The NFL’s cornerback debate always seems to reward the wrong kind of production. The loudest names get the most attention, while the guys who erase receivers snap after snap can somehow end up overlooked.
Atlanta Falcons cornerback A.J. Terrell fits that second category perfectly.
For six seasons, Terrell has been one of the Falcons’ most important defenders, and one of the toughest corners in the league to throw at. He doesn’t pile up the kind of splash plays that jump off the page, but that’s part of the point. Opposing quarterbacks usually find someone else to pick on.
That reality came through again in ESPN’s annual survey of NFL executives, coaches and scouts. When Jeremy Fowler asked around for the league’s top cornerbacks, Terrell landed as an honorable mention. A veteran defensive coach explained why the respect doesn’t always show up in the numbers.
"He's been really good for a long time," a veteran defensive coach said. "He just can't get the ball [with six interceptions in six NFL seasons]."
But that criticism misses the whole job description. A cornerback is supposed to make himself hard to find, and Terrell has done exactly that. His target rate hovered around 12% last year and sat at 10.8% in 2024, which tells the real story: quarterbacks are avoiding him.
He was also near the top of the NFL in yards per coverage snap in 2025 and remains one of the league’s best press-coverage players. That combination is a big reason receivers disappear against him. He may not be the kind of corner who fills up the interception column, but his value is in how little quarterbacks want to test him.
Terrell’s 2025 season wasn’t his strongest on paper, but the Falcons still got the kind of impact that doesn’t show up neatly in a box score. And if anyone wants to point to interception totals as the measuring stick, Trevon Diggs in 2021 is the reminder that picks can come with a price: he led the NFL with 11 interceptions, but was also one of the most-targeted corners in the league and gave up over 1,000 coverage yards.
Terrell has always been elite in the way that matters most for his position. Now, with his younger brother set to share the field with him, Terrell Island is about to get a little bigger in 2026.
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Two games are already locked in for 2026, including the Week 4 meeting with the Saints, and there is also a chance the station could pick up one more later in the year depending on how the schedule breaks. The arrangement also broadens Atlanta News Firsts sports reach beyond football, since it now includes all four major Atlanta pro teams, and there is already a path for more Falcons games to land there in 2027 if the team ends up on ESPN or NFL Network. [Read more 🡒]
