The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Falcons expect solid results from rookie punter

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter darryl.ledbetter@ajc.com SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY

Editor’s note: Leading to the start of NFL training camp, we’ll take a look at the Falcons’ coaching staff and position groups. Rookies reported Tuesday. QBs and injured veterans can report today and the rest of the veterans Tuesday. Today: Special teams.

The Falcons’ special teams, which ranked 30th of 32 NFL teams last season, need a major overhaul.

Special teams coordinato­r Ben Kotwica, in his second season, must fix the punting problems and eliminate the penalties that hurt the team in 2019. The Falcons ranked 30th in punting and net punting, and 31st in special teams penalties.

The special teams rankings were compiled by Rick Gosselin, the longtime sportswrit­er and Pro Football Hall of Fame voter who ranks teams in 22 categories from 32 (worst) to 1 (best). This was the 41st year for Gosselin’s ratings.

The Falcons ranked first in takeaways, with five, and second in points scored, with 12.

The Falcons believe they fixed their punting issues by drafting in the seventh round. He will have to beat out Ryan Allen, who was steady after Matt Bosher was injured and the team rolled through a series of punters last season.

“I’ve always loved competitio­n, growing up,” Hofrichter said. “I’ve always felt like it made me a better punter. You’re always going to have competitio­n in the NFL.”

The Falcons have raved about Hofrichter’s quick motion to get punts off and his hang time. If he can do that at the NFL level, it would help the coverage units.

“Very good operation time,” Kotwica said. “He’s very efficient. He has the ability to catch, move the football and deliver it quickly, which is important.

“He’s got excellent directiona­l ability. He’s familiar from playing in the (Carrier) Dome up there in Syracuse.

We are going to play, at least here, inside and then you add in New Orleans, obviously. He’s got experience with hitting in a dome.”

Hofrichter averaged more than 43 yards per punt over his career.

“Another thing that really popped out is that he minimizes the return yards of the opponent,” Kotwica said. “I think last year he only let out 25, 26 total yards in returns. So, when you take into account the things that he (brings) to the table, the ability to get the ball off quickly, minimize return yards whether it’s through direction or hang time.”

Allen, 30, punted in eight games last season and average 41.9 yards per punt for the Falcons. He punted for six seasons for New England before joining the Falcons in 2019.

“Ryan did a nice job for us last year,” Kotwica said. “We’ll see how it shakes out. They’ll get ample reps, and we’ll move forward from there.”

The Falcons also picked up linebacker Mykal Walker (119th overall) and safety Jaylinn Hawkins (134th) in the fourth round of the draft. They have speed and good tackling reputation­s.

“We feel that we’ve acquired some assets to move in the right direction and improve,” Kotwica said.

The Falcons did not re-sign returner Kenjon Barner and will have an open competitio­n. Wide receivers Brandon Powell, Olamide Zaccheaus and Chris Rowland are the main candidates.

Barner had a 78-yard punt return for a touchdown against Carolina, the Falcons’ first return for a touchdown since the 2014 season.

“Right now, Powell is the leader in the clubhouse as the returner,” Falcons coach Dan Quinn said. Zaccheaus “is definitely somebody we trained in that space as well.”

Powell returned punts and kickoffs in college at Florida. Most of Zaccheaus’ work has been at punt returner.

“We acquired Chris Rowland, who is an outstandin­g young man,” Kotwica said of the undrafted rookie from Tennessee State. “We were really fortunate enough to acquire him after the draft. You are talking about a player who averaged just over 12 yards a return . ...

He had a touchdown last year. He had a 25-yard return average in the kickoff return game. We have some options there.”

Younghoe Koo was added midseason after Matt Bryant started missing field-goal attempts and a key extrapoint attempt at Arizona. Koo made 23 of 26 field-goal attempts, including a long of 50 yards last season. He made 15 of 16 extra-point tries.

Koo also handled the kickoffs. On his 50 kickoffs, 27 went for touchbacks.

The Falcons indicated they would bring in competitio­n for Koo, but elected to move in another direction over the offseason.

“He did a nice job,” Kotwica said. “We did feel that at the completion of last year that it was important to bring in another guy. We haven’t made that (decision). We are in different times now. We are not on the field yet. If the opportunit­y presents itself, yes, we’d like to bring in another guy to compete, just to make sure that position is solidified when we start playing.”

 ??  ?? Falcons special teams coordinato­r Ben Kotwica likes punter Sterling Hofrichter’s directiona­l ability and says he can deliver the ball quickly.
Falcons special teams coordinato­r Ben Kotwica likes punter Sterling Hofrichter’s directiona­l ability and says he can deliver the ball quickly.

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