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Eagles safeties: We knew what was coming on Falcons’ 4th-and-goal

January 14, 2018 by  
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1:35 AM ET

PHILADELPHIA — Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Julio Jones made no excuses for not coming up with what would have been the game-winning catch in the final moments of Saturday’s 15-10 divisional playoff loss to the Philadelphia Eagles.

With the ball on the Eagles’ 2-yard line, Jones, covered by cornerback Jalen Mills on the play, slipped to the ground and appeared to take a push from Mills. He still was able to get to his feet and almost make a play on Matt Ryan‘s floating pass on fourth-and-goal.

Falcons’ red-zone woes finally catch up to them as season ends

Matt Ryan and the Falcons sputtered on the road and were shut out in the second half of Saturday’s 15-10 loss to the Eagles in the divisional round.

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    Falcons RB Devonta Freeman told ESPN he played the end of the season with sprained posterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments in his right knee but refused to use the injuries as an excuse for his ineffectiveness in Saturday’s loss to the Eagles.

  • “It was just a sprintout, a rollout to me,” Jones said. “Trying to take advantage of one-on-one [coverage] down there.

    “I don’t know, but at the end of the day, I can make those plays. I ended up on the ground when I came out of my route. And that’s a tough call [for the official] to make during that situation in the game. That was it.”

    Jones, the Falcons’ leading receiver this season, had four touchdown receptions in 16 regular-season games and two playoff contests. According to ESPN Stats Information, Ryan went 1-of-18 (6 percent) on passes to Jones in the end zone this season, after going 3-of-8 on those passes last season.

    Ryan explained Saturday’s final play from his vantage point.

    “That’s a play we practice all the time, and certainly in those situations you go to your best player,” Ryan said. “Obviously, roll to the right and have an opportunity to Julio. It just didn’t work out and that’s disappointing. That’s the life you live as a competitor — when you get in those situations, you want the ball in your hand. I think it was a right call. I think we had the right players in mind at the right time — and we just fell a little bit short.”

    Eagles safeties Malcolm Jenkins and Rodney McLeod said they identified the play before the snap based on formation. They alerted the rest of defenders, including Mills, who said he knew Jones was coming his way.

    “They communicated all the way from [Ronald] Darby’s side to my side,” Mills said. “You can’t do nothing but be thankful for having those veteran safeties that are able to ID formations.”

    Said McLeod: “It was right hash. That’s kind of a lot of teams’ tendency, is to sprint out, and as soon as I saw the tight end come over I was like, ‘There it is.’ This is everything you dream of as a player. You do your study, you do your preparing, and they come out and run the identical play, and the guys did a good job of stopping it, man.”

    Falcons coach Dan Quinn didn’t appear to have a problem with the fourth-down playcall by offensive coordinator Steve Sarkisian. Quinn was asked if he was confident Ryan and Jones could execute the play.

    “Damn right. Absolutely,” he said. “We’re giving our shots to Matt and Julio to go for it and win the game. We didn’t get the job done, but 100 out of 100 we’re gonna put the ball in those two guys’ hands to try to win.”

    The Falcons were 1-of-3 in the red zone against the Eagles. They finished the season 0-7 in games in which they failed to score 20 points. After leading the league at 33.8 points per game a year ago en route to the Super Bowl, the Falcons finished the 2017 season at just 22.1 points per game.

    Despite the obvious problems, Quinn expressed support for Sarkisian, who took over for Kyle Shanahan in February 2017.

    “I recognize that goes with the job, and so does Sark,” Quinn said of the criticism. “Like all things, we assess it all the way through. How can we do things better? There are a lot of things that Sark has brought to our team that we really like.

    “I can take a long time to go through different spots, so it’s easy to place blame all onto one person, and that’s a shared responsibility when we don’t achieve at the level that we would like to. There are a lot of really good things that we’ve done, and it was highlighted certainly [Saturday night] where we didn’t get the job done at the end of the game.”

    Jones, who backed Sarkisian all season, said he had no problem with the late-game playcalling.

    “I feel like everything went well,” Jones said. “It’s up to us to make them come to life. We’re all in this together — whatever is called down, it’s up to us to execute and make it come to life.”

    ESPN’s Tim McManus contributed to this report.

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    Patriots rout Titans 35-14, move on to AFC Championship Game

    January 14, 2018 by  
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    FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — To borrow the words of the late Dennis Green, “They are who we thought they were.”

    Did anyone really think the New England Patriots, who thumped the Tennessee Titans 35-14 Saturday night, would take the field in the divisional round of the playoffs and look like anything less than the New England Patriots?

    Sure, Tom Brady had just emerged from a less-than-stellar December (completing just 61.3% of his passes while recording six touchdowns, five interceptions and a passer rating of 81.6).

    Yep, the Patriots defense had struggled this season against mobile quarterbacks — think Alex Smith, Deshaun Watson and Cam Newton — and that provided a degree of hope for the Titans and their dual-threat signal-caller Marcus Mariota.

    And yes, there had been whispers about friction between owner Robert Kraft, coach Bill Belichick, and Brady. Such speculation, fueled by an explosive ESPN story, raised the question about the immediate and long-term stability of the union.

    But keep it real. These are still the Patriots.

    Belichick remains one of the best game-planners, and he always gets his players to buy in. Meanwhile, Brady remains an effective future Hall of Famer, recording his 13th career 300-yard-postseason game.

    Brady was as surgical as ever, throwing dart after dart, unaffected by mayhem around the pocket. He even made a few you-gotta-be-kidding-me throws that make it worth wondering if the TB12 Method and practices have indeed made him ageless.

    And, regardless of the whispers suggesting cracks in the foundation, New England still boasts one of the strongest top-to-bottom rosters, and those 53 players and their coaches share the common goal of winning yet another Super Bowl.

    And that’s why the Patriots dispatched the Titans with apparent ease to punch a ticket to their seventh straight AFC Championship Game, where they will host the winner of the Pittsburgh-Jacksonville game on Jan. 21.

    “It’s just a lot of good coaching, a lot of good football players, and we recognize we have a great chance here, and we want to maximize our opportunity,” said New England wide receiver Danny Amendola, who had 11 catches for 112 yards.  

    “We know we’ve got a good team, and as long as we play well, we can go as far as we want.” 

    The Titans simply found themselves overmatched on virtually every front.

    The quarterback position best illustrated the discrepancies between these two teams. Mariota, making only the second playoff start of his career, facing off with Brady, who entered the game boasting an NFL record 25 postseason victories.

    Mariota had virtually willed the Titans to victory in the wild-card round, throwing a pair of touchdown passes (one to himself), scrambling to both extend plays and pick up chunks of yards and even throwing a key block while directing a 22-21 comeback over the Kansas City Chiefs.

    Mariota’s strong play briefly carried into Saturday night’s game as he closed out the first quarter with a touchdown drive that featured the same well-rounded effectiveness.

    But it’s one thing to exchange blows with Smith and the Chiefs. Keeping pace with Brady and Co., while fending off an aggressive New England defense, represents a much greater challenge.

    After Tennessee’s first-quarter touchdown, the Patriots responded with a scoring drive of their own, and then added another, and then a third, a fourth and a fifth.

    What made the offensive display so impressive was the fact that the Patriots moved the ball at will against one of the best minds in the game in Tennessee defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau. The 80-year-old found himself pitted against familiar foes in Brady and Belichick for the ninth time in his career. But the familiarity did little good as LeBeau again struggled to find an answer for Brady.

    The quarterback entered the game owning a 6-2 record against LeBeau, including a 2-0 playoff mark. In those eight games against LeBeau’s units prior to Saturday, Brady had recorded 19 touchdowns and just three interceptions while completing 68% of his passes for 2,496 yards and a passer rating of 110.9.

    Add another 337 yards and three touchdowns to those tallies.

    “They were out there making plays, more plays than we did. On those third downs, we couldn’t get of the field,” said Tennessee cornerback Adoree’ Jackson.

    Meanwhile, as Brady spread the ball around and racked up yards and touchdowns, the Patriots’ defense essentially shut the Titans down, yielding only six second-half first downs while sacking Mariota seven times after halftime.

    Anti-Patriots factions spent Saturday night crowing over calls against the Titans that appeared questionable and helped extend New England drives. An offensive pass interference call, a Tennessee neutral zone infraction and unnecessary roughness calls ranked among the head-scratchers.

    But truthfully, the Patriots didn’t need any help from the officials.

    Nothing was going to deter New England Saturday. And if the defending champs continue to roll like this next week in the AFC Championship Game, it’s hard to envision anything preventing the Patriots from achieving their ultimate goal, again.

    “The reality of the NFL is what we did this week will have nothing to do with what we happens next week,” Brady said. “We’re going to have to repeat it, so you’ve got to get right back to work.

    “Everyone’s got to feel good physically and mentally and go out there and try to cut it loose one more time in a huge game.”

    ***

    Follow Mike Jones on Twitter @ByMikeJones

    PHOTOS: NFL divisional round playoff action