Panthers Reacts Survey: Who will win Super Bowl LX?

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SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JANUARY 25: Sam Darnold #14 of the Seattle Seahawks celebrates with the George Halas Trophy after defeating the Los Angeles Rams 31-27 in the NFC Championship game at Lumen Field on January 25, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

A Super Bowl between the Drake Maye led New England Patriots and the Sam Darnold led Seattle Seahawks is a nightmare scenario for many fans of the Carolina Panthers. If you described this to us a year or two ago then we would have chased you out of the room with torches and pitchforks. Alas, here we are watching the hometown hero face off against a former Panthers quarterback in the biggest game of the season.

Still, watching from the sidelines doesn’t mean we don’t have opinions. We all know the storylines. Maye versus an incredible Seahawks defense. Darnold versus his own ghost in a Jets uniform. Maye, a second year player with his first taste of success. Darnold, an eighth year player with his first taste of success.

The question is simple, Panthers fans, who do you think will win Super Bowl LX?

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Panthers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...hers-reacts-survey-who-will-win-super-bowl-lx
 
The Scratching Post: 2/2-2/6

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Greetings, internet users. Welcome to The Scratching Post and the new year.

Feel free to use this thread to chat about (almost) anything you want: video games, food, movies, non-football sports, you name it. As long as it’s allowed by the site’s ToS, it’s fair game here.

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Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/the-scratching-post/57937/the-scratching-post-2-2-2-6
 
Brian Answers: Who should the Panthers sign in free agency?

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Nov 8, 2025; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA; Stanford Cardinal head coach Frank Reich with his players in the third quarter at Kenan Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images | Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

Hello CSR! Welcome to Brian Answers, part two of your weekly Panthers fan mailbag for everyone! We’re about a month from free agency, aka the Christmas of the off-season. Let’s dive into all your questions from this week!

GooseCreek: As free agency truly begins in a month from today, what’s your take on how the Panthers should go about the business of building a new roster for 2026. Do you see anyone worthy of being tagged, which free agents should the Panthers seek to retain and which should they let walk away? What’s the preferred plan to maximize the limited cap space in recruiting outside free agents i.e. should they prioritize signing a couple of impact players or seek journeymen types to improve team depth in anticipation of the April draft?

I’ll start with the franchise tag; I don’t see anyone worth spending that on. You can find their list of free agents here. I would prioritize signing LS JJ Jansen and punter Sam Martin, just to add some continuity on special teams. On offense, I would bring back one or two of either Cade Mays, Brady Christensen (coming off another injury), Austin Corbett, or Jake Curhan along the interior as they all will make sense for depth purposes. Cade Mays might be outside their price range, but he’d be a viable starting center for a team that will have other offensive line issues to attack, such as what to do in Ikem Ekwonu’s extended absence at left tackle, which also makes bringing back Yosh Nijman a potential priority. Beyond that, I don’t see any names they NEED to retain (sorry Nick Scott), but many of their names would be worth bringing back without a ton of cap resources needed (please, Nick Scott).

I like the approach they’ve taken the last two offseasons, which is to identify a position or two of extreme need, and bring in a guy or two that can realistically solve that problem whether or not the Draft falls the way it does. So I think spending money at the inside linebacker position and somewhere along the defensive line would make sense. If they can ink another safety to start opposite Tre’Von Moehrig that compliments the pieces they still have, even better. But beyond that, don’t overspend too much and just add guys like Christian Rozeboom at positions where someone needs to be added, and then do your best in the Draft to add players that could develop into starters there.

Mozzie11: Don’t have the stats in front of me but it is pretty well documented that late round draft picks making it are few and far between – basically they are UDFA (90% bust rate for round 5-7 iirc). What says thou for taking any and all 6 and 7th round picks (maybe even 5ths) and use them to trade up in the earlier rounds for higher impact players and fill the back end of the roster with FA signings and UDFA.

This particular regime already seems to be doing that. In 2025 they ended up with two 4ths, two 5ths, and a 6th round pick all via various trades. In this upcoming Offseason, they have two 5ths and instead do not have a 7th round pick, like last draft. I think the Adam Thielen trade was actually a way to improve on those later round dart throws, so I’m very much not opposed to using those 6th and 7th round picks to jockey around in the 5th round, or even move up into the 4th round. It worked for them well last draft as basically everyone they drafted contributed in a meaningful way.

Coach_K: been hearing a lot of connections with tight ends, Mayer of the Raiders and Kmet of the Bears to name a couple. Also remember seeing us in mocks during the year getting Sadiq from Oregon. Do we have some tight ends whose contracts are about to expire?

I think the goal is to improve every skill position on offense if possible. They don’t have anybody who played meaningful snaps hitting free agency right now, but Tommy Tremble will be on the last year of his deal, and Ja’Tavion Sanders so far hasn’t amounted to the receiving tight end they wanted him to be. Still a big fan of Mitchell Evans, but adding another tight end wouldn’t hurt things. I’d probably prefer adding another one via the draft rather than spend much on a veteran free agent, since they have a decent room right now if they do absolutely nothing at the position.

@WTMealey: What is a non Panther Super Bowl moment/play that lives rent free in your head?

What is your earliest SB memory?


My earliest real memory that probably sticks with me to this day (as in, not when the game was on and I barely paid attention not being a huge football fan to start off as a kid) would be everyone saying “don’t kick it to Devin Hester”, only for the Colts to actually kick it to him and have it run back to open the game. Devin Hester was just different, man.

PantherBlueBlood: Will the Panthers win the Super Bowl next year.

It is probably not on my bingo card, but I think the Super Bowl being played this weekend just shows how unpredictable the NFL has become. If you can hit some home runs and really draft well, the timeline can shift a lot quicker.

PerpetuallyPerplexed: Assuming no trades of course:

Dallas drafts at 20, what’s the over/under on time spent talking about our pick at 19?


I assume the Panthers pick will happen over a commercial break, so maybe 30 seconds before the networks start talking about Dallas’s pick.

Truthshallsetyoufree: #1 Is mid to solid the panthers ceiling for the foreseeable future?

#2 am I the only one worried about the 2026 cap space? Outside of the teams in the red, Carolina has the 2nd lowest available cap space for 2026. Kicking the can down the road and cutting players to create cap room, in my opinion just keeps them in the same loop they’ve been in for years. With 2027 having substantial more cap space IMO, with this coming schedule, just bite the bullet on a down year to be able to start 2027 somewhat fresh.


I would say mid-to-solid is a realistic expectation for the next couple of seasons, until we see them hammer out another draft class like they did in 2025.

I’m not all that concerned about the cap in 2026, they don’t have a ton of dead cap on the books so they can maneuver around a bit. Their top 5 contracts account for over $100 million in cap against this year’s available balance, so extensions and restructures can clear a lot of it. Plus, most of the free agents they’d sign this year won’t have a high cap hit in 2026 due to how they structure contracts with bonuses, usually.

Panthers75: Is Frank Reich a masochist? He just took the OC job for the jets and previously signed on to clean up Rhule’s mess here. At this point you have to ask the question

I think Reich believes in Aaron Glenn, and they have history together, so I think this was more a loyalty thing (something I’ve seen speculated on Twitter than anything). I think Reich was closer to retirement than taking another head coaching gig, so going to help out Glenn when it wasn’t an attractive landing spot for other potential candidates probably helps. I’m sure the money is good, too.

That’s all for this week, Panthers fans! Enjoy the Super Bowl!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...s-who-should-the-panthers-sign-in-free-agency
 
Luke Kuechly is a Hall of Famer

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Dec 15, 2019; Charlotte, NC, USA; Carolina Panthers middle linebacker Luke Kuechly (59) runs onto the field before the game against the Seattle Seahawks at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images

The next class of Hall of Famers was announced at the NFL Awards on Thursday night. One of those is one of our very own. Former Carolina Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly is now Carolina Panthers Hall of Fame linebacker, Luke Kuechly.

The moment Luke Kuechly became a Hall of Famer #NFLHonors pic.twitter.com/ksw9zZRwjc

— Carolina Panthers (@Panthers) February 6, 2026

Kuechly is either the second or third player inducted into the Hall of Fame that is predominantly known as a Panther joining Julius Peppers and Sam Mills, depending on who you ask. He is the first player to spend his entire career as a Panther and make the Hall of Fame.

While his career was short, Kuechly was arguably the best linebacker in the NFL for almost all of it. He played eight seasons and was a first team All Pro in five of those. He was a second team All Pro in the other two that weren’t his rookie season. He was Defensive Player of the Year in 2013, and three time winner of the Butkus Award for the league’s best linebacker. He retired at the height of his powers after dealing with numerous injuries that included a handful of concussions. He surely would’ve added more awards to his trophy case had he continued playing, but he’s a nice enough guy that he stepped away to let other players get some shine.

This one feels good. Luke Kuechly is a Panther through and through. He’s still a part of the organization calling games on the radio. And he’s one of the most beloved players in the history of the franchise. This couldn’t happen to a nicer guy. Congrats Luke!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-news/58073/luke-kuechly-is-a-hall-of-famer
 
OH MAN where do I even start with this mess of a Super Bowl matchup?!

Look, I get it Panthers fans, this is rough watching Sam Darnold potentially get a ring before we even sniff the playoffs again. But let me tell you something - I'm taking the Seahawks in this one and here's why:

That Seattle defense is LEGIT. Drake Maye is good, don't get me wrong, but he's a second year QB in his first big moment. We've seen young QBs crumble on this stage before. Meanwhile Darnold has been through the absolute GAUNTLET of his career - the Jets disaster, bouncing around, and now he's finally got a real team around him. The dude has nothing left to prove to himself, he's just playing free.

Plus as a Bills fan who has watched the Patriots torture us for two decades, there is absolutely NO WAY I'm rooting for New England to get another championship. I don't care if Tom Brady is long gone, I will root against that franchise until the day I die. PERIOD.

Also congrats to Luke Kuechly on the Hall of Fame induction! That man was an absolute MONSTER and deserves every bit of recognition. One of the few Panthers I genuinely respected watching him destroy our offense twice a year. First ballot was the only appropriate outcome.

Now if you'll excuse me, I need to go mentally prepare for watching this game while screaming at my TV about how the Bills should be there instead. 🦬
 
Tetairoa McMillan wins Offensive Rookie of the Year

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Dec 21, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Panthers wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan (4) with the ball in the third quarter at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images | Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

Carolina Panthers wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan has been named the Offensive Rookie of the Year for the 2025 season. He beat out quarterbacks Tyler Shough and Jaxson Dart, fellow receiver Emeka Egbuka, and running back TreVeyon Henderson.

With both quarterback nominees missing significant chunks of the season either due to injury, coaching decisions, or some combination of the two, it always seemed like the award would go to someone at a different position that got more consistent playing time all season long. That left McMillan against a couple of fellow skill position players.

With that in mind, McMillan always seemed like the obvious choice. He finished his rookie season with 1,014 yards, the only rookie to surpass the magical 1,000 yard plateau in any one statistical category. That number in of itself was probably enough to win the award, but the seven touchdowns and a team playoff appearance certainly helped at well. And even more bonus points given that the quarterback play wasn’t always great and was significantly worse before McMillan’s arrival.

McMillan was a somewhat surprising selection at the eighth overall pick last April when everyone expected the Panthers to go defense. It didn’t take long for him to endear himself to Panthers fans though. He reportedly made a lot of highlight plays in training camp and then only took two real games to surpass 100 yards for the first time. He’s the most dynamic wide receiver the Panthers have had in quite a while, both at the catch point and running after the catch. And he’ll only get better as he gets stronger and better equipped to handle the physicality of the NFL game. We already saw that improve as the season went along this past year. We could very easily be watching a top 10 wide receiver in the black and blue next season.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...oa-mcmillan-wins-offensive-rookie-of-the-year
 
Reacts Results: Who are Panthers fans rooting for tonight?

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SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JANUARY 25: Sam Darnold #14 of the Seattle Seahawks celebrates with the George Halas Trophy after defeating the Los Angeles Rams 31-27 in the NFC Championship game at Lumen Field on January 25, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There is some surprising alignment between who Carolina Panthers fans are rooting for in Super Bowl LX tonight and who the nationwide SB Nation Reacts audience thinks will win. Is this a coincidence or is everybody still tired of the Patriots, no matter how you ask the question?

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The Seattle Seahawks are -4.5 point favorites against the New England Patriots tonight and our surveys say that’s just where America wants them to be. Of course, all of our hopes, dreams, analytics and superstitions mean nothing after kickoff. Anything can happen in the Super Bowl. We’re expecting the game to come down to Drake Maye versus a Seahawks defense that rivals any in that franchise’s history. But does every part of that defense show up tonight in the biggest game of their lives? Is Maye equal to the pressure of the moment? Is Sam Darnold still busy playing Luigi’s Mansion 3 under center?

We’ll find out tonight.

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Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ge...lts-who-are-panthers-fans-rooting-for-tonight
 
Super Bowl LX open thread

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SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 06: Sam Darnold #14 of the Seattle Seahawks during a practice ahead of Super Bowl LX at San Jose State University on February 06, 2026 in San Jose, California. (Photo by Eakin Howard/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We’re here, y’all. The last gasp of the 2025 season is upon us. Will Drake Maye take the first step in building a new dynasty in New England? Will Sam Darnold finally exorcise the ghosts of the New York Jets?

It’s time for the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks to settle this season. This is your open thread to follow along with us for all the action today.

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Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-discussion/58091/super-bowl-lx-open-thread
 
The Optimist: Stepping into 2026

NFL: Carolina Panthers Head Coach Dave Canales Introductory Press Conference


With Super Bowl LX in the books, it’s time to look forward to the long offseason of 2026. The Carolina Panthers are not widely expected to repeat their moderate successes of the 2025 season. Bryce Young has not firmly and obviously established himself as “the answer,” even as the team is preparing to offer him a contract extension in the form of exercising his fifth year option. This is usually the time of year when I have to preach patience to fellow Panthers fans. There are weeks to go before we get to the start of Free Agency, weeks more until the NFL Draft, and then months before the start of training camp and the preseason.

Most offseasons are a dreary combination of not trusting the decision makers in Bank of America Stadium and not being able to do anything about it because the vast majority of our readership and commenters are not David Tepper, Dan Morgan, or Dave Canales. I think. This season, despite still not having any actual control over the movements and strategies of our favorite team, I think we can safely say that the Morgan, Canales, and even Tepper have earned a modicum of trust.

Draftin’ Dan​


In two short seasons with limited cap space and draft capital, Morgan has built a roster that is undeniably better than the mess Scott Fitterer and Matt Rhule left behind. He’s only had one season with his new scouting department, but already last year’s draft class looks to be an all-timer for the Panthers in terms of contributing rookies. Offensive Rookie of the Year Tetiaroa McMillan was an obvious hit, but the bigger win might have been finding longer term pieces of the wider puzzle in linebackers Nic Scourton and Princely Umanmielen, running back Trevor Étienne, and safety Lathan Ransom. The jury is still on defensive tackle Cam Jackson, fan favorite tight end Mitchell Evans, and wide receiver Jimmy Horn Jr. but that’s to be expected for players selected 140th overall and later.

The impressive thing is that all eight draft picks made the roster and stayed on it all the way through the season. A couple more offseasons like that and the Panthers can spend fewer free agency dollars on veteran stopgaps and more on actual upgrades while also retaining some of their own draft talent. Maybe they’ll even flip back on to the right side of the all-important compensatory draft picks formula.

The optimist bully came through​


Canales, for his part, has lived up to his billing. That’s more than you can say for Tepper’s last two hires at head coach. The Panthers have come a long, long way since benching Young after Week 2 of the 2024 season. A 2025 wildcard berth and a respectable performance in their loss to the Los Angeles Rams was proof that Canales can pull together a team and inspire them to be greater than the sum of their parts. That is a valuable skill to have and arguably one more important over the course of an entire season than any particular talent in play-calling.

Whether or not Canales should ultimately hand off his play-calling duties or whether he can improve those skills with time remains to be seen. He has a lot to learn, he is young, and he is still hobbled by not knowing which version of Young is going to show up on a given day. That’s a lot of balls up in the air, but Canales has managed to put on two reasonably good shows with those balls in just two seasons. I think he has earned a fair amount of credit to keep juggling them for a few more season.

What’s next?​


There is a lot to be worried about still, to be certain. The Carolina Panthers have a Bryce Young-sized ice berg in their waters and there really is no telling yet what they should do about it, let alone what they ultimately will do. Still, the bag is more mixed than bad. Their schedule is going to be rough next season, they have a moderate amount of cap space, and they have mostly their original draft picks. That is to say, they are working with about what the rest of the league is working with while trying to improve for 2026.

If Dan Morgan can keep finding better pieces to build the roster with and if Dave Canales can continue to produce a team that is better than the individual pieces on the roster then I think the Panthers have a great shot at not being embarrassing in 2026. Heck, they may even have a shot at being good. I don’t know about you, but that feels way better than where the team has been over the past five to ten years.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-analysis/58104/the-optimist-stepping-into-2026
 
The Scratching Post: 2/9-2/13

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Greetings, internet users. Welcome to The Scratching Post and the new year.

Feel free to use this thread to chat about (almost) anything you want: video games, food, movies, non-football sports, you name it. As long as it’s allowed by the site’s ToS, it’s fair game here.

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Join the conversation!​


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Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/the-scratching-post/58102/the-scratching-post-2-9-2-13
 
Rising Stars: Ryan Fitzgerald

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Dec 28, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Panthers placekicker Ryan Fitzgerald (10) kicks a thirty-five yard field goal held by punter Sam Martin (6) against the Seattle Seahawks during the first quarter at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images | Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

After a number of years cycling through kicker after kicker, dealing with fluke injuries and soul-crushing misses, the Carolina Panthers might have finally found the guy worth keeping around. Undrafted out of Florida State University, Ryan Fitzgerald was one of the most consistent players on the Panthers roster throughout the 2025 season and deserves a moment in the spotlight as this week’s Rising Star.

Overall, Fitzgerald’s stats – of 25-30 (83.3%) – are not going to impress anyone. It’s not great, in fact it is one of the bottom 10 percentages in the NFL this year. Continuing his career at that rate wouldn’t likely allow him to keep his job in the NFL over the long term. However, like everything else in this world, context is key, which is why I’ve gone back to look at each of Fitzgerald’s missed field goal attempts to see if there are any valid excuses.

Missed FG #1: 55 yard attempt at New England Patriots in Week 4. Fitzgerald just plain missed it short.

Missed FG #2: 32 yard attempt vs Buffalo Bills in Week 8. Mayday scenario. Andy Dalton takes an ill-advised sack with 12 seconds left in 2nd half and no timeouts. Special Teams rushed on the field and gets the attempt off as time runs out in the half.

Missed FG #3: 48 yard attempt vs New Orleans Saints. Blocked kick that eventually bounced around a before being recovered by the Panthers for a fresh set of downs.

Missed FG #4: 55 yard attempt at San Francisco 49ers in Week 12. Although not indicated in stat sheet, kick was clearly tipped by #26 on the 49ers who went unblocked from Fitzgerald’s right.

Missed FG #5: 54 yard attempt at Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Week 17. While the rain had briefly stopped, it had been raining for most of the game to that point.

Of Fitzgerald’s 5 misses, 2 were blocked/tipped, 1 was in a mayday scenario where they had a 10 second running clock to get from the sideline to snap, and another was 54 yards in the the elements. I did not go back to re-examine the 3 extra points missed on 34 attempts, but that will certainly have to be cleaned up. It’s the NFL so excuses only mean so much, but for a 1 year sample size and only 1 kick being a clear miss… it’s hard to get too upset.

Another note in Fitzgerald’s favor was his penchant for making the kicks that mattered most, earning his coaches’ trust late in games. His 4 game winning kicks is tied for the NFL rookie record, including a 49 yarder in windy Lambeau Field to take down the current #1 seed and a 33 yarder as time expired to earn him an NFC Special Teams Player of the Week award.

RYAN FITZGERALD KICKS TO WIN IT pic.twitter.com/kPIeXJGZeR

— Carolina Panthers (@Panthers) November 2, 2025

While matching the NFL rookie record for game sealing kicks is great, the most fascinating portion of Fitzgerald’s game went under the radar for long stretches of the NFL season. That is, despite being a rookie, Fitzgerald was one of the best best kickoff specialist in the league.

Fitzgerald’s kicks were returned for an average of 22.7 yards, the 5th best mark in the league. Similarly, opposing teams had an average starting field position at the 28.9 – also the 5th best mark in the NFL.

Fitzgerald was one of the few kickers in the NFL who implemented a ‘knuckleball’ technique during the league’s implementation of the dynamic kickoff rule. A midseason article by Austin Mock at The Athletic tracked kicker’s EPA during kickoffs and found that Fitzgerald’s 1.5 EPA/game was second highest in the league. A mark which was nearly double the 3rd place kicker’s 0.8 EPA/game. After 11 games, Fitzgerald had gained .5 wins above replacement on kickoffs alone, an extraordinarily rare feat.

Panthers’ Ryan Fitzgerald on his knuckleball kickoffs: “We want it to be hard to track in the air and hard to catch whenever it hits the ground.”
Done and done.https://t.co/rVcBE6BT6K pic.twitter.com/LppyViOqJe

— Joe Person (@josephperson) September 24, 2025

It was not a perfect rookie season by any means, as Fitzgerald had his ups and downs. But, those ups were very high and those downs came with some pretty interesting caveats. Safe to say, the Panthers may have just found their long-term kicker.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...stars-ryan-fitzgerald-dirty-kicks-knuckleball
 
Ask Brian: We’re officially onto 2026

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Jan 1, 2023; Tampa, Florida, USA; Carolina Panthers quarterback Sam Darnold (14) runs with the ball against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the fourth quarter at Raymond James Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Hello CSR! Welcome to Ask Brian, part one of your weekly Panthers fan mailbag for everyone! Sam Darnold, and the Seahawks triumphed over the New England Patriots on Sunday to crown the next Super Bowl winner. Carolina played both those teams and unfortunately lost by pretty big margins though the games started out quite close. The Panthers now heading into the off-season with some momentum, but clearly need to answer a lot of questions before they could ever be in the conversation as a Super Bowl contender. This is a fact of life in the NFL, but looking forward the Panthers do have a solid core. They can build around, while they figure out if Bryce Young is the guy to lead them into the future. At least we’re not talking about losing football for another off-season in a row.

You all know the drill, comment down below with all of your questions, whether they be Panthers related, football related, or even completely off-topic! I’ll have your answers down below as we inch closer to NFL free agency.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-rumors/58114/ask-brian-were-officially-onto-2026
 
Super Bowl LXI odds

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - JANUARY 10: Bryce Young #9 of the Carolina Panthers celebrates after scoring a 16 yard touchdown against the Los Angeles Rams during the second quarter in the NFC Wild Card Playoff game at Bank of America Stadium on January 10, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The disrespect for the Carolina Panthers is beginning bright and early in the 2026 offseason. This year’s first bit of bulletin board material comes courtesy of FanDuel’s odds for the winner of Super Bowl LXI. The top of the board is a list of the usual suspects with the Seattle Seahawks (+750) as favorites to repeat with the Los Angeles Rams (+800) and Baltimore Ravens (+1200) hot on their heels.

The first surprise of the opening odds for the Super Bowl LXI winner is that the Buffalo Bills (+1200) are tied with the Ravens at the top of the AFC. The faith in Josh Allen is strong despite their surprise change in head coaches this year. Must be nice for Bills fans.

After that, the first non-playoff teams to show up in the odds are the Detroit Lions (+1600) and the Kansas City Chiefs (+1600) tied in eighth place. The rest of the non-playoff field of NFL teams begins at 17th place with the Dallas Cowboys (+3000). Tied-19th is where the NFC South comes in to play, but we’re still not to the Carolina Panthers yet. That dubious honor is reserved for the Atlanta Falcons (+5000) and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (+5000).

The Panthers finally (+15000) finally grace the list tied at 27th with the Tennessee Titans and just ahead of the of 29th place New Orleans Saints (+17500). It’s like nobody actually watched the NFC South this season or saw the Panthers go toe to toe with Matt Stafford and the Rams in the Wildcard round.

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Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-odds/58103/super-bowl-lxi-odds
 
Carolina Panthers 2026 NFL Draft Prospect Profile: Caleb Lomu

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PASADENA, CALIFORNIA - AUGUST 30: Caleb Lomu #71 of the Utah Utes blocks during the first half against UCLA Bruins at Rose Bowl Stadium on August 30, 2025 in Pasadena, California. (Photo by Ric Tapia/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Now that we are past the Super Bowl, we look ahead toward the 2026 NFL Draft. This weekly series will take a closer look at some of the prospects the Carolina Panthers could select in the 2026 iteration of the Draft. In this series, we’ll only be looking at prospects the Panthers could seriously consider. This week our profile will focus on Utah Utes offensive tackle Caleb Lomu.

Bio​


Lomu was part of a dominant offensive line in high school, winning back to back state championships in Arizona. Despite getting offers from powerhouse schools like Michigan, Florida, Oregon, USC, and Tennessee, he ultimately landed in Utah. After redshirting his first year on campus, Lomu took over the starting left tackle job as a redshirt freshman in 2024. He started all 12 games for the Utes at left tackle in 2024 and in 2025, vastly improving his pass protection numbers year to year. His zero sacks and eight total pressures allowed in 2025 earned him First Team All-Big 12 honors.

Strengths/Weaknesses​


Lomu has the size teams look for at tackle (6’6”, 310 lbs) and the athleticism that can really set him apart. He is incredibly quick out of his stance, has violent punches, and his strong hands allow him to lock down defenders once he gets a hold of their chest plate. Lomu’s footwork and balance are also very good, especially in pass protection, and he has the football IQ to process stunts, twists, and blitzes without issue. He also has the athleticism to pull in the run game, something many tackles lack at his size.

Lomu is a little light for most teams’ liking, though he has the frame to add some functional weight and strength. He also leaves a lot to be desired in the run game. For a player with his athletic traits, you’d like to see much more consistency in creating movement off the snap and finishing blocks. He is absolutely not a road-grader type of player, and stronger defenders have been able to get the better of Lomu against the run.

Projection​


Lomu has been in the conversation as a first round pick for a while, along with fellow Utah offensive tackle Spencer Fano. While Lomu has a long way to go in the run game, he has the frame and ability to greatly improve in that area. Combine that with the athletic traits and pass blocking polish he already has, and it’s easy to see why teams would take him in the mid to late first round.

The Panthers have some decisions to make at offensive tackle, especially after the knee injury to Icky Ekwonu. Lomu is the type of player the Panthers could plug in at left tackle until Icky is fully recovered. While the run game to the left side might suffer a bit, Damien Lewis should be able to help the rookie find his footing. After Icky returns, the Panthers could move Ekwonu inside to guard if needed or use Lomu as the primary swing tackle off the bench. I would also love to see Lomu as the “third tight end” in jumbo packages. His athleticism to get to the second level could be fun to watch. After Taylor Moton retires (and/or is cut for cap space) next year, Icky could slide over to right tackle and let Lomu man the blindside full time.

What do you think, Panthers fans? If Caleb Lomu is available when the Panthers select in the 2026 NFL Draft, should they take him? Sound off in the comments!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...rs-2026-nfl-draft-prospect-profile-caleb-lomu
 
Alright look I gotta give credit where credit's due - that Fitzgerald kid looks like he might actually be legit. 4 game winning kicks as a rookie including that bomb at Lambeau? That takes some serious stones. And that knuckleball kickoff technique is pretty clever with the new rules.

But let's be real here for a second - you guys are sitting at +15000 for Super Bowl odds and honestly? That's probably about right. I watched that Bills game in Week 8 and yeah Fitzgerald missed that 32 yarder but Dalton taking that sack with no timeouts was absolutely brutal. Classic Panthers moment right there.

Speaking of my Bills - we're sitting at +1200 tied with the Ravens and I'm feeling REAL good about that. Josh Allen is gonna get that ring eventually, mark my words. The coaching change doesn't scare me one bit.

As for that Lomu kid from Utah - if you're picking that high you probably need to address the trenches. Icky going down with the knee is rough but having a guy who can step in at LT and potentially slide around the line gives you flexibility. The run blocking concerns are legit though. Can't have your left tackle getting pushed around in the NFC South.

Bryce Young showed some flashes in that playoff game against the Rams. Kid might actually figure it out. Still think you need to surround him with better talent though. What's the plan at receiver this offseason?
 
Adding Teeth to the Bite: Panthers Roster Holes at Wide Receiver

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CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - JANUARY 10: Jalen Coker #18 of the Carolina Panthers runs with the ball during the third quarter of an NFL wild card playoff game against the Los Angeles Rams at Bank of America Stadium on January 10, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With the Panthers offseason underway and free agency just a couple months away, let’s take a look at some of the areas on the roster that Dan Morgan and Brandt Tillis have to address this offseason. Instead of looking at the entire roster, we are going to break the list down by position group. For the projected market value, I’ll be using Spotrac’s numbers. If you don’t agree with how much a player might get in free agency, take it up with them, not me. This week’s focus will be on the wide receivers.

2025 Performance​


The Panthers definitely seem to have hit on their first round pick from last NFL Draft in Tetairoa McMillan. McMillan eclipsed a thousand receiving yards en route to the Offensive Rookie of the Year award by a landslide. PFF graded T-Mac as a top twenty receiver in the NFL with a 79.3 overall grade. Jalen Coker was also seen in a positive light by PFF, notching a 75.4 overall grade in just 11 games played. Xavier Legette struggled quite a bit, only earning a 52 PFF grade and sowing doubt among the fanbase about his future. Hunter Renfrow, Jimmy Horn Jr, Brycen Tremayne, and David Moore also participated, only combining for 41 catches between the four of them. In terms of average depth of target, McMillan (11.6) and Coker (10.0) exceeded ten yards, while Legette (9.6) was just under that threshold. Legette also struggled to get yards after the catch, averaging only 2.1 YAC per reception while McMillan and Coker averaged 3.8 and 3.1 yards, respectively.

The Panthers definitely have their number one wide receiver and a high end number two. Horn provides value as a RAC threat and gadget player, while Legette enters a pivotal year that will determine the rest of his NFL career. What the unit still lacks overall is a true deep threat. Horn is fast but not the type of down field target that gets safeties to back up. If the Panthers can land a player in that mold like Ted Ginn used to be, they’ll have an incredibly well-rounded receiving corps.

Panthers’ Free Agents (with Spotrac expected market value)​


David Moore ($2.21M)
Hunter Renfrow ($1.03M)
Jalen Coker (ERFA)
Brycen Tremayne (ERFA)

Two veterans who did not provide much value last season are the only Panthers receivers hitting the open market this offseason. Moore might be brought back just for his veteran presence and familiarity with Dave Canales. He is also a boon on special teams. The Renfrow experiment is likely over. Coker and Tremayne are exclusive rights free agents, meaning if the Panthers offer a one-year tender at the league minimum, they cannot negotiate with other teams and must sign with the Panthers or sit out. The Panthers will absolutely make those tenders, so expect both those players to be on the roster next season.

Other Teams’ Free Agents (with Spotrac expected market value)​


Alec Pierce, Indianapolis Colts ($20.25M)
Rashid Shaheed, Seattle Seahawks ($14.1M)
Marquise Brown, Kansas City Chiefs ($5.5M)
Tyquan Thornton, Kansas City Chiefs ($2.84M)

If the Panthers really want to swing for the fences in free agency, they could make an offer to Alec Pierce or Rashid Shaheed. Both players are known for huge chunk plays and long speed, with Shaheed being the 11th fastest ball carrier in 2025 reaching 21.72 mph top speed on an 87 yard touchdown catch in Week 5. Both those players will have a ton of interest on the open market, so the Panthers might get priced out of that dream scenario.

Marquise Brown and Tyquan Thornton are more realistic options for the Panthers. Hollywood Brown is a known commodity who specializes in deep shots down field, and he’s still only 28. Thornton is another speedster who is a bit younger (25) and adds to the kick return game as well. Thornton broke the top 20 of fastest ball carriers in 2025 with a 28 yard kick return way back in week one. The fact that he accelerated to 21.48 mph in that short a distance shows that his 4.28 forty yard dash was no fluke. Adding that type of speed, even if he doesn’t catch most of his targets, forces the defense to at least think about precenting the huge plays over the top.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...e-bite-panthers-roster-holes-at-wide-receiver
 
Panthers reportedly adding Darrell Bevell to coaching staff

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Nov 12, 2025; Madrid, Spain; Miami Dolphins quarterbacks coach Darrell Bevell during practice at Estadio Riyadh Air Metropolitano. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

According to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, the Carolina Panthers are hiring Darrell Bevell as Associate Head Coach and Offensive Specialist.

The Panthers are hiring Darrell Bevell as associate head coach/offensive specialist, per sources.

A longtime respected NFL assistant, Bevell brings a wealth of experience to Dave Canales’ staff as Carolina aims to take the next step. pic.twitter.com/e6PLn3FFoj

— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) February 11, 2026

The Panthers haven’t made any changes to the staff prior to this, so it appears Bevell is a pure addition to the group. Dave Canales will continue to call plays and Brad Idzik is still the offensive coordinator, so I guess Bevell will just kinda help out and give them ideas and stuff. It’s hard to know for sure with all these different job titles teams make up for guys. It’ll be a reunion for several of the Panthers brass. Bevell overlapped with Canales and Dan Morgan in Seattle from 2011 to 2017. And we all know in the NFL, if you have a chance to give an old pal a job, you give an old pal a job.

It’s probably not the most inspiring hire based on past results. Bevell has been an offensive coordinator for 15 seasons, and the last several of those probably damaged his reputation. If it’s any consolation, in each of the last two seasons that he started as offensive coordinator, he finished as interim head coach. I guess that says something about how he’s perceived within the buildings that he works. He spent the last four years in Miami working as their quarterbacks coach and passing game coordinator. His experience with Tua Tagovailoa and Russell Wilson should make him well equipped to work with Bryce Young.

From the outside, we probably won’t see a whole lot of difference with Bevell on the staff. He’s likely here to take a little bit off the plate of Canales, who’s trying to balance play calling duties with other head coaching responsibilities on game days. It’s also another voice that presumably has a similar mind set that can bring some fresh perspective to the offensive meeting rooms.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...tedly-adding-darrell-bevell-to-coaching-staff
 
Brian Answers: A special guest, Darrell Bevell, draft questions, and more!

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Oct 26, 2025; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Panthers cornerback Chau Smith-Wade (26) runs on to the field before the game at Bank of America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images | Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

Hello CSR! Welcome to Brian Answers, part two of your weekly Panthers fan mailbag for everyone! We’re chugging along as we’re about 3-4 weeks away from free agency, so fans are chomping at the bit with mock drafts and projections of where rookies might fit. I brought in a member of the staff to help out with one of the questions this week, let me know if you’d like to see more of that!

Micash: Drop your favorite 7 round Panthers mock below please!

I realized upon writing that you may have been calling for mock drafts in the comments, but I tapped Daniel Belton for the first ever special guest to answer a question for this week! I don’t really do mock drafts this early in the off-season, but I know plenty of you friends exist, including the artist formerly known as DBelt. Here’s his picks and some quick reasoning behind them.

1-19: OT Caleb Lomu (Utah) – help on the line with older Taylor Moton and Ikem Eckwonu injury

2-51: LB Anthony Hill Jr. (Texas) – need better run defenders at LB to pair with Trevin Wallace

3-83: S Genesis Smith (Arizona) – center field type of safety to replace Nick Scott (sorry)

4-119: WR Bryce Lance (ND State) – Trey’s brother, tall and fast, vertical threat that the offense doesn’t have

5-157: EDGE Max Llewellyn (Iowa) – good size, what Ejiro Evero looks for in edge defenders

5-161: TE Dallen Bentley (Utah) – sleeper tight end, good blocker and reliable receiver

6-198: QB Drew Allar (Penn State) – developmental/backup QB, excellent tools, could be great with time, injured last year.

Overall, I like his Draft. Share your thoughts below!

brake23: You’re the GM and we’re at the #19 pick with the options below, which one do you pick?

Prospects of interest available:

A) WR-Makai Lemon

B) LB-Anthony Hill Jr.

C)Edge-Keldric Faulk

D) DT-Peter Woods

E)OT-Spencer Fanu

F)TE-Kenyon Sadiq

F) Trade back with Broncos for Picks 30 & 62


Obviously, as we saw up above, depending on who you ask Anthony Hill Jr is available in the 2nd round. I really don’t like trading into the late part of the first round with the needs the Panthers have. So among my choices, I’d be inclined to take OT Spencer Fano or EDGE Keldric Faulk, though you could talk me into Peter Woods being the pick. Let’s go with Faulk for this exercise, but a draft board falling like this gives the Panthers a lot of options. Faulk would be the highest impact player right away, but I think the value pick is Fano.

@WTMealey: I know we haven’t done FA or the draft yet. I’m trying to filter out homerism and have a realistic view of how much better we could be next year. We obviously exceded most outsiders expectations. Is that because they underestimated us or because we outperformed our actual ability?

My real question

__% chance we regress and have a worst season than 2025

__% chance we hold serve and have a very similar season to 2025

__% chance we continue to level up and have a better season than 2025


  • I give it a 40% chance of regression. The Panthers lost a few games they should have won and won a few games they should have lost. They have a harder (on paper, as of this writing) schedule going into 2026, so there’s a decent chance it goes sideways.
  • 30%. This team has a lot of needs to fill, and even if they continue on their upward trajectory, its highly possible the moves they make only keep them in the “playoff contenders” conversation due to the NFC South. I’d call 9 wins a “similar season).
  • 30%. I think many fans expect them to be better, and barring significant injury problems, its likely. So I’d say they have an equal chance of being better to being simply in the same area as 2025. To me, leveling up and being better is 10+ wins.

leazer88: Why does everyone have us picking a WR or DT in the 1st round? We have a lot of $ tied up on the DL, we need edge rushing, inside linebackers, and OL depth. We don’t need to be picking Sadiq with the first pick when we could sign a TE in FA or make a trade for Cole Kmet. Edge rushing and linebackers should be the MAIN focus in free agency AND the draft. We can sign a reliable veteran as a WR3.. like JuJu. Someone that doesn’t threaten targets for Tmac or Coker and can catch and create YAC. The Panthers don’t have that kind of guy.

Dcangio09 touched on the point about a defensive tackle quite well, so linking his comment here. To add my own thoughts, personally I have the mindset that you should always bolster the barracks on both sides of the line, so if an EDGE player isn’t available at the right value, a defensive tackle will help just as much since pairing Derrick Brown with another force on the interior would have just as much of a positive effect as another EDGE, since the inside takes a lot of pressure off the outside when you have a couple of high end players there (see Star Lotulelei and Kawann Short).

As far as wide receiver goes, Tetairoa McMillan is great, I think Jalen Coker has emerged into an absolutely reliable WR2, beyond that its a lot of youth and question marks. Adding another weapon to that group wouldn’t hurt, but I’d be slightly miffed if they did. Still, as the NFL evolves, having 3 upper tier wide receivers is not necessarily a poor allocation of resources. But if they do take one, that’s probably all but the end for Xavier Legette in Carolina as any kind of long term contributor. It will highly depend on what they do regarding Coker, as they can give him an RFA tag but I would expect them to give him much more than that in a contract extension.

dayneb12: One thing I’ve noticed during Dan Morgan’s time as GM is that each year there has been a pretty big UDFA class (19 each year). This has brought in some pretty solid players in guys like Jalen Coker, Ryan Fitzgerald, and Corey Thornton. Do you expect another big UDFA class after this year’s draft and could we see another solid UDFA pickup for the Panthers?

I spent years making my own brand off of favoring veterans over everyone’s favorite undrafted free agent darling in the previous decade, but I’ve been impressed with Carolina actually finding those coveted UDFA gems the last two seasons. Jalen Coker was a home run, Corey Thornton probably would have contributed a lot more as the season went on were it not for an unfortunate injury. Carolina is in less of a talent deficient situation as they were in 2024 and 2o25, but I still expect them to bring in some guys. I don’t know if it will be 19, but they have done a good job of identifying guys with traits they covet and making them contributors with their UDFA classes. A guy you didn’t mention was Brycen Tremayne, and he could realistically make the roster again as a wide receiver. I could see it happening again, hopefully at ILB, S, or along the offensive line or a RB.

Brazilian Panther: You have Ponds from IU and Chris Johnson from SDSU available to replace CSW in the slot, who do you take and why?

I’d take D’Angelo Ponds if the specific purpose is to take over for Chau Smith-Wade in the nickel spot, but I like Chris Johnson as a guy who can take over as an outside corner. So it really depends on what the Panthers overall cornerback room looks like come April.

Panthers75: Darrell Bevell hiring move anyone’s needle?

I actually really like the hire since Dave Canales cut his teeth working under Bevell in Seattle. I don’t know if it will have any major noticeable impact, but having someone with a ton of experience in the NFL around to evolve an offensive system he’s already familiar with can’t really hurt. I would imagine he can help Canales refine some things as well. But I don’t expect it to be a ground breaker of a move.

That’s all for this week, Panthers fans! Join us next week for another edition of the mailbag!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...guest-darrell-bevell-draft-questions-and-more
 
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