The Falcons have won nine of 32 games since that glorious Super Bowl season 
in 1998, and for good reason. Injuries to halfback Jamal Anderson and 
quarterback Chris Chandler have sidetracked the offense and there has been an 
alarming deterioration along both lines. The Falcons might have been the 
slowest team in the league last season.
    
   
|  | CAMP AT A GLANCE 
 | 
|  |  | 
| Dan Reeves is entering his fifth season in Atlanta. | 
 | Location: Furman University, Greenville, S.C. Rookies report: July 19
 Veterans report: July 19
 Preseason schedule:
 Aug. 3: Pittsburgh
 Aug. 12: at N.Y. Jets
 Aug. 17: at Washington
 Aug. 31: Tampa Bay
 
 
 | 
The offseason was a success on two fronts. The Falcons ponied up $16 
million in signing bonuses to re-sign offensive tackle Bob Whitfield and 
cornerback Ray Buchanan, their two best players. Then they made a blockbuster 
trade before draft day and landed quarterback Michael Vick with the first 
pick overall. Unfortunately, those deals tied the Falcons' hands financially 
and many of the pressing needs on both lines remain, which dampens the 
optimism for this season.
    
 
Man in the spotlight
Dan Reeves is entering the fifth and possibly last 
year of a five-year contract as coach and general manager. The Falcons were 
14-2 in 1998, 16-32 in Reeves' other three seasons. The offense, which is 
Reeves' baby, slipped to 30th last year. Owner Taylor Smith is a Reeves 
supporter, but things didn't look good when assistant coaches Rich Brooks and 
Bill Kollar jumped ship after the season. The Vick trade showed Reeves is 
finally thinking like a general manager and not a coach, which might be a 
sign that this is his last year on the sideline.
  
 Key position battle
Chandler remains the starter at quarterback, but he's 
merely keeping the seat warm for Vick. Chandler is 35, injury prone and was 
benched for two games last year because Reeves didn't like his leadership. He 
became a model citizen once Vick was drafted, accepting a pay cut and 
compiling a perfect attendance record during offseason workouts. Vick is a 
spectacular athlete who clearly isn't ready to start in the NFL. If Chandler 
gets off to a slow start, however, fans will be clamoring for Vick to take 
the reins. They might get homestate hero Eric Zeier instead.
  
  
Biggest adjustment
For six years, the Falcons had some of the NFL's best 
special teams. Dan Stryzinski's sky-high punts were virtually unreturnable, 
kicker Morten Andersen was automatic short and long and, in recent years, Tim 
Dwight was a dangerous return man. Now they're all gone, replaced by 
uncertainty. At punter, Atlanta signed ex-Bill Chris Mohr, whose 31.4-yard 
net average ranked last in the NFL (Stryzinski was first at 37.9). Andersen's 
job will go to Jake Arians, who made such a strong impression in training 
camp last year that he was kept on the practice squad. Darrick Vaughn made 
Dwight expandable on kickoff returns last year but the punt return job is 
wide open.
  
Rookie report
The Falcons gave away some of their draft to land Vick, then 
all but ignored both lines. Tight end Alge Crumpler, taken in the second 
round, isn't needed with Reggie Kelly around. In the fourth round, the 
Falcons took center Robert Garza, who had a good Senior Bowl, and linebacker 
Matt Stewart, who might get a shot with the loss of Henri Crockett in free 
agency and Keith Brooking's continuing injury woes. Fifth-round wide receiver 
Vinny Sutherland will be limited to kick and punt return duty early.
Falcons' complete offseason moves