Bijan Robinson Is Already A Star But Falcons Fans See One Debate

Bijan Robinson continues to shine as one of the NFL's top running backs, yet still seeks to refine his game with a focus on ball security and boosting his touchdown statistics under the Atlanta Falcons' new coaching regime.

Bijan Robinson has already done the hard part. In just three seasons, the Atlanta Falcons running back has gone from can’t-miss prospect to full-blown superstar, and the scary part for everyone else is that there’s still more room for him to grow.

Robinson entered the league with the kind of résumé that turns heads fast. He was a five-star recruit out of high school, ranked 21st in the country and rated the nation’s No. 1 running back after a standout run at Salpointe Catholic High School. The expectations followed him to college, where the scouting reports pegged him as an immediate contributor and a future first-round pick.

He lived up to that billing right away, even if the path wasn’t perfectly clean. As a freshman, Robinson shared work with Roschon Johnson, but he still piled up 86 carries for 703 yards and four touchdowns. He also led the conference in yards per attempt at 8.2, a sign that the talent was always obvious even before the stat lines got loud.

From there, the production kept climbing. Over his next two seasons, Robinson added 400 yards to his total in each year, then capped his college career as a unanimous All-American and the winner of the Doak Walker Award as the nation’s best running back. By the end of his senior season, he had nearly 1,900 total yards and 20 touchdowns.

That made him one of the premier names in the 2023 NFL Draft, and the Falcons didn’t hesitate. Atlanta took Robinson with the eighth overall pick, even after drafting Tyler Allgeier the year before, when Allgeier had rushed for 1,000 yards as a rookie.

Robinson’s first NFL season showed exactly why the Falcons were willing to make room. He finished 10th in scrimmage yards with 1,463 and scored eight total touchdowns, while carrying the ball 214 times for 976 yards and four scores. Allgeier still had a role, taking 186 carries, but Robinson’s value stretched far beyond the run game.

The biggest shift came as a receiver. Robinson had flashed that skill in college, though he had only 60 career catches over three seasons.

In his rookie year alone, he nearly matched that total, hauling in 58 passes for 487 yards and four touchdowns. The highlight plays came with it, and the league got a clear look at what was coming next.

Year two brought the full breakout on the ground. Robinson rushed for 1,456 yards and 14 touchdowns and added 61 receptions for 431 yards, enough to earn his first Pro Bowl nod.

Then came year three, and he took another leap. Robinson led the league with 2,298 scrimmage yards, ran for 1,478 yards at more than five yards per carry, and nearly doubled his previous career high as a receiver with 79 catches for 820 yards.

Even with that kind of production, there are still a few places for him to sharpen the edges. Ball security is one. Robinson tied his career high with four fumbles last season, and he has nine in three NFL seasons, with some of those turnovers coming in costly moments.

Touchdowns are another area he can push higher. After scoring 15 times in his second season, he finished with 11 last year. That’s still a strong number, but with Allgeier no longer there to siphon off goal-line work, Robinson has a clear path to climb back up.

Now heading into year four with a new coaching staff and a big contract extension on the horizon, Robinson is positioned for another huge season - and probably plenty more of the kind of runs and catches that keep filling up highlight reels.

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