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| In a new role, Brooking isn't likely to lose his taste for the takedown.
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| David E. Klutho/SI |
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| | 2008 Schedule |
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September
7 DETROIT
14 at Tampa Bay
21 KANSAS CITY
28 at Carolina
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October
5 at Green Bay
12 CHICAGO
19 Bye
26 at Philadelphia
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November
2 at Oakland
9 NEW ORLEANS
16 DENVER
23 CAROLINA
30 at San Diego
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December
7 at New Orleans
14 TAMPA BAY
21 at Minnesota
28 ST. LOUIS
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| | SPOTLIGHT |
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Michael Turner, Running Back: The Burner averaged 5.5 yards a carry in four years as LaDainian Tomlinson's backup in San Diego, good enough for a six-year, $34.5 million free-agent deal from the Falcons. The 5' 10" 244-pounder should come into his own burrowing behind fullback Ovie Mughelli in coordinator Mike Mularkey's run-heavy scheme.
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The Era of Good Feelings has begun in Flowery Branch. Just don't expect Good Football anytime soon.
Owner Arthur Blank and team president Rich McKay were flying back to the U.S.
from a Kenyan safari in July 2007 when the pilot came out of the cockpit to
notify them of an emergency. The plane was fine; it was their team that had hit
major turbulence. The pilot gave Blank an in-flight fax of Michael Vick's
federal indictment on dog-fighting charges. "I still have it," says McKay. "I
might frame it just to put into perspective the calamity of last season and how
we move on from it."
Vick pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 23 months in jail. Then, 13 games
into the season, coach Bobby Petrino abandoned the team to take the same job at
Arkansas. After Atlanta finished 4-12, Blank, the cofounder of Home Depot, set
about cleaning out and rebuilding: Thomas Dimitroff, director of college
scouting for the Patriots, was hired as G.M.; affable Jaguars defensive
coordinator Mike Smith became the new coach; veterans DeAngelo Hall and Alge
Crumpler, who had been critical of team management, were cut loose; and a new
face of the franchise, Boston College quarterback Matt Ryan, was drafted with
the No. 3 pick.
Blank had Ryan fostering goodwill at community events and hawking tickets in
commercials practically from the moment he touched down at Hartsfield on
April 26. In fact, the owner and his front office are making a conscious
effort to present this young squad in a wholesome light. (More than half of the
roster still in camp last weekend had two years' experience or less.) For a
scrimmage staged at Mill Creek High, north of Atlanta, the team had three
parachutists trailing Falcons-red smoke and an American flag float to midfield
during the national anthem, dozens of dogs doing flips and catching Frisbees
(the message: These Falcons love pooches), and a fireworks show. After
the scrimmage the 6,000 fans got a chance to meet the players.
Fresh faces and crowd-pleasing gimmicks may help the team's image, but will
they do anything to improve that abysmal record? Veteran Chris Redman might have
been a safe choice at quarterback, at least early in the season. Redman was out
of the league and selling insurance two years ago but started the last four
games in 2007, throwing for 898 yards and eight touchdowns in that span. "I was
just getting into the flow of things," says Redman, 31. "I know how the NFL
works and get that Matt is going to be a big part of this program. I just want
to help him along and give him a little competition."
He did, but Ryan showed an impressive command of the playbook and performed
well enough in preseason to be named the starter. He could get mauled early with
an untested offensive line that includes rookie left tackle Sam Baker protecting
the blind side.
Ryan will have a reliable target in speedy fourth-year wideout Roddy White,
who last year became the first Falcon to surpass 1,000 receiving yards since
Terance Mathis in 1999. Another optimistic note for the young QB is that new
offensive coordinator Mike Mularkey favors the run and has two reliable backs in
free-agent Michael Turner and third-year man Jerious Norwood.
Veteran guidance for the squad will come from 11th-year linebacker Keith
Brooking, the only player left from the 1998 Super Bowl team. Last season
Brooking, 32, led Atlanta in tackles for the seventh straight year, and he'll
return to his favored weakside spot as rookie Curtis Lofton takes over in the
middle. "Smitty and his coaches are pure football guys who have not made it
complicated for us in terms of schemes, terminology and the installation of the
system," says Brooking. "They've given us the nuts and bolts of football, and I
believe they'll put a winning team out there on Sundays."
Keeping it simple is a good theme for a team that needs to separate itself
from the recent past. Merely establishing a new identity with its fans will
count as progress. -- Lisa Altobelli
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