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Walker, Panthers look to bounce back against 1st-place Falcons

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                Atlanta Falcons quarterback Marcus Mariota throws a pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Chargers on Sunday.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Atlanta Falcons quarterback Marcus Mariota throws a pass during the first half of an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Chargers on Sunday.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. >> P.J. Walker’s previous outing couldn’t have gone much worse.

The Panthers quarterback was 3 of 10 passing for 9 yards with two interceptions and got benched with Carolina trailing 35-0 at halftime to the Cincinnati Bengals.

Yet, despite Walker’s 0.0 QB rating — and with backups Baker Mayfield and Sam Darnold considered healthy and ready to go — Panthers interim coach Steve Wilks is sticking with Walker on Thursday night against the first-place Atlanta Falcons (4-5).

A short week played into that decision, but Wilks said it’s also a reflection of how well Walker played in Carolina’s 37-34 overtime loss to the Falcons on Oct. 30 in Atlanta. He threw for 317 yards, including a 62-yard desperation touchdown pass with 12 seconds left that tied the game at 34.

That play could have led to a victory had D.J. Moore and Stephen Sullivan not been penalized 15 yards for removing their helmets as part of a raucous end zone celebration and kicker Eddy Pineiro not shanked the ensuing go-ahead 48-yard extra point.

But Walker failed to follow up that game with a strong outing versus Cincinnati.

“As a quarterback, you cannot let that affect you,” Walker said. “For me, it’s just to go out there and be you. Don’t go out there and change your game. Don’t go out there and take your aggressiveness away; be aggressively smart. That’s the way you’ve got to approach this week.”

It’s unclear how Mayfield feels about that decision. Mayfield, who led three touchdown drives against the Bengals in the second half on Sunday, didn’t address reporters this week.

The Falcons will look to bounce back from a tough 20-17 loss last week to the Los Angeles Chargers — one that allowed Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers move into a tie for first place in the wide-open NFC South after they battled back to beat the Los Angeles Rams.

“It’ll be a huge opportunity for us Thursday night,” Falcons coach Arthur Smith said. “As bad as that felt (on Sunday), you always got to flip the page even quicker.”

MARIOTA’S LIMITATIONS

Atlanta ranks near the bottom of the league in yards passing and attempts in its run-first offense.

Marcus Mariota, a Saint Louis alum, had a big game in Week 8 against the Panthers, completing 20 of 28 passes for 253 yards and three touchdowns. He also had a key 30-yard run in overtime to set up Younghoe Koo’s game-winning 41-yard field goal. Mariota did throw two interceptions.

But Mariota has struggled to maintain consistency. He couldn’t connect with rookie Drake London and tight end Kyle Pitts on deep passes in the loss to the Chargers.

Mariota completed only 12 of 23 passes for 129 yards and has completed fewer than 15 passes in six of nine games.

Rookie Desmond Ridder hasn’t played this season.

When asked how Mariota has played this season, Smith said “enough to be right in the middle of the race. There’s all of us and that’s the job of the quarterback, when you win, you probably get too much credit and when you lose, you probably get too much criticism, but that’s the job that you sign up for.”

STOPPING THE RUN

The Falcons offensive line should be ready to go as they prepare to face the struggling Panthers front seven.

Carolina allowed running back Joe Mixon to run for 153 yards and four touchdowns last week and the Bengals had 241 yards overall on the ground.

The Falcons have the league’s fourth-best rushing attack and they’ve got Cordarrelle Patterson back from injured reserve. Patterson, who did not play against Carolina in the previous matchup, ran for two scores against the Chargers.

“We have to flush that last game,” said Panthers linebacker Shaq Thompson. “We know they like to run the ball, so there’s going to be a lot of running and it’s going to be a physical game.”

ROOKIE RUNNER

Falcons rookie Tyler Allgeier passed Patterson for the team lead in the game Patterson returned after missing four following a knee injury. Allgeier, a fifth-round pick from BYU, ran for a career-high 99 yards on 10 carries against the Chargers and leads Atlanta with 423 yards.

Allgeier has a chance to become the second-fastest Falcons player to reach 500 yards if he gains 77 yards against the Panthers. He would reach 500 yards in his 10th game. William Andrews ran for 500 yards in his first seven games in 1979.

The Falcons’ running game has been balanced with Caleb Huntley and quarterback Mariota also contributing.

FOREMAN IN CHARGE

The Panthers had success on the ground against the Falcons in the previous matchup and will look to control the game with a steady ground attack.

D’Onta Foreman ran for 118 yards and a career-high three touchdowns in the previous meeting, along with a 2-point conversion. It was Foreman’s second straight 118-yard rushing game.

However, Foreman was held to 23 yards on seven carries last week as the Panthers fell behind early and were forced into passing mode.

“Foreman is a physical runner, he makes that one cut and he gets downhill in a hurry,” Smith said.

STICKING WITH HOLCOMB

Wilks said the Panthers are sticking with interim coordinator Al Holcomb as their defensive play-caller despite Carolina giving up 79 points over the past two games.

However, Wilks did fire cornerbacks coach Evan Cooper and defensive line coach Paul Pasqualoni on Monday, one day after Carolina’s 42-21 loss to the Bengals.

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