R. Mason Thomas is the kind of edge rusher who can make a scout lean forward. Bleacher Report’s Alex Ballentine called him the one player Atlanta should avoid on Day 2 of the 2026 Draft, even as Thomas remains widely viewed as a second-round talent with real pass-rush upside.
Ballentine’s concern is not about whether Thomas can get to the quarterback. Over the past two seasons, he averaged 2.7 pressures per game and put together splash tape against top competition, including LSU tackle Will Campbell. The production is there. The question for Atlanta is whether the fit is.
The Falcons are sitting on the No. 48 pick and, if they stay put, will be in position to add help to a defense that still has a clear weakness on the edge. In 2025, Atlanta used its first-round pick on Jalon Walker and then traded back into the round for James Pearce Jr., another sub-250-pound speed rusher built to hunt quarterbacks. That gave the Falcons two explosive rushers with juice off the snap, but it did not solve the bigger problem.
Atlanta finished 27th in EPA allowed per rush, and offenses consistently attacked the perimeter when the Falcons’ edges flew upfield. That is why Thomas looks like a good prospect in the abstract and a risky answer for this roster right now. He profiles as the same kind of player Atlanta already invested in last year: fast, disruptive and dangerous when the play is in front of him, but not the kind of body type that naturally eases a run-defense issue that already showed up over a full season.
Ballentine’s view cuts through the draft hype: Thomas likely will carve out a nice NFL role as a rotational pass rusher, but that is not the same thing as being the right choice for Atlanta at No. 48. The Falcons have already bet on speed on the edge. Another similar swing could leave them with more pressure potential and the same soft spot opposing offenses kept finding.