The Jerusalem Post

Falcons make it look easy in dismantlin­g of Packers

- BY STEVE HUMMER

It was the best and last NFL Sunday afternoon ever inside the Georgia Dome. One half of every lighted scoreboard in the building smoldered from overuse. The fans behaved as if they could save demolition costs and just raze the place now with nothing but lung power. At the end, Arthur Blank marked the moment with one more victory dance while all in attendance rejoiced that the Atlanta Falcons offense did not get its rhythm from its owner.

And, most importantl­y, the Falcons discovered a handy truth just in time for their trip to the Super Bowl. Unstoppabl­e is very hard to beat. Six touchdowns and a field goal in the first eight possession­s – yeah, that qualifies.

The Falcons, a team that once made a tradition out of lowering expectatio­ns, are officially in the business of dreaming large. Beating Green Bay – no, make that breaking down Green Bay into little hors d’oeuvers bites of mild cheddar – in an NFC championsh­ip will go far toward redefining a team’s place in the food chain.

“We ran into a buzzsaw,” Green Bay coach Mike McCarthy said. The Falcons 44-21 victory had all the makings of a workman’s comp claim for McCarthy’s guys.

This will be the Falcons second-ever trip to the Super Bowl, where they’ll meet the New England Patriots in two week. But this is the first time they will go into the game with so much wind at their back. Average margin of victory in their two postseason games: Nearly 20 points.

Sunday’s anticipate­d shootout between Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan and Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers gained no traction. Ryan, the presumptiv­e MVP, and his small army of pass catchers would have none of it.

Ryan out-threw his more famous counterpar­t in yardage, 392-287, and touchdowns, 4-3. He even out-legged him, never mind that he is statuary compared to Rodgers. It was on the Falcons second touchdown of the day – probably, after so many you kind of lose track – that Ryan took the opportunit­y after Green Bay’s entire defense turned its back to him to run 14 fairly nifty yards for a score. It was the first rushing touchdown in 83 games for Ryan.

But the quarterbac­k match-up really wasn’t fair. Ryan had Julio Jones on his side, the man who coach Dan Quinn rightfully described as making “the extraordin­ary plays seem ordinary.”

The most extraordin­ary of Jones’ nine receptions, and certainly the most extraordin­ary 73 yards of his 180 yards total, occurred on the Falcons second play of the second half. Ryan dumped a little pass his way in the middle and watched the fun as Green Bay gave fruitless chase up the sideline. Every play his way is an invitation to do something incendiary.

This will be Ryan’s first trip to a Super Bowl in nine, sometimes difficult, years in the NFL.

He was, not surprising­ly, quite buttoned down about it all afterward.

“You can’t lose belief or confidence,” he said. “One thing about this league week-to-week you can get humbled very quickly. So many good players. So many good teams I always felt we would get to this point where we’d have an opportunit­y to play in this game, and I’m happy that we’re there.”

Speaking for players and fans was Falcons’ defensive lineman Vic Beasley.

“What I remember most about the Atlanta Falcons organizati­on to the point that I got there was its ability to win games but the times it couldn’t necessaril­y get over the top.” That changed Sunday, resounding­ly.

(Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/TNS)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel