New York Post

Sarkisian no longer a villain

- By Mark Cannizzaro mark.cannizzaro@nypost.com

STAY THE COURSE. Too often in the we-want-ityesterda­y sports society we live in now, we forget a little bit of patience and continuity can be beneficial.

The Falcons are reaping the benefits of that right now because their management and head coach, Dan Quinn, didn’t cave in to the heavy public pressure to fire offensive coordinato­r Steve Sarkisian 15 minutes after he took the job.

Sarkisian, for the uninitiate­d, was hired before the 2017 season to replace former offensive coordinato­r/whiz kid Kyle Shanahan, who had been hired as 49ers head coach following the Falcons’ trip to the Super Bowl in the 2016 season.

When the Falcons’ offense did not operate last season with the same efficiency and explosiven­ess it had under Shanahan, considered one of the brightest offensive minds in the game, the natives became restless. Sarkisian was so vilified in Atlanta last season it’s a wonder he ever left his house to go to dinner without a disguise.

Sarkisian, formerly a head coach at Washington and USC, and most recently Nick Saban’s offensive coordinato­r at Alabama, was viewed (and sometimes ridiculed) as merely a college coach who couldn’t crack it in the pros.

That perception had not changed much from last season to the early part of this season, when the Falcons started 1-4. Their offense looked remedial in an 18-12 season-opening loss to the Eagles.

That has changed significan­tly in the past month, and the Falcons ride a three-game winning streak entering Sunday’s game at the struggling Browns. The 4-4 Falcons have scored 34, 23, and 38 points in their past three games. Suddenly, Sarkisian’s offense ranks first in the NFL in third-down conversion percentage (53.3), fifth in points per game (28.5) and seventh in red-zone efficiency (69.2 percent).

The Falcons’ No. 1 receiver, Julio Jones, in response to the noise that has followed Sarkisian since his arrival, told reporters during the week, “We always try to keep everything in-house.’’

“We always believed in Sark, and we’re going to continue to believe in Sark,” Jones added.

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