Calhoun Times

Matty Ice gets nod as Falcons’ greatest success on draft day

- By Paul Newberry

Associated Press

BEST FIRST-ROUND DRAFT PICK: QB Matt Ryan. Hard to go with anyone other than Matty Ice, who restored some credibilit­y for the franchise in 2008 as the No. 3 pick from Boston College on the heels of Michael Vick going to prison for dogfightin­g. Ryan has started all but three games over his 12year career, earning four Pro Bowl appearance­s and the NFL’s MVP award in 2016, when he led the Falcons to only the second Super Bowl appearance in team history.

BEST SECOND-ROUND DRAFT PICK: G R.C. Thielemann of Arkansas was the 36th overall choice in 1977 and quickly establishe­d himself as a stalwart on an offensive line that would power the Falcons to the first three playoff appearance­s in franchise history. He started all 114 games he played over nine seasons in Atlanta, earning three Pro Bowl selections. (Note: The Falcons picked a future Hall of Fame quarterbac­k in the second round in 1991, but we’ll get to him later.)

The Saturday edition of The Calhoun Times deadlined before the start of the NFL draft. For the latest NFL and Atlanta Falcons draft news, visit our website at www. CalhounTim­es.com.

BEST LATE-ROUND DRAFT PICK: C Jeff Van Note. A linebacker when the Falcons made him an 11thround pick out of Kentucky in 1968, Van Note was shifted to center the following year and went on to have one of the longest careers with one team in NFL history. Over his 18-year tenure in Atlanta, he played in 246 games with 226 starts and earned six Pro Bowl appearance­s. Honorable mention: RB Jamal Anderson, a seventhrou­nder out of Utah in 1994.

WORST FIRST-ROUND DRAFT PICK: LB Aundray Bruce. There’s plenty of competitio­n for this unwelcome distinctio­n, but we’ll give it to one of just four No. 1 overall picks in Falcons history. Bruce

FALCONS,

was heralded as the next Lawrence Taylor when he arrived from Auburn in 1988, but he’s now remembered as one of the most notorious busts in NFL history at the top spot. Bruce somehow managed to hang around the league for 11 seasons, but he made just 41 career starts — with only 12 coming after 1989.

WORST SECONDROUN­D DRAFT PICK: C Peter Konz. Again, there’s a lengthy list of botched Atlanta picks in this normally fertile round, but the Wisconsin lineman goes down as the biggest disappoint­ment. The 55th overall pick in 2012, Konz started 10 games at guard as the Falcons advanced to the NFC championsh­ip game. Heading into Year 2, Atlanta essentiall­y forced long-time center Todd McClure into retirement to clear a spot for Konz. He was thoroughly overmatche­d, the Falcons plunged to 4-12 and Konz’s career was over after just one more season.

BEST DRAFT TRADE: GM Thomas Dimitroff made one of the gutsiest moves of his tenure in 2011, trading Cleveland a mammoth package of five picks — including two first-rounders — for the chance to move up from No. 27 to No. 6. The prize? Alabama receiver Julio Jones. While there was plenty of debate whether Dimitroff gave up too much, Jones is one of

 ?? AP-Frank Franklin II, File ?? Matt Ryan, a quarterbac­k from Boston College, speaks at a news conference after being selected third overall by the Atlanta Falcons during the first round of the NFL football draft in New York in 2008.
AP-Frank Franklin II, File Matt Ryan, a quarterbac­k from Boston College, speaks at a news conference after being selected third overall by the Atlanta Falcons during the first round of the NFL football draft in New York in 2008.

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