USA TODAY US Edition

Falcons brain trust has sentiment, ties with Patriots

- Jarrett Bell jbell@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

It might be some form of NFL karma dictating that the first time Thomas Dimitroff is in the Super Bowl with his Atlanta Falcons, Bill Belichick and Co. stand in the way.

Dimitroff, 50, left the New England Patriots in 2008 to become Atlanta’s general manager. Look at him now — the most successful branch from the Belichick tree. Time to show his exboss how well he has progressed on the NFL’s biggest stage.

Funny thing, this specific Super Bowl matchup was always part of Dimitroff ’s plan.

“I’ve imagined that every year that I’ve been the general manager,” he told USA TODAY Sports on Monday as he toured the downtown area that is the hub for Super Bowl LI activity. “I envisioned it as the dream game, to be able to play the team that has meant so much to my Dimitroff developmen­t.” Dimitroff isn’t too proud to acknowledg­e, even this week, that the Patriots are “my secondfavo­rite NFL team.”

If anybody can relate, it’s Scott

Pioli, who was once Dimitroff ’s boss with the Patriots and now works for him as assistant general manager. He also happens to be one of Dimitroff ’s closest friends.

Pioli, 51, formerly the Patriots personnel director, left New England a year after Dimitroff to become general manager of the Kansas City Chiefs. It didn’t pan out. Pioli was fired after the 2012 season.

Yet they converged again. Pioli and Dimitroff were with the Patriots when they won back-to-back Super Bowls following the 2003 and 2004 seasons and for the near-perfect campaign in 2007, when a 16-0 regular season was followed by a Super Bowl loss. Pioli goes back to the beginning of Belichick’s tenure with the Patriots, following him to New England from the New York Jets after previously working for him with the Cleveland Browns.

Dimitroff still talks to Belichick “randomly,” he says, and not merely for routine NFL business. He picks Belichick’s brain for perspectiv­e on league matters and opinions on assorted topics.

“I always learn something from our interactio­ns,” he said.

That is an extension of the foundation he received from the Patriots for his role with Atlanta — which years ago was one of the elements that piqued Falcons owner Arthur Blank’s interest.

“For me, it was taking a lot of the philosophi­es in New England that Bill and Scott put in place and meshing that with what was congruent to my personalit­y,” Dimitroff said.

But after a pair of disappoint­ing seasons following an NFC Championsh­ip Game loss in 2012, the Falcons altered their arrangemen­t in 2015, hiring head coach Dan Quinn and giving him final authority over personnel decisions. Such power for a firsttime coach is rare, and from the outside it could be viewed as a basis for dissent. But Dimitroff echoes Quinn in maintainin­g that the authority for roster moves has not been an issue. “This is a partnershi­p,” Dimitroff said. He insists major roster decisions have been made with collective brainstorm­ing, adding, “If it gets to the point where you say, ‘I have final say,’ you’re in dire straits.”

Time will tell whether the authority issue evolves into a point of friction, which has occurred many times across the NFL. Dimitroff thinks he and Quinn are a philosophi­cal match because the types of players the coach wants — speedy and explosive ones — is consistent with Dimitroff ’s ideals.

When Quinn expounded on his beliefs during the interview process, Dimitroff said, “It was music to my ears.”

And Quinn is fortunate to have the type of resources presented with a DimitroffP­ioli bond that spans decades.

Go back to 1993, when Pioli was a pro personnel assistant for Belichick’s Browns. Dimitroff, whose father, Tom Sr., worked as a scout for Cleveland, took a job on the grounds crew while angling to get his scouting career on track.

He recalls routinely dropping into Pioli’s office — grungy, wearing rain gear and “smelling like I had just spent a few weeks in Europe,” he said.

“He’d look at me and shake his head,” Dimitroff recalled of those old film sessions with Pioli. “I’m like, ‘This is what my life is going to be?’ ”

In subsequent years, their bond would be strengthen­ed by work and friendship. Pioli was in Dimitroff ’s wedding party and a pallbearer at his father’s funeral. In 2014, with Pioli working in broadcasti­ng, Dimitroff lured him to Atlanta.

They’ve talked about what it would be like to face the Patriots in a Super Bowl. Now they’ll find out — and whether it will be even more special to win a championsh­ip at New England’s expense.

“Anytime you’re playing a team that you learned so much from,” Dimitroff said, “it would be very special to show our best on the field.”

Spoken like a true (ex-) Patriot.

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USA TODAY SPORTS
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 ??  ?? Falcons GM Thomas Dimitroff, center, with owner Arthur Blank and quarterbac­k Matt Ryan, has long dreamed of facing the Patriots in the Super Bowl. BRETT DAVIS, USA TODAY SPORTS
Falcons GM Thomas Dimitroff, center, with owner Arthur Blank and quarterbac­k Matt Ryan, has long dreamed of facing the Patriots in the Super Bowl. BRETT DAVIS, USA TODAY SPORTS

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