Birds of change: Eagles, Falcons out to establish early flight pattern
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[September 09, 2021]
Major offseason changes make
projecting the scene in Atlanta a serious challenge when the Falcons
host the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday.
Two of the NFL's worst teams underwent wholesale overhauls, hiring
first-time head coaches and parting with faces of the franchise to
begin anew.
The Eagles parted with Doug Pederson during the 2020 season and
named Nick Sirianni, previously offensive coordinator of the
Indianapolis Colts, head coach before trading quarterback Carson
Wentz to Indy.
That pushed Jalen Hurts into a starting role in a brand-new scheme.
He'll be at the controls of an offense Sirianni promises will be
"different."
A massive remake is underway in Atlanta, where Arthur Smith was
named head coach following a successful run as play-caller for the
Tennessee Titans.
The Falcons jettisoned wide receiver Julio Jones in a trade with the
Titans.
"I think it's to both of our advantages. I'm imagining they thought
the same thing that we did. That's pretty common on new staffs,"
Sirianni said. "So, they haven't shown some things either. We just
got to go back and look at tape of any of our time in the past. But,
again, not a lot of film on either of us."
Like the Eagles and Heisman Trophy-winning rookie wide receiver
DeVonta Smith, the Falcons unveil their prized draft choice -- No. 6
overall pick Kyle Pitts -- and he's expected to be featured. Arthur
Smith targeted tight ends early and often in a system with roots in
the Joe Gibbs scheme from the Washington glory days.
Described as a "unicorn" during the draft process, Pitts was largely
kept under wraps this summer. He played one snap and had one catch
in the preseason.
"I am very comfortable," Pitts said Wednesday. "I think (Arthur
Smith) did everything for a reason. He does a great job of teaching.
He kind of made it easier for me to learn. And I found ways to learn
his way. Me and him, we kind of jell."
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Hurts went through the offseason and
preseason operating as if he'd be the starter, but Sirianni saved
the official call at quarterback until last week. For an opening
test, the tandem gets to stare down the ultra-aggressive blitz
scheme of Falcons defensive coordinator Dean Pees. Pees isn't
working with a ton of proven talent as Atlanta moves away from the
Cover-3 scheme -- and personnel -- Dan Quinn employed. But he
promised one thing about his group: Blitzing from every possible
direction.
To counter, Sirianni has had multiple
sitdowns with center Jason Kelce and Hurts to establish calls and
signals for all situations in what will likely be a noisy
environment.
"I think the first blitz meeting that we always do is we have a
standard operating procedure of how we handle different packages,"
Sirianni said. "So, recognizing the package; recognizing what
they're doing out of the package; and being ready against a coach
like Coach Pees, who's a phenomenal coach. Being ready for anything
that they can throw at you."
Youth is no longer an apt description of Falcons quarterback Matt
Ryan, who has seen it all a couple of times with Atlanta. Sirianni
said Arthur Smith's offense gives opponents a lot to think about
because of his mix of personnel packages and willingness to run out
of any set. Smith appreciates the advantage experience provides with
Ryan under center, noting the offense is infinitely faster-moving
now than it was a month ago.
"It's not Matt's first rodeo," Smith said.
--Field Level Media
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