himself as one of the defensive centerpieces. His skill set and work ethic put him at the forefront of building a new identity in Atlanta. This defense has made several opponents uncomfortable with its calculated chaos up front and organization on the back end. Using the improved infrastructure to produce more game-changing plays is what players like Walker must do.

Although he only has three of the defense’s 22 sacks, the 2024 Butkus Award winner is there with Kaden Elliss and Zach Harrison as the most disruptive player up front. What he offers coming off the edge provides a much-needed threat, converting speed into power. His ability to drop into coverage and take on blocks in the run game creates mismatches for his teammates to exploit. The Falcons are currently ranked 15th in the league in sacks.

To be a respectable unit, led by a young core with the veteran Elliss being the vicious chaos creator, injects optimism into how this defense can continue to evolve. The most vital step in the defense’s rise will be how Walker grows from being one of the current pillars as the dangerous rook into the ultimate king over time.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...ression-gives-falcons-defense-a-new-dimension
 
Falcons vs. Colts Week 10 Injury Report: Matthew Bergeron, Leonard Floyd ruled out

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Thursday is here, and with it being an odd week for the Atlanta Falcons since they are playing in Germany on Sunday, today we received updates for their health and that of the Indianapolis Colts. As both teams travel to Germany today, let’s take a week at their practice reports.


Falcons injury report, Thursday, Nov. 6​


Full

• CB Billy Bowman Jr. (hamstring)

• WR Casey Washington (back)

Limited

• CB Mike Hughes (neck)

• DL Zach Harrison (knee)

• S Jessie Bates III (knee)

• LB JD Bertrand (knee)

• DL LaCale London (shoulder)

• OL Chris Lindstrom (foot)

Did Not Practice

• EDGE Leonard Floyd (hamstring) OUT

• OL Matthew Bergeron (ankle) OUT

• OL Storm Norton (foot) OUT


Colts injury report, Thursday, Nov. 6​


Full

• CB Sauce Gardner (concussion)

• CB Kenny Moore II (achilles)

• WR Michael Pittman Jr. (glute)

Limited

• N/A

Did Not Practice

• DT DeForest Buckner (neck) OUT

• DE Samson Ebukam (knee)

• WR Anthony Gould (knee)

• DE Tyquan Lewis (groin)



Looking at the Falcons first, three players were ruled out ahead of their flight to Berlin. Storm Norton, Leonard Floyd, and Matthew Bergeron will not play on Sunday. We did get some optimistic news though as Chris Lindstrom was listed as a limited participant after missing practice on Wednesday. Fingers crossed that Lindstrom will continue trending towards playing against the Colts.

There only real update for the Colts on Thursday was that defensive lineman DeForest Buckner, who has a neck injury, would not be making the trip to Germany. Additionally, corner Kenny Moore II and receiver Michael Pittman Jr. were upgraded to full participants in practice on Thursday.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...port-matthew-bergeron-leonard-floyd-ruled-out
 
Falcons vs Colts NFL Week 10 preview ft. Cody Felger: Critical clash in Berlin

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The Falcons head to Berlin, Germany in Week 10 to take on the AFC-leading Colts in a critical matchup for Atlanta’s dwindling playoff hopes. Kevin Knight is joined by Cody Felger (Bring the Juice podcast) to discuss Indianapolis’ unexpected rise this season, the injuries to monitor for both teams, and how Atlanta can potentially pull off the upset on Sunday. Fellow Falcoholics, welcome to another episode of the Dirty Birds and Brews podcast!

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.

If you’re interested in supporting the show, 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...eview-ft-cody-felger-critical-clash-in-berlin
 
Falcons vs. Colts Week 10 Injury Report: Chris Lindstrom questionable to play

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Thank goodness it is finally Friday. The Atlanta Falcons and Indianapolis Colts are both officially in Germany as they prepare to face off on Sunday morning, they both held their final practices of the week. With that, we received some game designations.

Let’s take a look.


Falcons injury report, Friday, Nov. 7​


Full

• CB Billy Bowman Jr. (hamstring)

• WR Casey Washington (back)

• S Jessie Bates III (knee)

• LB JD Bertrand (knee)

• DL Zach Harrison (knee)

Limited

• CB Mike Hughes (neck) QUESTIONABLE

• S DeMarcco Hellams (non injury)

• EDGE James Pearce Jr. (non injury)

• DL LaCale London (shoulder) QUESTIONABLE

• OL Chris Lindstrom (foot) QUESTIONABLE

Did Not Practice

• EDGE Leonard Floyd (hamstring) OUT

• OL Matthew Bergeron (ankle) OUT

• OL Storm Norton (foot) OUT


Colts injury report, Friday, Nov. 7​


Full

• CB Sauce Gardner (concussion)

• WR Michael Pittman Jr. (glute)

Limited

• CB Kenny Moore II (achilles)

Did Not Practice

• DT DeForest Buckner (neck) OUT

• DE Samson Ebukam (knee) OUT

• WR Anthony Gould (knee) QUESTIONABLE

• DE Tyquan Lewis (groin) OUT



Looking at the Falcons first, we already received news on Thursday that EDGE Leonard Floyd, guard Matthew Bergeron, and tackle Storm Norton would not being suiting up on Sunday. On Friday, we learned guard Chris Lindstrom, corner Mike Hughes, and defensive tackle LaCale London are all considered questionable to play after being limited in the final practice of the week.

With the Colts, we also found out on Thursday that one of their best defensive players, defensive tackle DeForest Buckner, would not be making the trip to Germany because of a neck injury. On Friday, the Colts announced that Buckner would be placed on injured reserve because of it, so he will not only be out Sunday, but also for at least the next three games for them. Also for the Colts, EDGE’s Samson Ebukam and Tyquan Lewis have both been ruled out. Return specialist Anthony Gould, who has not practiced all week, is interestingly considered questionable.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...y-report-chris-lindstrom-questionable-to-play
 
The Falcoholic Reacts: Which rookie has stood out the most?

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For the first time under Terry Fontenot, the Falcons fully dedicated their draft capital towards upgrading the defense. It was the logical move to make following four years of investing top picks at the most prominent offensive positions. Addressing glaring needs at edge rusher and across the secondary was vital toward revamping the defense. The results have been hugely encouraging, with all four players having standout moments and contributing with savvy plays.

If a hamstring injury didn’t derail him, Billy Bowman Jr. would have garnered serious consideration as the most impressive rookie. His playmaking skills, combined with the physical edge and tenacity, made an immediate strong first impression. Jeff Ulbrich’s defense has missed his tone-setting play in the slot. That leaves three rookies up for contention, although only two received genuine interest. James Pearce Jr. has shown good instincts in different areas as an edge player, but his pass-rushing skill set remains a work in progress.

That leaves Xavier Watts and Jalon Walker as the credible candidates to be the best rookie in Atlanta so far this season. Walker has elevated his play over the last two games against certain playoff teams. What he’s providing off the edge and off the ball has raised the defense’s ceiling. To have another versatile weapon with Kaden Elliss already causing havoc has rattled opposing quarterbacks. For all of Walker’s recent progress, fans believe Watts has been the most impressive rookie.

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Watts possesses the high football IQ, range, and ball-hawking skills that the secondary has been sorely lacking alongside Jessie Bates. How he anticipates routes and covers acres of space allows Ulbrich to be more creative with his pressure designs and cover disguises. Players like Watts have inspired some optimism among the fanbase, as the team looks to recover from a three-game losing streak. They left an impression by battling back against the Patriots in the second half.

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Can rookies like Watts and Walker produce statement performances against one of the most prolific offenses in the league in Germany? Let us know below.

This result is brought to you by FanDuel Sportsbook

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/nfl-r...ic-reacts-which-rookie-has-stood-out-the-most
 
Will offensive line injuries derail Falcons’ run-game revival?

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The Atlanta Falcons will be facing an uphill climb to get their running game back on track against the Indianapolis Colts in Week 10. They are down at least one starter on their offensive line, left guard Matthew Bergeron, and may be down another with right guard Chris Lindstrom listed as questionable. Coupled with the continued reliance on backup right tackle Elijah Wilkinson, the Falcons’ offensive line will face their biggest challenge of the season in Germany on Sunday morning.

That challenge will center on the Falcons’ ability to reestablish their run game, which has gone sorely missing as the team works to end their three-game losing streak.

I’ve written about the Falcons’ need to be more physical in recent weeks—a goal the team failed to achieve—and it’s no coincidence that the team is on the verge of matching its longest losing streak under head coach Raheem Morris should they fail to rebound against the Colts. When the Falcons dropped four straight games in 2024, it was easy to blame it on quarterback Kirk Cousins’ excessive turnovers during that stretch. This time, it’s harder to pinpoint one obvious issue behind the Falcons’ recent slide, but their struggles to run the football should be at or near the top of the list.

Falcons’ passing game is still a work in progress​


While the development of current quarterback Michael Penix is central to the Falcons’ long-term success, the immediate problem on offense stems from a lack of balance, as the run game has disappeared. As capable as the team’s pass-catchers are, they haven’t been good enough to drive the offense’s success as they did in 2024.

When healthy, wideout Drake London has showcased incredible play, including his three-touchdown performance in last week’s loss to the New England Patriots. London has been the engine of the team’s passing attack, coupled with tight end Kyle Pitts having his best season since his breakout 2021 rookie campaign. Last year, wide receiver Darnell Mooney only trailed Justin Jefferson as the NFL’s most explosive wide receiver. But in 2025, Mooney has been a non-factor, thanks to injuries that sidelined him for nearly all of training camp and a nagging hamstring injury that has plagued him during the regular season.

If London and Pitts can maintain their current level of play and the team can get Mooney back to his 2024 form, the Falcons have a chance to make things interesting in the back half of this season despite their slow 3-5 start. Yet, in the meantime, running back Bijan Robinson should remain the focus and foundation of their offense.

The Falcons owe wins to Bijan Robinson and the ground game​


In the Falcons’ three wins this season, Robinson has averaged 129.3 yards rushing. However, in the team’s five losses, Robinson’s per-game total drops to 41.4. Stats like this can be misleading, given that teams tend to run the ball when they hold leads. However, even if you look only at Robinson’s rushing success in the first quarter, when the scoreboard is less likely to dictate play-calling, this stark split still exists. In the first quarter of wins, Robinson is averaging 44.3 rushing yards and 6.7 yards per carry. In the first quarter of losses this year, Robinson’s averages dropped to 7.6 yards per game and 2.4 yards per carry.

Getting Robinson going early clearly is a huge factor in the Falcons’ success. Yet last week, the Falcons made a paltry attempt to get the run game going against the Patriots, with just three runs to nine passes in the first quarter. It was expected to be difficult to run against a stout Patriots run defense, but the Falcons didn’t even try.

If the Falcons can’t maintain more balance on offense, then their offense is essentially dead in the water until Penix reaches the next stage of his development. Penix showed significant growth last week in New England, where he had arguably his best career performance on the road. But it’s a step towards success rather than a great leap. Penix is still a ways away from carrying the Falcons offense with his arm, and frankly, asking him to do so at this stage in his career is a bad strategy.

Can the Falcons overcome injuries along the offensive line?​


Instead, the Falcons will need potential backups along the offensive line to step up if they are going to restore their run game. Kyle Hinton will likely step in for Bergeron at left guard and was functional last week in New England. If Lindstrom can’t go, the team will likely roll with either newly signed Andrew Stueber or backup center Jovaughn Gwyn. Lindstrom’s possible absence could be devastating given he’s by far the Falcons’ best run blocker, especially with right tackle Kaleb McGary sidelined for the season. And the Falcons are going to need Wilkinson to play better, after prominent struggles in each of the team’s last three losses. The hope was that Storm Norton could take over this week at that spot, but he suffered a setback in his recovery from injury last week, and he may become the second Falcons offensive tackle to go down for the year.

Few would expect the Falcons to be dominant on the ground given these injuries; however, they need to be better. If they can’t, the offense will continue to stagnate, as it has far too often this year, and any hope the Falcons have of finishing this season strong will go away.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...erail-falcons-run-game-revival-bijan-robinson
 
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