Former Falcons OC Dirk Koetter retires after 39 years of coaching

Former Falcons offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter is finally calling it a career after 39 seasons of coaching in various roles.

Former Falcons offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter is finally calling it a career after 39 years of coaching. Koetter, who served as Atlanta’s play-caller for the past two seasons, announced his retirement over social media, per Rick Stroud of the Tampa Times.

“From 1982 a Highland High through the 2020 season with the Atlanta Falcons, it’s been nothing but football year round with not nearly enough time for anything else, especially family,” the former Falcons OC wrote.

Koetter started his NFL career in 2007 with the Jaguars before joining the Falcons in 2012 as offensive coordinator. Following three seasons in Atlanta, Koetter took over the same role in Tampa Bay and was promoted to head coach in 2016.

He posted a 19-29 record and was fired by the Bucs after three seasons. Koetter had intended on retiring from coaching but was convinced by Dan Quinn to join the Falcons as offensive coordinator in 2019.

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Falcons dismiss OC Dirk Koetter, six assistant coaches

The Falcons are transitioning into a new era under head coach Arthur Smith, who must now fill out his staff with assistant coaches that share his vision for the team.

The Falcons are transitioning into a new era under head coach Arthur Smith, who must now fill out his staff with assistant coaches that share his vision for the team.

As reported by the Atlanta Journal Constitution’s D. Orlando Ledbetter, the Falcons will not be retaining offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter along with six assistant coaches. Greg Knapp, Chad Walker, Tosh Lupoi, Mayur Chaudhari, Chris Morgan and Aden Durden won’t be back in 2021.

Durden, Atlanta’s linebackers coach in 2020, will join the Cowboys’ staff as an assistant under Dan Quinn, who just took over as the defensive coordinator in Dallas.

These moves are not shocking as any incoming head coach would prefer to surround themselves with like-minded assistants. Atlanta has already been linked to several coordinators and assistants on both sides of the ball.

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Considering how rare it is to retain assistant coaches, it’s worth noting that Smith himself survived through three different head coaches while serving as an assistant in Tennessee.

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Matt Ryan: ‘Dirk does a good job of putting the plan together’

The Atlanta Falcons have now lost six of their last seven games against the New Orleans Saints.

The Atlanta Falcons have now lost six of their last seven games against the New Orleans Saints. Following Sunday’s 21-16 loss, Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan spoke with the media about how the offense has fared in their two matchups against the Saints this season.

“We certainly didn’t play good enough… Walked away with too many field goals and not enough touchdowns. It’s disappointing when you play like that.”

Ryan was then asked about the team  converting just seven of 27 third downs in their two matchups against New Orleans.

“I think part of it has to do with the type of third down we were in. We needed to be in more third and short to give us better opportunities and we weren’t in those. We needed to play better”.

When pressed on what the issue is, Ryan was asked if the scheme was the problem or just the receivers’ inability to get open.

“As players, you got to look at what you can do better, we’ve all got to do that. I think certainly when they get pressure and make the ball come out before, it allows for guys to be in tighter spaces than if we had more time. So, it’s a combination of being a little better on the outside, being a better plan, little better upfront, me being a little more accurate.”

Atlanta has talented receivers on the outside and tight end Hayden Hurst has shown an ability to get open in the middle. However, the Falcons have not done a good job at getting the ball in the hands of their play-makers.

The receivers need to do a better job getting open, while the team’s offensive line, which is stacked with first-round talent, needs to hold up longer. Ultimately, it falls on the scheme. But Ryan still holds confidence in offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter and this Falcons team’s offensive makeup.

“Dirk does a good job of putting the plan together and putting us in situations to be successful. I think like every week, there’s some things he would do differently and there’s things we have to do differently as players and make plays when the situations present themselves. That’s how I feel at this point.”

Ryan is not going to openly talk about whether or not he is unhappy with Dirk Koetter and his style of offense. The Falcons quarterback is smart enough to know how detrimental those comments would be in the locker room. While it may appease fans, it would make it harder for the team to do its job effectively.

When asked about the three consecutive run plays called by Koetter, Ryan again chose to hold off on passing blame to Atlanta’s play-caller. Instead, he said players need to execute better.

“We were productive on the first one. Got us into good position, second and short and then not productive with the last two runs… It’s tough. Our job is to, as players, is to execute the calls and to do our jobs and make them work. We didn’t do a good enough job there.”

Ryan seemed to follow the lead of interim head coach Raheem Morris, who was also unwilling to call out Koetter following Sunday’s abysmal offensive performance.

The Falcons take on the Los Angeles Chargers in Week 14, then have two matchups against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and one against the Kansas City Chiefs.

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Raheem Morris says Falcons failed former head coach Dan Quinn

After expressing his hopefulness to see the return of RB Todd Gurley and WR Julio Jones, Morris was then asked about how the team has fared in the second half of this season compared to where they started.

Falcons head coach Raheem Morris spoke to the media from his home on Monday and gave his thoughts on an array of topics. Morris was asked specifically how the mandated facility closure would impact this team’s preparation for the Saints in Week 13.

Mondays are pretty much normal for us. You kind of go into your own labs and do your own work. So we are all just at our houses working in that form. It is still nice to be able to walk by and see guy in the training room or whatever the case may be. It’s just not the case right now. It’ll be fine, just something we got to deal with. 

After a brief update on Julio Jones and Todd Gurley, Morris was asked about the mindset of the team now compared to the first half of the season.

You just want to get the guys reset every week for this 1-0 mentality and not to ride the emotional roller coaster. To not allow these guys to be too high on themselves or too low on themselves, no matter what happens. You know, when you’re 0-5, it’s easy for everybody to turn on each other and to point fingers and see who the problem was, and that wasn’t the case. 

Jeff Schultz of The Athletic asked Morris what the first thing he must do in order to change the culture around this Falcons team. Morris responded in great detail, laying out what it was like replacing Dan Quinn as head coach.

Usually, you get an offseason and you get a bunch of team meetings and a whole preparation thing where you plan it out and you’re ready to go. ‘Here’s the spill, here’s the philosophy, here’s what we are going to do moving forward.’ And for me, I had about 2 hours. 

You get a chance for your friend, Dan Quinn, to say goodbye to the team and turnover the reigns to myself and then you get to talk to them. And you got to be flat out honest with them and tell them the truth. The truth was we had failed that man miserably through the first five games. And that’s the cost of what happens and the cost of doing business. And we are going to move forward and I asked them guys to let me lead them. 

Morris reinforced his philosophy of wanting the defense to force its will on the Falcons’ opponents. He was then asked if he feels he has an honest shot at being the Falcons head coach beyond 2020.

The only thing I can tell you about give anybody an honest shot just in life, is what they do for me on a daily basis; and all I am getting is the utmost support from the highest level of the organization to the lowest level of the organization and I don’t have to name those two. And somewhere in between, you got a bunch of people trying to do a bunch of things to get that 1-0 mentality and when you feel people trying to get the 1-0 that’s how you know how much support you have from everyone in the building.  

Morris is currently 4-2 with the Falcons. And while it’s important to see how he finishes out the season, it’s also important to see how he handles his first rematch with the Saints. The Falcons lost to New Orleans, 24-9, in Week 11 and will look to upset their NFC South rival on Sunday.

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Falcons OC Dirk Koetter: ‘We couldn’t get anything going’

Offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter spoke to the media on Monday afternoon to discuss the team’s Week 11 performance, saying he felt the team was too one-dimensional. 

The Atlanta Falcons played one of their worst games of the season on Sunday, losing to the New Orleans Saints without starting quarterback Drew Brees. Offensively, the Falcons managed just nine points and struggled to do much of anything against a tough Saints front-seven.

Offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter spoke to the media on Monday afternoon to discuss Atlanta’s Week 11 performance, saying he felt the team was too one-dimensional.

The whole second half I felt we were too one-dimensional but once you get behind, its hard and we couldn’t get anything going

Koetter also explained that the eight sacks were not all on the offensive line.

Most people are going to look at it and think it was all on the O-line, it really wasn’t. There were some coverage sacks, in there for sure and we didn’t get anyone open and Matt had nowhere to go. There was a couple of times we did have someone open and Matt couldn’t find them. 

Quarterback Matt Ryan had his lowest passer rating since 2013, finishing without a touchdown and two interceptions. Koetter said the passing game failed to get going for a number of reasons.

First time in a long time our pass game couldn’t bail us out. We couldn’t get anything going. The [play action] passes weren’t there, the quick game isn’t working, the keepers, the bootleg game wasn’t working. 

D. Orlando Ledbetter of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution then asked specifically what the Falcons did to try and get the offense going.

We’ll we had two screens and we messed them both up. We had two draws for no gain. I guess those didn’t work too well either. We really didn’t have much going our way to be truthful.

Team reporter William McFadden asked about the Raiders’ defensive identity.

They are a zone-orientated four down front team. They started the season giving up a lot of yards rushing, but the last month of the season they are playing much faster on defense. 

Koetter noted that the Raiders are improving on defense. He also acknowledged that they nearly swept the defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs this past Sunday.

Koetter ended the Monday briefing by acknowledging how hard it is to replace Julio Jones, whose status for Sunday’s game remains up in the air.

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Dirk Koetter: ‘Guys like Julio make plays that you don’t plan for’

The Falcons have a plethora of offensive weapons, but All-Pro WR Julio Jones stands alone in terms of production, consistency and longevity.

The Atlanta Falcons have a plethora of offensive weapons, but All-Pro WR Julio Jones stands alone in terms of production, consistency and longevity. With Jones banged up and potentially out for Sunday’s game against the Carolina Panthers, though, the team will be relying on those other play-makers in Week 5.

Calvin Ridley, who’s been a breakout performer this season, was held without a catch in Week 4. Both of Atlanta’s starting wideouts are banged up. According to offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter, Jones’ absence is by far the hardest to make up for:

“You’re taking one of the best players of all time out of your lineup, so it’s not gonna be the same, there’s just no way it could be the same,” said Koetter prior to Friday’s practice.

The thing that sets Jones apart from the rest of the Falcons’ receivers is his ability to make a game-changing play at any moment.

“Those guys like Julio make plays that you don’t plan for. They make spectacular plays. And that’s something that these other guys would love to do but they just haven’t proven that yet,” Koetter explained.

Watch Atlanta’s offensive coordinator speak about Jones’ potential absence below, as shared by ESPN’s Vaughn McClure on Twitter:

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VIDEO: Dirk Koetter on Falcons’ 4th-quarter play-calling

The Atlanta Falcons lost another game they had no business losing on Sunday, falling, 30-26, to the Chicago Bears in Week 3. 

The Atlanta Falcons lost another game they had no business losing on Sunday, falling, 30-26, to the Chicago Bears in Week 3.

It’s easy to blame the defense for blowing another double-digit fourth-quarter deficit. And while the Falcons’ undermanned defensive unit was partially to blame, this game came down the team’s inability to sustain drives when it mattered most in the forth quarter.

Atlanta’s offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter explained to reporters on Monday that he wanted to run the clock down but the team just didn’t execute. Matt Ryan went ice cold, and the running game stalled out.

Here’s Koetter explaining his play-calling in he fourth quarter, as shared by ESPN’s Vaughn McClure below.

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Todd Gurley leads NFL in red-zone carries since 2018

Falcons running back Todd Gurley’s explosiveness may be in question after his surprising release from the Rams, but the former Georgia standout has been a touchdown machine during his NFL career.

Falcons running back Todd Gurley‘s explosiveness may be in question after his surprising release from the Rams, but the former Georgia standout has been a touchdown machine during his professional career.

Over five seasons in the NFL, Gurley has rushed for 58 touchdowns and added another 12 receiving scores. He’s perhaps most effective in short-yardage situations, particularly in the red zone. Give him a small crease and it is pretty much guaranteed to be six points.

As pointed out by Pro Football Focus below, no other running back has had as many red-zone touches as Gurley over the past two seasons.

Gurley has 18 more red-zone more touches than the next RB on this list, Christian McCaffrey, who has 102. Behind McCaffrey is Ezekiel Elliott (100 red-zone carries) and Derek Henry (88).

Atlanta needs Gurley to bring that red-zone threat back to Georgia as the team has been far too one-dimensional in recent years. That pass-heavy offense could actually benefit Gurley early on, as opposing defenses will be focused on slowing Julio Jones.

The Falcons’ offensive line will also need to play better collectively. While Jake Matthews and Alex Mack have been solid, the rest of the group is far less experienced. The team’s two first-round picks in 2019, Chris Lindstrom and Kaleb McGary, will have to play well in order for Atlanta to improve upon a rushing attack that averaged 85.1 yards per contest last season.

If Matt Ryan can get the offense to the red zone, though, Gurley has great chance of punching it in for six.

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Matt Ryan ranked among 10 QBs when facing pressure

Despite weapons like Julio Jones and Calvin Ridley lining up on outside, the Falcons’ predictive, pass-heavy play-calling led to quarterback Matt Ryan being sacked a career-high 48 times in 2019.

When an offense doesn’t have the threat of a running game, it makes the job of the opposing defense that much easier. That’s what happened to the Atlanta Falcons last year, finishing in the bottom five in rushing yards and top five in passing yards per contest.

Despite weapons like Julio Jones and Calvin Ridley lining up on outside, the Falcons’ predictive, pass-heavy play-calling led to quarterback Matt Ryan being sacked a career-high 48 times in 2019.

Ryan faced constant pressure, but was still one of the league’s best when under duress. In NFL.com’s recent future looking at the ten best quarterbacks when facing pressure, Atlanta’s former MVP QB was ranked at No. 7.

Ryan had a 78.4 passer rating when under pressure, as Nick Shook breaks down below:

No one on this list faced more pressures in 2019 than Ryan’s 216, with the next closest total belonging to rookie signal-caller Daniel Jones, sitting 31 pressures away with 185. Even in his team’s worst season in recent memory, Ryan still posted a passer rating under pressure that was more than 12 points higher than the league average of 66.2. 

We shouldn’t be all that surprised. No one in the NFL owns a higher passer rating under pressure in every season combined since 2016 than Ryan, whose mark of 87.9 puts him at the head of a top-five list that also includes Stafford, Alex Smith, Tom Brady (82.9) and Mahomes (81.2). Only Brady has thrown more touchdown passes while under pressure (30) than Ryan (27) since 2016. Ryan owns the highest passer rating that didn’t occur in 2019, too, with his 104.9 mark from 2016 sitting third in the top five passer ratings under pressure since 2016. And for those who will say most of these combined numbers are inflated by that memorable run to Super Bowl LI in 2016, here’s the numerical retort you weren’t seeking: Ryan tied for the third most touchdown passes thrown under pressure in a single season with nine, and he did so in 2018.

Adding All-Pro running back Todd Gurley should help take a little bit of the pressure off of Ryan in 2020. Slow starts also played a role last season as Atlanta was often playing catch-up after the first quarter and forced to abandon the run game.

Offensive coordinator Dirk Koetter will have to do a better job of keeping defenses on their heels if he wants Ryan to make it through the full year.

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Where Are They Now: A look at the last 5 Bucs coaches

Find out what the last five Bucs head coaches are up to these days.

Bruce Arians enters the 2020 season with perhaps the most talented roster he’s ever had during his coaching career.

The two-time NFL Coach of the Year will have the luxury of having Tom Brady under center leading his offense, and the Bucs now have a legitimate shot of making it to the postseason for the first time since 2007.

That 12-year playoff drought has been a painful won for Tampa Bay fans, and it has seen its fair share of coaches come and go. With that, let’s take a look at the last five Bucs coaches and see what they are up to now.