As Turner Soars So Do the Falcons

Turner, the Falcons’ 5-foot-10, 244-pound running back is a squat target, all shoulder pads and knee pads as he plows to the hole. If he rushes for 100 yards, the passing game is a more substantial threat. If he churns first downs, it means that Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers will have to stew on the sidelines and watch a game of Monopoly by the home team.

“The way to really spark this team is to get the run game going,” Turner said. “That’s the easiest way to get us going.”

The Falcons can win on Saturday night at the Georgia Dome if quarterback Matt Ryan can make plays to wide receiver Roddy White and tight end Tony Gonzalez and if Turner can beat the run blitz, which is sure to come.

“If teams run blitz and you can get your running back started, there’s going to be chances for big plays because they’re going to have the safety down and there’s going to be one guy left in the middle of the field,” center Todd McClure said. “If we can get him to that second level, that’s where he can do some damage; just get him to his first cut.”

Turner, who is in the third season of a six-year deal that pays $34.5 million, led the N.F.C. in rushing with 1,371 yards. He scored 12 touchdowns and had seven games of 100-plus yards, even as part of an offense that completed the seventh most passes in the (361).

The consequences for the defense when Turner gets to the second level — face-to-face with a cornerback, safety or outside linebacker — are that the thick Turner can block for the decently fast Turner. He does not need an escort. His shoulder pads hit the safety or corner; his legs carry him past.

Turner ranked fourth in the N.F.L. with yards after contact (694). He has nine runs over 20 yards. The Falcons do not call him Burner Turner. They call him MARTA, for the commuter train system in Atlanta.

Turner was called something much worse following an injury-marred 2009 season, in which he rushed for 871 yards. There was a list full of derision: one-hit wonder, fat and happy, a flash in the pan, and on and on.

In his first season in Atlanta in 2008 after backing up LaDainian Tomlinson for four seasons in San Diego, Turner ran for 1,699 yards and 17 touchdowns and helped carry the Falcons to the playoffs.

In 2009, the yards plummeted, not just because of the high-ankle sprain, but because Turner was heavier and not as fine-tuned. He intended to rest his body following his first full season as a starter in 2008, but he took it too far and gained weight. The ankle injury, which sidelined him five games, was the primary reason he slumped, but Turner knew conditioning was a factor, too.

In the Falcons’ locker room Wednesday, which was filled with media, Turner had a chance to perhaps chortle and stiff arm some of the critics. Instead, after practice, he went right to his regular routine of lifting weights.

When he came back to his locker, there were only four minutes left for the media’s allowed time in the locker room. At first, he shrugged off the notion that he was motivated this season by criticism.

“I was so focused on this year and so focused on finishing strong I haven’t had a chance to sit back and think about what I’m accomplishing this year,” Turner said.

Asked if was satisfying to see his career get back on track, Turner said: “It sticks with you, that’s something you keep in the back of your mind because you want to prove people wrong. As a competitor that’s your nature; to prove people wrong. You know you have the ability to do something and people are still out there saying you can’t do it.

“I think that’s behind me now,” he said. “I don’t think people can say I was a one-hit wonder.”

Against Green Bay, when the Atlanta offense comes to the line, receivers and backs will shift and go in motion, all designed to slow the Packers’ reactions because the defenders are considering where the ball might go.

If the Falcons have their way, it will not be complicated. The ball will go straight ahead with Turner.

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RB Starks Adds Wrinkle as Falcons Prep for Packers

, Wis. (AP) — The Atlanta Falcons were just as surprised as most of the fans sitting at home. Until this week, they’d never heard of Green Bay Packers running back James Starks, either.

Before Sunday, Starks was a sixth-round pick out of Buffalo who had struggled to get on the field because of injuries and inconsistent practice habits. Then he rushed for 123 yards in Green Bay’s 21-16 playoff victory at Philadelphia.

“He came out of nowhere,” Falcons middle linebacker Curtis Lofton said. “I’d never heard of Starks. I’d never seen him on film until the past two weeks. But he’s a talented back.”

And after smothering the Packers’ running game when the two teams played back in November, the Falcons certainly don’t plan to allow some rookie to have a big performance in Saturday’s playoff game at the Georgia Dome.

“When you can run the ball and pass the ball, that makes you that much more dangerous,” Lofton said. “They tried to run the ball against us the first time, and we shut it down. So that’s what we’re looking to do again.”

Packers coach Mike McCarthy said Starks has earned a bigger role in the offense.

“He’ll have opportunities in Atlanta,” McCarthy said. “How many, the game will dictate that. He has earned that opportunity based off his performance this past week.”

Starks says he’s ready.

“If you love this game, you love having the ball in your hands,” Starks said. “I would love to have that but I’m grateful for whatever I can get. I’ll take whatever I’m offered.”

But even the Packers concede that Starks’ breakout performance doesn’t necessarily mean they have solved their season-long running game problems.

“I think if we’re being honest, last week was a little bit of an anomaly, if you’re comparing it to the last seven or eight weeks,” Aaron Rodgers said. “Often my own rushing stats have bumped up the average. Our feature back has been averaging in the threes, usually, and we might end up with 33 carries for 120 yards. It was just a matter of the stuff we were calling was working. We blocked better and James was decisive.”

After losing running back Ryan Grant to an ankle injury in Week 1, the Packers spent most of this season struggling to run the ball and leaned heavily on Rodgers and his receivers.

The Packers’ running game hit a low point in their Nov. 28 loss at Atlanta. In addition to throwing for 344 yards, Rodgers was the Packers’ leading rusher with 51 yards. Running back Brandon Jackson — a second-round pick in 2007 who was expected to carry the load after Grant’s injury — chipped in a mere 26 yards rushing in that game.

And while Rodgers is proud of his underrated athletic ability, it would be just fine with him if he never led the Packers in rushing again.

Could Starks be the difference for the Packers this time around?

“Well, we’ll see about that,” Rodgers said. “Last time, I was the leading rusher. Hopefully that’s not the case again. But you’ve got to give credit to James and the way he prepared last week. He was the hot guy and he got the ball. Every week, you never know who’s going to get the majority of the carries. I’m just hopeful it’s not going to be me this week.”

Even if Starks can’t duplicate last week’s performance, his potential to do so could be enough to keep the Falcons’ defense from loading up to stop Rodgers and set up the Packers’ play-action passing game.

“It’s huge,” Falcons safety William Moore said. “Now they’re good all around. Me, personally, I don’t go off one game. We’ll continue to do our game plan and just do what we’ve been executing. But he’s a great rookie. He carried the load the last game. I’m sure he’s going to show up this game with the momentum he had last game.”

Starks missed his entire senior season at Buffalo because of a shoulder injury, then began this season on the physically unable to perform list because of a hamstring injury. He had a strong debut, rushing for 73 yards in a win over San Francisco Dec. 5, but didn’t do much the following week and sat out back-to-back games after coaches became concerned with his practice habits.

Rodgers said Starks got the message.

“I don’t know if you’re going to get 123 yards every week out of him. I don’t even know if he’s going to be the hot back this week,” Rodgers said. “But we expect him to prepare to play well and practice the way he expects to play. That’s the reason he got the opportunity, because his practice habits have improved. Coach says it, I’ve said it before, you need to show us in practice what you can do in order for us to have confidence you can do it in a game. That goes for James and any other player on our offense.”

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Packers Beat Eagles, Next Meet Falcons In Playoffs

PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) – The withstood a ferocious late finish from the to win their NFL playoff 21-16 on Sunday and advance to the next round against Atlanta.

The Packers, one of the pre-season favorites to win this year’s , were never headed during the game but almost came unstuck in the final quarter as the Eagles threatened to steal victory.

Green Bay quarterback Aaron Rodgers threw three touchdown passes in the win, but the NFL’s fifth-ranked defense also benefited from some missed opportunities by the Eagles.

The NFC East division champions missed two field goals and a last-gasp pass from quarterback that might have led to a winning touchdown but was intercepted in the end zone.

While the Eagles were left ruing their missed opportunities and early exit from the post-season, the Packers moved ahead to next weekend’s divisional playoffs against NFC top seed the Atlanta Falcons.

“We’re just getting started,” Packers coach Mike McCarthy told reporters. “We just won a big football game here against a championship-caliber program and we have an opportunity to go to Atlanta to play the number one seed down there.”

The Packers led 14-3 at the half and 21-10 late in the fourth quarter before Vick drove in from the one yard line to cut the lead 21-16 with four minutes to play.

The Eagles’ two point conversion try that would have put them within a field goal failed.

Philadelphia held the Packers and got the ball back on their own 34 yard line with 1:45 left for one last push although they were out of timeouts.

Vick took the Eagles down to the Green Bay 27 but cornerback Tramon Williams intercepted a pass intended for receiver Riley Cooper to seal the win.

“The last play, I just took a shot at the end zone,” Vick said after limping into the interview room, favoring an ankle he strained on a sack late in the fourth quarter.

“I could have checked it down to the back and I got greedy and took a shot at the end zone. I didn’t throw the right ball I wanted to throw and it got picked off.

“It was a bad way to go out, but I went out swinging.”

Two botched field goal tries in windy conditions by the usually reliable David Akers, a 41 -yard attempt in the first quarter and a 34 yard shot in the fourth quarter, also punctured the hosts’ chances.

Eagles coach Andy Reid was brief in his remarks, still stinging from the defeat and miffed about the missed field goals.

“We can all count,” said Reid. “Those points would have helped.”

Rodgers completed 18-of-27 passes for 180 yards and no interceptions, while Vick was 20-of-36 for 292 yards with one touchdown and one interception.

Vick made a couple of dashes for first downs but was largely held in check by the Packers, who limited him to 33 yards on eight rushes.

Rodgers hit tight end Tom Crabtree for a seven yard touchdown in the first quarter, fired a low, nine yard touchdown bullet to James Jones in the second quarter and floated a perfect screen pass to back Brandon Jackson who scored from 16 yards in the third quarter.

A sterling performance from unheralded rookie running back James Starks provided balance to the Green Bay attack. Starks, the 193rd player chosen as a sixth round pick in the draft out of Buffalo, gained 123 yards on 23 carries.

With Starks gaining tough yards with his inside running, Green Bay was able to control the ball and keep drives alive with third down conversions.

“To win week in, week out, you have to have a combination of run and pass,” McCarthy said.

The Packers entered the game ranked a lowly 24th in rushing while Philadelphia ranked fifth but outgained them on the ground 138 yards to 82.

“He was a hot hand,” McCarthy said about Starks. “James was a difference maker.”

(Editing by Julian Linden)

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