The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Being home big edge for Falcons

Seahawks far less formidable away from noisy crowd.

- By Paul Newberry

ATLANTA — As with any rematch, there are certainly things that both teams learned about each other the first time around.

Then again, so much will be different when the Atlanta Falcons host Seattle in an NFC divisional playoff game today.

Especially for the Seahawks.

Seattle found a running game in its playoff opener, and quarterbac­k Russell Wilson appears as healthy as he’s been all season.

Yet the defense looks a lot less imposing without safety Earl Thomas, out for the season with a broken leg.

Most significan­tly, this game will be at the Georgia Dome, costing the Seahawks perhaps the most imposing home-field advantage in the NFL. A 26-24 victory over the Falcons in Week 6 was at the Link.

In addition to having the fans on their side for the rematch, the Falcons look a bit different on the field.

The young defense, with as many as four rookie starters, has grown up considerab­ly over the latter part of the season, even after a season-ending injury to its best cornerback, Desmond Trufant.

Vic Beasley, in particular, establishe­d himself as one of the league’s most dominant pass rushers.

“Both teams now are a better version of themselves than when we played back then,” said Falcons coach Dan Quinn, a former defensive coordinato­r in Seattle.

The Atlanta offense has been on point all season. Led by quarterbac­k Matt Ryan, one of the leading contenders for MVP, the Falcons (11-5) romped to the NFC South title and a first-round bye behind the league’s highest-scoring offense, averaging nearly 34 points a game.

Here are some other things to watch for:

Postseason blues: While Ryan is coming off the best season of his career, completing 69.9 percent for 4,944 yards and 38 touchdowns, his career mark in the playoffs is just 1-4.

Ryan said the past won’t be a factor: “I feel like I’m playing better than I ever have.”

Running wild: Seattle’s inconsiste­nt run game got a big boost out of Thomas Rawls in last week’s wildcard victory over Detroit. Rawls rushed for 161 yards, a franchise playoff record that caught everyone off guard after the running backs produced just two 100-yard games during the entire regular season and the Seahawks didn’t even rush for 100 yards as a team in the final three games. Under Pete Carroll, the Seahawks have just one playoff victory when failing to reach triple figures on the ground.

Spreading it around: Julio Jones had seven catches for 139 yards against Seattle during the regular season, and Atlanta fans are still seething about an apparent pass interferen­ce penalty on Richard Sherman that wasn’t called late in the game. While the Jones-vs. Sherman matchup is sure to be a focal point, the Falcons have shown they can win even when opponents double up on their All-Pro receiver. Ryan has thrown TDs to an NFL-record 13 players, and the passing game is at full strength with the return of speedy receiver Taylor Gabriel and tight end Austin Hooper from injuries that kept them out late in the season.

Where’s Jimmy? It would be a good time to get tight end Jimmy Graham reacquaint­ed with the Seattle offense. In Week 6, he had six catches for 89 yards and took advantage of openings in the middle of Atlanta’s defense. But over the past five games including the playoffs, Graham has just 11 receptions and one touchdown.

 ?? AP ?? Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson has an NFLrecord 64 victories in the first five seasons of his career, including an 8-3 mark in the postseason.
AP Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson has an NFLrecord 64 victories in the first five seasons of his career, including an 8-3 mark in the postseason.

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