The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Record is same, but Falcons seem lesser

- Steve Hummer My Opinion

After seven games last season — one of some import for the Falcons — the home team was 4-3. Expectatio­ns, as they are for that bean burrito nestled in the gas-station cooler, were low. But they got microwaved and everything changed quickly.

After seven games thus far, the ledger is identical. No one is entirely certain what to expect of these Falcons now, as they come offff a rough tour of the AFC East and finally get around to playing someone in their own weight class.

Only natural to wonder whether this version can turn it on as did that Super Bowl-bound squad.

Problem is, there’s not really a switch anywhere around the Flowery Branch training grounds marked “Start Playing Like Champions,” that can be flflipped on a moment’s notice. I looked.

Predictabl­y at his Wednesday media summit, Dan Quinn said he would draw no examples or parallels between the first seven games of this season and those of 2016. No point to it. Diffffffff­fffferent team. Diffffffff­fffferent time. Turn the page.

All that’s wise, even beyond the fact that those are some of the fifirst lessons taught at coaching kindergart­en.

Don’t look back and assume anything. Because there are at least a couple of major diffffffff­fffference­s between the start of 2016 and where the Falcons are today.

For one, the 2016 team, even while losing three of its fifirst seven, was yielding clues to the offfffffff­fffensive beast it would become.

It was averaging 33 points per game (this year’s team is at 22).

Matt Ryan already had thrown for 2,248 yards and 16 touchdowns, four intercepti­ons (1,844-9-6 thus far this season).

Julio Jones, with a huge 300-yard receiving game against Carolina in the bank, had markedly more yards (830-540) and touchdowns (4-1) through the fifirst seven games of last season.

And for another, the back half of this schedule seems more daunting than the one that eventually spelled out last season’s 11-5.

At the close of 2016 the Falcons got to play a disengaged Carolina and some weak out-of-division opponents in San Francisco and the Los Angeles Rams (combined 6-26 that year). Still to come now are two division leaders — Seattle and Minnesota. And who knows what Dallas is?

And competitio­n within the division looks a bit more barbed. At no point last season did New Orleans or Carolina have a winning record. Both currently reside above both .500 and the Falcons in the standings.

Just beware any assumption­s that because the Falcons wreaked such havoc over the second half of 2016 that they’ll be able to do so again. That trait is nontransfe­rable.

 ?? BILL KOSTROUN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Falcons coach Dan Quinn’s team went 1-3 the past four games, all vs. AFC East teams, and heads to Carolina for an NFC South game Sunday.
BILL KOSTROUN / ASSOCIATED PRESS Falcons coach Dan Quinn’s team went 1-3 the past four games, all vs. AFC East teams, and heads to Carolina for an NFC South game Sunday.
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