The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Falcons bumble, fumble it away

- Jeff Schultz

NEW ORLEANS — There’s usually a point when it all catches up to you. A team can only drop so many passes, miss so many blocks, commit so many turnovers and blow so many red-zone possession­s and still win, before the inevitable happens: The elevator doors open and they realize too late that there’s no elevator there.

That point arrived for the Falcons on Sunday.

In they stepped. Down they went.

They committed 10 penalties, including, illogicall­y, implausibl­y, six on the offense on the first three possession­s. They whiffed on their first three trips into the red zone: a fumble from the 1, field goal and then stopped on fourthand-goal from the 1. They committed two turnovers that amounted to a 14-point swing. They went 2 for 13 on third down. They had some questionab­le play-calling.

They once again didn’t look like anything resembling a playoff team, let alone a team that went into Sunday with first place potentiall­y on the line.

So at least one thing was settled with a game left in this regular season. The 23-13 loss to New Orleans — a late touchdown provided meaningles­s window dressing — obliterate­d any lingering visions of another NFC South Division title that might’ve still been dancing in the Falcons’ heads on Christmas Eve. Their reign is over. After one season.

The only question now is whether the Falcons (9-6) will

hold onto a playoff berth, heading into next week’s finale against Carolina at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. It’s between them and the winner of Sunday night’s Dallas-Seattle games (the Falcons own tiebreaker­s over both).

“Penalties. Play-calling. Turnovers. The fumble by me. Injuries. All that stuff happens,” running back Devonta Freeman said. “We can’t look at none of that and say, ‘This was the reason we lost.’ We just have to win at the end of the day.”

Yeah. But does it matter?

First place in the NFC South was potentiall­y on the line and the Falcons looked the third-grader who didn’t realize until it was too late that somebody tied their shoelaces to the chair legs.

Forget the comparison­s to last season. Just measure performanc­e vs. talent and it’s not equitable. The Falcons have won nine games but they barely escaped in at least four of those (Chicago, Detroit, Seattle, New Orleans) and have fumbled around for the better part of this season.

What indication is there that this team suddenly is going to change, as if being run through a car wash and coming out the other end looking like a Super Bowl team?

Freeman is on the wrong kind of roll. He had three fumbles in the previous two games (none lost) and lost a big one against the Saints. This might have been the worst game of his career. He lost a fumble on the New Orleans 2-yard line. He committed two personal foul penalties. He was smacked for a loss on fourth-and-goal from the 1 (though much of that blame should go on an illogical play-call by offensive coordinato­r

Steve Sarkisian, who had Freeman lined up 6 yards deep with no lead blocker).

“You just have to man up,” Freeman said, who fumbled two plays after Deion Jones’ intercepti­on early in the third quarter seemingly gave the team new life. “I know I fumbled. I shouldn’t have fumbled. I know that. I know I can do better with holding the ball.”

The Falcons need to do

‘You can’t make mistakes, and we made too many of them.’

Matt Ryan Falcons quarterbac­k, after Atlanta had 10 penalties for 91 yards, two turnovers, and was sacked five times.

better in a lot of areas. But it starts with offense. Not only is it not in 2016 form, it’s too often not even coordinate­d.

It made for a fun party in New Orleans.

The Saints’ organizati­on launched a few verbal jabs in the Falcons’ direction during a “Us vs. Them” video highlight sitcom on the scoreboard in the first half. They contrasted fake stadium noise (Georgia Dome) vs. real stadium noise (Superdome) and Olympic rings (Atlanta) vs. Super Bowl ring (New Orleans).

There also was a halftime show that included a pep squad spelling out “28-3.”

It’s never going away. But mostly, the Falcons threw themselves onto grenades. The offense committed six penalties on the first three possession­s: a holding on Jake Matthews that wiped out most of a 26-yard run by Freeman on the first possession, two false starts (one on Derrick Coleman that negated a fourthand-1 conversion by Freeman), an offensive pass interferen­ce on Mohamed Sanu and two personal fouls on Freeman — one for kicking a Saints player during an un-piling and the other for grabbing a face mask at the end of a run.

“That’s not something we need to put in anyone else’s hands,” coach Dan Quinn said when asked about the penalties. “We had our opportunit­ies in this game and when we look back those are the ones that will be the determinat­ion in this game.”

Freeman was asked if he agreed with the two personal fouls.

“I don’t really want to speak on it,” he said. “They’re the refs. I play with so many emotions. They’ve got to make their decisions and I need to do the right thing. Obviously, I have to do a better job.”

The Falcons trailed only 6-0 when wide receiver Marvin Hall had a pass bounce off his hands and the ball was intercepte­d by Marshon Lattimore.

Three plays later, Ted Ginn Jr. scorched Desmond Trufant in the secondary and caught a 54-yard touchdown pass just before halftime.

If that didn’t end it, this did: Jones, the New Orleans native, intercepte­d Drew Brees for the third time in his brief career and returned it to the Saints 2 to open the second half. But then came Freeman’s fumble.

“You can’t make mistakes, and we made too many of them,” quarterbac­k Matt Ryan said.

That kind of game. That kind of season. Even if they get into the playoffs, it’s difficult to imagine them sticking around very long.

 ??  ??
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Falcons running back Devonta Freeman is stopped short of the end zone on a fourthand-1 run at the start of the fourth quarter Sunday. Freeman was lined up 6 yards deep with no lead blocker on the critical play.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Falcons running back Devonta Freeman is stopped short of the end zone on a fourthand-1 run at the start of the fourth quarter Sunday. Freeman was lined up 6 yards deep with no lead blocker on the critical play.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC. COM ?? Falcons kicker Matt Bryant, who was 2 for 2 on field goals (including a 48-yarder), watches the end of Sunday’s loss from the bench.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC. COM Falcons kicker Matt Bryant, who was 2 for 2 on field goals (including a 48-yarder), watches the end of Sunday’s loss from the bench.

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