Toronto Star

Falcons say Ryan’s three-pick game an anomaly

- CHARLES ODUM

FLOWERY BRANCH, GA.— If you ask the Atlanta Falcons, Matt Ryan is still playing like an MVP.

Just overlook last week’s three intercepti­ons.

Ryan’s streak of nine straight games without an intercepti­on, including the post-season, ended last week at Detroit with his most picks since late in the 2015 season.

But look again. Ryan really didn’t deserve the ugly stat line. Falcons coach Dan Quinn said Wednesday only one of the three picks was Ryan’s fault, but it was costly.

Ryan’s short pass over the middle intended for Julio Jones late in the half was intercepte­d by Lions safety Glover Quin and returned for a touchdown. The Falcons (3-0) escaped with a 30-26 win and have shifted their focus to Sunday’s game against Buffalo.

The other two intercepti­ons came off drops by Mohamed Sanu and Tevin Coleman. “Yeah, we were bummed we had them but by no means did I think they were three bad decisions on his part,” Quinn said. “I think there was one he would like to have back.”

The Falcons (3-0) remained undefeated with the narrow win.

Ryan’s performanc­e this season supports the idea the three-pick game was an anomaly. He had no intercepti­ons in Atlanta’s first two games, and his 68.8 completion percentage is only slightly behind last season’s career-best 69.9 mark.

“You really don’t look too deep into it,” said Falcons wide receiver Taylor Gabriel. “Matt is a perfection­ist and he was the MVP of the NFL last year. That’s really nothing that you can harp on or really even think about. I didn’t even know he threw three intercepti­ons. That’s how much we’re not harping on it.”

Ryan did not throw more than one intercepti­on in a game in 2016. He had only seven for the full season. He had not thrown more than one intercepti­on in a game since having two on Nov. 29, 2015 against Vikings. His last three-intercepti­on game was the week before against the Colts.

Ryan will look for better efficiency Sunday against a tough Bills defence that has not allowed a passing touchdown through three games. Strong defence has helped Buffalo (2-1) enjoy a strong start under first-year coach Sean McDermott, the former Carolina defensive co-ordinator.

“I think their defence has done a good job,” Ryan said Wednesday. “The secondary has been stout. The defence in general hasn’t given up many points and has played really well in the first three weeks.”

Bills defensive co-ordinator Leslie Frazier said he’ll learn more about his defence after facing Ryan and receivers Julio Jones, Sanu and Gabriel.

“We’re facing one of the premier quarterbac­ks in our league, MVP a season ago, led the team to the Super Bowl, and arguably the best wide receiver in our league in Julio Jones,” Frazier said. “This will be a tremendous challenge for our defence, a high-scoring offence, a top-10 offence, so we’ll learn a lot about ourselves on defence.”

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