Falcons Rookie Quarterback Is Making This Roster Battle Very Real

Undrafted free agent Jack Strand is turning heads at Falcons camp with his sharp performance and could disrupt the team's quarterback plans.

The Falcons have turned their quarterback room into one of the more interesting battles of the summer, and Jack Strand has forced his way into the conversation.

At the top, Atlanta still has the broader competition between Michael Penix Jr. and Tua Tagovailoa for the starting job. But the depth chart behind them is unsettled too, with Trevor Siemian and Strand fighting for the QB3 role.

Siemian should enter that fight with the edge. He’s 34, carries a $1.3 million base salary that matches Tagovailoa’s, and brings a much longer NFL résumé.

He has spent a decade as a journeyman and has 33 starts under his belt. Strand, by contrast, arrives without any D1 experience.

Still, the undrafted rookie has been one of the biggest standouts of Falcons minicamp. During mandatory minicamp, he got extra reps while Siemian was out with an injury. Later, when Penix Jr. had a planned rest day early in OTAs, Strand made the most of the opportunity and connected on some sharp throws to Zachariah Branch and Dylan Drummond.

What has helped him stand out is the same thing that made him an intriguing pre-draft visit for Atlanta: there’s something workable there. The MSU-Morehead product put together a decorated college run, shattering program records and earning a Harlon Hill Trophy nomination in each of his final three seasons. He also won NSIC Offensive Player of the Year.

That production has to be viewed through the lens of Division II football, but the Falcons clearly think Strand has traits worth developing. At 6-foot-4 and 243 pounds, he brings size, accuracy, and arm talent that could translate into a solid NFL backup.

For now, the path to the roster is still steep. Siemian has the experience advantage, and Strand has to keep proving he belongs. Even so, his summer showing has been enough to keep him in the mix, and if he doesn’t win the job outright, Atlanta is likely to try to stash him on the practice squad and keep building him up.

The Falcons may still have a quarterback hierarchy to sort out, but Strand has already done enough to make the decision tougher than expected.

In Other News...

Falcons Suddenly Face A Brutal Michael Penix Jr. Decision

Training camp questions have a way of exposing every crack in a quarterback plan, and Atlanta is walking into this one with Michael Penix Jr. at the center of it. The former first-rounder has had enough early starts to give the Falcons a feel for what he can and cannot yet do, and the numbers have been solidly middle-of-the-road as he tries to establish himself as the long-term answer under center.

What makes the situation more uncomfortable is the backdrop around him. Penix was not drafted by the current Falcons regime, which always matters when a new staff is trying to stamp its own identity on a roster, and the quarterback battle chatter around the league only adds to the pressure. Atlanta does not need another year of uncertainty at the position, but with a new camp evaluation ahead, Penix is still the player everyone will be watching closest. [Read more 🡒]

Falcons Quarterback Battle Just Took A More Unsettling Turn

Spring practices have already offered the Falcons a glimpse of how this quarterback evaluation could unfold, with Tua Tagovailoa handling all of the first-team 11-on-11 work while Michael Penix Jr. continues his recovery from a torn ACL. Atlanta has spent more on Penix and has every reason to see how he responds once he is cleared for full contact, but for now the team is still collecting information rather than making a declaration.

The next real checkpoint comes when training camp opens July 29 in Flowery Branch, when the reps are expected to be split and the competition should get a lot harder to read. Until then, the Falcons are living with a tricky set of variables: a veteran on a short-term deal, a younger quarterback the organization has invested in more heavily, and a timeline that keeps pushing the answer a little farther down the road. [Read more 🡒]