FLOWERY BRANCH, GA — The Atlanta Falcons won the headlines this week by snagging Tua Tagovailoa on a one-year, veteran-minimum flyer, but they just committed a front-office sin that could haunt the 2026 season. By failing to secure a legitimate secondary threat behind Drake London, General Manager Ian Cunningham left a high-octane offense idling in neutral. While the South Beach cast-off brings stability as Michael Penix Jr. recovers from a November ACL tear, he’ll have nobody to throw to once the defense brackets London.
The WR2 Ghost Town
Standing in the tunnel at Flowery Branch, you can feel the shift in energy. The roster is top-heavy with blue-chip talent like Bijan Robinson and Kyle Pitts, yet the depth chart at wideout looks like a preseason roster from a decade ago. Beyond London, the Falcons signed Jahan Dotson to a $15 million deal, a staggering overpay for a player who managed only 18 catches for 262 yards in 17 games with Philadelphia last season.
Atlanta also brought back Olamide Zaccheaus, but the rest of the room is a collection of “who’s that” names including Casey Washington and Dylan Drummond. If the Falcons fall behind by two scores, defenses will simply dare anyone not named London to beat them. This roster construction forces Bijan Robinson to carry the load as a receiver, a move that risks burning out the league’s most dynamic runner before the Week 8 mark.
“We have pieces, man. We have studs. But you can’t run a marathon on one leg. We need guys to step up on the perimeter or this league will swallow us whole.”
— Anonymous Falcons Veteran Starter
The James Pearce Jr. Dilemma
The draft won’t offer an easy escape. Atlanta currently sits at No. 48 overall, a spot where impact receivers usually vanish. Compounding the problem is the status of James Pearce Jr. After a 10.5-sack rookie campaign, Pearce is facing a possible long-term suspension following felony charges in South Florida. The Falcons are now forced to use that second-round pick on an edge rusher like Clemson’s TJ Parker or Missouri’s Zion Young just to keep the defense afloat.
If they pass on an edge defender to take a sleeper like Tennessee’s Chris Brazzell II, the pass rush dies. If they take the defender, Tua and a returning Penix Jr. will be throwing into triple coverage all year. It’s a self-inflicted corner that the front office should have avoided during the opening hours of the free agency frenzy.

