Chattanooga Times Free Press

Joining Falcons a dream come true for Atlanta native Irvin

- BY GEORGE HENRY

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — Bruce Irvin has wanted to play for the Atlanta Falcons since he was a kid.

Now that the seventh-year pro is in his hometown and about to make his Falcons debut, the pass-rushing defensive end said he won’t take this opportunit­y for granted.

It’s a rebirth for a 31-year-old who acknowledg­es he made bad decisions as an Atlanta teenager and now gets a chance to rewrite his local legacy.

“Yesterday it hit me a little bit,” Irvin said Thursday. “I know that I look scared, but I really was crying yesterday — this is a childhood dream for me. Growing up, watching Michael Vick and guys like Terance Mathis … this was always my dream, so for me to be able to come and live it out it was a surreal moment and I’m just very fortunate to be an Atlanta Falcon right now.”

Irvin was cut last Saturday by the Oakland Raiders as the rebuilding franchise continues to tear down its roster. He cleared waivers and was a free agent with offers from several teams, but Irvin never doubted where he wanted to land.

“My agent said, ‘You know everybody thinks you’re going to Atlanta,’ and I said under my breath, ‘Well, they’re right,’” Irvin said. “So it was no comparison, man. My family is here. My wife is from here. It was a childhood dream.”

Irvin said life passed him by growing up in nearby Stone Mountain. He watched friends from Stephenson High School — Jermaine Cunningham, Perry Riley and Kelvin Sheppard — focus on their football careers while he was having run-ins with law enforcemen­t and constantly putting himself in danger.

“I was out in the streets doing stuff, and those guys were getting four-year scholarshi­ps to Florida and LSU, and it hurt me,” Irvin said. “It hurt me seeing those guys go off, and I was just around here doing God knows what. It was a motivating factor. Look at me now. I outlasted Perry and Jermaine (in the NFL). Sheppard just got on so, but it was a motivating factor. I’m glad that I figured it out and got my head on straight.”

Irvin returned recently to Stephenson to meet with current students and offer some advice.

“Like I said, I never played at Stephenson,” he said. “I didn’t play football since the ninth grade and I didn’t play for six years. Going back there and letting those young guys know that anything is possible. You can be in the worst situation, and if you surround yourself by the right people and not around a bunch of yes men, you can make it around anything. So that was the biggest thing.”

Irvin will wear jersey No. 52 when the Falcons (4-4) take a three-game winning streak to Cleveland (2-6-1) on Sunday. He intends to help Atlanta improve a pass rush that ranks 27th in sacks.

The 6-foot-3, 250-pound Irvin was a first-round draft pick for Seattle out of West Virginia in 2012. He played four seasons with the Seahawks and two-plus with the Raiders.

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