Falcons Risk Undoing A Recent WR Move With One More Signing

Are the Atlanta Falcons risking their recent roster moves by considering a high-profile yet potentially redundant addition to their wide receiver corps?

The Falcons have already done plenty of work at wide receiver this offseason, but the position still feels unfinished.

Atlanta added Zachariah Branch, Olamide Zaccheaus and Jahan Dotson to a room that had “zero depth last season,” yet beat reporter Josh Kendall thinks one more move could still be on the table before the season starts. It might not be a headline-grabber, but Kendall pointed to the kind of fringe roster work first-year general manager Ian Cunningham has been doing since taking over.

"First-year general manager Ian Cunningham has been diligent in improving the fringes of Atlanta's roster since being hired, and if there's going to be a random offseason move, it might come at wide receiver," Kendall wrote.

That possibility opens the door to a free-agent market that still has some recognizable names sitting there. Deebo Samuel, Stefon Diggs, Tyreek Hill and Keenan Allen are the top receivers available, and because it’s still summer, a deal probably wouldn’t require Atlanta to pay a huge price.

Bleacher Report’s Moe Moton projected the Falcons as a landing spot for Samuel while discussing ideal fits for top offensive free agents.

"As a proven pass-catcher who can fill a void and carve out a secondary role of his own, the seven-year veteran would be an ideal fit with the receiver-needy Atlanta Falcons," Moton wrote.

On paper, the idea makes some sense. Atlanta does need more help at receiver.

But Samuel doesn’t line up cleanly with what the Falcons already spent draft capital on this year. Moton described him as someone who could step in as the No. 2 option and create after the catch, but that is the exact kind of job Branch was drafted to handle.

Moton wrote:

"Atlanta has an unsettled receiver corps behind Drake London. Jahan Dotson, Olamide Zaccheaus and rookie third-rounder Zachariah Branch will compete for targets in complementary roles...

Samuel would be an immediate upgrade in the No. 2 spot. Most importantly, he can extend plays after the catch."

The issue for Atlanta is fit, not just talent. The Falcons need more of an outside receiver who can stretch the field and fill the role Dotson is in line for, not another slot-heavy, YAC-oriented piece when Branch is younger and built for that same space.

That’s why a Samuel move would feel redundant. It would basically wipe out the purpose of drafting Branch in the first place, and that’s the last thing Atlanta should be doing. Another receiver addition still feels possible, but the Falcons need to be careful not to make a move that undercuts the one they already made.

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