The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Must-do for Falcons: Draft for the offense

- Mark Bradley

Mark Bradley: The offensive unit is in better shape than the defense, but it’s in serious need of more than a new coat of paint.

Credit where it’s due: Through the ongoing influx of young talent, the Falcons have brought their defense, which not so long ago was a swinging gate, up from oblivion. The 2017 Falcons were ninth among NFL teams in yards against. It marked only the second time since 2007 — and the first since 2012 — this club had cracked the top 10 in total defense.

Two problems here. First, yardage isn’t always the best measure. According to Football Outsiders’ DVOA (defense-adjusted valued over average) rat- ings, the Falcons’ defense was only 22nd-best, which bettered the 26th of 2016 — but not by all that much.

Second, their offense — again per DVOA — was the league’s ninth-best last season, down from the No. 1 of 2016. It’s a unit in decline, and not just because Kyle Shanahan no longer works here. Taylor Gabriel, a big deal in the Super Bowl run, just left as a free agent. Tevin Coleman, the understudy to Devonta Freeman, could leave next winter. (No way they can afford both backs.) That Matt Ryan and Alex Mack are 32 isn’t ominous — quarterbac­ks and centers can go on a while — but age

at receiver is always a concern. The great Julio Jones is 29 and seems to have a nagging injury every week; Mohammed Sanu is 28.

Since Dan Quinn arrived in 2015, the Falcons have exercised eight picks in the draft’s first three rounds. Six were spent on defenders. (The exceptions — Coleman and tight end Austin Hooper — were third-rounders.) Jalen Collins washed out on a wave of suspension­s. Keanu Neal and Deion Jones became key starters on a Super Bowl team. Takkarist McKinley had a promising first year. Duke Riley should be a contributo­r. Vic Beasley Jr. led the NFL in sacks in 2016. And Grady Jarrett, a fifth-rounder in 2015, might well be the team’s best defender.

The defense is coming, but — as the Football Outsiders rating suggests — it mightn’t be as far along as you’d think. Yes, the defensive unit is faster. Yes, they hit harder. Yes, they’ve gotten better. Still, they ranked 16th in opponents’ third-down conversion percentage and last on fourth down. Their 39 sacks tied them for 13th and their eight intercepti­ons tied them for 29th.

The Falcons hold the 26th pick in next week’s draft. There will be temptation

to try to offset the loss of Dontari Poe, who was here only a year, but the more prudent course would be, for the first time under Quinn, to wait until later to address the defense. All this accumulate­d young talent should improve with time, should it not? (Although Beasley’s near-disappeara­nce last year — he slipped from 15.5 sacks to five — is a major concern.) It’s the star-spangled offense that needs immediate help.

Chris Chester’s retirement after the Super Bowl left a void at right guard that is as yet unfilled. The Falcons have high hopes for Hooper, but he disappeare­d in the playoffs — four catches for a total of 18 yards. (One year earlier, he’d caught a touchdown pass in the Super Bowl.) Justin Hardy has been here three seasons and caught no more than 21 passes in any. If he’s not capable of becoming at least a No. 2 receiver, they need to find somebody who can. Last summer, Pro Football Focus adjudged the Falcons’ roster as the league’s best. That it didn’t often play that way last fall was mostly a failure of coaching, but the Falcons won’t be allowed to draft an offensive coordinato­r. The NFL isn’t like college football, where the difference between Alabama’s talent and Vanderbilt’s is as broad as the Atlantic Ocean. A hard salary cap means talent cannot be hoarded forever, that money spent on one player — $30 million per year to extend Ryan’s contract, say — can come at a cost. (Poe and Gabriel, say.)

The offense is still the better unit, but it’s also the older of the two. It needs more than a new coat of paint. It needs a playmaker to replace Gabriel, a guard to replace Chester, a more reliable third wideout for Ryan, a potential successor to Coleman. No team can ever fill every need in any one draft, but the Falcons’ tepid showing in free agency — their biggest acquisitio­n was 29-yearold guard Brandon Fusco, surely not a long-term answer — suggests they’ve been waiting for these three days in April.

They’ve done well the past three Aprils. They need, duh, to do well again. Last year’s team wasn’t nearly as good as the Super Bowl team. If this year’s team isn’t as good as last year’s, you know what we’ll be calling that Super Bowl? A blip.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ CCOMPTON@AJC. COM ?? With wide receiver Taylor Gabriel (left) lost in free agency to the Bears and Julio Jones not getting any younger, the need for the Falcons to address the position in next week’s NFL Draft becomes more acute. NFL DRAFT April 26-28 Arlington, Texas,...
CURTIS COMPTON/ CCOMPTON@AJC. COM With wide receiver Taylor Gabriel (left) lost in free agency to the Bears and Julio Jones not getting any younger, the need for the Falcons to address the position in next week’s NFL Draft becomes more acute. NFL DRAFT April 26-28 Arlington, Texas,...
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