Defensive line coach Nate Ollie said Zach Harrison and Brandon Dorlus will be the Falcons' "big ends."
FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — Another change is coming for Atlanta Falcons defensive lineman Zach Harrison.
Position coach Nate Ollie explained last Wednesday that Harrison and Brandon Dorlus will be Atlanta's "big ends" in 2025, a role that will blend Harrison's first two seasons with the Falcons. The former third-round draft pick started on the outside as a long base end in Ryan Nielsen's scheme in 2023. Last year, under new head coach Raheem Morris and defensive coordinator Jimmy Lake, Harrison added weight and moved inside. Now, he's back in his original role but at his upgraded size.
"We really feel like we can unlock Zach and do a lot of stuff," Ollie said. "Get him going off the football and not thinking and being a mismatch versus tight ends. Also, too, we believe that Zach has a little bit in his body to win off the edge. So, Zach is kind of a utility weapon."
In his third season, Harrison will work with his third defensive coordinator, Jeff Ulbrich. His first two had their own approach with a base scheme, with Nielsen favoring a 4-3 look and Lake leaning towards more of a 3-4 design.
Ulbrich, meanwhile, made it clear when he was hired in January, there is no one-track plan.
"If we look back 15, 20 years ago, there were 3-4 teams and there were 4-3 teams, and you were one or the other," Ulbrich said. "It's not that way anymore. Offenses have jumped off the playbook. … It's really forced us from a defensive standpoint to get more multiplicity in all that we do, front-wise, coverage-wise, all of that. So, we're going to be multiple, and we're going to do some unique things that are going to be 3-4-ish and 4-3-ish at times."
Through a mix of his 2023 and 2024 self, Harrison could embody that multiple approach for Atlanta. When Harrison was switched to the interior last year, he was tasked with bulking up and went from 268 pounds as a collegiate prospect to 286 pounds as a second-year professional. There was a visible difference when Harrison showed up to his second offseason program.