Tua Tagovailoa is in position to make a real run at the NFL’s Comeback Player of the Year award in 2026, and the setup in Atlanta is a big reason why.
His final season with the Miami Dolphins went off the rails, and there’s no way around that. But the picture was more complicated than a simple collapse.
Mike McDaniel’s offense had run its course, and the Dolphins’ top targets had trouble staying on the field. That left Tagovailoa in a tough spot.
Now there’s cautious optimism in Atlanta that the left-handed quarterback can get back to the version of himself that flashed before. If that happens under Kevin Stefanski, the award conversation gets very real.
Bleacher Report’s Alex Kay included Tagovailoa among his dark horse picks for the major NFL awards, and his case for Comeback Player of the Year centered on health and the talent around him.
"Tua Tagovailoa's career has been pockmarked by injury, but the polarizing signal-caller could finally find consistent success-and health-now that he's with the Atlanta Falcons," Kay wrote. "If Tagovailoa seizes the QB1 role, he'll have the elite supporting cast-led by first-round skill position stars in Drake London, Kyle Pitts and Bijan Robinson-needed to re-emerge as one of the NFL's top passers."
That kind of award carries real weight. In recent years, it has gone to names like Christian McCaffrey, Joe Burrow, Rob Gronkowski, Peyton Manning, Matthew Stafford, Michael Vick, and Tom Brady. Getting your name into that group is no small thing.
Tagovailoa also has a path to stand out in a crowded field. He is battling a rehabbing Michael Penix Jr., which at least gives him a head start in the race to be the Week 1 starter, even if the coaches say the competition is open.
And the upside is obvious. Tagovailoa has already led the NFL in passer rating in 2022, passing yards in 2023, and completion percentage in 2024.
If he can put together even two of those traits in 2026, the Falcons would have a quarterback with enough help around him to make noise. If that happens, he’d also become the franchise’s first CPOY winner.
The competition won’t be easy. A wave of major injuries last year means plenty of players will get attention before him, including Patrick Mahomes, Jayden Daniels, Micah Parsons, Malik Nabers, Fred Warner, Nick Bosa, and others. But playing the most important position in sports and helping end the playoff drought would give Tagovailoa a strong case.
In Other News...
Falcons Camp Battle Could Elevate One Receiver Nobody Saw Coming
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One of the more interesting names in that mix is Vinny Anthony II, the undrafted rookie trying to carve out a roster spot in a crowded field. His path is not just about catching passes, either, because Atlanta could use help on special teams and Anthony brings kick return experience that gives him a different kind of value as camp opens, while the teams decision to put real money behind his signing suggests he is not just another body in the room. [Read more 🡒]
Falcons Fans Just Got Another Risky Pass Rush Proposal
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There is also the timing to consider, since any deal for a player in a contract year can quickly turn into a second decision about whether to hand out a major extension right away. For a team trying to balance urgency with patience, that makes a splashy move feel a lot riskier than a series of smaller additions, and the Falcons seem more likely to take the quieter route unless the right opportunity opens up. [Read more 🡒]
Falcons Rookie Zachariah Branch Finally Addressed That Viral 26 MPH Clip
Zachariah Branch has spent much of his football life being defined by speed, and the Atlanta Falcons rookie wide receiver finally had a chance to speak directly about the viral treadmill clip that made the rounds long before he got to the league. The image of him flying on an overspeed treadmill became part of his public profile, but Branchs background already pointed that way, from his days as a high school track runner to the kind of burst that helped him post a 4.35-second 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine.
For the Falcons, the bigger point is that the clip was never just a social media novelty. Branch has continued to train at eye-catching speeds as he prepares for camp, and Atlanta is planning to use him as both a receiver and a return man. In a league that never stops chasing speed, Branchs challenge now is turning the fascination around his wheels into a role that matters once the games start. [Read more 🡒]
