brand-logo
Home/NFL
feature-image

USA Today via Reuters

feature-image

USA Today via Reuters

The Falcons vs Vikings week 2 game was supposed to be a hard-hitting game. Although the Vikes have won 4 of 5 games since 2017, the Falcons are also coming off a season opener win. But the halftime score of 9-6 made it boring to some fans. In the first half, the Falcons fought a gritty defensive duel where every point mattered. The entire first half belonged to the kickers, with drives stalling in scoring range and both defenses forcing quick stops.

James Pearce Jr. and Jalon Walker gave Atlanta an early spark, each grabbing the first sack of their careers. Pearce’s came late in the first quarter on 3rd and two, while Walker’s hit landed in the second quarter on second and goal.

Parker Romo stayed perfect under pressure, converting three field goals. He hit a 38-yarder in the first quarter at 3:48, a 29-yarder at 2:30, and another in the second quarter that stretched the Falcons’ lead. The Falcons replaced the veteran kicker Younghoe Koo with him to gain an edge, and it worked.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

All 15 first-half points came off kicks. Romo’s three, plus Vikings rookie Will Reichard’s two, including a 51-yard bomb at 0:25 in the second quarter, kept Minnesota within striking distance despite their stalled red zone trips.

Billy Bowman Jr. made one of the half’s biggest plays with his first career interception in the second quarter, picking off J.J. McCarthy on 1st and ten. The Falcons’ pass rush was the story of the day, finishing with six total sacks. They harassed McCarthy from start to finish, racking up 28 yards lost on sacks.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

NFL second-year QBs fail to impress in Week 2

Everyone hoped that Michael Penix Jr. vs. J.J. McCarthy would be exciting. But that was not the case. By the final whistle, the Falcons eked out a 22-6 win over Minnesota. But the quarterbacks were far from the story.

Michael Penix Jr. arrived in the league with fireworks on his resume. At Washington, he threw for 4,903 yards and 36 touchdowns. Atlanta took him in Round 1 to be their franchise guy. He showed flashes as a rookie, with 775 passing yards and 3 touchdowns over five games, enough to fuel belief that 2025 would be a leap. On Sunday, he went 13-of-21 for 135 yards, no touchdowns or interceptions, and took three sacks. Bijan Robinson carried the load, rushing 22 times for 143 yards, while Parker Romo nailed all five field goals, including a 54-yarder, keeping the Falcons in front.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

What’s your perspective on:

Falcons' defense shines—are they the NFL's most underrated unit this season?

Have an interesting take?

J.J. McCarthy, the Michigan legend, came in with similar hype, 27-1 as a starter, national champion, over 6,200 career passing yards. Minnesota trusted him to lead. But he struggled, going 11-of-21 for 158 yards with two interceptions and six sacks. Justin Jefferson was a bright spot, hauling in three catches for 81 yards, including a 50-yard bomb, but McCarthy was under constant pressure, turning a potential breakout into a textbook second-year stumble.

Second-year slumps are real. Penix and McCarthy avoided disaster, but neither dominated. No touchdown passes. This game will go down as a reminder, potential is not the same as production, and young quarterbacks still have lessons to learn.

ADVERTISEMENT

0
  Debate

Falcons' defense shines—are they the NFL's most underrated unit this season?

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT