FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — The check cleared, but the quarterback hits didn’t following suit. After the Atlanta Falcons handed Leonard Floyd a fully guaranteed $10 million lifeline last March, the veteran pass rusher responded with a stat line that looks more like a backup’s resume than a hired gun’s. Floyd finished the 2025 campaign with just 3.5 sacks and 19 total tackles—his quietest season since the Chicago Bears almost gave up on him in 2019.
The math was simple for Atlanta last spring: Scoop up a proven disruptor after the 49ers cut him loose for cap space. Floyd had been a model of consistency, ripping off at least 8.5 sacks in five straight seasons. But the 2025 tape tells a different story. Floyd didn’t just regress; he vanished for long stretches.
His snap count eroded as the season wore on, and it wasn’t just about age. The Falcons’ massive investment in the draft paid immediate dividends, forcing the veteran to the sideline. Rookie first-rounders James Pearce and Jalon Walker didn’t wait their turn. They kicked the door down. With Pearce’s explosive get-off and Walker’s versatility wrecking game plans, Floyd became the odd man out in a rotation that suddenly looked too fast for a 33-year-old entering his twilight.
The drop-off is stark:
“This league is about what you’re doing right now, not what you did three years ago in L.A. When you got young dogs like Pearce and Walker hungry for every rep, you either match that energy or you watch from the sideline. It’s the nature of the beast.” — Anonymous Falcons Defensive Veteran
Floyd hits the open market next month as an unrestricted free agent, but the phone might not ring as loudly this time. Spotrac currently values his annual market rate at $8.9 million, a figure that feels optimistic given his recent ghost act. General Managers pay for future sacks, not past glory, and paying nearly $9 million for a situational rusher entering his age-34 season is a tough sell.
Expect Floyd to test the waters, but don’t be shocked if he has to settle for a heavily incentivized “prove-it” deal to keep his career alive. The sack artist needs to paint a new masterpiece, or he might find himself out of the frame entirely.