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Falcons nab Louisville's Petrino to succeed Mora

ATLANTA -- Bobby Petrino received plenty of offers during
his four years as Louisville coach.

Finally, he got one worth taking.


Petrino has accepted a five-year, $24 million offer from the Atlanta Falcons to become their new coach, replacing Jim Mora. ESPN.com's Pat Forde reported the hiring and contract details earlier Sunday night.

A formal announcement was set for Monday afternoon at the
Falcons' suburban training complex in Flowery Branch -- exactly one
week after Mora was let go.

"This is an exciting day for the Atlanta Falcons franchise,"
owner Arthur Blank said in a statement. "Bobby Petrino is an
extremely talented football coach who has done some tremendously
innovative things as both an offensive coordinator and head
coach."

Mora, who never seemed to get the most out of Michael Vick, will
be replaced by a coach who guided high-scoring Louisville to a 12-1
season, capped by a 24-13 victory over Wake Forest in the Orange
Bowl.

The 45-year-old Petrino met briefly with his Louisville players
Sunday night to let them know he was leaving for what he feels "is
the best job in the National Football League."

"I am excited about the challenge that awaits me in Atlanta,
and I'm equally excited about the potential that I see in this
team," he said.


"Bobby Petrino did a great job here at Louisville," Louisville athletic director Tom Jurich told ESPN's Chris Mortensen. "I'm proud of what he accomplished. I just wish we could have kept him longer. He will do a great job for the Falcons."

Petrino's first order of business: getting more production out of
Vick. The Falcons star became the first quarterback in NFL history
to rush for 1,000 yards but never seemed comfortable in the West
Coast-style system installed by Mora and his offensive coordinator,
Greg Knapp.

This season, the Falcons were last in the league in passing and
25th in scoring with their average of 18.2 points.

Louisville never had any trouble putting up points under
Petrino. In 2006, the Cardinals ranked second in the country in
total offense (475.3 yards per game) and fourth in scoring with a
37.8-point average.

Petrino had a 41-9 record in four years at Louisville, leading
the school to the Big East title and its first Bowl Championship
Series appearance in the Orange. He had just completed the first
year of a 10-year, $25 million contract.

"In short, he's a difference maker who will bring a strong
identity to the Falcons -- one our team will buy into and take on as
their own," Blank said.

Petrino's name repeatedly came up for other coaching vacancies,
including an embarrassing episode in 2003 when Auburn set up a
clandestine interview late in the season to gauge his interest in
possibly replacing Tommy Tuberville.

Petrino met with LSU after the 2004 season and turned down the
Oakland Raiders' job a year later. Louisville twice renegotiated
Petrino's contract, giving him hefty raises in hopes of keeping
him.

"This is where I want to be," he insisted.

That all changed after the Falcons fired Mora, just two years
after he led the team to the NFC championship game. Atlanta missed
the playoffs the past two seasons, going 7-9 in 2006.

Petrino's previous NFL experience includes three years with the
Jacksonville Jaguars, where he served as quarterbacks coach and
offensive coordinator. He then returned to the college ranks, first
as Auburn's offensive coordinator in 2002 before heading to
Louisville.

The Cardinals went 11-1 and captured the Conference USA title in
2004, their final year in that league before moving to the Big
East. Under Petrino, the school known more for its basketball
program won at least nine games every season and played in four
straight bowls.


"I'm in shock right now," Louisville kicker Arthur Carmody told ESPN's Joe Schad on Sunday night. "We're coming off a great Orange Bowl win and we were all thinking national championship. I didn't think this would happen. He said he enjoyed college football. He's a great coach and we're going to miss him."

"Nobody thought this would happen, but nobody's complaining
about it," Cardinals defensive lineman Earl Heyman said. "You
can't fault him considering what he's done for this program."


The leading candidate to replace Petrino figures to be Tulsa coach Steve Kragthorpe, who has taken the Golden Hurricane to three bowl games in four years after taking over one of the worst programs in the country.

The Falcons interviewed at least four NFL assistants, but Blank
and general manager Rich McKay decided to go with an established
head coach this time.

Mora had never been a head coach until he was hired by the
Falcons. He got off to a rousing start, guiding Atlanta to a
division title and coming up one win short of the Super Bowl. Then
it all fell apart.

The Falcons lost six of their last eight games in 2005 to miss
the playoffs and keep alive the franchise's streak of never having
two straight winning seasons. Atlanta followed a similar path this
year, starting 5-2 before losing seven of nine -- including its last
four home games.

That didn't go over well with Blank, a hands-on owner who has
spent lavishly to build a perennial playoff contender. He also was
bothered by several off-the-field incidents, most notably a radio
interview late this season in which Mora said his dream job was to
coach at the University of Washington, his alma mater.

Mora said he was only kidding, but had to apologize after being
summoned to Blank's office.

The day after a season-ending loss, Mora was fired.

Pat Forde is a senior writer for ESPN.com. Joe Schad is ESPN TV's national college football reporter. The Associated Press and ESPN.com's Mark Schlabach contributed to this report.