Atlanta Falcons News & Rumors

Minor NFL Transactions: 8/11/24

Today’s minor transactions to wrap up the weekend:

Atlanta Falcons

Baltimore Ravens

Carolina Panthers

Chicago Bears

Detroit Lions

Jacksonville Jaguars

New York Giants

  • Waived: RB Jacob Saylors

New York Jets

Trice will unfortunately see his rookie season come to an end before it began. The third-round pick out of Washington exited Atlanta’s first preseason game with a knee injury that was later confirmed to be a torn ACL. Trice had been working his way into to outside linebacker rotation with the Falcons.

With Mevis getting cut, it seems the Panthers’ kicking battle has been decided. The rookie kicker, known as the “Thicker Kicker” at Missouri, was brought in to provide incumbent kicker Eddy Pineiro with competition for the job. Mevis’ departure leaves Pineiro as the only remaining kicker on the roster, putting an end to any competition.

Falcons Hoping To Trade QB Taylor Heinicke?

The Falcons invested heavily in the quarterback position this offseason. As a result, the team may be shopping their lone holdover at the position. As Josh Kendall of The Athletic writes, the Falcons staff is “behaving like it would prefer to get some trade value for Taylor Heinicke” vs. keeping him around as a QB3.

Heinicke had a successful run in Washington between 2021 and 2022, guiding his squad to a 12-11-1 record as a starter. That performance helped earn him a two-year, $14MM deal with his hometown Falcons last offseason, where he was expected to provide former third-round pick Desmond Ridder with some competition. Heinicke ultimately got four starts for Atlanta, going 1-3 while completing a career-low 54.4 percent of his passes.

The Falcons rebooted their QB position this offseason. First, they handed Kirk Cousins a lucrative contract, providing the organization with some veteran consistency at the position for the first time since the Matt Ryan era. The team later surprised many when they also added first-round QB Michael Penix Jr., a decision that definitively locked up a second QB spot on the 53-man roster.

While the team generally carried three QBs in 2023 while taking advantage of the league’s emergency quarterback spot, that might not be the case in 2024. Kendall says the team may prefer to just stash a young option on the practice squad as a QB3, and that means Heinicke (along with current QB4 Nathan Rourke) would likely be on the outside looking in.

While the Falcons would surely prefer to trade their quarterback, it may be easier said than done. Teams won’t be willing to give up a whole lot if they expect the Falcons to eventually cut Heinicke, and any QB-needy squads may just prefer to take their chances in a post-preseason bidding war. On the flip side, Heinicke doesn’t necessarily break the bank with his $4.5MM cap hit, and his starting experience could be valuable for teams seeking a dependable QB2. All the Falcons need is one suitor, but the team shouldn’t expect more than a late-round swap for the 31-year-old.

Falcons Sign Return Specialist Jakeem Grant

The Falcons receiving corps suffered a blow when it was announced that Rondale Moore would miss the 2024 NFL season with a knee injury. While not a one-for-one replacement, Atlanta has addressed the position group, signing veteran wide receiver and return specialist Jakeem Grant to a one-year contract, per Tom Pelissero of NFL Network.

Coming to the NFL as a sixth-round pick out of Texas Tech, it became immediately clear that Grant’s value came on special teams. As a rookie with the Dolphins, Grant only received one target and one carry, finishing with one yard from scrimmage. Instead, his impact came as a returner, as he scored his first career touchdown on a 74-yard punt return.

In the following years, Miami noticed the danger his speed presented and attempted to get him more involved on offense. He was able to contribute a bit here and there but never totaled more than 373 yards or two touchdowns in a season over six years with the Dolphins. In that same time, though, Grant continued to excel on special teams, returning three punts and two kickoffs for touchdowns.

Grant’s electricity has been evident throughout his career. He has always been a danger to break off a long return at any moment, twice returning kickoffs longer than 100 yards and returning four punts over 70 yards, including one 97-yarder. We last saw him in Chicago, where he played 11 games after being traded from Miami. That short sample of time was when Grant delivered his 97-yard punt return for a touchdown.

Following the expiration of his contract with the Bears, Grant signed a three-year deal taking him to Cleveland. Unfortunately, he never got to play for the Browns, suffering a torn Achilles tendon in the 2022 preseason. A year later, finally ready to make his Browns debut, Grant was carted off the field in the team’s final preseason game with a ruptured patellar tendon, once again getting placed on injured reserve before the season began.

Since departing from Cleveland, Grant has shown a continued interest in remaining on the field. In recent months, he has shopped his talents out to the Eagles, Saints, and Jets.

In Atlanta, the return man job won’t be simply handed to Grant. He will have competition for both return spots in Ray-Ray McCloud and Avery Williams. Williams served as the primary kick- and punt-return since 2021 before missing the 2023 season after undergoing ACL surgery. McCloud has an extensive history as a return man in his history, as well.

While both players have the requisite experience, neither player holds quite the same electricity as neither have scored return touchdowns in their NFL careers. This sets up an intriguing battle to come. All three players hold plenty of promise as return men, with varying levels of value on offense, as well. None of the three are expected to be key contributors for new quarterback Kirk Cousins, but if any prove that they can do more than just return, it could solidify them a roster spot in 2024.

Falcons WR Rondale Moore Suffers Season-Ending Knee Injury

Rondale Moore‘s debut Falcons campaign has already come to an end. The fourth-year receiver was carted off the field in practice yesterday, and the worst-case scenario has been confirmed after testing.

Moore suffered a season-ending knee injury, Ian Rapoport and Mike Garafolo of NFL Network report. He has now been placed on injured reserve by the Falcons, per a team announcement. The 24-year-old’s attention will therefore turn to recovery ahead of free agency.

Entering the league as a second-rounder, Moore faced high expectations with the Cardinals. He occupied a regular role in Arizona’s passing game for the past three seasons, drawing between 56 and 64 targets each year. The Purdue product did not deliver a strong statistical output during that span, however, with his best campaign coming in 2023 (530 scrimmage yards, two total touchdowns).

Moore was dealt to the Falcons as part of a straight swap for quarterback Desmond Ridder in March. That deal was a welcomed one on Moore’s part, given his dissatisfaction with his usage in Arizona. A change of scenery had him lined up to play with Kirk Cousins ahead of his walk year, providing him the opportunity to showcase himself in a new offense before landing a new Atlanta contract or reaching the market. Instead, Moore’s value will take a notable hit and Atlanta’s offense will be shorthanded during Cousins’ debut campaign.

The Falcons still have Drake London in place atop the WR depth chart. The former No. 8 pick has shown potential with underwhelming quarterback play so far in his Atlanta tenure, but expectations are high for a step forward in production with Cousins in place. Atlanta also signed Darnell Mooney in free agency, and the former Bear will be counted on to serve in a starting role on the perimeter.

Moore was competing for the first-team slot spot before going down with the injury. The Falcons were high on his potential in a new system, but Josh Kendall of The Athletic notes Ray-Ray McCloud was ahead of him based on how training camp had progressed (subscription required). Now, McCloud – who has seen his best performances come in the return game – will be counted on to produce on offense.

In a corresponding move, the Falcons signed undrafted rookie punter Ryan Sanborn. The Texas product was part of Atlanta’s UDFA class, and he will again have the chance to spend time with incumbent Bradley Pinion for at least a brief period. The team will now need to evaluate if a receiver addition is necessary ahead of roster cutdowns.

Minor NFL Transactions: 8/1/24

Here are Thursday’s minor moves from around the league:

Atlanta Falcons

Carolina Panthers

Cleveland Browns

Denver Broncos

Detroit Lions

New Orleans Saints

Rourke joins a third team this year. The Patriots waived the former CFL quarterback in May, and the Giants — after claiming him — moved him off their 90-man roster shortly after Daniel Jones received full clearance. Rourke spent most of last season with the Jaguars, catching on with the Pats late in the year. He will try to stick on a Falcons team with three QBs — Kirk Cousins, Michael Penix Jr. and Taylor Heinicke — already rostered. Heinicke expects to be jettisoned before Week 1, with the Falcons planning to keep two QBs on their active roster. Though, the veteran could have a place on Atlanta’s practice squad.

This will mark a third Callaway Saints stint. Utilized frequently during a 2021 season that featured zero Michael Thomas participation and brought back in 2023 after the Broncos and Raiders cut him, Callaway returns days after a Steelers departure. The former UDFA, who has a 698-yard 2021 season on his resume, played in three Saints games last season but did not make a catch. This comes at an interesting point, at least, with the Saints having moved on from OC Pete Carmichael en route to a Klint Kubiak hire.

Sullivan suffered a quadriceps injury, per the Panthers. The 2020 Seahawks seventh-round pick, who reunited with ex-Seattle assistant Dave Canales this offseason, has been with the Panthers for the past three seasons.

Arthur Blank: Falcons Did Not Plan To Pick First-Round QB

The Falcons adding Michael Penix Jr. at No. 8 became easily this draft’s most discussed decision. Giving Kirk Cousins a $100MM practical guarantee and then turning to Round 1 to add a successor represents a free agency-era zag, and Arthur Blank indicated this was not necessarily the team’s pre-draft plan.

Blank said Cousins was informed pre-draft the Falcons were planning to select a quarterback, but the longtime owner noted the plan was not to pick a passer eighth overall. Grades on Penix (and a lukewarm view of the 2025 and ’26 QB classes, as early as it is regarding those future crops) led to the team pulling the trigger, and Raheem Morris said in April the team informed Cousins of that pick minutes before it was made. The team’s decision left Cousins “stunned.”

I think (Cousins) was surprised as many people were and frankly we were,” Blank said of Penix being available at No. 8, via The Athletic’s Josh Kendall (subscription required). “Our plan was not to pick a quarterback at No. 8, but the grades our coaching staff had on Penix and him being available at No. 8 it turned out that that’s what happened.”

We made it clear to Kirk that we probably were going to draft a quarterback in this draft, and it turned out that Michael Penix, who our coaching staff and personnel department graded extraordinarily high, they viewed him as a tremendous player, (was available),”

This is an unusual account of the Falcons’ draft plan, as the uproar about Penix going to Atlanta stemmed from the Washington prospect going earlier than expected (and to a team that had just given a QB a four-year, $180MM deal). It would be odd if Cousins was surprised by Penix remaining on the board at No. 8, given that questions about the left-hander had him at least dropping into the teens. The Raiders, at No. 13, were a popular Penix spot in mock drafts. Several teams placed a second-round grade on Penix, though a number of coaches were high on him. After the Falcons surprisingly made a move for one of the six first-round-level QBs, the Broncos shut down any effort to trade down from No. 12 in fear the Raiders would then draft Bo Nix.

The Falcons’ move to nab Penix created a running storyline. Cousins declined to answer whether he would have signed with the Falcons had he known they would have chosen Penix. While the veteran may still have done so due to the $100MM guarantee Atlanta was willing to authorize, this will be a closely monitored situation for as long as the two passers are on the roster. Unsurprisingly, Blank’s view of recent Falcons QB situations prompted the aggressive offseason at the position.

We have seen that movie where we didn’t have a franchise quarterback, and we didn’t want to repeat that again,” Blank said. “I certainly didn’t.”

Blank and the Falcons have certainly shifted course. A year ago, the owner was eager to build around Desmond Ridder’s rookie contract. Blank had explained why the Falcons, who were close to acquiring Deshaun Watson in 2022, joined the rest of the NFL in not pursuing Lamar Jackson after the Ravens QB’s trade request surfaced. The Falcons built their 2023 offseason around Ridder, naming him the former third-rounder the starter months before training camp. After the team benched Ridder on multiple occasions last season, it moved him to Arizona for Rondale Moore.

The Falcons are back in the franchise-QB contract business, with Cousins — barring a trade — locked in for at least two seasons. The longtime Vikings starter, who recently received full clearance, is coming off an Achilles tear ahead of his age-36 season. Penix is already 24, separating this plan from the Packers’ Aaron Rodgers-to-Jordan Love succession; Love was 21 when Green Bay traded up for him.

This decision obviously cut into Atlanta’s ability to build a team around Cousins, as efforts to trade back into Round 1 for a pass rusher did not succeed. But the Falcons do now have a long-term plan in place at the game’s premier position. Rumors will undoubtedly persist about the team’s QB situation, but for now, no question exists as to which one is the starter.

Kirk Cousins is our franchise quarterback. He is our starting quarterback and he seems to be doing great from a medical standpoint,” Blank said. “… But I know age does kind of creep up. I can speak for myself personally on that. We also know that there will be a point where we will need a transition, and we want to do that smoothly.

I’m very sensitive on behalf of our fan base on not having a period of time post-Kirk Cousins to have a gap again between having that kind of franchise quarterback and being in the spin cycle and not being able to get out.”

Blank said he was closely involved in the Falcons’ pre-draft process but reminded (via Kendall) Terry Fontenot and the team’s personnel staff have the final say and made the ultimate call. That choice will likely determine the GM’s future in Atlanta, as the team is riding a three-season streak of 7-10 records.

They don’t have to clear (picks) with me,” Blank said. “They just have to make me aware of what is going on. I don’t like surprises. They know that, but it’s not up to me to make those decisions. It’s up to them and for me to understand the logic behind it.”

Minor NFL Transactions: 7/30/24

Today’s minor moves:

Atlanta Falcons

  • Waived: WR Isaiah Wooden
  • Placed on reserve/retired list: OT Tyler Vrabel

Baltimore Ravens

Buffalo Bills

  • Waived: LB Shayne Simon

Carolina Panthers

Green Bay Packers

Indianapolis Colts

  • Signed: DE Levi Bell

Jacksonville Jaguars

Pittsburgh Steelers

Marquez Callaway will once again hit free agency after having bounced around the NFL last season. The wideout spent time with the Broncos, Raiders, Saints (second stint) during the 2023 campaign. He caught on with the Steelers via a reserve/futures contract in January but ultimately lasted only a few days into training camp.

The former UDFA had a breakout campaign as a sophomore in New Orleans, finishing the 2021 season with 46 catches for 698 yards and six touchdowns. He saw a reduced role in 2022 before hitting the free agency carousel in 2023.

Falcons CB A.J. Terrell Addresses Extension Talks

A.J. Terrell is currently set to play on his fifth-year option in 2024, but it would not come as a surprise if he had a long-term deal in place before the start of the campaign. The Falcons cornerback recently addressed where things stand on the negotiation front.

“I’m just focused on being with the team and being involved and let my agent do what he does,” the 25-year said, via The Athletic’s Josh Kendall (subscription required). “It’s easy for me to come to work and not think about it and know that it’s in good hands. I’m just playing football and controlling what I can.”

While nothing appears to be imminent with respect to an extension, those remarks point to Terrell being satisfied with where things currently stand. The Clemson alum has been a full-time starter in each of his four Falcons campaigns, and his 2021 performance (three interceptions, 16 pass deflections) earned him a second-team All-Pro nod. Terrell has not matched that production since, but he remains an integral member of Atlanta’s secondary.

Earlier this month, it was predicted team and player would manage to hammer out an extension relatively smoothly. That has yet to take place, but Terrell’s participation in training camp is a positive sign with respect to a deal being feasible in the near future. Atlanta’s cornerback room beyond Terrell faces questions, and the team’s other starting boundary corner spot is up for grabs this summer.

The Falcons made a big-money investment at the safety spot last offseason by adding safety Jessie Bates on a four-year, $64MM pact. Terrell is set to join him as a highly-compensated member of the team’s secondary. The latter is due $12.34MM on his option, but a long-term pact should bring him closer to the top of the market. It would likely come as a surprise if Terrell joined the trio of corners averaging $20MM or more per season, but he could move up the position’s pecking order on a multi-year accord. With no other major financial priorities facing the team at the moment, the situation between Atlanta and Terrell will remain worth watching closely.

Minor NFL Transactions: 7/29/24

Today’s minor moves:

Atlanta Falcons

  • Signed: WR Jesse Matthews

Houston Texans

Jacksonville Jaguars

Las Vegas Raiders

Minnesota Vikings

  • Waived: K John Parker Romo

New York Jets

Pittsburgh Steelers

San Francisco 49ers

Riley Patterson‘s second stint in Jacksonville has come to an end. After getting a seven-game look with the Lions in 2021, Patterson won the Jaguars full-time kicking gig in 2022. He proceeded to convert 30 of his 35 field goal attempts that season, plus another three-for-three showing in the postseason (including a 41-yard game-winner against the Chargers).

He was replaced in Jacksonville by Brandon McManus last offseason, leading to him spending the majority of the 2023 campaign back in Detroit. In addition to his two-game stint with the Browns to end last season, Patterson ended 2023 having connected on 16 of his 18 FG tries and 41 of his 44 XP tries. The Jaguars brought him back in February via a reserve/future contract, but the team is already committing to rookie sixth-round pick Cam Little as their full-time kicker.

Falcons, WR James Washington Agree To Deal

James Washington‘s efforts to land an NFL deal have produced an agreement. The veteran wideout is set to join the Falcons, Mike Garafolo of NFL Network reports.

Washington did not record a reception in his pair of Cowboys contests during the 2022 season. He was out of the league altogether last year, but he made it clear earlier this month he intended to join a new team. After reportedly being on the radar of multiple interested teams, he will spend the rest of training camp in Atlanta.

The 28-year-old’s Dallas tenure did not go as planned, but it was preceded by four years in Pittsburgh. Between 2018-21, Washington showed his potential as a deep threat by averaging 14.2 yards per reception. He totaled 1,629 yards and 11 touchdowns on 114 catches, and he will aim to regain that form with the Falcons. Atlanta’s receivers coach – Ike Hilliard – served in that role with the Steelers during Washington’s last two years in Pittsburgh.

The Falcons’ WR depth chart is once again topped by 2022 first-rounder Drake London. The former No. 8 pick has been a focal point of the team’s passing attack so far, and that is expected to continue in 2024 with Kirk Cousins at the helm. The Falcons added Darnell Mooney in free agency, and the former Bear is slated to handle a starting role. Washington will be competing for a rotational spot alongside the likes of trade acquisition Rondale Mooreveteran returner Ray-Ray McCloud and incumbent KhaDarel Hodge.

Atlanta entered Monday at the bottom of the league in terms of cap space (roughly $3.5MM), so this Washington accord will not be a lucrative one. That comes as no surprise, of course, but he will now have the opportunity to earn a 53-man roster spot with a new team.