Atlanta, GA
Falcons ‘Violent, Big’ DL Impressing Raheem Morris, Coaches with Strong Summer
Before suffering a season-ending torn MCL in 2022, Atlanta Falcons defensive tackle Ta’Quon Graham was in the midst of a breakout second campaign.
Graham, a fifth-round pick out of Texas in 2021, had become a consistent pressure player on Atlanta’s defensive line, and his steady growth allowed minds to ponder the heights of his ceiling.
Across 11 games and nine starts, Graham had eight quarterback hits to his name. His one tackle for loss and no sacks did little to represent the problems he’d caused for opposing offensive lines.
Graham’s step forward in 2022 created optimism for 2023 — but the Killeen, Texas, native was hindered by the injury that cost him the final six games of the year prior. It took until the midpoint of last season for Graham to feel back up to strength.
As such, the 25-year-old Graham trudged through a difficult campaign. He saw action in 15 games and made a pair of starts but registered only one sack — the first of his career — and one tackle for loss with just two quarterback hits. He was a healthy scratch twice due to inadequate practice habits, Falcons assistant head coach/defense Jerry Gray alluded to last October.
Now, Graham is at a crossroads. He’s entering the final year of his rookie contract and playing under new head coach Raheem Morris, defensive coordinator Jimmy Lake and defensive line coach Jay Rodgers.
Uncertain exists — but Graham knows this: He felt great physically during training camp and will enter the season fully confident in his 6-foot-4, 307-pound frame holding strong.
“Camp is the roughest part on our bodies and I think I’ve been handling it pretty well in how I feel and how I attack every day,” Graham said. “So, I think I’m in a pretty good spot personally with my health.”
With the fitness box checked, Graham is working toward proving he’s still the same disruptive piece he was becoming two years ago. This summer, Graham has played extensively with the first-team defense, serving as one of many rotational pieces on a deep defensive line.
Given a chance to prove himself with the starters, Graham feels he performed at a level much closer to the standard he once set.
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“I think I’ve been having a pretty good training camp,” Graham said. “There’s always room for improvement, always things I want to fix. Hindsight can be 20/20 at times, and I’m just working on improving, but I feel like I’ve been having a solid camp.”
Graham said he hasn’t focused much on the order of the rotations; there have been lots of different groups, so he has little idea where, exactly, he stands inside the room. He added he likely won’t know until this week’s practices in the lead-up to Sunday’s season opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Falcons’ defensive line is led by Grady Jarrett and David Onyemata. Graham appears likely to factor into the next group, which includes Eddie Goldman, Kentavius Street, Zach Harrison and rookies Ruke Orhorhoro and Brandon Dorlus.
Even with heightened competition, Graham said he thinks it’s a positive the Falcons expensed a second-round pick on Orhorhoro and fourth-round choice on Dorlus.
“The more depth in the room, the better,” Graham said. “Personally for me, I’m just focused on myself and how I can contribute to the team and how I can improve my performance.”
Lake, similarly, likes the defensive line room being crowded. He also likes the way Graham has produced from the Falcons’ interior this summer.
“He’s one of those big bodies up front,” Lake said. “He’s tough, he’s physical. He’s also made his share of plays in practice. He knows the defense. Still room for improvement leverage-wise, some pass rush, but he’s right where he needs to be and just continuing to improve.
“I feel like TQ is just gaining confidence by the day.”
Graham emphasized strength and conditioning this summer and feels he made progress in both. On the field, he’s trying to first stop the run before converting his attack into a pass-rushing rep when needed.
The former University of Texas standout said he’s enjoyed learning from Rodgers this summer and believes the decade-long NFL defensive line coach has been a “pretty solid addition” to the room.
Relationships and cohesiveness have been established. According to Morris, so has Graham’s return to form.
“I’ve seen a violent, big human that’s absolutely learning how to practice versus his teammates,” Morris said. “And some of the stuff you like, some of the stuff you got to say, ‘whoa’, but he is strong. He’s got great length. He’s throwing his hands. He’s being physical. He’s doing things the right way.
“I’ve really been impressed.”
Now, Graham gets another chance to turn promise into production — with his first opportunity coming against the Steelers at 1 p.m. Sunday inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
Atlanta, GA
Decatur Square businesses thrive during 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup and WatchFest: “…beyond our wildest imagination”
With all the soccer fans visiting metro Atlanta, local businesses are reaping the benefits.
In Decatur, shops and restaurants on the Decatur Square are seeing a surge in foot traffic during the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup and Decatur WatchFest.
Lee Fewell, manager and bartender at The Brick Store Pub on the square, said the excitement has been nonstop. “It’s been really crazy,” Fewell said. “We have our outback garden area just completely filled up. We added some TVs, and it’s just been full capacity at any given moment.”
While Wednesday night was relatively slower than recent days, Fewell noted that business is usually quieter during the summer. This year, however, the restaurant saw its biggest day ever when the U.S. Men’s National Soccer Team played its first match in the tournament.
“It’s been 29 years this month since this place opened, but usually, it is definitely not like this,” Fewell said. “This is, I think, beyond our wildest imagination.”
Across the square, Siam Thai Restaurant is also enjoying record-breaking business. “We sold out of beer,” said Narit Narajit-McCrary, who works at the restaurant. “I had to go to the supermarket to restock for Monday.”
Narajit-McCrary said the World Cup boost has far exceeded expectations: “During the summer, normally it’s very slow for business, but this summer has been very good for us.”
Atlanta, GA
FBI orders field offices to send analysts to Atlanta for 2020 election investigation, sources say
The FBI is ramping up its investigation into the 2020 election results in Fulton County, Georgia, by ordering field offices across the country to send investigative analysts to Atlanta to help evaluate thousands of records, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter.
According to a memo sent to all field offices and reviewed by CBS News, the Directorate of Intelligence requested “surge support” to Atlanta to assist in what it called FBI Director Kash Patel’s “priority” investigation. The memo did not explicitly discuss the nature of the investigation, but multiple sources confirmed to CBS News the subject of the memo is the 2020 election probe in Fulton County.
The memo calls on every FBI field office to assign analysts, seeking to reach a total of 260 analysts. Large field offices are being asked to contribute eight analysts each, while small and medium offices must dedicate between three and five analysts. They are being asked to review 708 records each, and complete the work by July 17, the memo shows.
These “tactical intel” staffers typically provide help with day-to-day casework, such as running license plates, doing open-source checks on subjects of investigations, phone analysis, preparing subpoenas and reviewing subpoena returns.
The surge of personnel was first reported by MS Now.
President Trump has repeatedly alleged without providing evidence that officials in heavily Democratic Fulton County manipulated ballot counts in 2020 and that large numbers of votes in the state were cast by deceased Georgians, nonresidents or other ineligible participants.
After Mr. Trump lost Georgia by 11,799 votes, he frequently claimed the election had been “rigged.” But Joe Biden’s win in Georgia was confirmed in both a machine recount and an audit that involved hand recounts by every county in the state.
Earlier this year, the FBI executed a search warrant in Fulton County where it seized “all physical ballots” from 2020, as well as tapes from vote-tabulating machines, ballot images and voter rolls. Home to Atlanta, Fulton County was crucial to Biden’s narrow 2020 win in the state.
The case was referred to the FBI by Kurt Olsen, a lawyer who previously fought to help overturn the results of the 2020 election and now works for the Justice Department, where he is assigned in Miami to help investigate the so-called “grand conspiracy” into whether Obama and Biden-era officials conspired to keep President Trump out of office.
A judge in May denied a request by Fulton County to return the ballots that were seized.
The FBI declined to comment.
Atlanta, GA
Braves News: Tarik Skubal rumor, Cam Caminiti to the Futures Game, more
I think it’s time to chat again about Eric Hartman. The Braves’ now top prospect completed a 20 HR, 30 SB season on July 1st, through 71 games of his season. He was also ranked the 25th prospect in all of baseball by Baseball America and it’s getting easier every day to see him in the top 10 by the offseason. This is simply a hugely valuable prospect coming from a 20th round pick just two years ago and the back end of the organizational top 30 as recently as March. While he’s only at high-A (probably not for long) and still has work to do on his game, he has rapidly become a potential superstar on the position-player side for an organization that desperately needed talent on that hitting side and has got it this year from not only Hartman.
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