The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Three punters get shot in tryout

- By Jason Butt

The Falcons will host three punters for a tryout, pending the results of their COVID-19 tests, according to multiple people with knowledge of the situation.

The punters set to work out are Cameron Nizialek, Drew Kaser and Austin Rehko. The primary reason for the tryout is to find an extra specialist who can handle punting and place-kicking duties on an emergency basis for the expanded 16-man practice squad.

Nizialek likely is familiar to local fans, as he spent the 2017 season punting for Georgia in his graduate transfer season. Before attending Georgia, Nizialek spent four seasons at Columbia. With Georgia in 2017, Nizialek ranked fifth in the nation with a net punting average of 42.1 yards per attempt. He hit a 61-yard punt in the Rose Bowl against Oklahoma.

Nizialek then competed in the now-defunct Alliance of American Football with the Atlanta Legends. There, Nizialek was teammates with Falcons placekicke­r Younghoe Koo and was his holder on field-goal and extra-point attempts. Nizialek ranked second in the AAF with an average of 47.4 yards per punt. He competed in two exhibition games with the Baltimore Ravens as a punter and kickoff specialist. Nizialek also has field-goal kicking experience from his time at Columbia.

Kaser also was a former teammate and holder of Koo’s, with the two spending time together with the Los Angeles Chargers in 2017. Kaser was with the Chargers for the 2016 and 2017 seasons but was waived after four games in 2018. He spent time briefly with the Green Bay Packers later that year and was on the Oakland Raiders’ offseason roster until he was waived before the start of the 2019 season. In 36 NFL games, Kaser has averaged 47.4 yards per punt.

Rehko was not drafted out of Idaho in 2017 and has spent time on offseason rosters with the Buffalo Bills (2017) and New York Giants (2018). Like Nizialek, he competed in the AAF in 2019, but with the Salt Lake Stallions. He spent this past spring with the XFL’s Houston Roughnecks. With the Stallions, Rehko ranked fifth in the league with an average of 45.1 yards per punt.

This offseason, the Falcons elected to let punter Matt Bosher, who was taken in the sixth round of the 2011 draft, leave via free agency after nine seasons with the team. To fill the void, the Falcons drafted Syracuse punter Sterling Hofrichter in the seventh round this year. Hofrichter is expected to open the 2020 season as the punter.

There were no offseason workouts. A mandatory minicamp didn’t take place. The coronaviru­s pandemic limited all communicat­ion between players and coaches to video chats and phone conversati­ons.

Yet with the perceived setbacks in preparatio­n, the Falcons feel they are up to speed entering the 2020 season. Following Friday’s scrimmage, defensive tackle Grady Jarrett said everything has felt normal thus far on the practice field, with the team two weeks away from its opener against the Seattle Seahawks.

“I feel like being back we haven’t missed a beat,” Jarrett said. “For me, whether it’s a conditioni­ng level or whatever, I feel I’m in the same space that I would’ve been regardless. I was excited to get some extra work in the offseason by myself.

“As a team, as a defense, we came back where we left off. We just keep building. But the fact we didn’t have an offseason program isn’t an excuse for anybody. This is a profession­al sport. However things go, that’s how they go. You have to adjust or you have to get on.”

On defense, the Falcons look to build upon the way they finished the 2020 season. After a 1-7 start in which they ranked near the bottom of every major defensive category, the Falcons were 6-2 the rest of the way, which included road wins over the San Francisco 49ers and New Orleans Saints. In the final eight-game stretch, the defense ranked first in the NFL in allowing offenses to convert only 38% of their third-down opportunit­ies. Having picked up just seven sacks in the first eight games, the Falcons tallied 21 through the final eight.

Ideally, the Falcons would have been able to continue practicing what worked well during OTAs and mandatory minicamp. Instead, the team was unable to reconvene to the practice field until early August. Training camp didn’t start until Aug. 18, leaving the team with a long layoff from padded football work.

Even so, linebacker­s coach Jeff Ulbrich said the defense has looked sharper than he expected.

“You’d think we’d have been so far behind from that standpoint of our knowledge of the defense and our ability to communicat­e,” Ulbrich said. “You’d think that would be reflected in a lot of busts and mental errors. But it hasn’t been that way at all. It doesn’t feel any different than any other offseason now that we’ve gotten started, minus the fact we don’t have the preseason games.”

Instead of repping as a team and at practice, players were on their own. Falcons coaches were forced to teach new players the overall scheme and returning players the added wrinkles from afar. If the early positive return translates to wins when the season starts, Ulbrich noted that an element of the virtual learning could continue in future seasons.

“You’d love to have reps and you’d love to have practice, but there’s something to be said about the virtual setting for this generation of players,” Ulbrich said. “This is a generation that is so reliant on electronic­s. It’s so much a part of their everyday life that there are times I feel like that may be the better way to teach it in some ways.”

Shifting from training camp to regular practice mode Monday, the Falcons feel good about where the defense is right now.

Defensive end Dante Fowler’s performanc­e has earned praise from his teammates. Safeties Ricardo Allen, Keanu Neal and Damontae Kazee have all expressed confidence in the way they will be used in the secondary’s rotation.

Ulbrich said linebacker Foye Oluokun is poised for a big season now that he’s being asked to take over at strongside linebacker, the position played by De’Vondre Campbell through the past four seasons. Campbell signed a one-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals in free agency.

“In all honesty, I think Foye is ready for anything you give him,” Ulbrich said. “If Foye’s going to (play on all four special teams units and as a backup linebacker), he’s going to thrive. If you ask him to be a starter, he’s going to thrive.

“He’s always going to be prepared. His level of execution is unlike anybody else. His physical ability is really good, too.”

One player who has stood out to Jarrett is second-year defensive lineman John Cominsky, who has been playing defensive tackle in the nickel package and defensive end in the base package.

“It’s been night and day,” Jarrett said. “John has had a great camp, ballin’ out at every position down on the defensive line. He’s a guy who if Coach tells him to do something, he’s going to do it 100%. It’s going to get done right. He’s also going to make some big plays.”

Another area where the Falcons will look to improve is in forcing turnovers.

Last season, they totaled 20 takeaways — 12 intercepti­ons and eight fumbles — which tied for 19th in the NFL. There have been a number of takeaways throughout camp, with one notable intercepti­on coming from rookie linebacker Mykal Walker off a deflected pass.

To assist in this area, cornerback Isaiah Oliver said the secondary has been practicing with the JUGS machine before each practice. Kazee said defensive backs have placed a greater emphasis on attacking the ball while it’s in the air as opposed to waiting for it to arrive.

The Falcons tied for 24th in the NFL with a minus-5 turnover differenti­al in 2019, a number that Falcons coach Dan Quinn would love to change.

“I would say the defense has done a good job of having opportunit­ies to create takeaways,” Quinn said. “The only way that you get in the plus in that space is by forcing them. I thought, from a mindset for the ball, there has been a couple forced fumbles, a few intercepti­ons. That part, I thought we’ve made progress in that space. We’re working through the ball drills as often as we can.”

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Falcons defensive tackle Grady Jarrett said none of the irregulari­ties of this offseason seemed to have made the team any less ready for 2020.
JOHN BAZEMORE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Falcons defensive tackle Grady Jarrett said none of the irregulari­ties of this offseason seemed to have made the team any less ready for 2020.

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