Texarkana Gazette

Falcons wary of defending Saints’ ‘maestro’

- By Charles Odum

ATLANTA—The Atlanta Falcons may be a step ahead of the New Orleans Saints in the search for balance on offense.

That’s not enough to make Falcons defensive coordinato­r Marquand Manuel rest easy. The Saints have Drew Brees, and the veteran quarterbac­k’s guile is enough to make any defensive coach lose sleep.

Brees and the Saints (1-1) will try to establish more offensive balance when they visit the Falcons (1-2) on Sunday in an early test of NFC South rivals attempting to build off Week 2 wins.

The Saints have relied heavily on

the one-two punch of wide receiver Michael Thomas, whose 28 catches set an NFL record for the first two games of a season, and running back Alvin Kamara, who has 15 catches. New Orleans is last in the league with only 52.5 yards rushing per game.

“That’s definitely something that we recognize and we always talk about balance,” Brees said Wednesday. “We want balance.”

Coach Sean Payton said he saw signs of an improved running attack in the second half of last week’s 21-18 win over Cleveland .

“Certainly Alvin and Mike are guys we want to get the ball to, and yet we recognize the importance of having that balance,” Payton said.

Brees, 39, has completed 81.3 percent of his passes (65 of 80) for 682 yards with five touchdowns and no intercepti­ons.

“He’s a maestro now,” said Manuel, who defended against Brees as a defensive back with six teams before coaching against the quarterbac­k. “He was a magician before when he was dinking and dunking and hitting guys. Now he’s a maestro.”

Matt Ryan and the Falcons found more balance in last week’s 31-24 win over Carolina . Despite playing without running back Devonta Freeman, who could also miss Sunday’s game with a sore right knee, the Falcons ran for 170 yards. Fill-in starter Tevin Coleman ran for 107 yards.

Here are some things to know from the SaintsFalc­ons game:

PASS PATTERN: Payton is confident Brees will spread the ball around more and said he wants to see thirdround draft choice Tre’Quan Smith more involved. “We have to find ways to get him more touches,” Payton said. “He is handling our installati­on. He knows what we are doing game-plan wise and I think he is ready to prove that.”

APOLOGY: Falcons safety Damontae Kazee apologized this week after his ejection for last week’s hit to the helmet of Panthers quarterbac­k Cam Newton. Kazee was making only his second career start.

“I’ve got to learn to try to keep my head up when I tackle,” Kazee said. “It’s a new rule now and I’ve got to adjust to that.”

Kazee said he must learn “when to take my shot and when not to take my shot. He was sliding and I tried to lean over to the left and hit him with my facemask. I apologize for the hit.” RECEPTIONS FOR ALL: Ryan completed passes to eight receivers last week instead of relying heavily on Julio Jones. In one possession late in the first half, he completed six straight passes to five receivers, none to Jones. “I feel like as a quarterbac­k you’re just trying to make the right decision, go to the right spot with the football and trust

 ?? AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File ?? ■ New Orleans Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees motions before starting a play on Aug. 25. The Atlanta Falcons may be a step ahead of the Saints in each team’s search for offensive balance. That’s not enough to make Falcons defensive coordinato­r Marquand Manuel rest easy. Brees’ guile is enough to make any defensive coach lose sleep.
AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File ■ New Orleans Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees motions before starting a play on Aug. 25. The Atlanta Falcons may be a step ahead of the Saints in each team’s search for offensive balance. That’s not enough to make Falcons defensive coordinato­r Marquand Manuel rest easy. Brees’ guile is enough to make any defensive coach lose sleep.

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