The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Oluokun makes most of move

Linebacker excelling in role as defense’s new signal-caller.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

FLOWERY BRANCH — The Falcons’ new 3-4 defensive scheme produced a major shift of responsibi­lities.

Deion Jones was the mid- dle linebacker in Dan Quinn’s 4-3 alignment for the past five seasons.

But the new regime handed the main job, which includes calling the signals, to Foye Oluokun, which freed Jones to attack more in space and around the edges of the defense.

Oluokun has thrived and ranks second in the NFL in tackles, with 166. He was named the NFC defensive player of the week Wednesday after his 14 tackles, one pass breakup and key intercepti­on in the 20-16 win over the Detroit Lions this past Sunday.

“He runs the show out there,” Falcons coach Arthur Smith said. “He embraced his role and has run with it this year. It’s been fun to watch his progress.”

Oluokun intercepte­d Lions quarterbac­k Tim Boyle on the Falcons’ 1-yard line with 33 seconds remaining to seal the victory.

“Well, I think he’s an ascending player,” Smith said of Oluokun, who was drafted in the sixth round out of Yale in 2018.

Jones has been fine with the switch in roles.

“Foye has been lighting it up,” Jones said. “Foye has been having a great season. It’s a product of his hard work and how he attacks every week. It’s paid off. He closed out a game, this last game especially when we needed it right in the red zone. That’s closer mentality. He is doing his thing. He took the middle linebacker role and ran away with it. That’s just the type of guy he is, and I’m happy for him.”

Jones has embraced his changed role.

“I used to be in the mid- dle of the defense, now I’m on the side or the edges of the defense,” Jones said. “Just new angles. New type of responsibi­lity. Blitzing a little more. Covering differ- ent types of space, tight ends and running backs. Other than that, it’s just basically me being on the edges of the defense instead of being in the middle. That’s the big difference.”

Oluokun talked to the other players on defense when they were in that tough spot of trying to save the game and defend 37 yards against the Lions.

“So when we saw (Russell Gage’s fumble with 2:18 to play in the fourth quarter), we all huddled up there in the beginning,” Oluokun said. “I said, ‘If they don’t score a touchdown, we win the game.’ And eventually when they ran out of timeouts, it was like red-zone 7-on-7 . ... Everybody calmed down from there and just made the play happen.”

After this season, the Falcons will need to rebuild the front of the defense and find some outside linebacker­s. By re-signing Oluokun and keep- ing him from reaching the free-agent market, the Falcons can stabilize the inside linebacker spots.

Oluokun became the first Falcons player to have at least 14 tackles and an intercep- tion in a game since Curtis Lofton in 2011.

“It shows what kind of season that he’s had and the impact that he’s had on a lot of football games for us,” Smith said. “Foye runs the show back there. It’s a good job by him.”

Punter Morstead honored: Fa l cons punter Thomas Morstead, after a strong month of work, was named NFC’S special teams player of the month for December on Thursday. Morstead, who was signed after Dustin Colquitt went on the reserve/covid-19 list Nov. 22, punted 11 times for 539 yards (49.0 gross avg., 45.9 net avg.), including six punts inside the 20-yard line and a long of 64 yards.

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Falcons linebacker Foye Oluokun (54) celebrates after intercepti­ng Lions quarterbac­k Tim Boyle’s pass on the 1-yard line with 33 seconds remaining Sunday.
The Falcons won 20-16.
JOHN BAZEMORE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Falcons linebacker Foye Oluokun (54) celebrates after intercepti­ng Lions quarterbac­k Tim Boyle’s pass on the 1-yard line with 33 seconds remaining Sunday. The Falcons won 20-16.

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