New head coach Raheem Morris and the Atlanta Falcons took the opposite approach this offseason at quarterback from what the Las Vegas Raiders did after they announced they were making interim head coach Antonio Pierce their permanent leader. General manager Tom Telesco’s decision could eventually cost Pierce his job.
The Atlanta Falcons went aggressive at QB this spring

Morris told reporters at the NFL Combine that he probably wouldn’t be the Falcons’ head coach if they had better quarterback play following Matt Ryan’s departure from the team. The Falcons loaded up on talent at the NFL’s premier position, signing Kirk Cousins in free agency and drafting Michael Penix Jr. with the No. 8 pick.
While the Falcons were willing to take a risk by making an unpopular draft pick in the first round, Telesco chose to play it safe and waited to select tight end Brock Bowers. Bowers will join fellow tight end and 2023 second-round pick Michael Mayer on the offense in the upcoming season. Following OTAs, it’s still unclear who will throw them the ball.
Tom Telesco is happy with Aidan O’Connell and Gardner Minshew

Reports came out before the draft that Pierce wanted to draft a quarterback this year. (Pierce wanted Jayden Daniels, but the eventual No. 2 pick was a long shot for the Raiders.) Pierce was worried about being stuck in the same situation that got Arthur Smith fired in Atlanta. Telesco felt quarterback competition between Aidan O’Connell and Gardner Minshew would suffice this offseason.
The Las Vegas Raiders have a “concerning” QB situation

The results at OTAs weren’t pretty:
Both Aidan O’Connell and Gardner Minshew struggled during OTAs. They split snaps with the first string fairly evenly, but neither found much success during the practices that were open to reporters. The quarterbacks (and the rest of the offense) are still in the early stages of getting comfortable in coordinator Luke Getsy’s offense. Understandably, there have been some growing pains, but it’s still troubling that neither O’Connell nor Minshew displayed much progress results-wise by the end of OTAs.
Both quarterbacks struggled to push the ball downfield, had too many off-target throws and frequently put the ball in harm’s way. The Raiders will need better than that to avoid the offense being a liability yet again. The good news is there’s still plenty of time for O’Connell and Minshew to get better in training camp before the season arrives.
The Raiders have plenty of weapons for Minshew and O’Connell to target. Unfortunately, most of the problems appear to be on the quarterbacks and maybe offensive coordinator Luke Getsy. They’ll have to make a giant leap in the preseason if the Raiders have any chance of surviving a brutal AFC West.
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5 Comments
You realize that 6 QBs were drafted ahead of the Raiders 13th pick, right? Should they have taken Spencer Rattler over a purported *generational talent* TE Bowers? Plus Bo Nix & probably Penix as well, shouldn’t have even been drafted in the 1st round. So your whole *They needed a QB but took a TE?!?!?!* criticism is a complete non-sequitur.
Both qb’s totally suck , not surprised.
This story is complete clickbait authored by an Atlanta falcons fanboy who doesn’t have a clue what he bloviating over. Sure in a perfect world when your team needs a QB , you would magically be able to draft 1st or 2nd in the first round but this is reality and they drafted 13th and will have to do the best they can this season with the players who were available. IMHO I think they did a good job and the team is a work in progress but the D looks very good and if O’Connell develops a little we may sniff playoff and if not we will be all gas no breaks BTA qb next off-season . So really stop it with this shhh*t.
Update your article in Noember when Talking ders are leading thebWest!
Implementation of a new offense, two of the top OL out of camp. Raiders have an established, good D. As Coach AP has said, D is always ahead of O at this time, while Raiders O not having implemented much of play book. So yeah, the premise here is a logical fallacy.