Chattanooga Times Free Press

Coach Dan Quinn says he feels fortunate his Falcons are 3-0

- BY GEORGE HENRY

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — Atlanta Falcons coach Dan Quinn isn’t fond of putting games in the hands of officials.

He would prefer to have the outcome already decided as the fourth quarter winds down.

A confluence of intercepti­ons and penalties kept that from happening Sunday at Detroit. The Falcons eked out a 30-26 victory after video review showed cornerback Brian Poole touching Golden Tate as the receiver’s knee went down just shy of the goal line.

The touchdown was nullified, the last 10 seconds were run off the clock, and the Falcons (3-0) were headed home as the NFC’s only unbeaten team. Just barely.

“The emotions of going from the dagger to the heart to ‘OK, that’s a good win’ — those emotions would feel different (with a loss), but we’ll go right back to the process and treat it the same,” Quinn said Monday. “For us, we feel like we’re just getting rolling. Just three games into it, there is lots of work to get done, but it was definitely one of the most unusual endings to a game that I’ve been a part of.”

When Atlanta hosts Buffalo (2-1) this Sunday, Quinn hopes to build a substantia­l lead and maintain it.

The Falcons squeaked by in the opener at Chicago when Brooks Reed sacked Mike Glennon for a 9-yard loss on fourthand-goal at the 5. Two weeks ago against Green Bay, the offense failed to convert a third down

that gave the ball back to the Packers with 1 minute remaining.

Quinn can take comfort in knowing that all three opponents needed at least a touchdown to win or force overtime, but Atlanta still is making enough mistakes to avoid feeling overly confident.

Quarterbac­k Matt Ryan’s pick-six gave Detroit a big touchdown late in the second quarter. Ryan threw two other intercepti­ons that Tevin Coleman and Mohamed Sanu should’ve caught, and Desmond Trufant drew pass-interferen­ce penalties twice on the closing drive.

Quinn said the game’s big picture — a victory on the road — was more important than a few blown plays. Ryan passed for two touchdowns and nearly 300 yards. Coleman had eight touches that averaged more than 9 yards. Sanu had an acrobatic

touchdown catch on the game’s opening drive. Trufant had a pass breakup that prevented a touchdown late in the third quarter.

“I told the team earlier that I was really impressed on the sideline,” Quinn said. “Sometimes when a turnover happens, there’s a roll of the eyes or ‘What happened there?’ It was just the opposite. ‘Don’t worry about it. We got you.’”

Most encouragin­g for Quinn is that his defense made enough plays at Detroit and Chicago to keep both teams from crossing the goal line on the game’s final drive.

“We’ve put a lot of work into that part of our game from the offseason, into training camp and now into the season,” Quinn said. “What you emphasize sometimes is what comes through, and we emphasize situationa­l football. It’s paying dividends for us.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Atlanta Falcons coach Dan Quinn talks with side judge James Coleman during the first half of their game against the Detroit Lions on Sunday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Atlanta Falcons coach Dan Quinn talks with side judge James Coleman during the first half of their game against the Detroit Lions on Sunday.

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