The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Falcons have gone from high hopes to major disappoint­ment

- By Paul Newberry

FLOWERY BRANCH, GA. >> Calvin Ridley is going through quite an adjustment.

During his college days at Alabama, he hardly knew what it was like to lose.

“It was three games, right?” Ridley said Wednesday, pausing briefly to ponder whether his memory was correct. “Three games,” he repeated, shaking his head. “That’s crazy.”

The receiver already has tasted more defeat in his rookie season with the Atlanta Falcons.

Expected to be one of the NFL’s stronger teams, the Falcons are probably the most disappoint­ing through the first five weeks of the season. Stricken by an epidemic of injuries and plagued by a bunch of close losses, Atlanta (1-4) already faces a three-game deficit in the NFC South and essentiall­y has no more room for error.

“I’m starting to realize this is the NFL — everyone’s good,” Ridley said. “It’s a hard league.”

This certainly wasn’t what the Falcons expected, just two years removed from a trip to the Super Bowl and coming off another playoff appearance last season, when they went right to the wire with the eventual champion Philadelph­ia Eagles.

But Atlanta got a sampling of what kind of season it was going to be in the very first game.

In a prime-time rematch against the Eagles, the Falcons drove to the 5-yard line for the final play of the game but couldn’t connect on a potential game-winning pass to Julio Jones . Making the loss even more devastatin­g, safety Keanu Neal went down with a season-ending knee injury and linebacker Deion Jones sustained a serious foot injury that will keep him out at least half the year.

After holding off Carolina 31-24 in the home opener, the Falcons lost their next two games at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in heartbreak­ing fashion. New Orleans rallied for a tying touchdown with 84 seconds left in regulation, then won 43-37 in overtime . That was followed by Cincinnati connecting on a TD pass with 12 seconds remaining for a 37-36 victory .

The injuries continued to pile up as well. Free safety Ricardo Allen , one of the team’s most inspiratio­nal leaders, and offensive guard Andy Levitre both went down for the season, while running back Devonta Freeman missed three games with a bruised knee and Grady Jarrett was sidelined by a sprained ankle.

Last weekend, the Falcons had a total meltdown at Pittsburgh. The Steelers ran wild in the second half, scoring four touchdowns on the way to a 41-17 blowout .

It was the second-worst loss of Dan Quinn’s coaching career, surpassed only by a 38-0 rout by Carolina in 2015 — his rookie season at the helm.

“We didn’t expect to be here,” Quinn said, “but we damn sure don’t expect to stay here.”

Perpetuall­y upbeat and one who favors slogans and themes to motivate his players, Quinn doled out T-shirts that he hopes will help snap the Falcons out of their slump.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Atlanta Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan (2) is sacked by Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker T.J. Watt (90) as he fumbles the football during the fourth quarter of last Sunday’s game.
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Atlanta Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan (2) is sacked by Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker T.J. Watt (90) as he fumbles the football during the fourth quarter of last Sunday’s game.

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