The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Fowler learning new defense at “super fast” pace,

- By Jason Butt

Players may not be in pads, and they may not be hitting. But for Dante Fowler, everything is still moving at a fast pace.

Unable to work with his new team throughout the entire offseason, the Falcons defensive end still has absorbed plenty of new informatio­n about his new defense. But only now has Fowler been able to apply it on the practice field, albeit in a walk-through atmosphere.

While the coaching staff has tried to simulate the installati­on process as best as possible during the virtual offseason, that’s not nearly the same as being able to act out the plays on the practice field. This week marked the first baby steps the Falcons were able to take to produce new muscle memory among their players. And as Fowler said, it’s a lot of informatio­n to process at once.

“As far as getting in the playbook, everything is going super fast,” Fowler said. “It’s like the first day of camp. We’re on the field, but we’re going through walkthroug­hs. It’s going really fast. They’re drilling us and putting the pressure on us to know everything because we got to be on top of our stuff. We don’t have time to teach everything because the other stuff we already went through in virtual meetings. Now that we’re here, we’ll probably do a virtual meeting the night before, and the next day we’re walking through it at 8 o’clock in the morning.”

Fowler signed a three-year, $45 million deal with the Falcons this offseason with the hopes of bolstering a pass rush that ranked 31st in the NFL in 2019 with 28 total sacks. Fowler, who spent the past season and a half with the Los Angeles Rams, is coming off the best season of his five-year career, which saw him accrue 11.5 sacks.

“The (Rams’) coaches got all the potential that they could get out of me,” Fowler said. “They knew the good things that I could do, they knew what was going to put me in the right situations to be elite and a good football player. They weren’t stubborn. They knew whatever they could do to get sacks and make the team better, that’s what they did. I really appreciate­d them for that, to let me blossom …”

Falcons running back Todd Gurley knows what Fowler can bring to the table as a defender. In college, Fowler wasn’t afraid to scrap with Gurley during the 2013 game between Georgia and Florida, which ended in a 23-20 victory for the Bulldogs. The two have since become friends and spent the past year and a half as teammates on the Rams. Wearing a red and white face mask during his virtual interview with reporters, Gurley said he is thrilled to have Fowler — who shares the same Aug. 3 birthday — as a teammate again.

“I’m smiling behind this mask because that’s my guy,” Gurley said. “I’ve been competing against him since the Georgia-Florida days and to be able to share a birthday with him and be with the

Rams last year and bring our talent all the way to Atlanta, it means a lot. … Always been a great teammate …”

Fowler believes he turned a corner in his career last season, seeing that in the four previous years before his 2019 campaign, he combined for 20 sacks. He began his career in 2015 as the third overall pick by Jacksonvil­le, suffered an ACL injury during OTAs and was never more than a thirddown pass rusher with the franchise after that.

Traded to Los Angeles during the 2018 season, Fowler became a rotational player on a Rams’ team that reached Super Bowl LIII at Mercedes-Benz Stadium but fell short against the Patriots. Last season, as a starter for the first time in his career, Fowler finally felt he was beginning to reach the potential placed on him as a third overall draft pick.

Fowler’s goal in 2020 is to further validate his standing as someone who can be considered a premier pass rusher in the NFL.

“This is what I have to do this year,” Fowler said. “This is the year to put (the criticism) to rest. I put that on myself. My first few years in the league I had some bumps, some growing and learning curves. That happens to the best of us. I’m happy it happened to me earlier than in my later years.

“Some people out here have had a lot of great accolades in the beginning and probably didn’t know how to handle it. Now they don’t know how to handle it and you see what’s going on. I’m happy that it happened to be early in my career. So now that I know that already, I can be a pro for another 10 years.”

 ??  ?? Dante Fowler spent the past season and a half with the Rams.
Dante Fowler spent the past season and a half with the Rams.

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