The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pass-run balance a key to victory

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan is now 2-4 in the playoffs and the sky, or shall we say the Super Bowl, is clearly the limit.

After three seasons away from the postseason, Ryan had some extra pressure to carry his team deeper, and he handled it with ease in leading the Falcons to a 36-20 victory over Seattle before a raucous crowd of 71,155 fans Saturday at the Georgia Dome.

“That dome was rocking,” Ryan said.

Falcons coach Dan Quinn asked the fans to arrive early and be loud. The festive white-towel waving bunch delivered.

The Falcons advanced to the NFC Championsh­ip game for the fourth team in franchise history. The 1998 team was the lone one to reach the Super Bowl. The 2004 team led by Michael Vick was beaten by the Eagles, and Ryan’s 2012 team lost to the San Francisco 49ers.

Here are five things that changed the outcome of the game:

1. Matty Ice the surgeon. The week off didn’t hurt Ryan’s pinpoint precision.

“For Matt, we had certain plays that we liked,” Quinn said. “I thought the offensive line gave him time. We knew that was going to be a factor.”

The offensive line gave Ryan protection, and the MVP candidate was able to cut up the middle of Seattle’s zone defenses.

“I think we went where we should with the ball,” Ryan said. “When they played zone coverage and dropped their guys deep, we checked down and our running backs did a good job of getting as many yards as they could in those situations.

“When they went man-to-man coverage, I give our running backs, tight ends and wide receivers a lot of credit because they beat some really good corners and tough guys to go against in manto-man coverage.”

With Seattle trying to take away the Falcons’ chunk plays, Ryan was content to grind it out.

2. The running backs shined. The Falcons had to run the ball better against the Seahawks, who held them to 52 yards rushing in their regular-season matchup.

“Having the balance for us key,” Quinn said. “Where we are able to run, have play-action, we can get plays off of that.”

On second-and-3 from the 13 on the Falcons’ first possession, Ryan tossed the ball to running back Tevin Coleman, and he raced outside for a 6-yard gain.

From that play, the Falcons built momentum in the running game. They finished with 99 yards rushing.

In a key drive to start the third quarter, the Falcons ran with some authority against Seattle’s stout defensive front. Pro Bowler Devonta Freeman and Coleman combined to rush eight times for 44 yards. Freeman scored on a 1-yard run.

3. Pick-and-roll. Hawks coach Mike Budenholze­r would have loved the pick-and-roll play between wide receivers Mohamed Sanu and Julio Jones that led to the Falcons’ first touchdown.

Jones caught a 7-yard pass from Ryan after cutting behind Sanu, who reached out to block Seahawks cornerback Jeremy Lane.

Fox NFL rules analyst Mike Pereira said during the telecast that Sanu should have been penalized for pass interferen­ce. Pereira is a former NFL vice president of officiatin­g.

According to an NFL summary of rules, pass interferen­ce is “any act by a player more than one yard beyond the line of scrimmage that significan­tly hinders an eligible player’s opportunit­y to catch the ball.”

One of the prohibited acts specifical­ly mentioned is “cutting off the path of an opponent by making contact with him, without playing the ball.”

Well, perhaps this was a makeup for the non-call on the pass interferen­ce at the end of the game in Seattle.

“I just saw it as a touchdown,” Sanu said. “I ran off the ball and Julio ran underneath me.”

4. Why teams defer. Why did the Falcons defer after winning the coin toss? Instead of putting the league’s top-scoring offense on the field, they put their slow-starting defense out there.

It was no surprise that Seattle drove 89 yards on 14 plays to score a touchdown, taking 8:44 off the clock.

Russell Wilson threw a 7-yard scoring pass to Jimmy Graham.

The Falcons’ defense had problems starting games all season. Before getting a stop against the Rams, they gave up touchdowns on the opening drives of six consecutiv­e games, against the Chargers, Packers, Bucs, Eagles, Cardinals and Chiefs.

But with a 19-10 lead, the Falcons got the ball to open the third quarter and scored to take control of the game.

5. Central Intelligen­ce Agency. The Falcons were not shy about putting a spy on Wilson.

Defensive end Brooks Reed, defensive tackle Jonathan Babineaux, linebacker De’Vondre Campbell and safety Keanu Neal were all used to watch the elusive Wilson. He scrambled away at times, but the spies helped the defense get three sacks, seven hits and 18 quarterbac­k hurries.

“It certainly looked like we could have used a few more,” Quinn said. “He’s very difficult to keep in the pocket. When he gets outside, whether it’s running to convert or creating time where he can throw it down the field, that’s where he has been most dangerous.”

All of the attention started to bother Wilson, who threw fourth-quarter intercepti­ons to free safety Ricardo Allen and linebacker Deion Jones.

“We knew we had to make him uncomforta­ble in the pocket,” Babineaux said. “We had him frustrated and running around. We were able to get some balls overthrown or thrown out of bounds for a stop or a sack.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? The Falcons’ Ben Garland (63) celebrates his sack of Seattle QB Russell Wilson for a safety in the second quarter. Keanu Neal (22) and Jonathan Babineaux (95) join in. Babineaux had one of three sacks of Wilson and was one of several spies the team...
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM The Falcons’ Ben Garland (63) celebrates his sack of Seattle QB Russell Wilson for a safety in the second quarter. Keanu Neal (22) and Jonathan Babineaux (95) join in. Babineaux had one of three sacks of Wilson and was one of several spies the team...
 ??  ??
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Wide receiver Taylor Gabriel takes off on a 37-yard catch and run that set up a field goal in the second quarter, giving the Falcons the lead for good at 12-10.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Wide receiver Taylor Gabriel takes off on a 37-yard catch and run that set up a field goal in the second quarter, giving the Falcons the lead for good at 12-10.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States