logo
How the Falcons are trying to tap into Bijan Robinson's ‘home run' potential

How the Falcons are trying to tap into Bijan Robinson's ‘home run' potential

New York Times4 days ago
FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — When the Atlanta Falcons used the No. 8 pick of the 2023 NFL Draft on Bijan Robinson, it was the first time in five years and just the sixth time in the previous decade that a team picked a running back in the top 10.
The reason, the Falcons said, was simple: 'Bijan's more than a running back,' then-head coach Arthur Smith said. 'He's an impact football player. He's a home run hitter.'
Advertisement
Robinson is entering his third year in the league, and Atlanta believes this is the season he starts hitting those home runs. The University of Texas alumnus was third in the NFL in rushing last season with 1,456 yards, fifth in rushing touchdowns (14) and seventh among running backs in yards per carry (4.8). In his two years in the league, only Derrick Henry, Saquon Barkley and Kyren Williams have more rushing yards.
Robinson's 3,350 yards from scrimmage in the last two seasons (his rushing total plus 918 receiving yards on 119 catches) are third behind only Barkley and Henry. He was the league's offensive rookie of the year in 2023 and a Pro Bowler in 2024.
He has been almost everything the Falcons hoped for when they made him their highest drafted running back since they picked Joe Profit seventh in 1971. The only line of Robinson's resume that is lacking is the home runs the team predicted. What he has so far been is the league's most dynamic doubles hitter.
Robinson's longest career run was a 38-yarder against Jacksonville in October of his rookie season. He's had three runs longer than 30 yards. Fourth-year Falcons backup running back Tyler Allgeier has four career runs of more than 30 yards, including three of more than 40 yards in his rookie season.
'That's the next step, obviously,' Robinson said. 'We all want it. I've been working on it a lot this offseason, and when the season comes, it's time to go show it.'
Entering seasons, Robinson has always set almost impossibly high goals for himself. One year in high school, he wrote down that he wanted to gain 3,500 rushing yards that season. He has called this year's rushing goal 'outlandish.' He declined to share specifics, but he has never been shy about measuring himself against the league's best at his position.
Advertisement
Last offseason, he said he wanted to emulate the impact of San Francisco's Christian McCaffrey. This year, he's chasing the type of season Philadelphia's Saquon Barkley had in 2024 when Barkley had 10 runs of 30 or more yards and six of 50 or more yards on the way to a Super Bowl championship.
'We are all waiting for that Saquon-type season when it comes to explosives,' Robinson said.
Not only waiting for it but working for it. Much of the offseason emphasis for the Falcons' offensive coaching staff was focused on getting more breakaway runs from Robinson.
'That is a jump that we want to take,' offensive coordinator Zac Robinson said. 'That's definitely something we are emphasizing as an offense.'
Robinson led the NFL in missed tackles forced with 117 last season, according to Next Gen Stats, and both Zac Robinson and running backs coach Michael Pitre have emphasized his gift for making defenders miss in tight spaces. Now, those coaches want him to create more of those situations when he gets to the third level of the defense by getting closer to defenders before committing to a path.
'You're showing him clips and saying, 'Maybe we could close the space on this free safety and not make the move from 8 to 10 yards away,'' Zac Robinson said. 'How can we press that guy's toes to make him feel uncomfortable? Nobody is better in the NFL at making short-area quickness moves on defenders. I think it's just showing him the clips, emphasizing it.'
The Falcons' coaching staff could also help Robinson with more interior run calls instead of the wide zone that was so prevalent last season. While wide zone runs highlight Robinson's natural cutback ability, they also can help out defenders down the field because having Robinson near the sideline takes away some of his options for avoiding defenders.
Bijan Robinson with good blocking ahead for six 💪
📺: #ATLvsMIN on FOX📱: https://t.co/waVpO909ge pic.twitter.com/hFyEVEwSEb
— NFL (@NFL) December 8, 2024
The athletes that Bijan Robinson is facing once he breaks into the secondary are better than the ones he's facing closer to the line of scrimmage, and he needs to always be aware of that, Pitre said.
'I think it's about truly understanding what gives the defense an issue and what puts them in conflict and having to realize that guys at this level are able to redirect if you make your move too early,' Pitre said. 'The conflict happens when you step on their toes, close the distance.'
Advertisement
Robinson was tied for 22nd in the NFL last season with five runs of 20 or more yards. In the last two years, he is tied for eighth with 12 such runs.
'Our challenge as coaches is how do you recreate the things that show up in games,' Pitre said. 'It's drill work, it's film study. If you watch all his carries, he's done it. How do we do it more consistently? That's what we're trying to get done. I'm not overly worried about it. I think that is his next step. That's his next evolution as a player.'
Robinson is coming off the highest workload of his career — 304 carries and 61 catches — but he doesn't expect any physical repercussions because of it, even though the 300-carry threshold has been tough on running backs. That total has been topped 15 times in the last 10 years. Six of those came last year. In the nine seasons it happened before that, only one (Derrick Henry in 2019 and 2020) had more rushing yards the following season. In the other eight seasons, the backs had an average dropoff of 695 yards the next season.
While Morris said the Falcons have to be aware of Robinson's workload 'to protect that type of elite athlete,' quarterback Michael Penix Jr. entered training camp urging more touches for his star running back.
'He has to touch the ball a lot each and every single game,' Penix said. 'Once he gets that ball, you don't know what's going to happen, but you know it's going to be good. We've got to get him the rock; it's as simple as that. He's going to help us win ballgames.'
Robinson said last week he felt better than he ever has after nearly a month of workouts with Christian McCaffrey in Studio City, Calif., this offseason.
'It was really cool,' Robinson said. 'I got to see how he worked. He got to see how I worked and we got to put it together. It was really cool, two guys coming together to just make each other better. He taught me a bunch of nuanced moves.'
Advertisement
The most valuable part of the experience for Robinson was seeing McCaffrey's recovery regime, Robinson said.
The program consisted of pool workouts, a red light therapy bed and a newly designed hyperbaric chamber called a Stratosphere.
It was like 'we were 18,000 feet in the air, but we were in a machine,' Robinson said. 'It was like the coolest thing ever.
'I am going to continue doing that because I felt super, super great this summer, and it was all because of how we came back and recovered our bodies,' Robinson said.
Zac Robinson and Pitre both express optimism that Bijan Robinson's home run total will jump this year. Bijan Robinson believes it, too.
'I work on it every single day,' he said. 'I've been gifted to do stuff like this. Me and (Pitre) joke all the time, we're done with 30-yard runs. Now it's time for 50 yards, 60 yards.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Michigan State football extends official offer to 3-star TE commit Eddie Whiting
Michigan State football extends official offer to 3-star TE commit Eddie Whiting

Yahoo

time7 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Michigan State football extends official offer to 3-star TE commit Eddie Whiting

The Spartans have extended an official offer to one of their first verbal commits of the 2026 class. Eddie Whiting of Sioux Falls, S.D. received his official offer from Michigan State football on Friday. Whiting posted about the offer from Michigan State on his social media X account following receiving the official offer from the Spartans. August 1 is the first day for schools to extend official offers to prospects in the 2026 class. Whiting is a three-star tight end prospect in the 2026 class. He holds a recruiting rating of 87 and ranks as the No. 44 tight end in 247Sports' composite system. He is also listed as the No. 2 player from South Dakota in the class. Whiting was one of the first commitments for the Spartans in the 2026 class. He announced his commitment to Michigan State in early February, picking the Spartans over notable offers from Alabama, Auburn, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Iowa State, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, UCLA, Washington, Washington State and Wisconsin. Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Robert Bondy on X @RobertBondy5. This article originally appeared on Spartans Wire: Spartans extend official offer to 3-star TE commit Eddie Whiting

Chicago Bears will honor late Virginia Halas McCaskey, Steve McMichael on uniforms during 2025 season
Chicago Bears will honor late Virginia Halas McCaskey, Steve McMichael on uniforms during 2025 season

Yahoo

time7 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Chicago Bears will honor late Virginia Halas McCaskey, Steve McMichael on uniforms during 2025 season

The Chicago Bears lost two franchise icons earlier this year. The organization will be paying tribute to both of them on the field this season. The Bears will honor the late Virginia Halas McCaskey with a jersey patch and the late Steve McMichael with a helmet decal. McCaskey, formerly the owner and matriarch of the Bears, died on Feb. 2. She was 102. Her initials are at the front and center of a football-shaped patch that's stitched onto the left breastplate of the Bears' 2025 jerseys. The football is orange, and McCaskey's initials are navy blue. The patch is strikingly similar to the one Chicago used during the 1983 season to commemorate McCaskey's father, George Halas, who founded, owned, coached and played for the Bears over the course of a Pro Football Hall of Fame career. "We thought it would be appropriate if her patch mirrored her dad's from 1983," George McCaskey, son of Virginia and current Bears owner, told the team's website. "So it's the same size, the same color combination. The only thing that's different, of course, is the initials. We thought that was the right thing to do." The "VMH" patch will make its debut on Aug. 10 when the Bears kick off preseason action at home against the Miami Dolphins. Also in honor of McCaskey, Chicago won't wear alternate or throwback uniforms this season. Per the team website, the Bears will wear navy jerseys and white pants at home and white jerseys and navy pants on the road. Players will be outfitted with the franchise's famous navy helmets for every game. On the back of each of those helmets will lie a football-shaped decal, with McMichael's No. 76 featured under the laces. That same logo will be painted on the grass of Soldier Field for every Bears home game this season. McMichael, a Hall of Fame defensive tackle who played for the organization from 1981-93, died at 67 years old on April 23 after battling ALS. McMichael was part of the 1985 Bears, who went 15-1 before winning Super Bowl XX. The decal logo will also be painted on the grass at Soldier Field for every Bears home game. Even though the 2025 season marks a new era for the franchise, with George McCaskey taking over as owner and Ben Johnson taking over as head coach, the Bears are faithfully remembering their past, too.

Matt Turner joins Revolution on loan from Lyon as he looks to get back to national team form
Matt Turner joins Revolution on loan from Lyon as he looks to get back to national team form

Yahoo

time7 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Matt Turner joins Revolution on loan from Lyon as he looks to get back to national team form

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — Matt Turner is returning to his MLS roots as he looks to get back into position to compete for the starting job as U.S. national team's goalkeeper. Turner will join the New England Revolution on loan from French Ligue 1 club Lyon through June 2026, the Revolution announced Friday. The deal includes an option to purchase the contract of Turner, who will be a designated player on the Revolution's roster for the remainder of the 2025 season. He'll be eligible for targeted allocation money in 2026. One of the reasons that Turner was displaced by New York City FC's Matt Freese at the U.S. starter at goalkeeper for the CONCACAF Gold Cup matches in June and July was that he hadn't played consistently at the club level for France's Lyon. Turner, 31, became the No. 1 U.S. goalkeeper ahead of the 2022 World Cup and had started 14 consecutive competitive matches for the U.S. and 23 of 24 before the Gold Cup. Turner will now look to get back to that level in New England, where he made his pro debut in 2016. He last played for New England in 2022, posting a 53.3% save percentage over five starts. ___ AP soccer:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store