Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

For the most part, the 2023 offseason has been a strong one for the Atlanta Falcons. They had a ton of cap space at their disposal and they have not been afraid to use it. Multiple holes on the roster have been addressed with the moves that they have made.

Tight end Jonnu Smith was acquired from the New England Patriots and is reunited with head coach Arthur Smith. The two spent time together on the Tennessee Titans, where J. Smith had the best seasons of his career. He wasn’t the only weapon the team added as wide receiver Mack Hollins was signed away from the Las Vegas Raiders.

Atlanta’s leaky defense, which ranked 23rd in points allowed and 27th in yardage, received upgrades as well. Safety Jessie Bates III was the biggest splash, signing a four-year, $64 million deal to leave the Cincinnati Bengals.

The Falcons also raided the cash-strapped New Orleans Saints for two more upgrades. Defensive tackle David Onyemata and linebacker Kaden Elliss were both signed to multi-year deals.

Overall, that is a solid offseason for the franchise. They will add another impact player to the mix with the No. 8 overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft. Despite that, some people are viewing the Falcons as one of the biggest losers in 2023 NFL Free Agency. Not because of a move that they have made, but for one that they didn’t.

Arguably the most glaring hole that the Falcons have is at the quarterback position. They are set to start Desmond Ridder and signed Taylor Heinickie to be his backup. But, what made the Falcons losers this offseason was their non-pursuit of Lamar Jackson.

26-year-old former MVPs don’t become available often in the NFL. Those are players franchises build around, not play hardball with as the Baltimore Ravens are doing. It was a situation ripe for the picking as Atlanta would have quickly vaulted to the top of the NFC South with Jackson leading the way.

When taking into consideration the amount of cap space that Atlanta had, they are one of the few teams who could have made a competitive offer the Ravens may not have matched. Two first-round picks aren’t an overly steep price either when taking into consideration what other teams have traded for quarterbacks recently and none are as dynamic or possess the upside that Jackson does.

This isn’t a bad offseason for the Falcons by any means. However, it could have been a truly special one had they taken the leap and made an upgrade at the quarterback position.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
London mayor eyeing Super Bowl bid, other hosting opportunities for major sporting events if re-elected
Rome Odunze raves about Michael Penix Jr. ahead of draft
Jimmy Butler trolls Celtics after Game 2 win: 'Don't let us get one'
Heat play 'Herro ball' to stun Celtics in Game 2
Lions extension makes Amon-Ra St. Brown the NFL's highest-paid receiver
Brad Marchand gets winner as Bruins beat Leafs to go up 2-1 in series
Reigning Cy Young winner's disastrous 2024 continues
Timberwolves C overcomes long odds, wins Sixth Man of the Year
Watch: Aaron Judge passes Derek Jeter on Yankees all-time home run list
Why it makes sense that the Steelers declined QB Justin Fields' fifth-year option
Heisman Trust's Reggie Bush decision another sign of NCAA's diminishing power
Peyton Manning rips Jets for failing QB Zach Wilson
'Baaaadd man' Shai Gilgeous-Alexander lifts Thunder to commanding Game 2 win
Golden Knights heading home up 2-0 on Stars
Watch: Thunder G Shai Gilgeous-Alexander sets new playoff high
Chargers reportedly targeting this former Jim Harbaugh player in draft
Watch: The Maple Leafs turn up the physicality in Game 3 vs. Bruins
Cavaliers forward to miss rest of first-round series
Latest report provides hint on Cowboys' feelings about Ezekiel Elliott reunion
Three-time Pro Bowl pass-rusher requests a trade from the Bengals

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.