The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Not holding back

Second-year player made an immediate impact last season.

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

Defensive back Brian Poole is embracing the competitio­n and enjoys the versatilit­y on the Falcons roster,

Brian Poole went from undrafted free agent to camp body to depth to key contributo­r for the 2016 Falcons. Now he’s fending off competitor­s for his starting spot.

The University of Florida product didn’t hear his name called in the 2016 NFL draft, but familiarit­y with Falcons head coach Dan Quinn, once his defensive coordinato­r in Gainesvill­e, prompted a reunion. Poole fought his way into the nickel spot, going from afterthoug­ht to accumulati­ng snaps on a Super Bowl team.

As another athletic, versatile piece of the Falcons’ defense, Poole will see time at cornerback and safety in 2017.

“Wherever the team needs me,” he said. “That’s not really my call. My job is to come out and execute wherever they put me. I just want to polish up on, you know, every aspect of my game. Really just put it all together.”

Scouting reports hammered Poole’s size, tackling ability, speed and general physical tools. His size was a legitimate red flag: 5-foot-9, 210 pounds. He was under the radar in part because of Florida’s unparallel­ed secondary depth, featuring 2016 first-round picks Vernon Hargreaves III and Keanu Neal.

Poole made an unexpected uptick from the moment he hit the practice field, according to his head coach. He won Quinn over in camp, earning first-team reps at the start of August.

Quinn lauded Poole’s technique and competitiv­eness out of the gate.

“I knew Poole was going to be amongst us when in training camp I saw him counting in line, not for who he didn’t want to go against, but because he wanted to go against Julio ( Jones),” Quinn said during his coach’s show last November. “That told me right then and there the competitor that he is. As opposed to backing off, he wanted to go challenge it. I’m not saying he went up there and stoned him. However, it spoke a lot to the confidence that he had in himself to say ‘I want to try it against the best.’”

To say he outperform­ed the minimal expectatio­ns of an undrafted rookie is an understate­ment. Poole played in all 16 games, starting nine (and two in the playoffs). He racked up 59 tackles, one sack and 10 deflection­s. He recorded his lone intercepti­on in the Falcons’ 33-16 win at Carolina.

In 25 blitzes, Poole led all corners with 11 quarterbac­k pressures, according to Pro Football Focus.

Similar to a year ago, Poole finds himself in competitio­n again. But this time it’s not for a roster spot. This time, he’s considered the front-runner.

With Desmond Trufant and Robert Alford holding outside positions, Poole is expected to start in the slot. His chief competitio­n is Jalen Collins, a 2015 second-round pick.

Poole’s opportunit­y last season came in part because of Collins’ four-game suspension to open the campaign.

With OTAs wrapped up, Poole was hosting his first annual football camp in Bradenton, Fla., on Friday.

“Camp went well,” Poole said. “I feel like we all got better. We all came out and competed. We just upheld the standard.”

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 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Brian Poole (left, with Desmond Trufant during the first day of minicamp Tuesday) is expected to start for the Falcons this season and see playing time at cornerback and safety — “wherever the team needs me,” he said.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Brian Poole (left, with Desmond Trufant during the first day of minicamp Tuesday) is expected to start for the Falcons this season and see playing time at cornerback and safety — “wherever the team needs me,” he said.

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