Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hill rattles Falcons in his first start

- By Brett Martel

NEW ORLEANS — Driving accurate throws downfield, exhibiting poise in the pocket and scrambling judiciousl­y, Taysom Hill capitalize­d on his opportunit­y to make his case as a candidate to one day succeed record-setting star Drew Brees as the Saints quarterbac­k.

Hill rushed for two touchdowns and completed 78.3% of his passes for 233 yards in his first NFL start at quarterbac­k, and New Orleans beat the Atlanta Falcons 24-9 on Sunday to extend its winning streak to seven games.

“Man, he played tremendous,” said Saints receiver Michael Thomas, who caught nine passes for 104 yards. “I could see the look in his eyes. He was ready for the moment.”

With the 41-year-old Brees sidelined at least three games with multiple rib fractures, Saints coach Sean Payton gave Hill the nod over free-agent acquisitio­n Jameis Winston.

The decision meant a lot to Hill, who persevered through an injury-plagued college career at BYU before starting his NFL career as a 27-year-old undrafted rookie in 2017. And because Hill initially flourished in an unconventi­onal utility role, with duties ranging from change-of-pace option QB to tight end and special teams, he played in 46 previous NFL games before finally getting his first start under center.

“I spent a lot of time reflecting this week. My wife and I had so many conversati­ons about where we’ve been, the process of getting here,” Hill said. “If I’m being honest, it was an emotional week.”

Hill looked comfortabl­e

running the scheme Payton designed for him. He completed 18 of 23 passes without an intercepti­on and used his all-around athleticis­m to run intermitte­ntly on scrambles or designed read-option plays, finishing with a team-high 51 yards rushing. The biggest blemish in his performanc­e was an inconseque­ntial, fourth-quarter fumble after a 20-yard run to the Atlanta 22.

Still, he had a better day than Atlanta quarterbac­k Matt Ryan, who was sacked eight times and finished 19-of-37 passing for 232 yards, no touchdowns and two intercepti­ons to defensive backs Marcus Williams and Janoris Jenkins. Cameron Jordan sacked Ryan three times, while Trey Hendrickso­n and David Onyemata each had two sacks.

“You’ve got to give the Saints

credit. They did a great job on defense,” Falcons interim coach Raheem Morris said. “The defensive backs, they did a nice job of limiting us on what we were able to do. They had a nice game plan for us. They did a nice job of keeping Matt under control and they did a nice job keeping our receivers under control.”

Hill entered having thrown just five passes with four completion­s for 86 yards this season and was 10 of 18 for 205 yards in his career, leaving him relatively unproven as a passer.

Not anymore. While his allaround athleticis­m would have made scrambling a tempting default choice, he regularly showed patience and poise while delivering accurate passes moments before impact from onrushing defenders.

“I always know that I have the ability, if things break down, that I can make a play,” Hill said. “But my mindset was: let’s keep your eyes down the field and let’s find opportunit­ies” for receivers.

New Orleans’ second-ranked run defense held Atlanta to 52 yards rushing, and the Saints defense did not allow a touchdown for the second time in three games — with only one touchdown given up in between.

The Falcons (3-7) struck first with a field goal set up by Ryan’s 46-yard completion to Calvin Ridley and led 9-3 on three Younghoe Koo kicks before the Saints responded with 21 straight points.

NEXT: Raiders at Falcons, 10 a.m. Sunday. Saints at Broncos, 1:05 p.m. Sunday.

 ?? Brett Duke The Associated Press ?? Saints QB Taysom Hill mixed in passing and running to keep the Falcons off balance for the win Sunday.
Brett Duke The Associated Press Saints QB Taysom Hill mixed in passing and running to keep the Falcons off balance for the win Sunday.

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