The Falcons are reshaping their franchise under new leadership, highlighted by president of football Matt Ryan.
Their hope is that after years of constant change and misalignment among their key decision makers, this is the start of a unified operation that pulls this team out of its latest dark ages â it hasnât made the playoffs since 2017, and that includes the past two years of disappointment despite preseason playoff expectations.
Owner Arthur Blank, after using an outside consulting group to evaluate his franchiseâs health, opted to clear out his organization. Enter Ryan, a franchise legend who nearly 20 years after getting drafted returns trying to save the Falcons again, and President and CEO Greg Beadles. Both men will report directly to Blank.
Per the Falcons, Beadles, who replaced longtime executive Rich McKay, will âoversee all aspects of the business operations of the organization and collaborate closely with the president of football to ensure alignment of the entire business and football areas of the organization.â
Now with Ryan in place, the Falcons will continue their search for a new head coach and general manager. Both of those individuals will report to Ryan, who now oversees all that relates to the on-field team.
âArthur has been really clear to me on what this structure is going to look like,â Ryan said Tuesday at his introductory news conference. âUltimately, Arthurâs football team is his football team, but I understand the task thatâs been laid at my hands: thatâs to lead this process along with the guys and women who are along for that. Weâre going to come together, weâre going to work collaboratively and weâll make a recommendation to Mr. Blank about what we think, but Iâm comfortable with that.â
Blank followed by saying that Ryan will be involved in all facets of team-building, but he isnât âdoing their jobs,â as it relates to a coach and general manager. He stressed those individuals will serve their roles with Ryanâs âwisdom and guidanceâ behind them.
Asked about whether heâll have final decision in matters, Ryan referred to that as a âloaded questionâ and acknowledged itâs circumstantial. He emphasized that a coach will have power over his duties and the same goes for the GM. He said he viewed his position as an opportunity to take some stress off both positions in terms of responsibilities.
Ryan said he wonât be leading scouting or running any meetings with scouts. The GM role will be the same as itâs always been, he said.
âAs I look at it right now, the decision Iâm going to have to make in this immediate process, with Arthurâs approval, is who we hire for those two positions,â Ryan said. âBut we are empowering them to go out there and do their job. And Iâve expressed that in our interviews as well with the coaches weâve talked with. Iâm not trying to call plays. Iâm not trying to run your offense. Iâm not trying to pull a Philip Rivers and come back and play. Iâm not doing any of those. Most importantly, Iâm trying to get the right person in here in both of those positions. And Iâm trying to support you in any way I can.â
The answers might seem vague, but thereâs reason for that. Ryan and the Falcons are defining his role still; after all, Ryan has never been an executive, and Blank has never had a president of football. The team also doesnât have a coach or GM with whom to collaborate right now.
Itâs also possible that the coach and GM roles could be defined differently based on whoâs hired. If the Falcons hire experienced coach John Harbaugh, for instance, he might desire more say beyond his standard duties than a first-time coach like Klint Kubiak (Ryan said heâs just looking for the best candidate â no preference for an offensive playcaller, as has been the NFLâs trend over the past decade, or experience, which is likely a plus but not essential).
So consider Ryan a middleman between Blank and the traditional football setup. Heâs a guiding presence for the organization. And the Falcons are betting heâll be a pretty good resource for all.
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