New Falcons head coach Kevin Stefanski was on staff in Minnesota for 13 years before he got an opportunity to call plays in the NFL for the first time as the team’s interim offensive coordinator. After only a year in the full-time role, he was hired to serve as the head coach of the Browns, with whom he would assume primary play-calling duties. In parts of each of the last two years, though, Cleveland has seen Stefanski cede play-calling duties to his coordinators.

For this new chapter in Atlanta, according to D. Orlando Ledbetter of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Stefanski has opted to start the season with his coordinator calling plays. Lucky for him, the offensive coordinator to whom he is ceding play-calling duties to is Tommy Rees, who has a bit of experience calling plays from when he was the offensive coordinator Stefanski ceded play-calling duties to last year in Cleveland.

Rees’ history as a play-caller in the NFL came only in the second half of last year. Before that, his only play-calling experience came with collegiate entities, from his time at Notre Dame and Alabama. After his career as an undrafted NFL quarterback came to a fairly swift end, Rees turned to coaching as a graduate assistant at Northwestern. He made his NFL coaching debut the next year as an offensive assistant for the Chargers before returning to his alma mater to coach quarterbacks at Notre Dame.

At the end of his third year coaching for the Fighting Irish, Rees was given an opportunity to call plays in the team’s bowl game and retained the duties after getting promoted to offensive coordinator for the next season. After three years calling plays for Notre Dame, Rees took over the offensive coordinator job at Alabama for a season before getting hired back to the NFL as the Browns’ pass game specialist/tight ends coach. Following the dismissal of Ken Dorsey, Rees was promoted to his first offensive coordinator job in the NFL.

After the Browns’ bye week, Rees took over play calling, starting out with Dillon Gabriel for two games before moving on to Shedeur Sanders. Working only with rookie quarterbacks, Rees was able to help Sanders to a few strong performances including three impactful wins and a 364-yard day in a loss to the Titans. Following the season’s end, Rees found himself getting some interest as a potential head coach, first interviewing for the job at Penn State before being considered a candidate to replace Stefanski in Cleveland.

Now, in Atlanta, it appears Stefanski is getting out of the way early for Rees, letting him call plays from the onset instead of as a later resort. He’ll get to work with a slightly improved quarterbacks room that features a veteran Kirk Cousins and a recovering Michael Penix Jr. The offense also includes one of the league’s top, young running backs in Bijan Robinson and impressive pass catchers, pending a few contract decisions that will need to be addressed in the offseason. It will be interesting to see what Rees will be able to do in his first full year of calling plays in the NFL with a new group of weapons.

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