Atlanta Falcons HC Arthur Smith Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

Watch: Falcons HC Arthur Smith left fuming after Saints score garbage-time touchdown in 48-17 rout

If Week 18 turns out to be Arthur Smith's final game as Atlanta Falcons head coach, it will be remembered more for his postgame confrontation with New Orleans Saints head coach Dennis Allen than anything else.

Atlanta was blown out 48-17 against New Orleans in their regular season finale. Smith used his meeting with Allen at midfield following the game to air his grievances over the Saints' decision to run a play out of victory formation for a garbage-time touchdown with 1:10 remaining in the fourth quarter.

Afterward, Allen defended Smith's reaction and apologized to the beleaguered head coach, saying players overrode his call for a kneel-down.

"That's not who we are, not what we're about," said Allen, failing to understand that a petty, meaningless touchdown against the Falcons is exactly what the Saints are about. 

Allen's admission suggests he doesn't have the command of the locker room that he should and is as bad a look as Smith pouting over getting blown out in a rivalry game. Smith's overblown reaction might be due to his realizing that he is probably hours away from being fired on "Black Monday." In December, reports surfaced that the Falcons' third-year head coach was safe barring a late-season collapse.

That's exactly what happened over the final two weeks of the regular season, though. In consecutive losses to the Chicago Bears and New Orleans Saints, the Falcons were outscored 85-24.

On Sunday, NFL insiders Tom Pelissero and Ian Rapoport reported that Atlanta is a team to look out for should they part ways from Smith and the Patriots move on from head coach Bill Belichick.

Jim Harbaugh appears likely to return to the NFL following Michigan's College Football Playoff championship game appearance and the Falcons could be an intriguing destination for him, too.

The Falcons have talented young playmakers in tight end Kyle Pitts, wide receiver Drake London and running back Bijan Robinson. With a top-10 pick in the upcoming 2024 NFL Draft, Atlanta is in a prime position to draft a quarterback in a promising class.

After a promising first half against the Saints, quarterback Desmond Ridder showed why he's better suited for a starting job in the UFL with several poor throws in the second half, including an interception, another would-be pick and an awful fourth-down throw to Robinson in the end zone.

The Falcons will probably have a different head coach and quarterback for the 2024 season, making Sunday's embarrassing loss to the Saints an ignominious way for the Smith era to end. We would probably be upset, too.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Anthony Edwards backs up talk to keep Timberwolves alive in WCF
Championship-winning NASCAR team to shut down after 2024 season
Three takeaways as Panthers tie Eastern Conference Final vs. Rangers
Texans sign young offensive star to huge contract extension
Aaron Boone comes to the defense of retired umpire Angel Hernandez
Negro League legend finally getting his due as MLB merges stats
Several key players withdraw from NBA Draft
Tyrese Haliburton ready to take active role in retaining Pascal Siakam
Mets stars reportedly had emotional reaction to firing of Buck Showalter
NHL announces 2024 King Clancy Memorial Trophy winner
Cardinals sign first-round DL
Rams sign first-round DE, complete draft class
Steelers QB Justin Fields focusing on 'little things' amid battle with Russell Wilson
Pistons confirm that key RFA forward underwent toe surgery
Pirates place left-hander, catcher on injured list
Patriots exec discusses team's approach to QB competition
Braves to promote No. 3 prospect for MLB debut Wednesday
Diamondbacks release veteran infielder
Packers' former first-round pick planning to make 'monster leap'
NFLPA finalizing proposal for major change to offseason schedule

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.