The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Young players brighten outlook
Players in Atlanta’s 2018 draft class answered bell after key injuries.
FLOWERY BRANCH — The weather matched the mood when Dan Quinn met a room full of media on a gray, rainy Thursday to offer a requiem on the Falcons and their staff changes, but the head coach found a little sunshine in talking about young players who surpassed expectations in the season just past.
Nobody’s happy about missing the playoffs, given the lofty expectations of the team, yet the Falcons got mileage out of every member of their 2018 draft class, and their first and last picks — wide receiver Calvin Ridley and linebacker Foye Oluokun — played beyond reasonable projections.
Second-year defensive back Demontae Kazee grew up, too. It’s just a bummer for the Falcons that it took injuries to others to get so much tape on some of these guys.
Ridley was a starter from the jump, and led all NFL rookies in receiving yards (821) and touchdowns (10), was second in receptions (64) and first among wideouts.
“We see usually first- and second-year players make the biggest jumps, and I certainly anticipate that with this draft class,” Quinn said. “I think from a production standpoint, you saw Calvin’s speed and explosiveness that we probably talked about on draft night.”
Kazee wasn’t new to NFL football, but his role grew when starting strong safety Keanu Neal went down in the first game at Philadelphia and increased more when free safety Ricardo Allen went down with an Achilles tendon rupture in the third game.
All he did was ring up seven of the Falcons’ 15 interceptions, add 82 tackles (80 on defense), 10 pass breakups to rank behind only cornerbacks Desmond Trufant (12) and Robert Alford (11) while also forcing a fumble. Kazee also improved over time at quarterbacking the defense, although not to the level of Allen.
Oluokun moved into the rotation when middle linebacker Deion Jones suffered a foot injury in the first game and Duke Riley moved from the weakside to replace him with the sixth-rounder from Yale back-filling for Riley. Before long, he replaced Riley in many situations and remained on the field when Jones returned from his injury in December.
All Oluokun did was rack up 91 tackles (89 on defense) to rank second on the team to strongside linebacker De’Vondre Campbell’s 94. On four different occasions, Oluokun had 10 tackles in a game including three times over the second half of the season.
“There’s definitely things you find out about certain players. A guy like Kazee was thrust into a bigger role. A guy like Foye was thrust into a bigger role. I thought they thrived in some of those roles,” Quinn said. “... So those would be two examples of guys that took on a bigger role than if maybe had we been healthy, that wouldn’t have been the case.”
Cornerback Isaiah Oliver missed the first two games with an injury, but the second-round pick played in all 14 after that, and started twice.
He subbed for Alford on occasions late in the season to suggest that team officials are considering moving on from Alford, who next season is scheduled to have a $9.1 million salary-cap hit.
Defensive tackle Deadrin Senat played in 15 games, starting two, and although his production slipped in the second half as the thirdround pick contended with injury, he pitched in 30 tackles and three quarterback hits.
Running back Ito Smith was drafted in the fourth round and played more than anybody would have predicted after Devonta Freeman was injured twice in the first few games and barely played.
He rushed 90 times for 315 yards and four touchdowns and caught 27 passes mostly for short yardage. There were moments before his season ended in the 14th game.
Fifth-rounder Russell Gage primarily was a special-teams player, and although he committed a couple of costly penalties, he added four tackles in addition to catching a couple of passes as a receiver.
“This was a really mature group that took to it quickly,” Quinn said of Falcons rookies. “... You’d love to keep everybody as long as you can all the time, but knowing that’s not the case, it kind of challenges you to ... push it on to the development of some players ...
“And that can excite you when you see guys making steps from Year 1 to 2, and 2 to 3. That’s why the development piece is such a big one . ... And for all of them, I don’t think anybody’s near where we think they can get to. And that lights me up because I think all of them can make a significant jump moving forward.”