The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Shanahan ‘excited’ about chance to work with Ryan.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

Falcons offensive coordinato­r Kyle Shanahan is going from working with Cleveland Browns quarterbac­ks Brian Hoyer and Johnny Manziel to working with three-time Pro Bowler Matt Ryan.

Yeah, he’s pretty excited about his new gig.

“There’s a lot of good quarterbac­ks on this planet, but there’s probably only five, maybe eight (in) a given year, that people aren’t trying to replace,” Shanahan said Tuesday.

Ryan, 29, who’s set to enter his eighth season in the NFL, guided the Falcons to five consecutiv­e winning seasons and the NFC Championsh­ip game after the 2012 sea-

son. The team regressed the past two seasons and posted a 10-22 record that led to the dismissal of coach Mike Smith.

Shanahan will be Ryan’s third offensive coordinato­r. He also played for Mike Mularkey and Dirk Koetter.

When Koetter took over in 2012, he taught himself the Falcons’ verbiage and tweaked the playbook accordingl­y. Shanahan is coming in with a completely new outside-zone blocking scheme and a system that requires much more movement from the quarterbac­k.

“Matt Ryan fits into everybody’s offense,” Shanahan said. “When you have a good quarterbac­k like Matt, he’s done a little bit of everything, whether it’s dropback, whether its play-action.

“He hasn’t done a lot of movement stuff, but he has athletic ability to do it. I’m really excited to deal with Matt.”

Shanahan, 35, the son of former longtime NFL coach Mike Shanahan, received his break at age 28 when he became the offensive coordinato­r of the Houston Texans. His career includes bumpy stops in Washington and Cleveland.

Shanahan’s offenses have had success in piling up yardage. In four of his seven years as a coordinato­r, Shanahan’s offense finished in the top 10 in the league. His offenses ranked third in overall yards in 2008, fourth in 2009, fifth in 2012 and ninth in 2013. They ranked 18th in 2010, 16th in 2011 and 23rd last season in Cleveland.

Behind the rushing of Alfred Morris and Robert Griffin III, the Redskins led the league in rushing in 2012, with 169.3 yards per game.

Shanahan’s defenses have consistent­ly struggled in the red zone. In six of his seven years as a coordinato­r, Shanahan’s units finished in the lower half of the league in red-zone percentage with rankings of 26th, 12th, 19th, 29th, tied for 22nd, tied for 20th and 24th.

“You want to get your best players involved down there,” Shanahan said. “It’s changed with every team. I don’t know all of my numbers or what they’ve been in the red zone over the years. I’m sure that we’ve had good ones … but it depends on your team.”

Shanahan’s scoring rankings are equally unimpressi­ve: 17th, 10th, 25th, 26th, 4th, 23rd and 27th.

Shanahan met Ryan last week. They will not start working together until the offseason program. He believes they’ll be able to bond and improve on those redzone and scoring numbers.

“Players want to be coached,” Shanahan said. “It’s as important to them as it is to you. They want to do as good as they can. You want a quarterbac­k to believe that you can help him. So you work as hard as you can to put guys in a situation to be successful.”

Shanahan’s attack relies on being balanced and having a potent rushing action. He has not fully evaluated the running backs, but he mentioned Steven Jackson and Devonta Freeman.

“Any type of back can succeed in the system,” Shanahan said. “The type of guys that you want are the type of guys who can put their foot in the ground and get downhill. You want guys who can create arm tackles and run through them. I’m not looking for a guy that you have to give 30 carries to get 100 yards.”

 ?? JOHN KUNTZ / THE PLAIN DEALER ?? Out of his Super Bowl-winning father’s shadow in Washington and away from the Johnny Manziel circus in Cleveland, Kyle Shanahan can look forward to watching Matt Ryan run his offense.
JOHN KUNTZ / THE PLAIN DEALER Out of his Super Bowl-winning father’s shadow in Washington and away from the Johnny Manziel circus in Cleveland, Kyle Shanahan can look forward to watching Matt Ryan run his offense.

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