Atlanta, GA
Michael Penix, Falcons Lose Heartbreaker to Commanders: 3 Takeaways
LANDOVER, Md. — The Atlanta Falcons entered Sunday with a chance to clinch their first playoff berth since 2017. They left Northwest Stadium in Landover, Md., with heartbreak.
Atlanta (8-8) fell 30-24 in overtime to the Washington Commanders (11-5) on Sunday Night Football, with Commanders rookie quarterback Jayden Daniels hitting tight end Zach Ertz over the middle for a touchdown.
The Falcons led 17-7 at halftime, seemingly in control of the game, and quickly put the Commanders in a third-and-22 on the first drive of the second half. Then, Falcons outside linebacker DeAngelo Malone committed an illegal contact penalty, giving Washington new life and turning the game on its head.
Led by star rookie quarterback Daniels, the Commanders’ offense methodically wore down the Falcons’ defense. Atlanta’s offense counterpunched with a game-tying touchdown inside of 100 seconds to play, and after a three-and-out, the Falcons gave kicker Riley Patterson a chance to win it from 56 yards out.
But Patterson’s kick, which was straight on, fell short.
In overtime, the Commanders received the kickoff and marched down in the field, taking over seven minutes off the clock. Daniels threw the dagger to Ertz on third-and-2 with 2:45 remaining.
The Commanders secured their playoff ticket. The Falcons enter next weekend needing a win and Tampa Bay Buccaneers loss to the New Orleans Saints.
And Atlanta’s left picking up the pieces from a slow-bleeding death in perhaps its biggest game in seven years.
Here are three takeaways …
In the third quarter alone, Washington ran 25 plays, possessed the ball for 12:53 and gained 145 net yards. Comparably, Atlanta had just three plays over 2:07 and lost one yard.
As the Commanders’ offense grew more confident and the Falcons’ defense became more tired, Washington turned its 10-point halftime deficit into a 24-17 lead midway through the fourth quarter.
Atlanta had a chance at the end of regulation but, no pun intended, fell short.
Falcons rookie quarterback Michael Penix Jr. struggled to ride the wave of momentum created by a strong first start in the team’s 34-7 victory over the New York Giants last week — until he needed it most.
Penix went 19-for-35 passing for 223 yards, one touchdown and one interception. He hit a few big throws to receiver Drake London, headlined by a 31-yard catch-and-run on fourth-and-11 on the team’s final drive, but also missed a handful of passes.
He hit tight end Kyle Pitts for a 13-yard touchdown pass on fourth-and-goal late in regulation, the first touchdown pass of Penix’s NFL career.
Falcons linebackers JD Bertrand and Kaden Elliss each made personal history in the first half. Bertrand, a fifth-round rookie, notched his first NFL sack, while Elliss, a sixth-year pro, recorded his first NFL interception.
Receiver Drake London broke the 1,000-yard mark for the first time in his professional career with a 14-yard catch from Penix midway through the second quarter
The Falcons (8-8) host the Carolina Panthers (4-12) at 1 p.m. Sunday inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
Atlanta, GA
11-year-old injured in New Year's Day shooting at Atlanta gas station
ATLANTA – An 11-year-old was grazed by a bullet in an incident on Chappell Road in northwest Atlanta on New Year’s Day, according to the Atlanta Police Department.
It happened around 8:22 p.m. at the Exxon gas station located at the corner of Chappell Road and Donald Lee Hollowell Parkway NW.
Police say the child was grazed by a bullet at the location and was driven to an area hospital before emergency crews arrived.
Investigators are still trying to determine what led to the shooting.
The name of the child has not been released.
The Source: The Atlanta Police Department provided the details for this article.
Atlanta, GA
Atlanta Braves Showing Interest in Free Agent Right-Hander
The Atlanta Braves are reported to have a free-agent reliever on their radar. According to the New York Post’s Jon Heyman, the Braves are showing interest in right-handed pitcher Carlos Estévez.
The 32-year-old pitcher had a career year split between the Los Angeles Angels and Philadelphia Phillies. He made 54 appearances and finished with a 2.45 ERA, a 0.90 WHIP and 50 strikeouts in 55 innings pitched.
Along with the Braves, the Angels are reported to be showing interest in bringing him back.
This addition would provide the Braves with a nice right-handed fill-in while Joe Jimenez recovers from knee surgery.
No information on what a deal might look like has been reported yet. Last season, Estévez made $6.75 million, according to Spotrac. They pin his market value at $14 million a year for three years.
So, that will give us some kind of idea of what a deal could look like. It’s certainly a possibility.
Here would be a pro to a deal like this. Closer Raisel Iglesias will be a free agent after next season and they would have another guy ready to go if he walks at a similar contract value in this scenario.
However, it is a steep price tag for a pitcher who only has a one-season track record of reliability. Heading into the 2024 season, he had a career 4.47 ERA. Though, in his defense, he was a member of the Colorado Rockies for almost that entire time.
The moment he wasn’t pitching a good bulk of his games at Coors Field, we’ve seen improvement.
At the right price, this could be a good acquisition for the Braves.
Along with Estévez, there have been reports that the team is interested in left-handed pitcher Tanner Scott. Not sure if the Braves can both at their projected price tags, but getting at least one of them would put their bullpen in a good spot.
Atlanta, GA
Falcons Coach Says Michael Penix Jr. has Trait Most ‘Great’ QBs Have
Atlanta Falcons rookie quarterback Michael Penix Jr. had perhaps his most impressive drive through two starts late in the fourth quarter of Sunday night’s 30-24 overtime loss to the Washington Commanders.
Penix led a game-tying 12-play scoring drive in just over three minutes, capped by a touchdown pass to tight end Kyle Pitts on fourth-and-goal from the 13-yard line. He went 5-for-8 passing for 77 yards on the drive, during which he also converted a third-and-5 and fourth-and-11.
The pass to Pitts, along with intermediate out routes to receiver Drake London, showed Falcons head coach Raheem Morris that Penix, in addition to his plethora of physical tools, has an important trait that’s common for successful quarterbacks.
“You’re talking about a guy that’s a great anticipatory thrower, and Michael throws the ball with great anticipation,” Morris said Monday. “Most of the great quarterbacks that we know, that we’ve seen, throw the ball with great anticipation, and they throw it before the guy’s open. We call it throwing them open.”
Morris believes Penix did exactly that on his touchdown to Pitts, which was the first scoring pass of Penix’s young career. He also did it on his second career interception, coming in the first quarter after miscommunication between he and receiver Chris Blair.
“He lets that thing go on line on the fourth down to Kyle Pitts in the back of the end zone, throwing that ball well before the break, in and out of the break, in between two defenders — great anticipation,” Morris said.
“When you throw the ball that way, just like on the interception he threw, if somebody runs the wrong route and you throw the ball with great anticipation that they’re going to be there and they’re not, that lets you down and you can get an interception.”
Morris’s answer came in response to a question about Penix’s chemistry with his receivers after a late-season quarterback switch from veteran Kirk Cousins to the 24-year-old first-round pick.
At halftime of Sunday night’s loss, Penix approached London. The rookie passer said he needed to be better, to which London reassured him by noting they’d only played six quarters together.
Penix spent the first 14 weeks of the season as Atlanta’s scout team quarterback, meaning he didn’t get many reps with the starters. In addition to chemistry questions, the ball spins differently from left-handed quarterbacks, making the adjustment difficult for the Falcons’ wideouts.
Yet in must-have situations Sunday night, Penix and London connected well. They still feel they have room to grow — and progress should come with reps.
“They’re talking about their work and what they need to do on their indicators when breaks are going to happen and when he’s going to come out,” Morris said. “Some of the outside breaking routes that Drake’s been able to run that seem like they’re seamless, some of those pressure routes that we ran yesterday with Drake that are awesome, those are things you’ve got a lot of accumulated reps on.”
Morris pointed to a few inaccurate redzone passes Penix made against the Commanders as an instance of chemistry needing more work. That won’t happen overnight, and Morris added they’ll work on it this week in practice and into the offseason.
The standard, Morris said, can be found with the Cincinnati Bengals.
“I can only think about the tandems that have been together for a long time,” Morris said. “We’re talking about the great ones, right, Joe Burrow and Ja’marr Chase. That is time on task, and that’s what we’re talking about. We’re talking about being able to get those things.
“And it is a tall task to ask the guy to step in and be able to do those things. It is the reason we didn’t actually want to do those things right away. We were put in the situation that we are.”
Morris, one can assume, is alluding to the Falcons starting Penix. They signed Cousins to a four-year contract worth up to $180 million this spring with intents of starting him for at least the next two seasons, during which he’s set to receive $90 million guaranteed in addition to a $10 million roster bonus for 2026 that’s paid March 17, 2025.
Atlanta didn’t pay Cousins that type of money to bench him after 14 starts, but after the 36-year-old tossed nine interceptions to just one touchdown in his final five appearances, the Falcons were left with no choice.
While not their plan, the Falcons are getting one positive: an early look at the player they think can be their long-term future under center.
“I love the kid,” Morris said postgame Sunday. “I love the kid’s fight. I love the kid’s desire. He represents us. He represents Atlanta. He represents everything that’s good about us.”
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