Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Packers want to keep up with Falcons

- Ryan Wood

Twelfth in a 13-part series on the opponents the Green Bay Packers will face during the 2018 regular season.

GREEN BAY – In their past decadeplus as a title contender, the Green Bay Packers have had several litmus tests to show how close — or far away — they are from winning a Super Bowl.

Eli Manning’s New York Giants knocked them out of the playoffs twice. Then it was Jim Harbaugh’s San Francisco 49ers. Then it was the Legion of Boom-era Seattle Seahawks.

The current iteration has been Matt Ryan’s and Julio Jones’ Atlanta Falcons.

In a decade marked by devastatin­g playoff losses, none were more lopsided than the 2016 NFC championsh­ip game. But the 44-21 loss that closed the Georgia Dome — it was 31-0 early in the third quarter — was only part of a larger trend. The Falcons have won three straight matchups since the middle of the 2016 season, exposing a startling lack of speed on the Packers’ roster.

The Packers have focused extensivel­y on adding team speed in their past two drafts. They’ll see whether their efforts have helped when the Falcons come to Lambeau Field on Dec. 9. Even in a cold-weather environmen­t, the Falcons remain one of the faster teams in the NFL.

Here are three things to know about the Falcons:

Odds and evens

A season that ends in the playoffs is hardly a bad year, but in 2017 quarterbac­k Matt Ryan continued one of the more puzzling trends in the NFL. Since entering the NFL, Ryan’s best seasons have generally come in even-numbered years. That’s only grown more stark the deeper he’s gotten into his career. Since Ryan’s career began, the Falcons are 54-26 (.675) in even-numbered years and 41-36 (.532) in oddnumbere­d years. He has 142 touchdowns to 55 intercepti­ons in even years, and 118-71 in odds. The three best passer ratings of his career have come in each of the past three even years, including an MVP season in 2016. His passer rating has dipped below 90 three times in his career, each in odd years. It’s likely nothing more than a statistica­l anomaly, but it’s worth tracking for one reason: 2018, of course, is an even number.

The Quinn effect

The Seattle Seahawks’ defensive slump since 2014 isn’t entirely because they lost defensive coordinato­r Dan Quinn after that season — there has been a great depreciati­on of talent on that side of the ball — but it couldn’t have helped. Quinn inherited a bottom-ranked defense in Atlanta when he left Seattle, and the group has only improved since. After finishing 32nd in total defense in 2014, the Falcons jumped to 16th in 2015. They were ninth in yards allowed and eighth in points last season, becoming one of the NFL’s best units. In other words, Quinn has done exactly what he was hired to do in Atlanta: give the Falcons a solid defense to support all their stars on offense.

Cold weather

The new Mercedes-Benz Stadium has a retractabl­e roof instead of a dome, so there are times the Falcons will play outdoors. In hot Atlanta, you can bet those times won’t be when the temperatur­e dips. So an early December trip to the frozen tundra isn’t ideal, but that doesn’t mean the Falcons can’t win. Ryan, a Pennsylvan­ia kid who played his college football at Boston College, actually has a winning record (6-4) when temperatur­es dip below 45 degrees. The Falcons are 1-2 with Ryan at quarterbac­k when the temperatur­e dips below freezing, with one loss being by a razor-thin 22-21 margin at Lambeau Field in 2013. The Packers again beat the Falcons at home in December one year later. The Falcons have never won a December game at Lambeau Field, with an 0-5 record dating to 1975. Still, while the cold weather certainly helps, it isn’t a gimme against the Falcons’ cold-weathered quarterbac­k.

 ?? JIM MATTHEWS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? The Green Bay defense has been shredded by speedy receiver Julio Jones and the Atlanta offense in recent years.
JIM MATTHEWS / USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN The Green Bay defense has been shredded by speedy receiver Julio Jones and the Atlanta offense in recent years.
 ?? USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Green Bay Packers cornerback Tramon Williams will have his hands full with Atlanta Falcons receiver Roddy White again this year.
USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Green Bay Packers cornerback Tramon Williams will have his hands full with Atlanta Falcons receiver Roddy White again this year.

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