The Falcons appear set to place a big bet on young players and coaching at cornerback

The Falcons appear set to place a big bet on young players and coaching at cornerback
The Falcoholic The Falcoholic

Perhaps cash is coming, but right now, the Falcons appear content.

The Atlanta Falcons have signed five cornerbacks since free agency opened. Two of them are veterans, with 2023 part-time Cardinals starter Antonio Hamilton and comeback-hopeful and former Packers corner Kevin King joining the roster before the draft. Three of them are undrafted free agents, from North Dakota State’s Jayden Price to MidAmerican Nazarene’s Anthony Sao to Minnesota State’s Trey Vaval. That’s it.

This is a fairly striking thing, because this is not a proven, high-end group of cornerbacks. Jeff Okudah started a significant portion of the season in 2023 and is gone, and valuable reserve Tre Flowers has not returned. Your starters today are A.J. Terrell, second-year pro Clark Phillips or Hamilton, and either third-year former undrafted free agent Dee Alford or fanbase punching bag Mike Hughes. It’s possible to conjure up a scenario in which Terrell, Phillips, and Alford form an excellent young, starting trio with Hamilton and Hughes as proven solid depth. It’s easier to think that none of that will prove to be good enough, and a rebuilt defensive line will suffer the ill effects of a weakened secondary behind them.

Is this really the plan? Will the Falcons stand pat?

Falcons tried but whiffed in draft

Terry Fontenot’s apparent allergy to reaching, per his definition of the word, kept the Falcons from getting a cornerback in the draft. The Falcons apparently tried to climb back into the first round to possibly grab a corner, but didn’t see one either worth trading up for or sticking at 43 for in the second round. From there, the team simply didn’t touch the position until they brought on Prince, Sao, and Vaval after the draft.

That would seem to imply that the team knows they need more talent at the position, but...

There’s no guarantee they sign a free agent

Hamilton’s already here as a starter in a pinch, and the Falcons have expressed an alarming amount of faith in Hughes, with King as a lottery ticket who could be an asset if he’s healthy. Unless the Falcons think they need a slam dunk starter, they’re probably not dipping into the free agency market at this point.

If they did, they’d almost certainly have to pry apart a contract or two. It’s worth noting that this team is not exactly loaded with 2025 cap space at this point and may be trying to avoid touching veteran contracts with an eye on contending the next two years and gradually retooling the roster around Michael Penix for 2026, which means they don’t want to be carrying big dead money hits from, say, Grady Jarrett and Jake Matthews in 2026 alongside the inevitable one for Kirk Cousins. That means that if they can, they need to leave those deals alone, which might take them out of the running for a free agent like Akhello Witherspoon unless he’s still there in the summertime and amenable to a dirt cheap deal....