The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ryan's second-guess of Shanahan a shock

Speak-no-evil QB also played part in Super collapse.

- Mark Bradley

Full credit to Pete Prisco. The CBS Sports writer got Matt Ryan to do something nobody else — at least to my knowledge, and I keep track of this stuff — has done. He got Ryan to say something less than gracious.

In a conversati­on with Prisco this week, Ryan essentiall­y blamed the Super Bowl collapse on offensive coordinato­r Kyle Shanahan, who’s now coaching the 49ers and who, it must be said, turned Matt Ryan from a good quarterbac­k into the NFL’s MVP.

I’m not here to argue that Shanahan didn’t botch the fifinal eight minutes of regulation of Super Bowl LI in NRG Stadium. He demonstrab­ly did.

Still, hearing the speakno- evil Matty Ice say it out loud and for the record is rather jarring.

Ryan to Prisco: “We made the play to win the Super Bowl to Julio ( Jones).”

Apparently Shanahan called that one, too, but never mind. What happened next lost the Super Bowl. The Falcons ran the ball and lost a yard. Ryan got sacked on second-and-11 from the New England 23 when a fifield goal would have clinched the Lombardi Trophy. Jake Matthews was called for holding. Ryan threw incomplete. The Falcons didn’t even try a fifield goal. They punted.

Ryan to Prisco on the sack: “Kyle’s play calls — he would take time to get stuff in. As I was getting it, you’re looking at the clock and you’re talking 16 seconds before (the microphone in his helmet) cuts out. You don’t have a lot of time to say, ‘ There’s 16 seconds, no, no, no, we’re not going to do that. Hey, guys, we’re going to line up and run this.’ You’re talking about breaking the huddle at seven seconds if you do something along the lines.”

Then: “With the way Kyle’s system was set up, he took more time to call plays and we shift and motion a lot more than we did with (former offensive coordinato­r) Dirk (Koetter). You couldn’t get out of stuffff like that. We talk about being the most aggressive team in football. And I’m all for it, but there’s also winning time. You’re not being aggressive not running it there.”

Again, not to defend this play call — there’s no defending the indefensib­le — but Ryan could have called timeout if he objected strongly. No, you don’t like to stop the clock if you’re holding a late lead, but you’d rather do that than get sacked. Speaking of which ... On the strip/ sack that ended the Falcons’ previous possession and

changed the game, Ryan had no chance. Devonta Freeman blocked air, as opposed to the blitzing Dont’a Hightower. On this

sack, Ryan might have gotten rid of the ball and saved the yards. The pressure came late and up the middle from Trey Flowers, who had flung the ailing Alex Mack backward.

And maybe I’m making too much of this, but that final bit — “There’s also winning time” — is pretty much what these fifingers typed in the immediate aftermath and could be read as a rebuke of coach Dan Quinn, whose postgame comments about “staying aggressive” bordered on gibberish.

Ryan told Prisco he has put the Super Bowl in the past. To a man, the Falcons keep saying that. But here they are, about to go to camp, and Peyton Manning is making jokes about them and they’re still trying to explain themselves.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Falcons QB Matt Ryan says offffensiv­e coordinato­r Kyle Shanahan (above, now the 49ers’ coach) took too long to send in play calls to him.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS Falcons QB Matt Ryan says offffensiv­e coordinato­r Kyle Shanahan (above, now the 49ers’ coach) took too long to send in play calls to him.
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