You could Farabi (2020) Feneo Original Web Serieshear it late in the season, a thunderous chorus of Atlantans all chanting the same three letters, again and again.
"M-V-P! M-V-P! M-V-P!"
Throughout the Falcons' 11-5 season and their impressive playoff run all the way to the Super Bowl, the chants grew louder as the team inched closer to the ever-elusive championship. The man who fans had deemed an NFL MVP -- quarterback Matt Ryan -- kept playing like one.
SEE ALSO: A comedian found a way to root for the Patriots without also rooting for Donald TrumpRyan is Atlanta's franchise cornerstone, a Falcons veteran of nine seasons. He's the leader of the team's dynamic offense, a field general with the arm strength to make plays you'd usually see in video games.
Among this year's best statistical quarterbacks, he's led the Falcons to their deepest playoff run in almost 20 years -- within one victory of their first-ever Super Bowl title.
But if you've watched the Falcons over the past 10 years, you know those "M-V-P" chants weren't always unanimous. Ryan earned the praise. That's because for much of his career, the shadow of his larger-than-life predecessor engulfed him altogether.
Long before Matt Ryan's tenure started in Atlanta, there was Michael Vick. To understand the type of quarterback Vick was, look no further than his nickname -- "The Human Cheat Code."
Vick did things that no one had ever seen before. His jaw-dropping jukes left defenders in the dust, his ability to shift directions made him impossible to stop, even for the stoutest NFL defenses.
Agile, dynamic and fast -- he clocked a 4.33 40-yard dash, the fastest of any NFL quarterback to this day -- Vick was a phenomenon for two years at Virginia Tech before the Falcons selected him No. 1 overall in the 2001 NFL Draft.
All of which explains why it didn't take long for Vick's star to rise in Atlanta, on and off the field.
In a Player's Tribune article, Vick describes what it was like when he emerged as the Falcons' starter, when an entire cityrallied around a 21-year-old quarterback from Virginia. Kids in Atlanta had a cultural idol, Vick says, and the community had an icon.
"It just felt very real," Vick writes. "It felt like we had made football cool again. Or maybe football wasn't even ever cool to begin with -- maybe we made it cool for the very first time. But whatever it was that was happening, it was happening in a big way."
He was soon embraced by the burgeoning local hip-hop scene. Music videos were peppered with Michael Vick jerseys throughout the mid-2000s. Atlanta's top entertainers flooded the Georgie Dome to watch The Michael Vick Experience. Vick even made a cameo in the video for T.I.'s smash-hit and party anthem "Rubber Band Man."
"It was a full-on cultural moment," Vick writes. "It was Atlanta sports, and Atlanta music, and Atlanta movies. And they were all just sort of coexisting, and feeding off of each other, and making each other want to be great, in this really special way."
But the Georgie Dome party ended abruptly in 2007 when Vick pled guilty to his involvement in a dog fighting ring. The NFL suspended him and the Falcons released him.
Vick was sentenced to 23 months in prison. Atlanta lost its icon. And the man that turned his football team into Atlanta's cultural heartbeat soon became the focal point of protests and boycotts for his actions off the field.
After six years of watching one of the most exciting players in football, the Falcons also needed a new quarterback.
In 2008, the Falcons got their quarterback. They drafted Matt Ryan with the third overall pick in the NFL Draft, but his selection was hardly met with the same fanfare as Vick.
Ryan was good, no question about it. An All-American and ACC Player of the Year, he had led Boston College to three bowl victories. He even earned NFL Rookie of the Year honors in 2008.
But Matt Ryan was no human cheat code. He didn't produce the thrill-inducing highlights Vick did. And even more troubling, he couldn't pull through when Atlanta needed him. Turnovers and interceptions led to early postseason exits for the Falcons in three of Ryan's first four seasons. He became the all-too-easy scapegoat for the Falcons' late-season misfortunes. Fans roasted him. The media followed.
Naturally, Ryan had trouble winning over Atlanta. The city didn't embrace him the way it did Vick, especially when the Falcons missed the playoffs for three straight years.
Then, 2016 happened.
The Matt Ryan of 2016 was a maniac, a leading MVP candidate putting up absurd numbers -- a career-best 38 touchdowns and 4,944 yards with only seven interceptions.
Of course, he can thank the talent around him.
Wide receiver Julio Jones finished 2016 with 1,409 receiving yards. Running backs Devonta Freeman and Tevin Coleman provided a dangerous backfield duo. Essentially, many tout the Falcons offense as the best in the NFL.
So it begs the questions -- after nine years, has Matt Ryan finally outgrown Michael Vick's shadow? Does he need a Super Bowl win to be loved by Atlanta?
Well, rapper T.I. -- once the pillar of Atlanta's booming culture -- answered that question on Friday.
"He's already loved," T.I. told ESPN's First Take. "He's already been embraced. I think he's proven himself ... simply by making it [to the Super Bowl] and having this type of season."
Michael Vick never won a Super Bowl or an MVP. Matt Ryan is inches from both, and one of those honors would likely etch his name in Falcons lore forever. Not as Vick's replacement, but in his own right.
It won't be easy.
Many talented quarterbacks have dashed Ryan's championship hopes. In 2009, two-time NFL MVP Kurt Warner ended the Falcons' season. Two years later, Ryan lost to another two-time NFL MVP, the formidable Aaron Rodgers. A year after that, it was eventual Super Bowl MVP Eli Manning.
Now, heading into the Super Bowl, the only thing in Ryan's way is a 39-year-old immortal touchdown machine named Tom Brady, the New England Patriots quarterback and a fellow MVP frontrunner.
But this isn't the Ryan of the past. He has Julio Jones. He has the best offense in football. And, at long last, he's got what some said he never would.
Matt Ryan finally has Atlanta.
Topics Super Bowl
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