Falcons QB contenders afforded plenty of snaps

Atlanta Journal-Constitution photo by Jason Getz via AP / Marcus Mariota, left, and Desmond Ridder throw during the Atlanta Falcons' training camp Wednesday in Flowery Branch, Ga. The Falcons have only three quarterbacks in camp, and Feleipe Franks is spending most of his time at tight end right now.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution photo by Jason Getz via AP / Marcus Mariota, left, and Desmond Ridder throw during the Atlanta Falcons' training camp Wednesday in Flowery Branch, Ga. The Falcons have only three quarterbacks in camp, and Feleipe Franks is spending most of his time at tight end right now.

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. - Desmond Ridder has heard stories from NFL training camps where four or five quarterbacks line up for snaps, adding pressure to make the most of every repetition.

There's no shortage of opportunities for Ridder at the Atlanta Falcons' camp.

The rookie from the University of Cincinnati and veteran Marcus Mariota are taking almost every snap. The only other quarterback in camp, Feleipe Franks, is spending most of his time at tight end.

Second-year coach Arthur Smith wants to give Mariota, who opened camp as the starter, and Ridder, a possible long-term option, as much time behind center as possible before the Sept. 11 regular-season opener against the rival New Orleans Saints.

"We'll still give Feleipe some reps at certain points, but when you have a limited number of reps, we're trying to make sure Marcus and Des get as many as they can," Smith said Wednesday, adding he has a "contingency plan" at the position.

That's just fine with Ridder.

"I'm grateful for that," said Ridder, the No. 74 overall selection and a third-round pick this year. "Sometimes you might be a little tired out here because it's just two guys, but then you think you're working up to this point our entire lives and with three, four or five guys in training camp, you hear the stories that you might only get the one rep. You better make sure that rep counts.

"I'm just blessed to come in here and for right now be one of the two guys."

Ridder made a strong early impression as a quick learner at the team's rookie camp and minicamp. Even so, Mariota would have to be outplayed by Ridder to lose the starting job.

The Falcons signed Mariota to an $18.75 million, two-year deal on March 21 after trading 14-year starter Matt Ryan to the Indianapolis Colts.

Mariota, 28, is motivated to take advantage of the opportunity to revive his career in his second stint with Smith, the former Tennessee Titans offensive coordinator.

Mariota, who was the Titans' top quarterback for his first four seasons, was limited to only a combined six starts the past three years with Tennessee and the Las Vegas Raiders. Now comes the fresh start he sought.

"I think for me, it's a great opportunity for me to prove not only to myself but to those who have believed in me," Mariota said. "So I'm excited. The last couple of years was a great reset."

Mariota has 61 career starts in the NFL and the added advantage of familiarity with Smith's system, though the quarterback noted the coach has tweaked his playbook through the years.

"I feel very comfortable," said Mariota, the No. 2 pick in the 2015 NFL draft. "Being around Art for all of that time in Tennessee, I think that's where it comes from, but I think he's done a great job of collaborating and creating new things. For us as an offense, it's exciting. It allows us to just go and play fast and do creative things, but for the most part, I feel really comfortable, I feel really confident and I like where we're at."

Eager to learn, Ridder is studying his playbook. He's also paying close attention to Mariota.

"Marcus has been in Coach Smith's system before, so he knows a lot more," Ridder said. "I'm just trying to learn from him and learn how he goes about the game plan and learn how we go about things each and every week just so I can better myself and be the best I can be."

photo AP photo by Brynn Anderson / Atlanta Falcons coach Arthur Smith looks on Thursday during training camp in Flowery Branch, Ga.

Honor roll

Todd McClure, the center who played his entire NFL career with Atlanta, has been selected to the Falcons Ring of Honor. McClure, who retired after the 2012 season, set a franchise record by starting 144 consecutive games from 2001-10, and he played 14 seasons in all.

He will become the 12th player inducted into the Falcons Ring of Honor when they hold a ceremony at halftime of an NFC South Division game against the Carolina Panthers on Oct. 30 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The Falcons have previously inducted William Andrews, Steve Bartkowski, Warrick Dunn, Claude Humphrey, Mike Kenn, Tommy Nobis, Gerald Riggs, Deion Sanders, Jessie Tuggle, Jeff Van Note and Roddy White.

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