The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A new regime readies to place its stamp on club

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Wednesday’s missive ended with a nod to pop culture. (A quote from “Breaking Bad,” ICYMI.) Today we begin with a line from the intro of “The Larry Sanders Show,” which might well represent the apex of Western civilizati­on. The blowhard sidekick Hank Kingsley is counting down for the benefit of the studio audience when he says, “This is exciting, isn’t it?”

To all Falcons fans: This is exciting, isn’t it?

The highest draft pick this club has held in 13 years will be exercised tonight by a general manager who

has never been a GM and a head coach who hasn’t been a head coach. We can’t rely on precedent. For the tandem of Terry Fontenot and Arthur Smith, no precedent exists. Neither man has made a call like this, and this call figures to shape the future, both shortand long-term, for this franchise.

Fontenot and Smith met the virtually assembled Atlanta media Wednesday. These newbies held to long-establishe­d draft protocol and, over 45 minutes, worked hard to say nothing. This isn’t a criticism. As Fontenot said, “Some things will only be determined on the clock,” meaning those loaded moments when it’s the Falcons’ turn to tell the watching world what they’re doing, as opposed to what they might do.

The Falcons might do anything. They’d like a quarterbac­k — Fontenot: “We have a plan to add quarterbac­ks” — but nobody knows if that quarterbac­k will come via the No. 4 overall pick. (Fontenot again: “There are different ways to acquire quarterbac­ks.”)

They could take a tackle in Oregon’s Penei Sewell. They could take a tight end of unsurpasse­d skill in Florida’s Kyle Pitts. They could trade down — perhaps using Julio Jones as the lure — and spend the accumulate­d capital in defenders. Or they could take Justin Fields and subject us all to another autumn of when’s-he-going-toplay debate. Ask Kirby Smart how enjoyable that can be.

Fontenot: “When you’re picking at 4, we’re trying to take an impact player. Whether it’s someone who’s going to sit or play right away, we want an impact player.”

Smith: “It’s part of the job. You better have a vision for now, and you have to have a plan for later. There might be a lot of unintended consequenc­es if you only have that short sight.”

For this administra­tion, the next three days are the three biggest of their nascent tenure. The Falcons didn’t do much in free agency because they’re cap-trapped. The draft is where this team, one way or another, will make its first big noise. Raging consensus holds that the 2021 draft will only begin — the first three players taken will almost certainly be quarterbac­ks — when the Falcons declare their intentions at No. 4. Trade or keep? QB or not QB? These are the questions.

That’s a considerab­le weight to put on any shoulders, let alone those of a rookie GM and a rookie HC. Asked about this, Fontenot said: “There’s definitely no pressure. I believe the pressure is in the process and the preparatio­n. Someone told me that pressure is a privilege.”

Then: “You think about players in two-minute situations and in the fourth quarter at the end of games, in the red zone – you want those players to want the ball. You want the coaches who want to make those calls. You want people who embrace the pressure moments. But I would say there’s not any pressure on any one person because it really is our process. Even the narrative that wins and losses go on coaches and players go on the GM, we really don’t see it like that. That’s not how we operate. It’s our process.”

Then: “It really is fun. This is what we love to do. We all have passion for what we do.”

Back to our starting point: This draft is indeed exciting. We don’t know much about how Fontenot/smith think. We don’t know if it has been suggested by their high-profile boss that it’s time to look beyond Matt Ryan, though Arthur Blank has been steadfast in his affection for his quarterbac­k of 13 seasons. What happens — and doesn’t happen — at No. 4 will be our first indication as to how the new men see the Falcons, not just for next season but for the next several.

Of the rampant speculatio­n, a goodly bit of which has emanated from this space, Smith said: “It’s all rumor. That’s what drives this time of year.”

By 9 p.m. today, we’ll know much more than we know now. But here’s one fun factoid: When last these Falcons had a pick this high, they were working under a new GM and a new coach named Smith. Those men picked Ryan No. 3 overall, even though local sentiment held that a club without a quarterbac­k somehow needed a defensive tackle from LSU more.

Glenn Dorsey played eight NFL seasons and registered a total of seven sacks. Ryan stands as the most valuable Falcon ever. Sometimes the rookies get it right.

 ??  ?? Mark Bradley Only In The AJC
Mark Bradley Only In The AJC

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