The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The Maturation of Austin Hooper will be vital

TE departed college two years early; growth expected.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

Editor’s note: This is the ninth of a 10-part, position-by-position series ing the Falcons’ roster before the start of training camp.

FLOWERY BRANCH — If Falcons tight end Austin Hooper had stayed in school at Stanford and taken a redshirt year, he’d be entering his first year in the NFL.

But he came out after his true junior year and was 21 years old. He had a decent rookie year as a backup, but showed that he and his game needed to mature last season as he took over the starting spot.

The Falcons will give him a shot to grow as a starter when they report for training camp Wednesday.

“Definitely, you want to get better every year,” tight ends coach Wade Harman said. “I know his work ethic and mentality has been outstandin­g. He’s spent a lot of time with Matt (Ryan) together doing a lot of oneon-ones, trying to make sure that they’re on the same page.”

Hooper was brought along slowly as a rookie as he backed up veteran Jacob Tamme. After Tamme suffered a season-ending injury after eight games, Hooper took over. He went on to play 37 snaps in Super Bowl LI and caught a 19-yard touch- down pass.

“He was a young kid com- ing out,” Harman said. “He had two years of eligibilit­y (left) when he was coming out, so he was a young player.”

Last season, that lack of maturity showed in his play and when he dealt with veteran members of the media. After not coming up with a big catch in the Miami game, following the game he brushed off interview requests, walked off to a restricted area and said he had to call his mother.

The Falcons didn’t draft a tight end this year after heavily scouting South Carolina’s Hayden Hurst. They are counting on Hooper to mature. Hurst went to Jack- sonville with the 25th overall pick. The Falcons selected wide receiver Calvin Ridley with the next pick.

“He’s got a real good understand­ing of the offense,” Harman said of Hooper. “So, I think he’s started to pick up more of the details, not just about what my route is, but how to work it go get open. Where’s Matt expecting me on this coverage? What Matt expects me to do if this happens. I think he has a real good understand­ing and feel with Matt about that. That will be huge for his developmen­t.”

Harman, who coached Hall of Fame tight end Shan- non Sharpe in Baltimore, said Hooper had a strong off- season. Harman coached the Ravens’ tight ends from 1999- 2013 and is a two-time Super Bowl (XXXV and XLVII) win- ning assistant coach.

“It really doesn’t mean much until we put the pads on,” Harman noted. “One thing that we’ve talked about is just being consistent. We’ve done a lot of really good things. This cer- tain block, we did really well nine times, 10 times and the same opportunit­y came up and we didn’t do it the same way.

“Same thing with routes. Make sure that you are doing the routes right all the time. Seven of them will look really good and two of them we’ll be like ‘what happened?’”

Hooper started with a monster season-opening game against Chicago, but proved to be undepend- able as the 2017 season progressed. He caught 49 of 65 targets (75.4 percent catch rate) for 526 yards and three touchdowns. He had 265 yards after the catch, which was second on the team.

He didn’t fight back to the ball on a memorable play in a loss to Miami and had three drops.

“Hooper (caught) 49 balls last year and there were a couple opportunit­ies where we had some drops I wish we wouldn’t have had,” Harman said. “Seventy catches? Who’s not going to get the catches? So, are we going to take them away from Julio Jones? The backs, (Devonta) Freeman and (Tevin) Cole- man? Or (Mohamed) Sanu?

“There are only so many snaps a year. So, I wouldn’t think I would base anything on the number of catches. Making the most of his opportunit­ies, that’s the No. 1 thing we’ll try to do.”

The Falcons parted ways with block i ng tight end Levine Toilolo and signed veteran Logan Paulsen to a one-year, $1 million deal.

Paulsen, 31, is 6-foot-5 and 264 pounds and has played in 105 games and made 55 starts. He has caught just 82 passes for 816 yards and six touchdowns. He was undrafted after playing at UCLA and has been in the NFL since 2010.

“He’s been really good in our room,” Harman said. “Veteran guy. He played in a similar system with (former offensive coordinato­r) Kyle (Shanahan) in Washington and he played for him last year in San Francisco. So, he really knows kind of where the system came from.”

Paulsen could also be a positive influence on Hooper.

“He’s a veteran guy who’s lasted in this league and there’s a reason he’s lasted,” Harman said. “He’s not the most talented or the fastest tight end in the league, but he’s a very good blocker. He works very hard at his craft and he does a really good job with the young guys. He’s a really good leader.

“He knows what it takes to survive in the NFL.”

Eric Sau bert, foreign exchange player Alex Gray, Troy Mangen and Jaeden Graham are the other tight ends on the 90-man roster.

Saubert, a fifth-round pick in 2017 out of Drake, played 30 snaps on offense and 212 on special teams last season.

“He’s really done a good job,” Harman said. “Last year, it was him trying to figure out where to line up and where to motion and what’s my route when the ball was snapped. You saw a lot thinking out there. This year, he’s got a real good understand­ing of what we are doing.

“So, now you see his speed and athletic ability really starting to show up. Last year, at times, his mind was slowing things down a little bit. You didn’t always see the ability that he has.

“I’m real excited to see what he can do this fall.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/AJC ?? Falcons tight end Austin Hooper celebrates after catching a touchdown pass in the second quarter of Super Bowl LI. Hooper became a starter last season and caught 49 passes.
CURTIS COMPTON/AJC Falcons tight end Austin Hooper celebrates after catching a touchdown pass in the second quarter of Super Bowl LI. Hooper became a starter last season and caught 49 passes.

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