The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ridley may not be Falcons’ new Gabriel

Speedy Alabama receiver pick has productivi­ty issues.

- By D. Orlando Ledbetter dledbetter@ajc.com

FLOWERY BRANCH — Calvin Ridley is a polished route-runner with 4.43 speed, but is he an upgrade over Taylor Gabriel? Let’s ponder that. Falcons coach Dan Quinn got offensive coordinato­r Steve Sarkisian, who had a poor first season in his position, a new weapon in the draft Thursday with the wide receiver.

The Falcons bypassed their gaping hole at defensive tackle to get the offense some help.

The Falcons added Ridley to essentiall­y replace Gabriel, who was allowed to leave in free agency. He received a lucrative deal with the Bears.

The Falcons could have taken Florida defensive tackle Taven Bryan, who went to the Jaguars three picks later, to fill the hole created by the decision to let defensive tackle Dontari Poe leave in free agency. He signed with the Panthers.

Last season, there was a drastic drop in several key statistica­l areas under Sarkisian, who hadn’t been in the NFL since 2005 and never was a full-time NFL playcaller. He spent part of the 2016 college football season at Alabama and worked with Ridley.

“He was really cool,” Ridley said. “He was trying to get me that ball before he left, I knew that.”

In 2016, the Falcons averaged 33.8 points per game under coordinato­r Kyle Shanahan and dropped to 22.1 last season, which ranked 15th, nearly out of the top half of the league.

The Falcons fell off drasticall­y inside the opposition’s 20-yard line. They were 64.5 percent in 2016, which ranked eighth in the NFL. Under Sarkisian, they were 49.1 and ranked 23rd.

Foiled by his receivers and shaky pass protection­s, quarterbac­k Matt Ryan’s play was below the MVP level he set in 2016. Ryan completed 342 of 529 passes (64.7 percent) for 4,095 yards, 20 touchdowns and 12 intercepti­ons.

Gabriel had a major dropoff and that contribute­d to the shaky offense.

Gabriel’s job was to make teams pay for double-teaming Jones as he did in 2016.

That role will now shift to Ridley, whose catch production at Alabama declined in each of his three seasons.

He went from 89 catches to 72 and then only had 63 last season. He had 1,045 yards as a freshman, 769 yards as a sophomore and 963 last season.

There was also the matter of 20 dropped passes over his career. The Falcons led the league in dropped passes last season along with the 49ers.

“There is no question that we’re pretty honed in on that,” Quinn said. “We understand that people are going to have their drops, they’re going to have their missed plays. In our mind, he far outweighed that in his ability to do what we want him to do . ... We like his hands a lot, and think he can be big-time playmaker.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Falcons head coach Dan Quinn believes the downsides of Calvin Ridley — dropped production and passes — are outweighed by positives.
CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Falcons head coach Dan Quinn believes the downsides of Calvin Ridley — dropped production and passes — are outweighed by positives.

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