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Petrino resigns as Falcons coach
Jay Glazer
FOXSports.com, Updated 14 minutes ago STORY TOOLS:

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Bobby Petrino resigned as Atlanta Falcons coach on Tuesday and will take the head coaching job at Arkansas, sources told FOXSports.com. He lasted only 13 games with the NFL team.

Petrino called a staff meeting late Tuesday afternoon, a meeting which last about 10 seconds, sources said.
"He just said to us, 'Guys I've resigned, I'm going to Arkansas. I'm sorry. I'll be talking with you guys in the future.' And with that he turned and walked out the door. We haven't been told anything else," said one assistant coach.

At this point, the assistant coaches have not been told who will be coaching the team going forward.

Petrino did not address the team following his resignation. Players are livid with the way Petrino left the team and several called his handling of the situation "classless."

Petrino left Louisville to become Falcons coach in January for a five-year, $24 million contract, largely because Atlanta felt he could help star quarterback Michael Vick reach his full potential.









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A few months later, Vick came under investigation for a grisly dogfighting operation that eventually led him to plead guilty to federal charges. He was sentenced Monday to 23 months in prison without ever taking a snap for Petrino.

Arkansas has been looking for two weeks for a coach to replace Houston Nutt, who resigned after a tumultuous season and hours later took the Mississippi job.

The school had no immediate comment on its coaching search.

The Falcons declined further comment beyond a terse, two-paragraph statement released Tuesday night. Owner Arthur Blank and general manager Rich McKay were scheduled to hold a news conference Wednesday.

There was no immediate word who would take over as head coach for the final three games, though defensive coordinator Mike Zimmer and offensive coordinator Hue Jackson would be the most logical candidates.

Petrino did not answer his cell phone or a call placed to his Atlanta-area home. His brother, Falcons receivers coach Paul Petrino, declined comment when reached on his cell phone.

"I don't think I can say anything about it right now," he said. "I'm sorry."

After losing Vick, Petrino tried three other starting quarterbacks without success. The Falcons are 3-10 and assured of the 32nd losing season in their 42-year history.

The resignation of Petrino was another jarring blow to the Falcons, who dealt with Vick's legal troubles since the first day of training camp, when a plane flew overhead pulling a sign that said: "New Team Name? Dog Killers?"

Petrino assembled one of college football's highest-scoring offenses at Louisville, but the Falcons were anemic without Vick. They also were plagued by injuries on the offensive line, which forced them to start two players who weren't even drafted out of college.

Just hours after Vick's sentencing in Richmond, Va., Atlanta took its fourth straight double-digit loss, 34-14 to the New Orleans Saints.

"Not a good day," Petrino said afterward.

The resignation had to be a major surprise to Blank, who fired Jim Mora just two seasons after he led the Falcons to the NFC championship game, and lured Petrino with a lucrative contract.

Before Monday's game, Blank said he felt better than ever about his decision to hire Petrino given all the adversity the team faced this season.

"I feel real fortunate we have a terrific guy leading our team, our CEO, in Bobby Petrino," Blank said. "I think he's proven to me he's a better head coach than we thought he was going to be, dealing with a set of cards we didn't see unfold this year, which probably never in the history of the NFL has anything like this happened. Bobby has done a wonderful job dealing with all of these issues. He's kept the players focused."

But there were signs of dissension, especially in the way Petrino dealt with his players.

He ran the team with an aloof style, feeling no reason to share his decisions on personnel with the affected players. He could walk through the locker room without speaking to anyone and was openly criticized by two of the team's stars, Pro Bowlers Alge Crumpler and DeAngelo Hall.

Petrino drew the ire of the veterans with his decision to cut nose tackle Grady Jackson, one of the team's most productive defensive linemen, during the bye week. Quarterback Joey Harrington was clearly perturbed a few weeks ago when, after leading the Falcons to two straight wins, he heard from the media that Petrino still considered injury prone Byron Leftwich the starter.

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Against the Saints, the Falcons made another change at the most crucial offensive position, giving Chris Redman his first start since 2002. While Redman threw for 298 yards and two touchdowns, the Falcons lost again.

They have been outscored by an average of 18.5 points in their last four defeats.

After the latest loss, Petrino sounded as though he was still committed to getting the Falcons turned around.

"We'll come back on Wednesday to take a look at it, and then we'll get back to work," he said. "We have to find something to rally around."

But clearly, Petrino already had decided to abandon the sinking ship.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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I think it was handled badly too, but....

the Falcons are in a bad place and it will be years before they can crawl back to being a competative team. Is there any doubt that they would have fired him if next year's record was not significantly better?

Plus you've got to remember, some of the key players hated him so it wasn't going to get better.
quote:
Originally posted by ghoti:
what comes around goes around! the falcons fired dan reeves with 3 games left in the season, just a little karma for them. i think it's funny but then again i'm a hog fan!!!! lol
The difference in the Reeves situation is Reeves still got paid and the team had a plan going forward. In this situation the Falcons didn't have a plan going forward. This was a surprise. Petrino has just change is reputation from "offensive whiz" to "just another scumbag coach."

While I completely understand college sports are a business, college coaches do make an impression on their players. Bobby Bowden once showed his players it's OK to punch out a female store clerk and still play in a bowl game for a national championship (Deion Sanders).

I remember Arkansas once suspended three key players for the Orange Bowl. The odds were huge in Oklahoma's favor. Arkansas still hammered Oklahoma 31-0 with the back up tailback running for 200+ yards. The message was, "If you can't be a decent citizen we don't need you and can win without you."

I prefer my kids play for a coach like Joe Paterno. A few kids screwed up big time. He's cleaning up the program while the entire team cleans up the stadium after the game. How's that for peer pressure?
quote:
Originally posted by KellerDad:
Did Dan Reeves have a plan going forward?
A guaranteed huge paycheck until the contract expired. This is not a professional way to say good bye to players who laid their bodies on the line each week for you. Telling your boss you're not leaving the day before leaving is not professional.
Last edited by RJM
According to Blank and many of the players, Petrino was aloof and had very poor communication skills. When you are dealing with grown men with different personalities, you need to be a strong communicator. One report said that he would walk through the locker room without saying a word to any of the players - not even a "Hello". He had lost the respect of the players anyway. No one, including Blank, was blaming him for our poor season. In fact Blank had given Petrino a vote of confidence and Petrino had given Blank his word that he would be back next season. A man is as good or in Petrino's case, as bad as his word. Good riddance. We will rebound. It might take a while, but we will be back.
Last edited by Catfish
Didn't the Falcon's swoop in and hire McKay away from Tampa Bay with 3 games to go in the season. I don't agree with what happened and/or how the Falcon's or the Media has reacted after the change. Now he didn't leave for more money and what effect exactly is he going to have on what is a very poor Falcon's team in the last 3 games. It's funny how no one is commenting on that ridiculous diplay with the free Vick T shirt. That team was at of control and it was that way prior to Petrino getting there and didn't the former coach state with 3 games left in the season that he would leave imediately if Washington came calling. Perhaps we are dumping on Petrino when we should really just move on.
" Telling your boss you're not leaving the day before leaving is not professional.[/quote]"

There is no difference between when a team fires a coach in mid season and a coach leaving in mid season.

It is wrong both ways.

A guaranteed huge paycheck until the contract expired.
True the comapny had to pay him. And in Petrinos case they don't have to pay him.

This is not a professional way to say good bye to players who laid their bodies on the line each week for you.

You have a huge misunderstanding of profesional NFL. 99% of the NFL players are playing for 1 thing. Money. They are not laying it on the line for the team, the city, the coach. they are laying it on the line for $

Telling your boss you're not leaving the day before leaving is not professional.

Correct. So is hiring someone to Coach and run the team and when they tell you they need a certain player or assistant coach, and then telling them no, after you had promised them you would support and provide anything they need.

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