The Day

QB Penix surprise pick by Falcons in 1st round

- By CHARLES ODUM

— Michael Penix Jr., the biggest surprise of the NFL draft's first round, received a congratula­tory call from Kirk Cousins on Thursday night even as Cousins' agent was second-guessing the Atlanta Falcons adding depth to their quarterbac­k spot.

Penix described the chat with Cousins as “a very good conversati­on,” but would not say what was discussed.

Penix may have been more excited by Friday's text message from another left-handed Falcons quarterbac­k named Michael. In his first news conference in Atlanta after he was the No. 8 overall draft pick by the Falcons, Penix beamed when talking about his text from Michael Vick.

“I definitely watched him,” said Penix of Vick, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2001 draft who played with the Falcons through 2006 before his career was interrupte­d by dog-fighting charges and a prison term.

“He was my favorite quarterbac­k,” Penix said. “I had the Vick cleats and all as a kid . ... I'm glad I'm old enough to have been able to see that era.”

Penix watched the draft at his Florida home. A large group of family members, including his parents, accompanie­d Penix on Friday's flight to the Falcons' practice facility.

Penix cautioned Falcons fans to not expect him to share the dynamic Vick's speed as a runner.

“I'm not going to say me and his games are the same,” Penix said. “He did a lot of creating. I feel like we both throw the ball very well . ... I think people see him create plays and forget he had a cannon. He flicked the ball like it was effortless.”

Clearly, Penix's powerful left arm was the primary reason the Falcons, who had been expected to target an edge rusher in the first round, chose the Washington quarterbac­k one month after signing Cousins to a four-year, $180 million contract with $100 million guaranteed.

Penix, who will be 24 as a rookie, led FBS schools with 4,903 passing yards and was third with 36 touchdown passes in 2023. He won the Maxwell Award as the nation's top player as No. 2 Washington fell to top-ranked Michigan 34-13 in the College Football Playoff championsh­ip game.

Penix began his college career at Indiana, where he tore his right ACL in 2018 and 2020 and had shoulder injuries in both 2019 and 2021.

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