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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Falcons in playoffs

Nightmare of ’07 a thing of the past

Vikings linebacker Chad Greenway tackles Falcons running back Michael Turner, who had 70 yards and one TD on Sunday.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By JON KRAWCZYNSKI Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS – When Mike Smith took over as coach of the Atlanta Falcons in January, he inherited a team still smarting from Bobby Petrino’s defection and sickened by Michael Vick’s incarceration.

Less than an hour after watching his team clinch a most unlikely playoff berth, things are coming together much faster than even the white-haired optimist ever could imagine.

Matt Ryan threw for a touchdown and made no big mistakes, Justin Blalock recovered a fumble in the end zone for another score and the Minnesota Vikings committed four turnovers in a 24-17 loss on Sunday that clinched a postseason berth for the Falcons.

“We set milestones and we’ve reached those milestones at a much quicker pace than we had anticipated,” Smith said.

Michael Turner rushed for 70 yards and a touchdown for the Falcons (10-5), who were 4-12 a year ago and ended the season without a head coach or a franchise quarterback.

With Smith calling the shots and Ryan’s steady hand, the Falcons have that and so much more now.

“It’s huge for us,” Blalock said. “To come from the beginning of this year, the negative expectations, the negative talk around our camp, it feels pretty good to be here.”

Tarvaris Jackson played well in his second straight start for the Vikings (9-6), who could have clinched their first division title since 2000. Jackson threw for 233 yards and two scores and rushed for 76 yards, but also had a fumble at the Atlanta 16.

Minnesota fumbled the ball seven times and lost four of them.

The league’s leading rusher, Adrian Peterson, was held to 76 yards. He lost a fumble inside the Atlanta 20, another one on a botched handoff from Jackson and had one more that he recovered on the final drive.

“I’m hurting right now. It’s killing me,” Peterson said. “We had a chance to win the NFC North, and we did everything to screw it up today. Including me. Turnovers and things like that. We can’t have that. So I’m very disappointed right now.”

The Vikings’ defense couldn’t generate any turnovers of their own, missing their big chance when Ryan helicoptered toward the goal line in the third quarter.

The ball popped out and trickled right through safety Darren Sharper’s legs. Cornerback Cedric Griffin also had a shot at it, but couldn’t secure it.

To no surprise to Falcons fans, it was the 6-foot-4, 330-pound Blalock who pounced on the ball instead, giving Atlanta a 24-7 lead late in the third quarter. It was Blalock who beat three Tampa Bay defenders to a fumble by Ryan at midfield last week that extended a drive in a 13-10 win.

“I don’t know, the ball just seems to gravitate towards me,” Blalock said with a sheepish chuckle.

The Vikings still have a shot at their first NFC North title, needing a Chicago loss in its last two games or a win over the New York Giants next week in the season finale. The Bears host Green Bay tonight, then play at Houston.