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Falcons vs Colts Week 10 postgame show: Atlanta’s season ends in Berlin

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The Falcons put up quite a fight against the Colts in Berlin, but offensive struggles and a few key misses on defense were ultimately their undoing in a brutal overtime loss. Kevin Knight and Allen Strk break down the game, including the end of the (reasonable) playoff hopes, Penix’s struggles, frustrating defensive and special teams miscues, and more. Fellow Falcoholics, welcome to another episode of The Falcoholic Live!

Watch the stream below or on YouTube


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!

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Thanks for watching!

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...-postgame-show-atlantas-season-ends-in-berlin
 
Falcons fall apart against the Colts in Week 10 Snap Reactions

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The Atlanta Falcons gave their international fans a vintage performance in this tough overtime loss to the Indianapolis Colts. The Falcons now stand at 3-6 with a less than 20% chance of making the playoffs.

Here are the Week 10 snap reactions.

The Falcons have a top-10 pass rush​


The defense keeps stacking sacks — seven in this game — and everyone is getting in on the fun. Nate Ollie was touted in the offseason as a big addition, and I’d argue he’s the most impactful hire they made.

Not only has Ollie gotten instant results from his rookie edge rushes, but he’s also getting the most out of the veterans and the crop of young defenders who were going to waste. Leave it to the Falcons to be second in the league in sacks and not any closer to a winning season.

A step back for Michael Penix​


It was not a good game for the young quarterback, especially in the second half. The pressure is getting to him and leading to a case of the jitters. Ball placement struggles continue. He had a nice throw to Drake London for a touchdown, but underthrew Kyle Pitts, who was going to walk into the endzone.

He earned his third intentional grounding penalty of the season, and he displays poor awareness too often. No, this isn’t the easiest situation (injured OL plus below-average OC and WRs) to deal with, but the quarterback did himself no favors with his own play today.

The Tyler Allgeier show​

Allgeier gives the Falcons the lead with 1:44 left!

ATLvsIND on @NFLNetwork
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/wVxuDOwVPf

— NFL (@NFL) November 9, 2025

Allgeier is going to make some other team very happy next year. Today was his day; the power back punished the Colts defense all game and propelled the Falcons into overtime. Bijan Robinson is a stud, but Allgeier has played so consistently his entire Falcons career that some fans will always wonder what things would be like if the team had gone all in on him.

He’s been the perfect fit for the Falcons run scheme from day one. We’ll never know what that alternative reality will look like, so let’s keep enjoying him while he’s here.

Special teams is an albatross​


When one part of the machine gets fixed, something else breaks down. It’s hard to keep your opponent from scoring when they seemingly get the ball at midfield every drive. Bradley Pinion has had some spectacular punts this season, and even in this game, but he’s also been good for one shank a game. There is hardly any juice from the returners, but the real crime is the coverage and blocking units.

It was great to see Zane Gonzalez make his kicks, but the missed field goals were only the tip of the iceberg with this group.

Quotes reveal culture​

Drake London on the #Falcons 3rd down woes: “I just run the routes that I got”

— Miles Garrett (@MilesGarrettTV) November 9, 2025

Kaden Elliss says that the defense “quit” on the 83-yard touchdown run by Johnathan Taylor. When asked about the Falcons 3rd-down troubles, Drake London said, “I just run the routes that I got.” The walls are crashing in, and Raheem Morris’ ship has sustained critical damage to the hull.

You can’t be a players coach with a toxic locker room. The Falcons were once again competitive against a formidable AFC opponent, and once again, they made sure to get in their way. Questionable time management, abandoning the run, not spying Daniel Jones on 3rd & 21; it feels like a handful of talented players are dragging this staff along.

The Falcons will have plenty of time to think about the loss and its impact on their season during their flight home. Atlanta is 3-6, and there is no miracle turnaround coming.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...colts-in-week-10-snap-reactions-raheem-morris
 
Falcons vs. Colts: A sad, sad highlight reel from an OT loss in Berlin

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Another week, another heartbreaking Falcons loss.

This should feel better. The Falcons put a lot of good stuff on tape, including another big game from Drake London, a massive game from the Falcons’ pass rush, and a bit of a resurgence from the Falcons’ run game in a losing effort.

Despite that, we are tasked to look at the bright side here, so here is this week’s highlight reel for the Atlanta Falcons as they fall to the Indianapolis Colts in overtime.

Dee Alford gets key PBU to stifle Colts’ opening drive​


The Colts were 15-of-17 on 4th down heading into today’s game. The Falcons made sure that was 15-of-18 to start the game.

After the Colts drove down the field with relative ease, Dee Alford made a huge play to keep the ball out of the end zone and back into the hands of the Falcons offense.

Jessie Bates also had two great plays on the opening drive: Causing a fumble that was recovered by a Colts offensive lineman and creating the fourth-down opportunity with great coverage in the middle of the field on tight end Tyler Warren.

Drake London gets the drive going with 30-yard explosive​


With the Sauce Gardner trade, that became the marquee matchup heading into this game. Drake London made sure that Gardner and this Colts secondary knew from the get-go that he was not trapped in this game with them; they are locked in for 60 minutes with him.

London beats the Colts’ defense on a deep crosser for a massive 30-yard pass to get the Falcons drive, directly after the strip-sack, going.

Love how Drake London continues to work through the route even when he is well covered. He gives Penix a higher percentage look with his effort on plays out of structure

— Allen Strk (@allenstrk) November 9, 2025

Tyler Allgeier gives the Falcons the lead​


Allgeier caps off the six-play, 81-yard drive with two physical runs in the red zone, including a 1-yard, walk-in touchdown to give the Falcons the early 7-6 lead. (Thank you, Zane Gonzalez for converting the extra point).

Tyler Allgeier answers back!

ATLvsIND on @NFLNetwork
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/u2HC1aRMsw

— NFL (@NFL) November 9, 2025

The Falcons are showing some good things early as the Falcons take an early lead, due to…kicking woes from the Colts? Listen, it’s nice to be on the other side of those challenges for a change this season.

Drake London stays hot to retake the lead​


Four receptions, 72 yards, and another touchdown, making it four for Drake London in the last two weeks. London has been on a heater and has been one of the only reasons this Falcons offense has had teeth over the past two games.

Penix to London in Berlin!

ATLvsIND on @NFLNetwork
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/MzWos082qm

— NFL (@NFL) November 9, 2025

A heck of a route from London, and a heck of a playcall to get him lined up on a linebacker and clearing out cornerback Sauce Gardner.

Penix when targeting London up until this point:

  • 4-of-4 for 72 yards and a touchdown

Penix targeting anybody not named Drake London:

  • 3-for-6 for 27 yards

Jessie Bates gets interception to secure lead going into halftime​


Jessie Bates has been inches away from making a massive play on this Colts offense all first half, and he finally gets his paws on the football after Daniel Jones and Alec Pierce aren’t on the same page on a deep crossing route.

Jessie Bates picks off Daniel Jones before the half!

ATLvsIND on @NFLNetwork
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/MRMc6htH15

— NFL (@NFL) November 9, 2025

This not turning into an opportunity for points is a travesty, and Raheem Morris, you will be tried for your crimes.

First-Round pass-rush duo strikes again to stifle promising Colts drive​


Last week, the turning point for the Falcons was Jalon Walker and James Pearce, Jr. combining for a strip-sack and recovery to put the Atlanta offense into the red zone. This week, the chaotic duo met up at the quarterback again. This time, the roles were reversed as Pearce, Jr. got his first full sack of the season, and Walker picked it up to give Penix and company great field position.

JAMES PEARCE JR AND JALON WALKER

SACK FUMBLE AND RECOVERY

NFLN | NFL+ pic.twitter.com/RRYiBMhPxO

— Atlanta Falcons (@AtlantaFalcons) November 9, 2025

JD Bertrand stuffs Colts’ 4th-down attempt​


Listen, there is plenty to get upset about when it comes to JD Bertrand, but right here, we will give him his flowers.

JD Bertrand comes up with a huge stop against the Colts to stifle a 14-play drive that had gotten all the way to the Atlanta 5-yard line.

Big Falcons stop on 4th down!

ATLvsIND on @NFLNetwork
Also streaming on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/fQULyvgode

— NFL (@NFL) November 9, 2025

Thank you, Captain America. Your service is appreciated.

Tyler Allgeier and Bijan Robinson team up to give the Falcons the late lead​


The Falcons go down the field in nine plays, gaining 71 yards, and take the lead with under two minutes to go in the game. Tyler Allgeier and Bijan Robinson combine for 36 yards on six of those runs, including the 1-yard sealer to put the Falcons up.

TA ALL DAY

NFLN | NFL+ pic.twitter.com/wWRAC44SJ3

— Atlanta Falcons (@AtlantaFalcons) November 9, 2025

A beautiful route from Drake London makes this a three-point lead, and the Colts have only a timeout and limited time to pull off the game-tying field goal.

Honorable Mentions​

  • Brandon Dorlus, Pearce, Jr., Arnold Ebiketie, Zach Harrison, Kaden Elliss, Jalon Walker, and Ronnie Harrison, Jr. combined to give the Falcons their 16th game with 7 or more sacks. This is the first time they’ve lost one of these games since 2003.
  • Xavier Watts finished this game with 11 combined tackles, the first time a Falcons rookie safety has had double-digit tackles since Keanu Neal in 2016.
  • Drake London continues his dominance, recording another 100-yard game (104) while hauling in six of his eight targets.
  • Tyler Allgeier found paydirt twice, the second time that he’s had a two-touchdown game in his short career as a Falcon.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...s-colts-highlights-berlin-germany-nfl-week-10
 
Falcons snap counts from an overseas loss to the Colts

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Will the snap counts illuminate this week, or only deepen our confusion and frustration? Let’s find out!

Offense​


Michael Penix Jr.: 63

Jake Matthews: 63

Kyle Hinton: 63

Ryan Neuzil: 63

Elijah Wilkinson: 63

Drake London: 62

Chris Lindstrom: 62

Kyle Pitts: 58

Darnell Mooney: 57

Bijan Robinson: 54

David Sills: 31

Charlie Woerner: 25

Tyler Allgeier: 23

KhaDarel Hodge: 2

Teagan Quitoriano: 2

Jovaughn Gwyn: 1

Casey Washington: 1



Sills was wide open late when Penix missed him badly, so he was in the position to make a splash play in this one. I still don’t understand why over half this team’s snaps went to a wide receiver who is not a high-end blocker when the Falcons were A) running well and B) getting pass catching production out of their backs and even Charlie Woerner. This was probably Sills’ best game overall this season, but I’m still baffled by the personnel usage, particularly when WR2 is struggling so much. Interestingly, Mooney made his only catch on eight targets working against Sauce Gardner.

Kyle Hinton, meanwhile, filled in extremely well. He was one of two starting offensive linemen Pro Football Focus did not tally a pressure for, the other being Chris Lindstrom, and he was good enough in run blocking that the Falcons really didn’t miss Matthew Bergeron that much for one week. If Bergeron misses more time, Hinton should be a solid fill-in at worst.

The splits and usage for Bijan and Allgeier, meanwhile, were some of the most logical we’ve seen this year. That clears a low bar, given that the Falcons put together multiple drives where they mysteriously forgot to run despite being able to do so all day, but Allgeier got his red zone work and finished drives while Bijan cut through the tangle largely on early downs for big pickups.

Defense​


Kaden Elliss: 77

Jessie Bates: 77

A.J. Terrell: 77

Xavier Watts: 77

Keith Taylor: 65

Ruke Orhorhoro: 62

Billy Bowman Jr.: 58

David Onyemata: 54

Jalon Walker: 50

Zach Harrison: 47

James Pearce Jr.: 45

Arnold Ebiketie: 38

Ronnie Harrison: 35

JD Bertrand: 28

Brandon Dorlus: 28

Josh Woods: 13

Dee Alford: 12

Sam Roberts: 4



The Falcons rotated Bertrand with Harrison and Woods this time, with Harrison still getting the bulk of snaps. Aside from one really nice run stop I’ll give him a ton of credit for, especially given that it came on fourth down, Bertrand was once again the weakest link in that chain, consistently arriving late, struggling to make tackles, and “enjoying” misadventures in coverage on the rare occasions he was asked to handle that. Harrison, meanwhile, was flying to the ball and making tackles, and was credited with four run stops on a tough day for this run defense; Woods missed one tackle but made a habit of throwing himself at the ball as well. Until Divine Deablo returns, a Harrison 60%, Woods 25%, and Bertrand 15% or less split probably makes a lot of sense.

With injuries along the defensive line, the Falcons had to roll out Orhorhoro and Onyemata on many more snaps than I expect they wanted to, and both had tough days against the run. I saw Onyemata pursuing plays desperately on a few occasions and Ruke blocked out of them entirely; the Falcons probably can’t survive on a weekly basis without someone like Sam Roberts or LaCale London to help soak up early down snaps and play the run effectively. That said, this group was still money on passing downs throughout the day, minus their inability to contain Jones.

Alford was on his way to a bit of a tough day early, with one nice play in coverage and two receptions credited to him in coverage on three targets for 47 yards, but we’ll never know if he would’ve rallied and authored some of the big plays he’s wont to get because he left the game with a concussion. Taylor replaced him and allowed a team-high 56 yards on four receptions and six targets, but did nice work against the run and held up astonishingly well considering he’s CB5 and hadn’t seen any real game action this year.

It takes a village to be this poor against the run, and aside from Jalon Walker, Ronnie Harrison, and Zach Harrison, I don’t think anyone covered themselves in glory on Sunday. That’s worrisome with Rico Dowdle up next.

Special teams​


KhaDarel Hodge: 24

DeMarcco Hellams: 24

Mike Ford: 24

JD Bertrand: 23

Teagan Quitoriano: 21

DeAngelo Malone: 19

Feleipe Franks: 19

Josh Woods: 18

Natrone Brooks: 18

Bradley Pinion: 14

Charlie Woerner: 11

Tyler Allgeier: 9

Liam McCullough: 9

Ronnie Harrison: 8

Jamal Agnew: 8

Zach Harrison: 6

Ruke Orhorhoro: 5

David Onyemata: 5

Brandon Dorlus: 5

Ryan Neuzil: 3

Kyle Hinton: 3

Jake Matthews: 3

Elijah Wilkinson: 3

Jovaughn Gwyn: 3

Jack Nelson: 3

Zane Gonzalez: 3

Arnold Ebiketie: 2

Kaden Elliss: 1

Xavier Watts: 1

Keith Taylor: 1

Jalon Walker: 1



PFF credited the Falcons with nine missed tackles on Sunday on returns, and that shouldn’t surprise anybody. The guilty parties were stalwarts of this team’s coverage unit, with JD Bertrand (2), DeAngelo Malone, (2), Mike Ford (1), Feleipe Franks (1), and Mike Ford (1) among those missing them. Only Natrone Brooks and KhaDarel Hodge made tackles without missing one, and Brooks and Hodge both saved returns from potentially being touchdowns. That was maybe the ugliest day of the year for the coverage units, which have been such a massive liability this year that I no longer feel great about Marquice Williams surviving a second coaching staff change if things continue to go awry.

Part of that is the lackluster nature of Atlanta’s own returns. Jamal Agnew has slipped multiple times this year, including in this one, and averaged just 22.5 yards per return on the day. The Colts, meanwhile, averaged 35 yards per kick return and 10.7 yards on punts; that’s a striking disparity that increases the degree of difficulty for both the offense and defense.

At least Zane Gonzalez made all his kicks!

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...oss-to-the-colts-keith-taylor-ronnie-harrison
 
NFC South Week 10 review, a week of losing

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The division went 1-3 last weekend, a vintage performance. The South looked strong at the beginning of the season for the first time in recent memory, but they have since cooled off.

Here is the Week 10 NFC South Review.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-3)​


Week 10 Result: Buccaneers 23 – Patriots 28

Week 11 Opponent: Buffalo Bills

The @Patriots offensive line is a force to be reckoned with 😤 pic.twitter.com/P63FWTuiez

— NFL (@NFL) November 11, 2025

The Buccaneers couldn’t contain the Patriots explosive rookies and lost coming off their bye week. Tampa Bay got behind early and didn’t have enough time to catch up. Baker Mayfield said post-game that the team lacked a “killer instinct,” a harsh critique after a loss to a very good team, but it shows what kind of standard the Buccaneers have set in their locker room.

Lucky for the Buccaneers, they’re still the favorite to win the division. Mayfield’s team will take on the Buffalo Bills, who have looked out of sorts the last five weeks.

New Orleans Saints (2-8)​


Week 10 Result: Saints 17 – Panthers 7

Week 11 Opponent: Bye Week

The Saints pulled off the upset, taking down the hype machine known as the Carolina Panthers. Tyler Shough looked like the best quarterback on the field, Alvin Kamara had a vintage 100+ scrimmage yard performance, and Chris Olave topped 100 receiving yards for the first time since Week 7 2024.

Most shocking was the Saints putrid defense shutting down the Panthers run game. The Saints are out of time to turn this season around, but they could play spoiler in the back half of this schedule if they can repeat this type of performance.

Carolina Panthers (5-5)​


Week 10 Result: Panthers 7 – Saints 17

Week 11 Opponent: Atlanta Falcons

Bryce Young ranks dead last in yards per attempt (5.8) among 119 quarterbacks with 1,000+ pass attempts since 2000. Joey Harrington and Kyle Boller are the only other QBs under 6. It's Joever.

— Ian Hartitz (@Ihartitz) November 10, 2025

The Panthers had the perfect opportunity to prove they weren’t pretenders, and they choked. The Saints plan was simple: shut down the run and make Bryce Young play quarterback. The 4th-year veteran was outplayed by rookie Tyler Shough and had his 8th game of the season with less than 200 passing yards.

The loss has killed the Panthers national hype and widened the gap in the division. This was the exact outcome the team was hoping to avoid. Next week’s division game is round two versus the Falcons.

Atlanta Falcons (3-6)​


Week 10 Result: Falcons 25 – Colts 31

Week 11 Opponent: Carolina Panthers

The Falcons have dropped four in a row, and after starting 6-3 in 2024, they’ve flipped the script and started 3-6 in 2025. There are no excuses left for Raheem Morris; this is a bad team. The Falcons play up to the competition but make sure to cause self-inflicting wounds along the way, and they play down to their competition as if it’s a race to create new woes.

The team is sitting 3rd in the division and will face off against a Panthers team that bullied them into firing Ike Hilliard (that sure paid off). Would five losses in a row be enough cause for Arthur Blank to send Morris a pink slip?

The entire division lost, except the Saints —yuck. The NFC South is as open as it’s ever been, but no one seems up to challenging Tampa Bay for the title.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...-10-review-a-week-of-losing-saints-buccaneers
 
Falcons passing game struggles, Week 10 film review: Tuesday Takes with Tre’Shon

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The Falcons delivered another competitive effort against one of the AFC’s finest in Week 10, but were ultimately undone by continued struggles on offense. Kevin Knight and Tre’Shon Diaz break down the film from the Colts game, including the struggles of Michael Penix and the passing game, the emergence of Jalon Walker and James Pearce Jr., the continuation of the JD Bertrand saga, and questions about Atlanta’s coaching staff. 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...-2025-michael-penix-jalon-walker-james-pearce
 
Can the Falcons salvage the season? Falcoholic Live, Ep354

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The Falcons dropped their fourth-straight game to fall to 3-6, but with three winnable games coming up, is there still a chance for the 2025 season to be salvaged? Kevin Knight and Adnan Ikic break down the frustrating loss to the Colts, discuss the chances for the team the turn it around over the next month, and give thoughts on the future (or lack thereof) of the team under Raheem Morris. 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...25-raheem-morris-michael-penix-terry-fontenot
 
Darnell Mooney broke his collarbone on the first day of training camp, per Raheem Morris

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When Darnell Mooney was injured way back in late July, the best estimate we got from the team was that he would miss a “few weeks” of action with a shoulder injury. There were rumors swirling around at the time that the injury might be more severe than the Falcons were indicating, but without the team or reporters in the building giving us anything concrete, we just waited and hoped for the best.

Mooney would miss Week 1, but he was out there in Week 2. The puzzling thing for anyone who saw Mooney do stellar work all last season was that he didn’t look very much like Mooney, something we chalked up to rust and recovery at the time. Mooney would go on to miss another week with a hamstring injury, and thus far his season has been a massive disappointment compared to our high expectations, with the veteran receiver and Michael Penix Jr. seemingly not on the same page through0ut the year and with Mooney dropping passes he would’ve caught in his sleep a year ago. Surely a shoulder ailment and a mild hamstring ailment shouldn’t be impacting him to this extent?

On Dukes and Bell on 92.9 The Game Wednesday, Raheem Morris parried and riposted with Mike Bell and Carl Dukes over the state of the team, mostly stressing the need to keep working and stay even in the face of the team’s four game losing streak. The only time I heard Morris get more than a little testy concerned Mooney, with Dukes pressing him about the connection between the two, when Morris revealed for what I believe is the first time publicly that Darnell Mooney had a broken collarbone in July. You can hear the exchange starting at 15:56, but here’s an excerpt.



Carl Dukes: “Coach, I have to ask you right there. High expectations. Darnell had a great year last year.”

Raheem Morris: “No doubt.”

Mike Bell: “He had a shot at 1,000 yards.”

Carl Dukes: “We know he missed camp.”

Raheem Morris: “Yeah.”

Carl Dukes: “We’ve been talking about this, and I know that played a role. But coach, it seems like there’s no connection between our quarterback and Darnell Mooney right now.”

Raheem Morris: “How would you have one?”

Carl Dukes: “I don’t know. I’m assuming the practices, I don’t know!”

Raheem Morris: “There’s been no practices. You just said it.”

Carl Dukes: “For both of those guys.”

Raheem Morris: “You just said it. So like, you don’t make excuses, you never talk about these things, but like…Mooney, we knew how this would work, right? He came back, he hurt his…he broke his collar bone the first play of training camp.”

Carl Dukes:
“Right.”

Raheem Morris: “First play of training camp, he missed all this time, he came back the second week of the season. That was the first time they actually practiced together. You start working those practices, you knew the first four weeks of the season would be like almost training camp for him. So You’re working those things in, you’re getting him going, really getting him his legs back and getting him to run fast, getting him through all those things, and then the little small setback with the hamstring. He has the hamstring, he misses the two weeks or whatever the case may be, really two weeks, and you get him back going again. And then this last week you start to see him move fast, move around, and some unfortunate things happen. You have the drop that you would never drop, right? And all those other things, the timing routes on the sideline are not quite like you want ‘em, and then you have the nerve to ask me why.”

Carl Dukes: “Why?”

Raheem Morris: “You know why.”

/laughter, incredulous and otherwise

Raheem Morris: “You’re smarter than that.”



Dukes went on to press the point a bit, noting that Falcons fans would expect that if Mooney is practicing the connection would show up more on the field; Morris reiterated that the weeks of practice were almost like training camp for Mooney, that some failure was expected, and the team knew Mooney would have to go out there and struggle a bit as he worked his way back. Morris also said he feels Mooney is close to getting on track, in so many words. I highly recommend listening to the whole interview, as there’s some good questions from Dukes and Bell and some thoughtful answers from Morris around that bombshell.

But what do we make of this? I can’t say I’m happy, to put it mildly, but it also looks even worse in hindsight than the team’s inaction with their receiver room did in, say, late August. The fact that the team was not forthright about the injury isn’t exactly great and will likely make plenty of fans angry, but from Mike Smith on and maybe especially with the way the team has handled players like Troy Andersen, I have very low expectations for the team’s willingness to communicate the severity of injuries and recovery timelines to the broader world. A broken collar bone is, after all, technically a shoulder injury.

It’s the roster building that rankles. The Falcons very obviously carried a bunch of receivers, including future #3 option David Sills, into the regular season because they didn’t know exactly when Mooney would be healthy. But they knew he had a broken collarbone, an injury that generally takes anywhere from 6 weeks to 3.5 months to heal from, depending on the severity of the ailment. They knew, as Morris alluded to in his exchanges on 92.9, that Mooney would not have practice time to get up to speed and develop a rapport with Penix, who he had only caught passes from in the regular season for two games at the end of 2024. They knew, in other words, that the possibility he might miss real time and struggle was a real possibility; Morris even basically said he knew some struggles were (understandably, given the injury) an inevitability. That meant the team would need other options to pick up the slack.

The team’s answer for that was to sign DJ Chark, who did not end up making the team, and stock both the bottom of the roster and the practice squad with receiving options. They undoubtedly thought that a heavy reliance on Bijan Robinson and Tyler Allgeier on the ground, plus Bijan, Drake London, Kyle Pitts, and Ray-Ray McCloud through the air, would help them get through those struggles relatively unscathed. For stretches, that’s exactly what has happened, but not nearly consistently enough for this team to weather Mooney’s injury and recovery as well as they had hoped.

Instead, the Falcons are essentially working with one credible starting receiver in London after Ray-Ray McCloud was cut, and McCloud wasn’t really a factor before that. Mooney has caught just 13 of the 35 passes thrown his way, and while Penix has missed him owing to miscommunication and simple inaccuracy, Mooney has only recently started to get open the way he did so often last year. Even when he’s open and the throw is there, Mooney’s struggling to reel in balls (as I mentioned above) and get to the right place at the right time. There’s little question this will get better as time goes on and Mooney continues to get healthier, but how soon, and how much better? Will it only happen when this season has slipped away entirely?

We didn’t know Mooney had a broken collarbone and that all of these things might happen; only the Falcons did. The fact that they didn’t seriously consider trading for or attempting to sign a receiver with a history of at least borderline starting-caliber production knowing what they knew feels like malpractice now, and had we known the full extent of the injury, it would have felt like malpractice heading into Week 1. All non-London and Mooney receivers for the Falcons—a list that includes McCloud, Casey Washington, David Sills, and KhaDarel Hodge—have combined to catch 18 passes for 202 passes and zero touchdowns, or a measly 10% of Penix and Kirk Cousins’ completions and yards. Mooney himself, with his 13 catches and 190 yards, has provided a little less than that; that leaves 80% of Penix’s production in the hands of Bijan, Pitts, London, Tyler Allgeier, and Charlie Woerner. No credible passing game, especially one that likes to run a lot of three receiver sets, can live with that production from its #2 and #3 receivers, especially when that #2 is struggling as much as Mooney has been. Predictably, the Falcons have been sinking, a problem exacerbated by Penix’s accuracy woes.

It’s too late to do anything about it now, and the team is left to hope that Mooney and Penix will iron out their connection and Mooney can return to the high-level receiver play we just saw from him in 2024, which clearly has been their plan all along. But by virtue of hoping Mooney would beat the standard timelines for a serious injury with no compelling contingency plan, the Falcons took an awful risk with what was supposed to be an ascendant passing game. That risk has very clearly blown up in their faces, as they’re now 3-6 with a struggling offense and passing attack, an outcome an injured Mooney has unfortunately played a role in—and absorbed significant heat for from fans and analysts along the way.

Had the team been more honest with the outside world and themselves, the Falcons could have spared Mooney criticism and perhaps eased him in more gracefully, with another receiver filling in while that happened. We’ll never know now, of course.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...-first-day-of-training-camp-per-raheem-morris
 
How confident are you in the Falcons after Sunday’s international embarrassment of a loss?

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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.

Initially I was disappointed I was going to miss Sunday’s game. I was in Minneapolis doing some on-camera stuff for work, and since we were filming tailgating before Ravens-Vikings, I was out on location while the game was going on. I had it on in the rental car as we were driving between locations and every time we were in the car, it sounded like the Falcons were looking pretty good. It was a close one. Jonathan Taylor was doing Jonathan Taylor things, but the Falcons seemed to be holding their own and getting pressure on Daniel Jones, even forcing some mistakes. By the time we wrapped for the day and I parked the rental car in my hotel’s parking garage, the Falcons were up, and the game was almost over. By the time I got up to my room on the 14th floor, the Falcons had blown it.

Same old story. Same old Falcons. This team is incredibly frustrating.

Anyway, you know the drill. Take our survey, and share your thoughts/vent in the comments with your fellow fans. I’m not traveling this weekend so I’ll have results for you by Sunday morning. (Incidentally, I’ll be shooting tailgating content at the UNC Charlotte-UGA game next Saturday, so if you tailgate before Dawgs games and want to show us your setup and play some live In-5 trivia, email me at [email protected]!)

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...ianapolis-colts-berlin-germany-fan-confidence
 
Falcons vs. Panthers Week 11 Injury Report: Drake London limited on Thursday

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Thursday is here as the Atlanta Falcons and Carolina Panthers continue preparing for this weekend’s rematch. On Wednesday, we saw the first updates on the health of both teams, and a day later we know a little bit more.

Let’s take a look.


Falcons injury report, Thursday, Nov. 13​


Full

• DL LaCale London (shoulder)

Limited

• CB Mike Hughes (neck)

• CB Dee Alford (concussion)

• LB Malik Verdon (shoulder)

• LT Jake Matthews (rest)

• WR Jamal Agnew (foot)

• WR Drake London (illness, back)

• DL Zach Harrison (knee)

• DL Brandon Dorlus (oblique)

• TE Feleipe Franks (foot)

• CB Billy Bowman Jr. (rest)

Did Not Practice

• LB Josh Woods (hamstring)

• LS Liam McCullough (personal)

• EDGE Leonard Floyd (hamstring)

• RG Chris Lindstrom (foot)

• LG Matthew Bergeron (ankle)

• DL Sam Roberts (knee, ankle)


Panthers injury report, Thursday, Nov. 13​


Full

• WR Brycen Tremayne (hip)

• OL Chandler Zavala (elbow)

• DL Derrick Brown (knee)

Limited

• RB Rico Dowdle (quads)

Did Not Practice

• FS Lathan Ransom (hand)

• LB Trevin Wallace (shoulder)



For the Falcons on Thursday, we received a few updates. Some positive news, receiver Drake London was limited after missing Wednesday’s practice. Although notable, London’s injury status changed from illness on Wednesday to now dealing with the illness along with a back injury. We will be monitoring that heading into Friday. Also, guards Chris Lindstrom and Matthew Bergeron continue to be absent as they deal with their respective injuries; the Falcons could have to start two backup guards if that continues.

We also learned that in July, the shoulder injury that receiver Darnell Mooney was dealing with was a broken collarbone. Mooney is not listed on the injury report currently, as it appears he’s healed from that.

Looking at the Panthers, the noticeable update for them is that running back Rico Dowdle also progressed to being limited on Thursday with his quad injury.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...njury-report-drake-london-limited-on-thursday
 
Falcons vs Panthers NFL Week 11 preview: Can Atlanta get back on track?

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The Falcons return home in the midst of a four-game losing streak to face the Panthers with both teams fighting for their playoff lives. Can Atlanta get back on track and into the win column? Kevin Knight breaks down the injury report for both teams, the matchups to watch on offense and defense, and whether or not there’s still hope for the Falcons in 2025. 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...week-11-preview-can-atlanta-get-back-on-track
 
Falcons odds: Atlanta a field-goal favorite at home vs. Carolina Panthers

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The Falcons return stateside with an albatross of a four-game losing streak in tow, where they will host the division rival Panthers at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Sunday. Atlanta hung with Indianapolis in Berlin, but was ultimately undone by an abysmal passing game and costly special teams errors. Despite the loss, the Falcons are favored by 3.5 points over the Panthers on Sunday, per FanDuel Sportsbook.

When these two foes last met in Week 3, the Panthers blanked the Falcons 30-0 in Charlotte. It was the worst loss Atlanta had suffered in quite some time, which would be topped a month later when they fell 34-10 to a 2-6 Miami team.

Atlanta now sits at 3-6 and is whistling past the graveyard of another lost season. This team has not figured out what it is on offense, and while the Falcons have one of the top rushing attacks in the NFL, the ground game will inexplicably disappear for stretches on end.

Should the Falcons fall to the Panthers, they’ll find themselves at 3-7 and 0-3 in the NFC South. In that event, slim postseason chances will be all but vaporized, and there will likely be changes among the coaching staff. When that would happen is anybody’s guess.

The Panthers are 5-5, and have won three of their last five games — including a 16-13 win over the Packers two weeks ago.

You can bet the Falcons will want to avenge that 30-0 drubbing, but wanting and doing are entirely different things. Nothing Atlanta has shown us over the last few weeks has given any confidence that they can beat anybody, but nevertheless, FanDuel has given them home-field advantage in the odds for Sunday’s tilt.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...ld-goal-favorite-at-home-vs-carolina-panthers
 
Falcons vs. Panthers: A look at the series history going into 2025 (Part 2)

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The Falcons rekindle their rivalry with their little brother team that’s sort of been punching them in the face in recent times when they welcome the Carolina Panthers into their confines.

I use the term “little brother” because Atlanta has statistically owned this rivalry since Carolina’s inception in 1995, with a 37-24 all time lead in a series where both teams have met twice a year.

Despite the historic success, the Birds have not swept the Panthers since 2019, as both teams have split the series every single year from 2020 and on. Carolina has enjoyed some very recent success, winning three of the past four meetings and the last two in a row, putting up a combined 74 points over the course of those games.

The team out of Charlotte now has their own chance of completing a sweep in the season series, which would be the first such instance since 2013. This would also be just the fourth such instance of the Panthers sweeping the Falcons ever, with the others coming in 1997 and 2005, respectively.


Last Meeting​


The Falcons were feeling themselves after a dominant win on Sunday Night Football against the Minnesota Vikings, and poor coaching seemed to result in them completely overlooking a Panthers team that came out of the gate struggling at 0-2.

The game seemed to start well enough for Atlanta, who got to the opposing 31-yard line before new kicker John Parker Romo — the hero in Minnesota — completely shanked a field goal attempt. After Carolina drove downfield and scored a touchdown on their first possession, Parker Romo missed another field goal on the Falcons’ second drive.

While the offense remained stuck in neutral, the defense held up and the score was just 10-0 going into the half, before a punt was forced on the Panthers’ first possession after the break. Michael Penix then threw a horrendous interception which was returned for a touchdown and never managed to settle himself, looking incredibly gun shy and inaccurate all afternoon.

Carolina happily let Atlanta self destruct in front of them, tacking on second half field goals as well as a Rico Dowdle touchdown, as Penix threw another late interception before getting benched for Kirk Cousins. the Falcons left Charlotte in disgrace, losing 30-0.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...-at-the-series-history-going-into-2025-part-2
 
Darnell Mooney’s decline reflects Falcons’ letdown

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When the Atlanta Falcons worked out a trio of wide receivers earlier this week, the thought crossed my mind that Darnell Mooney was on the verge of getting the Ray-Ray McCloud treatment and being unceremoniously and inexplicably dumped during the regular season.

It seems far-fetched at first, but given the lack of production from Mooney thus far this year, it’s not as if the team would be losing much on the field.

Mooney’s 2025 fall-off has reached epic proportions​


Mooney has been one of the league’s least reliable pass catchers this year, thanks to frequent drops, with the highest drop rate according to PFF entering Week 11. His calling card in 2024 was his explosive plays, which have disappeared from this year’s offense. Mooney ranked second among wideouts last year with 21 catches of 20 or more yards, but has just caught two such big-play passes this year. Both occurred in the closing seconds of the first halves, wasted on drives that didn’t lead to points as time expired.

That contrasts with 2024, where four of Mooney’s five touchdowns came on explosive plays of 20 or more yards. In addition, the drives in which Mooney generated explosive plays often resulted in scores, a total of 84 to be exact. That’s an average of 4.9 points per game that Mooney’s chunk yardage contributed to in 2024. Adding that type of production and scoring back into the current year’s offense would increase the Falcons’ output from 27th-ranked to 16th-ranked. It’s easy to imagine how much of a difference those plays could have made in the Falcons’ three one-score losses this season. Simply put, Mooney’s 2025 decline has been devastating to the Falcons’ offense this year. Now, coupled with the recent revelation that Mooney suffered a broken collarbone early in training camp, an even larger cloud of doubt and concern hangs over the sixth-year receiver.

Restoring a Mooney-sized shot of adrenaline into the offense could do wonders to provide more scoring down the home stretch of the year, as the Falcons are desperate to snap their four-game losing streak. Whether it results in the Falcons winning more games remains to be seen, but it’d make the games more entertaining to watch. Can the Falcons deliver on the vision of the high-flying Michael Penix-led offense promised this summer? Where the second-year quarterback acts as the point guard, distributing the ball effectively to weapons like Mooney, Drake London, Bijan Robinson, and Kyle Pitts? That would be worth tuning in for on Sundays, since getting a reliable winning team is too much to ask for as a Falcon fan.

Michael Penix’s inconsistencies have also contributed to Mooney’s problems​


But Mooney’s lack of a connection with Penix is a two-way street, with the young quarterback’s erratic ball placement not a good match for the diminutive receiver. Listed at 5-foot-11, 180 pounds, Mooney’s catch radius isn’t suited for contorting his body to deal with the equal probability of Penix sailing the ball three feet above his head or throwing it at his ankles.

Penix did exactly this several times against the Indianapolis Colts. It’s on the Raheem Morris-led coaching staff to accelerate their ability to get on the same page. They’ve failed utterly, as they have at many things this season. With the latest controversy surrounding some comments Penix made earlier this week, suggesting that no one on the staff helped him work on his game, that urgency increases.

The clock is ticking on Raheem Morris and Mooney’s impending exits in 2026​


The Falcons’ inability to solve problems this season should push Morris out the door at year’s end. Their failed attempts at resolving the revolving door at kicker, replacing Divine Deablo, or avoiding getting “out-Atlanta-ed” show Morris isn’t capable of stabilizing a struggling roster. Ironically, it’s come during a season where the Falcons have finally found a pass rush. The football gods are cruel.

Mooney’s struggles are just one more fire this coaching staff can fumble trying to put out. Without a late-season surge from the team’s second wideout, the Falcons are sure to move on after the season. Mooney has an $18.5 million cap hit in 2026, far too high a figure for a wideout on pace to finish this year with 28 catches. The Falcons could save $7.5 million by cutting him in March, according to OvertheCap.com.

Whoever is in charge of the team and offense next year will need to prioritize adding a second receiver next spring to complement London, who is on track for a pricey extension to match his improved 2025 production, despite battling injuries throughout the year like Mooney. Of course, none of London’s nagging injuries has been as serious as a broken collarbone. But the Falcons will be incentivized to go with a cheap option via the draft to offset the Brinks truck they’ll be backing up to London’s front lawn.’

Mooney, like Morris and so many others currently on the Falcons’ roster, should be fighting to save his job over the next two months. With their backs to the wall, they face a must-win challenge on Sunday against the Carolina Panthers. If things don’t fare better this weekend for Mooney, Penix, and the offense amid the multitude of concerns, then all fleeting hopes for a dramatic turnaround are over. It’ll be just another dropped opportunity, much like the many that have gone through Mooney’s hands this season.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...nell-mooneys-decline-reflects-falcons-letdown
 
Falcons vs Panthers Week 11 postgame show: Nail in the coffin

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The Falcons blew another fourth quarter lead after an anemic second half on offense, letting the Carolina Panthers sweep them for just the third time in franchise history. Kevin Knight and Allen Strk discuss the failures on both sides of the ball, the end of the 2025 season, and why it’s time to fire Raheem Morris and start to look to the future. Fellow Falcoholics, welcome to another episode of The Falcoholic Live!

Watch the stream below or on YouTube


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.

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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...hers-week-11-postgame-show-nail-in-the-coffin
 
Michael Penix Jr. reportedly aggravated knee injury

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The Falcons lost their fifth straight game on Sunday, and yet the news got even worse from there.

Michael Penix Jr., who had an impressive first half after struggling mightily the previous week, left the game with a knee injury. We didn’t have details immediately following the Panthers loss, but now we know that Penix probably aggravated the knee he injured earlier this year. That bone bruise kept him out for a week last time out, but given Penix’s injury history, the fact that the season is unquestionably lost, and the team wants him around for the long haul, my guess is that he will miss multiple weeks this time around.

Falcons QB Michael Penix Jr is believed to have aggravated the same knee injury as earlier in the season, per me and Tom Pelissero. That bone bruise in the same knee kept him out one game. More tests coming, but there is concern he’ll miss some time.

Ian Rapoport (@rapsheet.bsky.social) 2025-11-17T00:58:42.580Z

Penix has been wildly inconsistent in year two, but was 13/16 for 175 yards against the Panthers with a nine yard scramble and had engineered three scoring drives. Penix was also in the midst of a fifth straight week without an interception, a mark even Matt Ryan only hit a small handful of times in his Falcons career; this felt like a week where he had worked to get better and had. This league is often unfair.

If Penix does miss time, it’ll be Kirk Cousins again. Cousins is 32/52 for 250 yards in three games, including one start in relief of Penix, with no touchdowns and no interceptions. He has looked much the same as he did last year past a certain point, just without the crushing lows associated with all his 2024 turnovers, and thus is not a particularly inspiring option to lead an already scuffling passing game. But if the Falcons are going to salvage some dignity from this season, play spoiler a bit in the NFC South with the Buccaneers, and maybe figure out who should stick around from their receiving and tight end corps past this year, they’ll need Cousins to be better than he has been. Perhaps that caliber of player is still in there somewhere.

We’ll see if we get a more concrete timeline soon, but an already depressing season just got even more depressing. Fingers crossed Penix is healthy soon.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...eportedly-aggravated-knee-injury-kirk-cousins
 
Michael Penix Jr. out for the season? Falcoholic Live

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The Falcons received the bad news on Monday that quarterback Michael Penix Jr. is likely out for the season with a torn ACL. Kevin Knight and Tre’Shon Diaz break down the news, the implications for Atlanta’s future, and the potential timeline for return. 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...l-penix-jr-out-for-the-season-falcoholic-live
 
Michael Penix Jr.’s injury is a disaster for team and player alike

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For two quarters and change, things were going well for the Atlanta Falcons. Then Michael Penix Jr. went down,

It’s not just that the season is over at 3-7, though the season is over. It’s not just that Penix is hurt, although he is. It’s that Penix’s injury occurred during a game where he was rolling along and showing the team what they had hoped to see, and that his injury is not just potentially season-ending but also apparently to his left ACL. Penix notably tore his right ACL twice in college, and if the damage is significant, he’ll be facing a long recovery from what’s reportedly a partial tear.

This is a terrible outcome for player and team, for reasons that intersect but are also quite distinct.

Penix’s injury history could shorten his career​


This was a concern when the Falcons drafted him, given that Penix had multiple serious college injuries. Two ACL tears, a broken collarbone, and an A/C joint separation are not minor ailments, but the Falcons were confident they wouldn’t linger or significantly shorten his career. An ACL tear on the left now means he’ll have two surgically repaired knees, and chances are that eventually that will catch up to him.

I wrote when the Falcons drafted Penix that he might, by virtue of his age and injury history, have a 5-10 year career instead of a 10-15 year one, but that it could be worth it if he was as good as the Falcons thought he could be. Through the first two seasons of his career, Penix has been an up-and-down player and now has another ACL tear to work through, one that will likely require anywhere from 6-9 months to return from. That means the Falcons can’t be certain he’ll be good to go for training camp, and that’s coming in the third season of his rookie career. Any lengthening of his recovery timetable might help him prevent re-injury, but it will mean the Falcons have to have a great insurance policy for early 2026.

Available research indicates that quarterbacks are more likely to return from ACL tears without significant performance drops and have longer careers post-surgery than other positions, but this is a third tear for Penix. We’d have to be gullible as hell to believe this will have no impact on his longevity and availability going forward, and this is a franchise that can no longer afford to have that lack of imagination. The fact is that no surgically repaired ligament is going to be 100%, and even if the risk of another tear is only slightly elevated, NFL players absorb big hits and bend limbs at unnatural angles all the time in a way that heightens that risk further. If Penix is still the 1A plan at quarterback—and he will be unless he simply can’t go—the Falcons have to have a compelling 1B.

But for Penix, this just sucks. His flaws were on full display throughout this season, but at times those tantalizing strengths were there and he was delivering crisp passes anywhere he wanted to with authority. The thought that we may have to wait a long time to see or never see the best version of what Penix can be is heartbreaking as a fan; I can’t even imagine what it’s like for him, having to battle through an injury like this again and confront an uncertain future while putting in months of rehabilitative work in service of getting back on the field and

The Falcons now have quarterback uncertainty…again​


Two years ago around this time, the Falcons were confronting the fact that they had no long-term quarterback option. At the time, this was ruinous for Arthur Smith’s tenure with the team and the 2023 season, but Atlanta had invested just a 2022 third round pick in Desmond Ridder and a two-year, $14 million deal for Taylor Heinicke. Both were easy to escape, and the Falcons did so, trading both players away in the 2024 offseason. They had a chance to start fresh.

Atlanta invested about as many resources into the quarterback position as you possibly can during that offseason, signing Kirk Cousins to a massive multi-year deal and then drafting Penix with the eighth overall pick. As part of a pattern of this team weighing one position too heavily—even if it is arguably the most important position on the field—they thought investing those resources in quarterback would set them up to win right now and well into the future. Instead, both moves are now looking like catastrophes.

The common thread for both were injuries. Somehow, the Falcons did not really ask themselves what a 35-year-old Kirk Cousins coming off the first truly major injury of his NFL career would look, given that Cousins’ already limited mobility and mechanics would obviously be tested by recovering from an Achilles. Cousins did some very good work for a few weeks and then fell apart entirely thanks in part to an injury suffered against the Saints, and a year later and supposedly much healthier he looks…like a 36-year-old quarterback who is not the same player he was. The Falcons spent a lot of money and will continue to spend a lot of money for a guy who would need to suddenly turn the lights on in a major way to justify not just sticking in Atlanta past this season, but also a starting quarterback job in the NFL anywhere in 2026 and beyond.

And now injury has come for Penix. Past ailments are not necessarily indicative of future outcomes, and the Falcons had expected to have Penix sitting and learning longer than they did. But they believed in the talent and waved away age and injury concerns because of that, and now even their hand-picked franchise quarterback is not a lock to be out there and performing at a high level early in 2026.

When you expend the resources the Falcons did to solve your quarterback problem and you end up here less than two full seasons later, that’s a nightmare. I recognize there was real upside with both moves—I wasn’t thrilled about Cousins but he had the track record, and I really liked Penix’s arm and ability—and that Penix’s story in Atlanta is not written just yet, with an opportunity for him to overcome this injury and become the player he and the franchise want him to be. But there’s real uncertainty about that outcome and near-certainty that the Cousins move has not worked out. That could lead to widespread changes in Atlanta, and it could mean massive changes to the quarterback position as soon as this coming spring.

When you treated the 2024 offseason like a referendum on your quarterback group, took a prospect top ten because you reasoned you would not have a chance to pick in the top ten again any time soon, and then made a trade that may well end up depriving you of a 2026 top ten pick…well, you’re technically correct. But not spiritually. The Falcons took a couple of very big swings, and neither one has worked out; they’re on track for an eighth straight losing season.



Obviously this is a dour article because this is a dour moment, but I don’t want to dismiss Penix out of hand. I’m still a believer in the talent, and if he can get back next summer and build on the stop-and-start progress he made in 2025, there’s still a chance for him to deliver multiple seasons of franchise-level play. I want to stress that for myriad reasons—Penix being under contract for three more seasons, the fact that he’s already here, the upside he has, and the investment the team has made in him—that’s the best-case scenario and one we should all be rooting for. I’ll be pulling hard for Penix to make a full and swift recovery and deliver as the clear-cut Falcons franchise quarterback in 2026 and beyond.

But with the uncertainty at the moment around the full extent of Penix’s injury and his timeline, the likelihood the team will cut Cousins in 2026, and Atlanta’s increasing desperation to win enough games to avoid a losing season for once, they’re going to need to reimagine the quarterback position regardless. This injury is a disaster for player and franchise alike, one that could have an outsized impact on Penix’s career and force the Falcons to once again shop for a starting-caliber quarterback in the offseason, just two years after believing they had solved the position for a long time. In a season full of depressing developments, nothing’s worse than this one.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...njury-is-a-disaster-for-team-and-player-alike
 
NFC South Week 11 Review: The division race tightens with another week of losses

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Another week, another 1-2 result for the division. The NFC South is living up to its reputation, and it’s looking like it will be a two-team race for the remaining year.

Here’s the Week 11 NFC South Review.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-4)​


Week 11 Result: Buccaneers 32 – Bills 44

Week 12 Opponent: Los Angeles Rams

Josh Allen put the team on his back in Week 11

3 passing TDs
3 rushing TDs
357 total yards
44 points scored pic.twitter.com/1oYpL3TEH1

— NFL (@NFL) November 16, 2025

The Buccaneers fell victim to another explosive AFC East offense. Josh Allen’s six touchdowns were too much for Tampa Bay to overcome. After a hot start that overcame a laundry list of injuries, the Buccaneers have now lost two in a row and opened the door for the Panthers to make a run at the division title.

They face the red-hot Rams this week, and if Todd Bowles can’t get his team to lock in, things could get ugly quick.

New Orleans Saints (2-8)​


Week 11 Result: Bye Week

Week 12 Opponent: Atlanta Falcons

New Orleans spent last week on a bye. While the team isn’t in the division title or playoff mix they have important questions to answer in the final half-stretch of the season. Tyler Shough had a good outing against the Panthers, and Kellen Moore’s offense has been effective this season despite the record.

This isn’t a good team, but they can compete, and they’ll be facing a wounded Falcons team for the first time this season. Motivation is rarely needed during Hate Week, but handing the Falcons their 6th consecutive loss is nice bulletin board material.

Carolina Panthers (6-5)​


Week 11 Result: Panthers 30 – Falcons 27

Week 12 Opponent: San Francisco 49ers


Carolina was the only winner this week and had the most to gain. Bryce Young had one game over 200 yards passing coming into the division matchup against the Falcons, so of course, he threw for a Panthers franchise record of 448 yards. It was anticipated that Carolina’s run game would be the unit that could dominate this matchup, but as he has seemingly always done to the Falcons, Young took the team down with his arm.

The Panthers now have as many wins as the Buccaneers and are in the playoff hunt, but they have a big test on Monday Night Football against the 49ers next.

Atlanta Falcons (3-7)​


Week 11 Result: Falcons 27 – Panthers 30

Week 12 Opponent: New Orleans Saints

Michael Penix went down after a promising game, and the Falcons’ hopes went along with him. The Panthers swept the team for the first time since 2013, and the Falcons dropped to 0-3 in the division. Saying the Falcons are not in a good place would be an understatement. Atlanta is on the verge of missing the playoffs for the eighth year in a row, and they haven’t won a game in over a month. Now the team must turn to Kirk Cousins against the Saints, and he’ll be without Drake London. May the gods have mercy on us.

NFC South football is not for the weak, but someone has to win this division, and it’s looking like it will come down to a photo finish between Carolina and Tampa Bay, for now.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...-with-another-week-of-losses-falcons-panthers
 
Falcons snap counts from a ruinous loss to the Panthers

Yes, I have snap counts. No, they’re not going to lift your spirits. Sorry.

Offense​


Jake Matthews: 66

Kyle Hinton: 66

Ryan Neuzil: 66

Elijah Wilkinson: 66

Chris Lindstrom: 64

Darnell Mooney: 61

Drake London: 61

Bijan Robinson: 56

Kyle Pitts: 55

Michael Penix Jr.: 41

David Sills: 37

Charlie Woerner: 35

Kirk Cousins: 25

Tyler Allgeier: 14

KhaDarel Hodge: 6

Casey Washington: 3

Teagan Quitoriano: 2

Jovaughn Gwyn: 2



There’s very little new to note here. The Falcons still run 11 personnel a little bit over half the time, which has David Sills on the field as the third receiver, and went back to playing Allgeier quite lightly after a successful week against the Colts for him. The personnel usage is not so much egregious as it is vaguely disappointing; the Falcons don’t have a ton of great options in their receiving corps but haven’t been able to overcome that by using Allgeier and their reserve tight ends more.

Injuries pressed Hinton, Cousins, and then Washington and Hodge into action, and most of them struggled. Cousins had another forgettable day, Hinton struggled a bit after a great Week 10 with two pressures allowed (tied for the team-high with a struggling Chris Lindstrom), and Hodge and Washington barely played. We’re gonna see a lot more about of Cousins, Washington, and Hodge going forward, though.

Penix, London, and Bijan were all great, but Penix and London exited with injuries and Penix may be out for the season. That’s not great.

Defense​


Kaden Elliss: 80

Xavier Watts: 80

Jessie Bates: 80

A.J. Terrell: 80

Ronnie Harrison: 78

Natrone Brooks: 69

Billy Bowman Jr.: 64

Brandon Dorlus: 51

Jalon Walker: 51

James Pearce Jr.: 47

David Onyemata: 45

Ruke Orhorhoro: 44

Kentavius Street: 31

LaCale London: 28

Khalid Kareem: 26

Arnold Ebiketie: 15

Cobee Bryant: 11



The Falcons finally switched away from JD Bertrand to Ronnie Harrison entirely and the results were better, if still deeply uneven. Harrison allowed four catches on four targets for 34 yards and a touchdown, per Pro Football Focus, and also was credited with four missed tackles. He also managed seven tackles, four run stops, and was a key player for Atlanta as they bottled up Rico Dowdle and Bryce Young on the ground. This team desperately needs Divine Deablo back, but there’s more upside with Harrison, at least.

Brooks was a disaster. He’s stood out in the summer, but has so many miscues as a returner and now as a cornerback that the Falcons probably will not be turning back to him in any meaningful roles a year from now. A week after Keith Taylor put together an impressive fill-in week, the Falcons choosing not to elevate him and only lightly use Cobee Bryant when he looked pretty good while Brooks imploded seems awfully weird. Brooks allowed a team-high 108 yards—Billy Bowman Jr. and Xavier Watts were just behind him with 85 yards each—and a touchdown, erasing the fine work he did on his two pass breakups. On coverage teams, against the run, and lightly used as a reserve in coverage, Brooks does have real value; it’s just that as a starter and as a returner, he’s stretched past his ability at this stage of his career.

Getting Kentavius Street on the roster and LaCale London back helped immensely against the run; the duo each had three stops and were an integral part of stonewalling Dowdle. It was a really good day from the entire defense against the run, but obviously Street in particular doesn’t offer the pass rush much. That showed up on Sunday in a way that makes it clear the Falcons will have to mix and match more on early downs and against certain opponents who love to pass.

Finally, Bryant did well enough that I think he should get a longer look, especially if Alford and Hughes are set to miss more time. He looked as physical as advertised and more disciplined than he did in our brief glimpses of him over the summer, and was very good in coverage against the big Panthers receivers. With Mike Hughes and Dee Alford seeing their contracts run out next year and an opening across from Terrell potentially on the table, evaluating Bryant to see if some of the traits the coaches loved can translate in a starting role feels like a priority.

Special teams​


KhaDarel Hodge: 25

DeMarcco Hellams: 25

Mike Ford: 25

JD Bertrand: 25

Feleipe Franks: 21

Jammie Robinson: 20

Teagan Quitoriano: 16

Ronnie Harrison: 15

Charlie Woerner: 12

Tyler Allgeier: 12

Zane Gonzalez: 11

Khalid Kareem: 10

Bradley Pinion: 10

Nate Carter: 10

Liam McCullough: 10

Jamal Agnew: 10

Jordan Fuller: 8

Kaden Elliss: 7

Natrone Brooks: 7

Xavier Watts: 6

Elijah Wilkinson: 5

Ryan Neuzil: 5

Jake Matthews: 5

Kyle Hinton: 5

Jovaughn Gwyn: 5

Jack Nelson: 5

David Onyemata: 4

Ruke Orhorhoro: 4

LaCale London: 4

Cobee Bryant: 3



After weeks of rolling disasters in this phase, the Falcons avoided them…except for one moment. Brooks has been an iffy returner all season, but his fumble on a ball he was carrying like a loaf of bread was a catastrophe. Only a heroic four down stop from the Falcons kept it from being an easy Panthers scoring drive, and I’m wondering if the Falcons might try other options back there going forward.

Bertrand was back to full time special teams work and came up with a tackle, and Atlanta’s core guys were all useful in coverage on Sunday. New addition Jammie Robinson appears to have been activated just for special teams and did solid work as a blocker and in coverage, as well; he may get another look this week versus the Saints.

Source: https://www.thefalcoholic.com/atlan...ap-counts-from-a-ruinous-loss-to-the-panthers
 
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