The Atlanta Falcons aren’t walking into 2026 with questions about their offensive identity. They already found it last season. Bijan Robinson took over, accounting for over 40% of the offense. Naturally, the assumption heading into Year 4 is simple. Give him even more.
That’s where things get interesting. Because new head coach Kevin Stefanski just hinted that might not be the plan.
How Kevin Stefanski Plans To Balance the Falcons’ Offense
Speaking in his press conference, Stefanski made it clear that while Robinson remains central, the Falcons aren’t interested in building a one-man show.
“I think a really, really talented football player who I think matches exceptionally with what we want to do with him and Bijan [Robinson]. The skill set and how they marry each other, how they complement each other.”
It’s about redistributing responsibility. Stefanski doubled down on that philosophy with a line that fantasy managers probably didn’t love hearing.
“We want have an attack that’s not just a one-person attack. You have to be balanced in this league. I think Brian [Robinson Jr.] gives us an opportunity to do that.”
It signals Atlanta is serious about pairing the two Robinsons and using Brian as complementary weapon, rather than letting Bijan dominate touches as he did in 2025.
And make no mistake, Robinson dominated, finishing third in PFSN’s NFL RB Impact Score. He touched the ball 366 times, roughly one out of every three offensive plays. That level of usage is rare in today’s NFL and historically difficult to sustain year over year.
Stefanski’s track record explains the pivot. His offenses have always leaned run-heavy but have never been overly dependent on a single player. In Minnesota, Dalvin Cook thrived but within a system. In Cleveland, Nick Chubb produced elite numbers while sharing the workload in a structured, balanced attack.
That context matters for projecting Robinson’s future. The Falcons aren’t moving away from him. They’re trying to make him more efficient within a broader system.
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From a football standpoint, it makes sense. Stefanski’s wide-zone scheme thrives on multiple threats, play-action, and keeping defenses guessing. Robinson’s vision and cutback ability make him perfect for it, but the scheme works best when defenses can’t key in on one player.
From a fantasy standpoint, though, this is where expectations need recalibrating. Robinson may still be elite, but the days of 35% usage might be over. And that’s the trade-off Atlanta is willing to make. Less volume, potentially more efficiency, and a more sustainable offense built for January, not just stat sheets.

