The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Which Falcons will show up for playoffs?

Tonight’s road game against Rams will provide answers.

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The Rose

LOS ANGELES — Bowl, which opened in 1922, was the site of a historic win for Georgia on Monday night. The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, which opened in 1923, is set to host a Rams

playoff game for the first time in 38 years.

The Falcons are seeking a different kind of history. They’re just trying to get back to last year.

The NFL playoffs open tonight. It took until the final week of the regular season for the Falcons to qualify. The fact they’re the only NFC team from last year’s postseason to make it in speaks to the volatility of such things, but when a team goes to the Super Bowl and leads the NFL in scoring and, well, almost slams New England for the champion- ship, it enters the following season with a certain expectatio­n level.

The Falcons didn’t meet those expectatio­ns during the season. They finished 10-6, which isn’t bad, and they went 6-2 in the second half, which is very good. But the question of which team shows up for the playoffs lingers.

The wild-card game against the Los Angeles Rams at the Coliseum tonight will provide answers about the offense and the defense.

Defense: The Falcons’ defense has been solid this season, ranking ninth in yardage (318.4) and eighth in points (19.7), despite having only 16 takeaways (27th overall). But it’s going against a Rams offense

led by a creative young coach, Sean McVay, who calls plays for the NFL’s high-scoring unit (29.9 points) and ranked 10th in total offense (361.5). Former Georgia running back Todd Gurley leads the team in rushing and receiving.

Offense: The Falcons’

offense averaged 22.1 points, nearly 12 fewer than a year ago. There hasn’t been a significan­t drop in several categories from 2016, but they’re far worse in the red zone. Their touchdown percentage of 50 ranks 23rd in the league and is down from 64.6 percent a year ago. The team averaged 1.7 touchdowns in the red zone this season, down from 2.7 last season.

Wade Phillips, the well-traveled but long successful defensive coordinato­r for the Rams, said of the Falcons earlier this week: “They’ve kind of hit their stride here at the end of the year, as far as their offense goes.”

What makes him believe that?

“I just look at the last ballgame. They’ve played some really good teams and played well against them. game I In they the last the thought moved ball really well. It’s hard to stop their running game, and the quarterbac­k can move the football.”

The Falcons’ last game was a 22-10 win over Carolina on Sunday. They totaled 371 yards in offense, with Matt Ryan throwing for 317, and they went 6 for 16 on third downs. But the team was a horrible 1 for 5 in the red zone.

Matt Bryant kicked five field goals, including a clutch 56-yarder in the fourth quarter. That’s great for Bryant. It’s great for the Falcons. It’s bad for the offense in the big picture.

This good news for the Falcons is that while the

NFC playoff field is solid,

there are no dominant teams. Philadelph­ia is 13-3

but lost starting quarterbac­k Carson Wentz with three games left. Minnesota is 13-3, but are you going to trust a play

off team with quarterbac­k Case Keenum, who couldn’t cut it in his first four NFL seasons with Houston or the Rams?

The Falcons also have been on this playoff stage before, while the Rams have only five players on the active roster with playoff experience (only three starters). That includes tackle Andrew Whitworth, who played in six playoff games with Cincinnati but

lost all of them.

“I’m O-fer, so I don’t have much experience in winning,” he joked this week. “I don’t know if that really gives me value.”

It’s there for the Falcons, if only they play to

the level of their talent. Too often this season, they haven’t.

They have had some impressive wins: Green Bay, Dallas, Seattle, New Orleans and to some degree Carolina at the

end. But they’ve also had some ugly losses (Buffalo, Miami, New England, Minnesota) and narrow escapes (Chicago, Detroit, New York Jets). Notwithsta­nding the way the Super Bowl ended, most expected a smoother ride this season.

Can they flip a switch? The playoffs will either affirm that something was just off this season or much of what we’ve seen since September never mattered.

 ?? Jeff Schultz
My Opinion ??
Jeff Schultz My Opinion

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