The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY SPOTLIGHT’S BRIGHTER THAN EVER ON MATT RYAN

Three intercepti­ons in Thursday’s win came amid low passer rating.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

For the Falcons’ playoff push to really take off, they need the real Matt Ryan to stand up.

The reigning most valuable player turned in his lowest passer rating in 39 games in Thursday night’s 20-17 comeback victory against the New Orleans Saints.

The Falcons (8-5) next play Tampa Bay at 8:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. 18, at Raymond James Stadium. And a rematch with the Saints comes on Christmas Eve afternoon in New Orleans.

Ryan completed 15 of 27 passes for 221 yards. He threw for one

touchdown, but had three intercepti­ons on successive possession­s. He finished with a passer rating of 55.2, which was his lowest since he had a 55.1 rating in a 25-19 win over Washington on Oct. 11, 2015. He completed 24 of

42 passes for 254 yards with no touchdowns and two intercepti­ons in that game.

“I’ve had worse games,” Ryan said. “Yeah, I’ve thrown

five before. I think it comes with experience. I think that comes with confidence and belief in yourself. Sometimes that’s how it goes.”

It was the 10th-lowest passer rating in Ryan’s 155 NFL regular-season starts. His lowest rating — 29.6 — came in the second game of his career, against Tampa Bay on Sept. 14, 2008.

Ryan has had eight passer ratings from 55.1 to 40.5. The Falcons are 4-6 in his 10 lowest passer-rated games.

“There are nights that are like that, but those don’t define the outcome of the game,” Ryan said. “How you respond to those situations defines who you are as a player and who you are as a team.”

Falcons coach Dan Quinn was not too concerned about the passing game being off track for a major portion of the game.

“It wasn’t all bad for us in the pass game,” Quinn said. “I thought we ended up with four for five drops. I thought from a third down standpoint, that was good.”

Ryan’s first intercepti­on came when he tried to get a pass out to Julio Jones right before halftime. Saints cornerback Marshon Lattimore was battling Jones and ended up in the path of the pass and made the intercepti­on.

Jones stormed back into the play and made a touchdown-saving tackle.

On Ryan’s second intercepti­on, tight end Austin Hooper bobbled an accurate pass that was picked off by Saints linebacker Chris Banjo on the first play of the third quarter.

The Saints converted that turnover into a touchdown to take a 17-10 lead.

On their next possession, the Falcons were driving before Ryan, on third-and-6 from the Saints’ 9, tried to force a pass into Jones that was intercepte­d in the end zone by rookie Saints safety Marcus Williams.

“The intercepti­on in the red zone, again, if it’s not there we were going to give our guy a chance after he got pressured,” Quinn said. “It would have been (good) to give a guy a chance way high or outside or throw it into the stands.”

The last one seemed to bother Ryan the most.

“I’ve got to make a better decision in that situation to know we have three points on the board,” Ryan said. “I’m disappoint­ed in a couple of plays, but that’s part of it.”

The Hooper intercepti­on wasn’t on Ryan.

“The one to Hooper to start the second half was a bummer from his standpoint,” Quinn said. “The pass was on point. It obviously turned into a drop that turned into an intercepti­on.”

Ryan has thrown 11 intercepti­ons in 13 games. He had just seven intercepti­ons last seasons.

Ryan tossed 17 intercepti­ons in 2013 and 16 in 2015.

Quinn took the good Ryan with the bad Ryan.

“He definitely had some good throws, the conversion­s on third down were an important part of this game,” Quinn said.

The offense did amass 343 yards, including 132 yards rushing. After going 1 of 10 on third downs against Minnesota, the offense converted 7 of 12 (58 percent) third downs against the Saints.

“I thought our offensive line played extremely well,” Ryan said. “We ran the ball efficientl­y. We ran it physically.”

Before the rash of intercepti­ons, Ryan put together a 15-play, 90-yard touchdown drive that took 8:27 off the clock in the second quarter and was the Falcons’ longest scoring drive of the season.

With running back Tevin Coleman in the concussion protocol, the Falcons may need to lean on running back Devonta Freeman, who rushed for 91 yards on 24 carries and had his sixth rushing touchdown of the season against the Saints.

The 91 yards was Freeman’s second-highest total of the season.

His 28 rushing touchdowns since 2015 are the most in the NFL over that time frame.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN / AP ?? Saints outside linebacker Hau’oli Kikaha sacks the Falcons’ Matt Ryan, who recorded his lowest passer rating in 39 games during Atlanta’s three-point victory Thursday over New Orleans.
DAVID GOLDMAN / AP Saints outside linebacker Hau’oli Kikaha sacks the Falcons’ Matt Ryan, who recorded his lowest passer rating in 39 games during Atlanta’s three-point victory Thursday over New Orleans.
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