Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Falcons try to reverse decades of bad football

- Ed Bouchette: ebouchette@post-gazette.com and Twitter @EdBouchett­e.

team; Atlanta’s only previous Super Bowl team, drubbed 3419 by Denver, followed that breakthrou­gh season by slinking to 5-11 in 1999.

Bill Fralic, Penn Hills native and proud Pitt alum, saw some of the bad times in Atlanta as an All-Pro guard from 1985-92. He spent three more seasons as the team’s radio color commentato­r. In his eight seasons playing for the Falcons, they made the playoffs once; more common were seasons with 3, 4 and 5 wins.

Tragedy took different turns during his time with them. “Within the course of a 12-month period I actually lost a few teammates,” Fralic said.

Two teammates died in separate car crashes in 1989 and another died of a drug overdose during the 1988 season.

Off and on the field, “We didn’t have much success when I was there,’’ Fralic said.

He sees better days ahead after this season as the Falcons try to reduce the number of NFL teams who have never won a Super Bowl. Fralic believes they can turn it around, as the pro football team did in his native Pittsburgh.

“It was before my day, but I would imagine it was like the Steelers,’’ said Fralic, who lives in suburban Atlanta and runs Bill Fralic Insurance Services. “The Falcons, for their first 40-some seasons, are similar. I mean that in no disrespect to anybody whether it’s down here or up there.

“From my perspectiv­e on the playing field, the loses were pretty dismal. That’s the nature of the beast. Nobody in their teens right now would think the Steelers had dark days, and they’ve had a hell of a run.

“There are teams that haven’t sniffed a Super Bowl; this is the Falcons’ second.”

And maybe the good times will last for them. They have the quarterbac­k who should be the NFL’s most valuable player in Matt Ryan, one of its great receivers in Julio Jones, a 1,000-yard rusher in Devonta Freeman, and the league’s most successful pass-rusher in linebacker Vic Beasley Jr., who had 15.5 sacks.

“I’m real happy for the city of Atlanta, for sure,” said Ryan, who has seen enough ups and downs with the Falcons. “I’ve been in Atlanta nine years … so it has been a little while since we’ve been back here but we’re all excited to be here.”

They brought along a good luck charm in Coutney Upshaw. You remember him. Ben Roethlisbe­rger surely does. The former Ravens linebacker hit him so hard in a 2014 game in Baltimore that the Steelers quarterbac­k said he lost his breath.

Success follows Upshaw around. He played for two national championsh­ip teams in Alabama and earned a Super Bowl ring in Baltimore. He joined the Falcons this year.

“It never gets old to win a championsh­ip,” said Upshaw, going for his fourth.

Maybe Upshaw along with the young Falcons stars will get over that hump and end half a century of mostly woe. It once looked that way when another young quarterbac­k joined them.

Matt Schaub was born in Pittsburgh and has family still there, including his grandmothe­r. He joined the Falcons in 2004 as a third-round draft pick in the same class that produced Roethlisbe­ger, Eli Manning and Philip Rivers.

But like Favre before him, Atlanta dealt its promising third-year backup quarterbac­k to Houston for two second-round draft choices in March 2007.

Atlanta had its franchise quarterbac­k in Michael Vick. One month later, Vick was accused of running an illegal dog-fighting ring, pled guilty and went to jail for 21 months. He never again played in Atlanta. The luck of the Falcons. Schaub returned to them this season as the backup to Ryan and does not think the Falcons are jinxed.

“Our focus is on this year, this team,” he said. “I was fortunate, my rookie year we made it to the NFC championsh­ip game. We lost to Philadelph­ia in a tough game. We had a really good team, had all the pieces. We definitely felt we could get close but fell a little bit short.”

That stretched longer. Like the Dirty Birds, the 2004 Falcons followed their visit to the NFC title game with records of 8-8, 7-9 and 4-12.

Fralic believes better times are ahead under billionair­e owner Arthur Blank, Home Depot’s founder.

“It seems he now wants part of his legacy to being a great team owner. I think he’s figured out how to build a team, and as this year shows, he’s done a heck of a job in that direction.”

One thing about the Atlanta Falcons, though, the good times rarely last.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States