Cousins, take two
Playing in a game for the first time in more than 10 months, Kirk Cousins struggled mightily in his Atlanta debut.
Hardly what the Falcons expected from a quarterback who received a four-year, $180-million contract in free agency that includes $100 million in guaranteed money.
Coach Raheem Morris made it clear that the offense was the biggest problem against the Steelers. Cousins looked shaky in the pocket, threw two interceptions and finished with just 155 yards passing on 16 of 26 completions.
Most notably, he failed to take advantage of two of his biggest playmakers. Tight end Kyle Pitts did catch a 12-yard touchdown pass but finished with just three receptions for 26 yards. Even worse, top outside threat Drake London was targeted only three times, making two catches for 15 yards.
“We played what I thought was winning football in two phases of the game, and we didn’t play winning football in our offensive phase of the game. That’s just the truth of the matter,” Morris said. “It wasn’t good enough. We threw two interceptions. We’ve got to make better decisions in the passing game all around.”
Not done yet
Brandon Graham still has a lot left in the tank.
Graham’s first snap in the opener made him the first Eagle to ever start a 15th season. He was tied with Pro Football Hall of Famer Chuck Bednarik (14, 1949-62). Graham also has the record for the most regular-season games played (196) in franchise history.
The 36-year-old defensive end played 32 snaps against the Packers — one more than second-year edge rusher Nolan Smith and two more than defensive end Bryce Huff. Huff signed a three-year, $51 million free-agent deal in the offseason.
Graham could expect a similar workload against the Falcons.
“Brandon is still a good player, and I’ve told him several times, he’s not on any ceremonial last-year retirement parade,” defensive coordinator Vic Fangio said. “He’s going to play. He’s still playing good.”
Jarrett returns
One Atlanta player who didn’t look rusty at all in Week 1 was Grady Jarrett.
Coming back from a season-ending knee injury, the longtime stalwart of Atlanta’s defensive front picked right up where he left off.
Jarrett had 1 1/2 sacks and three quarterback hits, becoming the franchise leader in the latter category with 117 for his career to surpass John Abraham’s 115.
“I know I’m back,” Jarrett said. “I put a lot of work in, zero doubt in my mind. I’m ready to go. I’m just excited to have a great year and contribute to this team the best I can.”
Tush push woes
The tush push is still alive in Philly.
Alive and well? Not so much, at least not after an opening victory where the tush push was unsuccessful on at least two attempts and there was some miscommunication between Hurts and center Cam Jurgens on other plays.
The play goes like this: Hurts lines up under center with two or three players behind him. He takes the snap, the offensive line surges forward and Hurts gets a big push from behind.
The Eagles converted the play about 93% of the time each of the past two seasons. Jason Kelce, the burly center who anchored the play, retired. Jurgens took over at center and the play — the offensive line as a whole — underwent early growing pains.
“I was pleased with the way we were getting some push on some of them,” Sirianni said. “We have some things to clean up.”