Reacts Results: Fans report lost hope in Week 2 Survey

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The Carolina Panthers opened the 2025 season with their fourth consecutive Week 1 loss. Not since Matt Rhule and Sam Darnold opened the 2021 season with three straight wins have the Panthers won a season opener. Coincidentally, that was also the last time the team had more than two consecutive wins. The Panthers have been bad and, despite late season hope and an offseason of promise dating back to Week 9 of 2024, last week’s game served nothing but disappointment.

We’ve talked a lot this week about how maybe it wasn’t as bad as it looked. There are reasons for optimism, largely encompassed by the theory that if the team looked bad as a whole on one day then they could look good on a whole the next if everybody can clean up their individual mistakes. It’s a sound theory, but it also feels like a lot to ask for given the Panthers recent history.

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Fans seem to think that it is, perhaps, too much to ask for.

A convincing win this week could see these numbers soar back up as high as the mid 60s, but the reality is that Panthers fans are a wary bunch right now. Years of failure has ingrained a “I’ll believe it when I see it” mentality. We thought we saw it last year and we started to believe. We didn’t see it Week 1 and so now we don’t. Even a one week rug pull like that—if we’re lucky enough to have it only be one week—won’t be completely overcome by one good week against the Cardinals.

Panthers fans were tied with fans of the Indianapolis Colts for the third highest confidence drop across the SB Nation network with a loss of 44% of fans. Only the Miami Dolphins (-45%), the Kansas City Chiefs (-47%), and the Tennessee Titans (-48%) had tougher weeks.

Dave Canales and Bryce Young are going to have to earn the trust of the Panthers faithful and re-earn their optimism. They’ll need to start this week, or else we’re going to be asking next week how many Panthers fans intend to even watch Week 3.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/general/55782/reacts-results-fans-report-lost-hope-in-week-2-survey
 
The Optimist: We’re going to keep doing this

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The Carolina Panthers accomplished an amazing feat yesterday: they looked better than they did in Week 1 while simultaneously leaving many of their fans even more bereft of hope. Bryce Young opened the game with two turnovers that should never have happened. He made mistakes and his offensive line let him down massively. That line protected him for most of the rest of the game, but they never lived up to their offseason billing. An immediate 10-point deficit and a stymied running game that led to Young throwing 55 passes yesterday left fans feeling like they were on a sinking ship, even while the Panthers clawed back in the second half. Carolina is allergic to giving their fans something as simple as hope. If they’re the cats then we are the live mouse they toy with season after season.

Improvements by every pass catcher not named Xavier Legette and big plays by young defenders contributed to a second half rally that saw the Panthers turn a 27-3 deficit to the Arizona Cardinals into a miracle last possession, after an onside kick recovery, with a chance to win the game. That ultimate drive was a comedy of errors on both sides, but no one drive from yesterday represents the whole story of this team.

The first six minutes and the last two minutes were the definition of impotence. Everything inbetween was a slowly building display of competence and adjustments. This was the Panthers letting us flee for our lives before catching us by the tail at the last second. Of course, playing with their prey fans was not intentional. Instead, a supposed strength failed and cascaded into the show we had yesterday. The real key to this game was the Panthers’ inability to control the line of scrimmage at big moments. That resulted in both pressure on Young and an inability to establish the running game.

The line settled down and the offense started to gain some traction in the second half, but they never made much room for Chuba Hubbard and Rico Dowdle. Young spotted the Cardinals with two turnovers and ten points in the opening minutes, then was asked to throw the ball 55 times. No part of that is in Carolina’s recipe for success.

The running game was supposed to be the strength of this team. The fact that the offensive line was so stymied by what was supposed to be an average opponent is worrying. But it makes the effort put forth by the passing game and the defense all the more impressive when compared to last week’s debacle.

There was a lot to like yesterday and a lot to worry about. It didn’t help, emotionally, that the Panthers started out with a series of calamities centered around Young and went into the half down 20 to 3.

What I liked​

The passing game​


Gasp. I know. It’s so cool to dump on Young and Canales. I’m not going to today.

Call it garbage time if you will, but Young, Tetairoa McMillan, Hunter Renfrow, and Ja’Tavion Sanders demonstrated the core of a stable passing game even though they were working primarily behind the sticks. Head coach Dave Canales has built a functional offense, which is more than I can say for any Panthers coach in living memory. While lacking in preparation and situational play calling, the team finally has the bones of success laid down. Maybe it’s a lot to ask them to flesh that out, but it is the task before them this season.

Considering the years we spent watching Matt Rhule go through quarterbacks and excuses like tissues and the negative that was the Frank Reich 11/17s of a season, I’m surprised so many people are so quick to ignore any shred of hope in favor of immediate negativity. We’re not ditching Young this season. The draft will still be there in January. This is the ride we’re on and it’s already more entertaining and promising than anything we saw outside of three weeks of Good Sam Darnold since Cam Newton was unceremoniously defenestrated the first time.

Are things good yet? No. But the Panthers look better on the field at 0-2 in 2025 than they did at 0-2 in 2024. We all want wins, but if we have to have patience. This is progress.

Kudos to the defense​


Princely Umanmielen and Nic Scourton have shown flashes of why they were once considered first round picks. D.J. Wonnum and Pat Jones were excellent yesterday, a revelation compared to their apparent absence against the Jaguars. Mike Jackson got jobbed on a PI call, but otherwise he and Jaycee Horn seem up to the job of containing almost any two-headed receiving corps in the league. In short, that was a shockingly good day from the defense. The Panthers had no chance of attempting a comeback yesterday without the defense holding the Cardinals to seven points in the second half.

Brycen Tremayne​


Renfrow and Sanders both took steps forward yesterday while still having a couple of plays I bet they want back. Renfrow will—deservedly—get all the accolades today for his seven receptions for 48 yards and two touchdowns. But I want to call out the undrafted rookie from Stanford. He hauled in three catches for 48 yards on five targets. including a clutch 26-yard reception on 4th & 16 during the Panthers last touchdown drive.

This is the kind of promising play that the Panthers need to find out of low cost players if they want to rebuild their roster and compete.

What I didn’t like​

Xavier Legette​


His first target of the day was a -2 yard reception that set up 3rd & 12. The play was well defended, but Legette surrendered unnecessary yards and failed to fight for anything more. That put the Panthers in an obvious passing situation at a time when the offensive line couldn’t block a sleeping baby. Young was immediately under pressure on the next play and threw his only interception of the game.

The throw is on Young, but this is a team game. The pressure was on the line, and the field position was—in part—on Legette. That was Legette’s only reception on eight targets. I don’t know what happened to him this offseason, but something has to change.

The offensive line​


Damien Lewis and Austin Corbett looked lost yesterday. They bear as much responsibility as anybody for the Panthers struggling to stay on the field in the first half. The entire line failed to generate much space for Hubbard and Dowdle and that made Carolina one dimensional for the entire game. This showed up big on one of the few unpenalized plays of the final drive. Down five points with less than two minutes to go, the line allowed immediate pressures on consecutive plays to put the Panthers behind the sticks. Bad line play exacerbated bad play calls and left the Panthers unable to move the ball or score when they really need to.

Nobody thinks that Young should be throwing 55 passes in a game. But averaging 2.6 yards per carry is no way to conduct an offense either.

This isn’t getting better fast.

Reports are that Robert Hunt (bicep) and Corbett (knee) may miss extended time with injuries they suffered yesterday. A torn biceps or ACL could sideline either of them for the season. Cade Mays should be able to do an acceptable job in Corbett’s absence, but things get a little murkier behind Hunt. Brady Christensen has played just about every position on the line and Chandler Zavala has, uh, had his moments, but neither are players that you want to rely on for a season at right guard.

The linebackers​


Christian Rozeboom and Trevin Wallace ain’t it, y’all. The sudden retirement of Josey Jewell combined with these guys falling well short of expectations has left the Panthers in a bind. They have improved at every other level of their defense, but this unit is so far below competitive that they are likely to drag the entire defense down with them.

It’s impressive that Carolina held a strong Arizona rushing attack to 82 yards, but don’t expect that to be a weekly thing. Do expect it to get worse before it gets better.

What’s next​


The Panthers have their first home game against the 1-1 Atlanta Falcons. Their offense currently runs through Bijan Robinson, which I’m sure won’t put any undue stress on the Panthers linebackers. As to what Young and company will bring to the field? That’s anybody’s guess. We should wait and see what the prognosis is for both Corbett and Hunt before we make any predictions.

I want to reiterate that yesterday was progress from last season. Canales is still extremely early in his career as both a play caller and a head coach. Young has had a weird ride and, while he does bear some responsibility for that, he has kept a calm and level head in the face of a lot of adversity. His rookie year was detrimental to his development. His second season saw him benched for a third of it. This season he is two for two in terms of games where he has made accurate throws and good decisions more often than not. It’s a low bar, but he has cleared it.

Adam Archuleta said a funny thing yesterday on the broadcast. He loved most of what Young did through the second half and argued that he could be a special player if he could “limit the catastrophic mistakes.” That’s as demoralizing an attaboy as I’ve ever heard, but it is also a dead accurate analysis of Young’s play. He doesn’t miss small. That makes it hard to judge what he can do when he’s firing on all cylinders. If he can fire on all cylinders. Young has a history in the NFL of bad habits born of bad experiences and worse coaching. He had ten games last season after his benching where he was prepared as the starter and not visibly haunted by his rookie season from the first play.

The games under those conditions were pretty fun to watch. This season is the next step for Young. These are his first games with actual stakes. Even today, the season is not lost. He’s playing under real pressure with a real team for what is effectively the first time in his career. He hasn’t been perfect, but he shouldn’t be expected to be perfect. I don’t even want him to be. I don’t want to see how he does while riding high. I want to see, now that he has taken a step or two forwards, if he can keep stepping forwards as the pressure mounts. That test is the point of this entire season to me and it was never going to be completed after two weeks. Instead, we’re going to do this again next week and the week after. Progress is is king. Progress shows process and that’s what leads to winning sustainably and consistently. We may never get there, but it is the only way to get there—no matter who our quarterback is.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/general/55825/the-optimist-were-going-to-keep-doing-this
 
Panthers Reacts Survey Week 3: Let’s revise our win predictions

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Back in the halycon times of last month, before the 2025 Carolina Panthers had taken a live snap in the regular season, fans were full of hope. Most of us predicted a moderately successful season with at least one more win than Dave Canales, Bryce Young, and Andy Dalton combined for last season. What an innocent time that was.

Now that we’ve been subjected to a far rougher start than we had hoped for, it is time to revisit our old predictions. Gone is the optimism of yestermonth. We have returned to the familiar environs of the cellar. This week, we’ll find out how far away rock bottom is. Next week, perhaps, we’ll see if there any layers below even that.

First, our standard confidence question. Once again, this is not a question asking if you think the Panthers will win this weekend against the Atlanta Falcons. This is a question asking about your opinion about the long term prospects of the franchise as a whole. Think of it as a referendum on the leadership of general manager Dan Morgan and head coach Dave Canales.

Second, let’s revisit the big question. How many games do you think the Panthers will win this season? Be honest, then be kind to yourself. It’s okay if this question makes you sad. We’re all in this together, for some reason.

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/ge...survey-week-3-lets-revise-our-win-predictions
 
Brian Asks: Come weep with me

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Hello CSR! Welcome to Brian Asks, your weekly Panthers fan mail bag for everyone! Well, I was hoping to feel this mail bag on a more positive note this week, however, the Panthers and specifically their first quarter had different plans for this week. The Panthers ended up losing a one score game despite a miraculous comeback where we saw them recover an onside kick for the first time in God knows how long. And after the dust settled, the Panthers are now going to have to shuffle their offensive line and try to write the ship along the way.

I know you all have questions and things you’d like to discuss, so this is your place to do it. Most of you know the drill, but comment down below with your questions and I will try my best to answer them later on this week. Hopefully, and I’m trying to will this into existence, next week we will have some more positive things to discuss, but we shall see what happens.

Comment down below with your questions, and keep pounding!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/general/55837/brian-asks-come-weep-with-me
 
Panthers vs Falcons: Offensive preview

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Well at least there were signs of life, right? The Carolina Panthers offense has put up about six quarters of mostly incompetent football. But of course, the two most competent quarters were the most recent two quarters, which now makes valid the question “have they figured it out?” To be fair, the Cardinals helped out by letting their foot off the gas with a big second half lead. That allowed Bryce Young to get comfortable, and he started wheeling and dealing in the short to intermediate areas of the field while the defense was protecting against a potential big play.

Whatever momentum the offense picked up in the second half of the loss to the Cardinals will be used to combat a seemingly much improved Atlanta Falcons defense. Through two weeks, they’ve allowed opponents to average just 4.5 yards per play, fourth best in the league. They have seven sacks in those two games, which is fifth best in the league. And that’s come against the Buccaneers and Vikings, who theoretically have better offenses than the Panthers. Atlanta prioritized their pass rush in the offseason, and it seems to be paying off based on the early returns.

Working in the Panthers favor is the fact that this is the team’s home opener, though fan support might not be stellar given the fourth straight 0-2 start to a season. Also it’s only been two weeks, so we don’t really know what’s real yet. We do have a couple of data points to analyze, so let’s see what they suggest the Panthers need to do on Sunday to get their first win.

  • Keep Bryce Young protected. The Panthers have been dealt some offensive line trouble in the first two weeks of the season. Robert Hunt and Austin Corbett both left the loss to Arizona on Sunday with significant injuries that will likely keep them out for most if not all of the rest of the season. The Falcons have done a good job of getting pressure from the interior and on the blitz, which is a worrying fact for a Panthers team trying to find continuity and talent on the offensive line. Young may have to make a lot of plays out of structure to keep the offense moving.
  • Try to stretch the field. Bryce Young currently has the shortest longest completion of the year in terms of air yards this season. He is the only quarterback in the NFL to have not completed a ball that traveled at least 30 yards in the air. While the overall depth of target has been bad but not terrible, it’s having a noticeable effect on the spacing of the offense. There hasn’t been much room to run, and the middle of the field in the passing game is crowded and dangerous. It may be hard to find the time to let longer routes develop, but the Panthers have to try to find a way to stretch out opposing defenses.
  • Xavier Legette, please show up. The second year wide receiver has put forth an absolutely stunning stat line through two games, turning 15 targets into four catches for eight yards. It’s not all on him, but at a certain point, good players need to be able to create easy plays, and he’s not doing that. He’s also manufactured nothing out of the touches that were manufactured for him. And now he’s popped up with yet another injury, this time with his hamstring. He seems to be good to go for Sunday, and his coaches and teammates are all saying the right things, but at some point we need to see something out of him on Sundays.
  • Keep throwing the ball to Tetairoa McMillan. McMillan has been exactly what the Panthers hoped to get when they made him the eighth pick in last May’s draft. If nothing else, watching a bunch of balls get thrown his way will make the game entertaining. He’s been a joy to watch so far.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...thers-vs-falcons-offensive-preview-nfl-week-3
 
Panthers vs Falcons: Defensive Preview

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Hello CSR! We’re onto week 3 of the 2025 NFL season, and the Panthers first home game of the season. They’ll be taking on the 1-1 Atlanta Falcons, who are coming off a strong win over the Minnesota Vikings where they combined for 218 total yards rushing. Sound familiar? That’s because the Panthers surrendered 200 rushing yards on a semi regular basis in 2024, and opened the 2025 season doing the same. Last week was a much better week for the Panthers defense, however an offense that shot themselves in the foot twice to start the game and several times after that did them no favors, as the Panthers fell to 0-2. Let’s go through some keys to this game for the defense to continue on an upward trajectory, and hopefully help the Panthers to their first win.

  • Continue the positive run defense. The Panthers managed to hold the Cardinals to a total of 82 yards for 3.7 yards per carry on Sunday, with the longest run coming on a scramble by QB Kyler Murray for 30 yards. Overall, a pretty successful day for most defenses, but a very successful one for a Panthers defense that habitually got abused in the run game last season and even in 2o23. However, the Falcons are much more devoted to running the football and involving their running backs in general. Stud running back Bijan Robinson ran roughshod over the Vikings last week with 143 yards on 22 attempts. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers managed to keep Bijan and Tyler Allgeier under wraps during week one, but Bijan still caught the ball 6 times for 100 yards in that contest. The engine of this offense is going to be Bijan Robinson and Allgeier, as the duo has carried the ball 58 times collectively over the last two games. Carolina’s rush defense has improved since last year, but this game could quickly get out of hands if they can’t limit the rushing attack early on. The inside linebackers in particular could be in for a very bad day if they continue to play as bad as they have so far.
  • Jaycee Horn and Mike Jackson will have to rise to the challenge again. One of the lost stories of the 2025 season so far is Jaycee Horn and Mike Jackson have overall played extremely well as the perimeter corners. Sure, Mike Jack had an unfortunate pass interference penalty last week (that I maintain would not have happened if Kyler doesn’t severely under throw the football to his receiver), but overall the two have been about as good as we could have expected given the other weaknesses surrounding them. Jaycee Horn in particular seems to be grading out as one of the best in the league this year. He’ll see Drake London and Kyle Pitts on Sunday, and London in particular has been a thorn in the Panthers side whenever he’s healthy.
  • Ramp up the pass pressure. The Panthers pass rush still is finding its footing in 2025. Last week, rookie Princely Umanmielen got his first sack of the year, and the team as a whole managed 4 QB hits, which was progress compared to the whole 0 sacks and 1 QB hit they got in week 1 against the Jaguars. They’ll be facing Michael Penix Jr this week, who has only started a handful of games compared to Trevor Lawrence and Kyler Murray. Penix has started the season somewhat inconsistently, with a decent pass performance in a losing effort in week 1, and a game manager role in week 2 when the rushing attack ran over the Vikings. The last time Penix and Bryce Young met, it turned into a major shootout. With the Panthers current woes on offense, a shootout is not an ideal scenario. Continuing to play the rookie pass rushers and rotate should help if the game turns more pass heavy than I would expect.

What are you watching for from the defense, Panthers fans?

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...n/55863/panthers-vs-falcons-defensive-preview
 
Reacts Results: Win predictions by fans sink with 0-2 start

Fans of the Carolina Panthers are holding a surprising amount of hope for a team they mostly think is heading in the wrong direction. That’s what this week’s Panthers Reacts survey has told us, at least. An 0-2 start after an offseason of building hope is always going to generate some emotional whiplash in the people that watch these games looking for fun and entertainment, but Panthers fans are notably impatient due to the past seven years of disappointment that we have endured.

Losing to the New England Patriots this weekend in the Panthers home opener would drop the team to 0-3 and all but guarantee an eighth consecutive losing season. Fans, who have never seen even two consecutive winning seasons in the franchise’s 30 years, are understandably down on the entire team right now.

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There is room for these numbers to drop as some fans are still clearly hoping for a 2024-esque rally. There are, in their defense, a few things to pin their hopes on. Bryce Young’s performance on the field has been a mixed bag at best to start, but still superior to his 2025 start. The Panthers defense looked shockingly better than last season against the Arizona Cardinals last week.

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Nobody is expecting a huge turnaround for the team. But also, I think it’s notable that not everyone bottomed out their prediction from the preseason. I think folks are just hoping for Young, what remains of his offensive line, his receivers, and the defense to pull together a complete game a few times this season. I think at this point we’re just hoping for Sundays to be fun on occasion.

How about you? Jump down in the comments and tell us what you’re hoping for this weekend and this season.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ge...s-win-predictions-by-fans-sink-with-0-2-start
 
Brian Answers: Bryce Young, Dave Canales, and more!

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Hello CSR! Welcome to Brian Answers, part two of your weekly Panthers fan mailbag for everyone! Most of the questions this week revolved around moving on from Bryce Young and Dave Canales, subjects I was hoping we wouldn’t be getting into this early in the regular season, but here we are! Let’s dive right in, and join us next week for another edition of the mailbag!

e4*: Will I ever play the the violin?

If the Panthers continue to have horrific games like the last two weeks, you might have an extra four hours a week come November or so to learn the violin. Or become an Eagles fan. Maybe learn to play “Fly Eagles Fly” on the violin too? Seriously though, I hope the team can at least stabilize its performance soon.

schrodingersblackcat: What happens if Bryce pulls off a trajectory similar to last year? (With or without benching.)

I went ahead and linked the whole comment since you asked several questions, I will try to hit on all the asking points.

  • I think if Bryce ends the season on the upswing again and the team finishes around .500, you probably have to consider bringing in some form of competition. I don’t know if that’s a first round pick at QB, but maybe a mid rounder or a free agent option. Then as the head coach/GM, you let those guys fight it out in camp, and build the rest of the roster up as best you can around them. I don’t think it makes sense to move on entirely from Bryce Young in this scenario unless you find a team willing to make a decent trade, but what exactly that would look like is hard to project right now.
  • I don’t know if bringing Jameis Winston in makes a lot of sense for this team, but it would be fun. If by some miracle the Giants are playing Jacxson Dart over a healthy Russell Wilson prior to the deadline, maybe you can get Winston on a cheap trade, but I don’t think he’s saving the season if we see the Panthers continue on the current trend. I am still of the mindset that we give it a few more weeks before deciding the 2025 season is completely lost.

brake23: Last week I said Bryce had to have a big game and throw for over 300 yards for me to have any optimistic view on his future. Surprisingly, he followed through BUT it also came with the typical Bryce turnovers and against a very banged up Arizona secondary with no pressure up front for a large chunk of the second half. What kind of performance do you think Bryce needs to have in order to show the fanbase that he isn’t regressing?

Really, to me, it has to be starting the game fast rather than a horrific turnover, and staying somewhat consistent on offense throughout the game. Atlanta’s defense looks pretty good right now, specifically the pass rush, so that unfortunately means we’ll probably see some pressure on Bryce on Sunday. But I think starting the game strong and keeping it competitive throughout would be a good start, even if the Panthers don’t find a way to win.

Bruce Guild: What are your thoughts on how this defense will fair this year particularly if offense can minimize turnovers?

I’m hoping this week is the starting point with Nic Scourton and Princely Umanmielen on the edges. It looks like at least Scourton will get a much bigger role with Pat Jones already ruled out, but hopefully that also means Princely will get mixed in a bit more as well coming off his first sack last week. The rush defense did well last week, but how much of that comes from the Cardinals letting off the gas in the second half remains to be seen. If the Panthers edge rushers can continue to progress and acclimate, the defense could be alright. Jaycee Horn, Mike Jackson, and Chau Smith-Wade seem to be doing very well as the CB tandem all things considered. The safeties and interior linebackers have been meh, but a stronger pass rush can help mask a lot of these things. Its all going to start with the defensive line in my opinion, but I’ve seen some flashes of good from the defense as a whole throughout two weeks where bad offense hurt everything else.

Panthers75: Is it my fault? I have a confession. I took a flyer on Bryce as my last pick on one of my fantasy teams. I thought that maybe, just maybe the offense would be legitimate. I apologize to the Panthers fandom at large for this transgression

I feel you, Panthers75. In my big money Dynasty league, I drafted Bryce Young last year (it was the inaugural draft) with a later round pick. I dropped him after he was benched, picked him back up after he started trending upward and have him as my QB2/3 this year. It might be both of our faults.

schrodingersblackcat: How many more weeks of awful play and awful-er effort will it take for our coaches to overlook XL’s draft status and bench him?

I think if his struggles continue, once Jalen Coker is back and healthy he might drop down the roster to WR4/5. Currently, Hunter Renfrow is getting open and doing well with his catchable opportunities, and it seems Brycen Tremayne is making a real case to continue to see passing snaps on offense. If Legette can’t get it together his role may be overtaken by Coker, so that decision might just come down to getting the best guys on the field.

right_turn_clyde: How hot is Canales’s seat right now given that yet again the Panthers are the worst prepared and worst performing team to start the season?

If Dave Canales is fired this season or during the off-season, this organization and David Tepper would lose pretty much all of the good faith I have that they’ve moved on from the snap decisions that caused them to be in the situation they’ve been in for the last 5 seasons. The way they’ve drafted, handled free agency, and general strategy all seem to indicate they are finally taking the long approach towards team building, and I think the idea with hiring Canales, as inexperienced as he was, is that there were going to be growing pains, and this wasn’t supposed to be a situation where the Panthers were going to be playoff contenders within two seasons. Obviously, the slow starts over the last two years, specifically on offense, are very concerning. But I would not consider Canales’s seat hot right now, maybe a conversation we would have following year 3. If they move on from him this soon, I have major concerns about this team ever rebuilding properly.

Shifty Fish: At what point does Will Levis enter the conversation?

Maybe towards mid season if we’re continuing to see this version of the offense at that time, though I’m not convinced they won’t turn it around at least in some capacity. If the Panthers are still winless and Bryce Young looks like a shell of what he was to end last season and in flashes this year, it might be worth bringing Levis in, but I don’t know how much that would help. He’d have to pick up a new offense entirely on the fly, and he’s not a veteran QB with experience in several schemes throughout his career. It would be a dart throw at best, but I wouldn’t completely oppose it if things continue to be this bad.

KeepPounding88: Why do we continue watching this team even though we know damn well they’re just going to find new ways to disappoint us?

I think I’m at the point where it has to end eventually, and they seem to be building for the long term now. But I can understand why people are at their limits with the team. Hopefully a get right game is around the corner where we can at least be entertained.

Chef: Is it ok to not expect every single week to be a disaster? Hope is a fragile thing, but I just can’t watch continually expecting the worst possible outcome. Will the overall sentiment surrounding the team change when we beat ATL?

I think like the Raiders game last season, all it takes is one strong victory to get the fans at least invested again. Hopefully this time it doesn’t have to come with Bryce Young being benched for a period.

Revshawn: Does it make sense for the Panthers to trade for a QB when the NFL Draft QB class is this good? How much of a shot do you give the Panthers at landing Arch Manning if we stay the course and start Bryce all 17 games?

I’m not sure what QB they will target if things really go that way. I’m thinking the team has to stabilize at some point, but how many games they’ll win is a different matter.

Galadhron: Why are we acting like this team is cooked? I mean, the GD Chiefs are 0-2, too!

I’m glad we’ve still got some optimism out there, I know this community has been through some really challenging seasons for several years in a row, so I understand the quick response to give up on this season. Again, if they can turn it around and find a strong victory this week or next, we might return to optimism. Keep up the good vibes!

positivebob: 1st win? Don’t think it’s Atlanta, haven’t followed the Pats much yet, but it’s on the road, so not likely, but Miami at home. That’s the one. Sound about right?

Weird stuff always happens between the Panthers and Falcons, no matter how good or bad each team is. So I genuinely have no idea what to expect on Sunday. The Falcons defense is being praised as good, the Panthers offense has been bad outside of the 2nd half last week. But this week could be the week. Pats and Dolphins are also both winnable games, but I think that will depend on what the Panthers look like this week too. Momentum is a thing. Even if they don’t win, a competitive performance will be more uplifting than the defeating performances to start this season.

Kimbersdad: Does XL make the team next year???

I don’t see why he wouldn’t, but its a bit early to be having that conversation. Let’s at least give the guy the rest of the year to get his head right.

Zing311: Can we trash this 3-4 crap and go back to what we were good at yet?

The base defense the team plays really doesn’t effect a whole lot, but the Panthers don’t have the personnel to go back to a base 4-3 anyway. They currently play more of a hybrid defense, and when the team is in nickel/dime defense the only real difference between 3-4 and 4-3 is whether the edge rushers have their hands in the dirt or not. Changing back to a 4-3 is not going to solve the defense’s problems, the linebackers aren’t going to be any better. The two edge rushers they drafted are better fits as 3-4 edge rushers as well.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/general/55889/brian-answers-bryce-young-dave-canales-and-more
 
Panthers Injury Report & Transactions – Week 3

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The Carolina Panthers front office is busy throughout the season with transactions, roster moves, and injury updates. Here’s what’s happening at Mint Street this week.

Injury Report


The Panthers head into a divisional game against the Atlanta Falcons after having just placed guard Robert Hunt and center Austin Corbett on injured reserve. Outside linebacker Patrick Jones II and defensive tackle Tershawn Wharton are listed as out this week, while wide receiver Xavier Legette is questionable.

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Transactions


In addition to placing Hunt and Corbett on the IR, the other transactions of note were the signings of linebacker Maema Njongmeta (from the Bengals practice squad) and center Nick Samac (from the Ravens practice squad).

Njongmeta is a 6-foot-0, 230-pound second-year NFL player. He played his college ball at Wisconsin and in 32 games recorded 158 tackles and 6.5 sacks. He went undrafted in 2024 but ended up making the Cincinnati Bengals roster and appeared in all 17 games last year with one start. He played just 30 defensive snaps but was a special teams mainstay with 371 snaps. In his rookie season last year he had 13 tackles and two fumble recoveries. Cincy tried to stash him on the practice squad this year but the Panthers signed him away this week.

Samac is 6-foot-4 and 315 pounds. He played for Michigan State in college, appearing in 49 games. In 2024 he was a seventh round pick by the Baltimore Ravens. He didn’t appear in any games during his rookie season last year, was waived before the 2025 season, then signed to the Ravens practice squad before the Panthers snapped him up.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...81/panthers-injury-report-transactions-week-3
 
Panthers 30 Falcons 0: The Panthers defense is the story today in a wild shutout victory

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The Panthers were looking for their first win of the season following two depressing losses to start the season. Luckily for them, they faced the Atlanta Falcons, a matchup nobody can ever truly predict! And needless to say, I don’t think many Panthers fans predicted this result. Let’s dive right in!

First Quarter​


The Falcons started the game off hot with several easy completions from Michael Penix. The Panthers rush defense was pretty good, and they managed to hold the first drive in field goal range, which naturally the Falcons kicker missed horrifically, giving the Panthers offense decent starting field position. A couple of completions later, the Panthers were staring at 4th and 3 in decent scoring range, which Dave Canales elected to go for. Surprisingly, instead of the play going bad, Bryce Young hit Tetairoa McMillan for a beautiful 23 yard pass and catch. A 12 yard completion to Tommy Tremble put the Panthers on the 4 yard line, and then Bryce Young scampered in for the touchdown, giving the Panthers a 7-0 lead on their first drive on offense! The Panthers then managed a 3 and out after a Falcons clock management snafu, and everything seemed to be going the Panthers way. Until Trevor Etienne muffed the punt return, Falcons took over with nice field position. Luckily, the Panthers defense once again held up, forcing another long field goal. Which the Falcons, once again, missed. The Panthers could not capitalize and were forced to punt as the first quarter winded down. Falcons took over on their own 10.

Second Quarter​


The Falcons managed to get past the 50 yard line again, but two short completions and an incompletion later, they punted for the first time in the game. The Panthers offense took over on their own 13 yard line. They leaned heavily on Tetairoa McMillan and the rushing game, but unfortunately a false start penalty and a missed timing throw by Bryce Young to Hunter Renfrow cut the drive off just as they were getting closer to the RedZone. Rookie kicker Ryan Fitzgerald nailed a 57 yard field goal to bring the lead to 10-0 for the Panthers. The Falcons took over, leaned on Bijan Robinson, but again were held to a punt after a nice pass deflection by Chau Smith-Wade on 3rd down. A bad looking punt gave the Panthers the ball on their own 31. Unfortunately, a penalty and a trip by Rico Dowdle forced a quick Panthers punt with 1:10 to go. With no timeouts, the Falcons ran out of time to position for a field goal. The Panthers open the second half with the ball.

Third Quarter​


The Panthers first drive ended with a dropped screen pass by Tetairoa McMillan that would have likely seen him hitting paydirt if he could corral it. The Panthers punted to the Falcons with good kick coverage to tackle the returner immediately. However, the Panthers defense once again came up strong, with arguably the biggest play of the year so far. Chau Smith-Wade broke beautifully on a pass from Penix, and took it to the house. Even the unsportsmanlike conduct penalty didn’t matter, as Ryan Fitzgerald nailed a LONG PAT attempt. 17-0. The Falcons tried to get something going on the following drive but were met with a 4th down situation, they elected to go for it. Penix put the ball in the turf for an open receiver, Panthers took over. The Panthers drove it into the redzone after multiple pass attempts to T Mac resulted in defensive pass interference, but the Falcons defense stood with a sack on Bryce Young. Another Fitzgerald field goal brought the score to 20-0 Panthers. The Falcons took over and went into throwing mode, getting into decent scoring position but again were faced with a 4th down decision. They went for it again, and Mike Jackson joined the action with a pick of his own, which would have went for six if Penix didn’t manage to get in his way! Panthers took over around the Falcons 30!

Fourth Quarter​


With a short field, the Panthers drove the ball with several runs and a couple of completions to Ja’Tavion Sanders, unfortunately he came up limping and was taken out following a really big first down play. The Panthers capped off the drive with a rushing touchdown by Rico Dowdle. 27-0. Kirk Cousins came in for the next Falcons drive following another bad fielding of a kickoff by their return team. On 4th down, he threw the ball just outside of Darnell Mooney’s reach. Panthers take over again. The Panthers churned out some clock, but a holding penalty ended up cutting the drive short. Another field goal by Fitzgerald put the Panthers up 30-0. The Falcons went for garbage time yards to try and score, but a forced fumble by Lathan Ransom preserved the shut out! Panthers win!

Final Thoughts​


The Panthers defense showed up in a huge way today. Before the game got completely out of hand, they held the Falcons to field goal attempts, which as always are not a guarantee to score points. The Falcons missed those attempts. They didn’t allow 200 yards rushing, they held Michael Penix to 172 yards passing, 50% of his attempts completed, zero TDs, and 2 interceptions. They didn’t sack him at all, but I don’t think this Panthers defensive unit is going to produce a ton of sacks. But they pressured him enough with some exotic blitz packages, and generally played very technically sound defense. Special shout out to Chau Smith-Wade, obviously he had the pick six, but beyond that he had a nice pass deflections and several great tackles in coverage.

On offense, the Panthers didn’t shoot themselves in the foot. Bryce Young only threw for 121 yards, but he did run one in to start the game off strong. They generally leaned on the running game, threw the ball a lot to Tetairoa McMillan, and did what they needed to. Ryan Fitzgerald nailing every kick he needed to helped, but the bottom line is the Panthers didn’t have the back breaking mistakes on offense that killed them the last two weeks.

I won’t over scrutinize too much beyond these thoughts. The Panthers won, and its on to a beatable Patriots team in Foxborough next week. Thank you all for keeping with us throughout a challenging start to the season, hopefully this is the catalyst for better days ahead. KEEP POUNDING!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...-is-the-story-today-in-a-wild-shutout-victory
 
Panthers vs Falcons: Inactives and open game thread

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The Carolina Panthers open their home slate for the 2025 season against the Atlanta Falcons. Down 0-2 on the season, the Panthers have the opportunity today to tie the Falcons for second place in the NFC South with a win. That opportunity might seem wishful thinking to some, as most fans are already quite down on the team.

The big news of the morning is that Xavier Legette is joining Tershawn Wharton, and Patrick Jones II as starters that are inactive due to injury. Jimmy Horn, Jr, James Mitchell, and Nick Samac round out the list of players who did not receive a game day jersey this week.

Today has a big sink or tread water feel for Panthers fans hoping for an entertaining season. Words like ‘winning’ and ‘competitive’ feel a long way off, especially with the injuries already beginning to mount on the Panthers perilously thin defense.

This is your open thread to follow along with all the action today.

You know the drill.

This is now an open thread!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ga...ers-vs-falcons-inactives-and-open-game-thread
 
The Optimist: Panthers narrowly beat Falcons, 30-0

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The soon to be 15-2 Carolina Panthers overcame uncharacteristic competence to win their home opener against the Atlanta Falcons. All jokes aside, that was the first game in years that felt good, looked good, and stayed good from start to finish. Just as the first two games were team losses, with key mistakes from across the roster, yesterday was a team win.

The offense, led by a careful Bryce Young, played mistake-free football. Special teams kicked the ball out of the park, with shout outs earned by the coverage teams and by kicker Ryan Fitzgerald. And, perhaps most surprisingly, the defense showed up big. A pick six and the team’s first shut out since 2020 are fitting accolades for the most complete performance Ejiro Evero’s unit has put together since the much maligned defensive coordinator joined the Panthers in 2023.

What I liked​

The offensive line​


Bryce Young had a clean pocket most of the day and made enough of it to keep the Panthers competitive against a flailing Falcons team. The Arizona Cardinals game got off to a horrific start in large part because the line allowed free rushers in Young’s face within moments of the snap, resulting in two turnovers and ten points in the first two minutes.

It was easy to expect something similar against an ascendant Falcons defense and without Robert Hunt and Austin Corbett. Instead, Chandler Zavala and Cade Mays more than held their own in relief. Young repaid the favor by not making bone headed decisions and keeping the ball in the hands of the Panthers.

Young and the offense’s day overall was clean and efficient with only a few missed connections. There were fewer deflating drops, missed passes, and runs for negative yardage than we had seen in the past two weeks. Credit for that starts with the line stepping up. Kudos, once again, to Zavala and Mays for excellent work.

The defensive secondary​


Chau Smith-Wade and Mike Jackson both got their picks. Jaycee Horn dropped a third while making several other splash pass break ups and tackles. Even the safeties stepped up, keeping Bijan Robinson in check and holding their opponent to a second consecutive game under 200 yards rushing.

Yes, we celebrate clearing low bars here.

The front seven controlled the line of scrimmage reasonably well, but applied very little pressure in the passing game and missed what felt like dozens of tackles in the running game. The secondary was able to hold everything together and still pitch the shut out. That’s incredible given what the box score looks like:

Atlanta outgained Carolina by 109 yards today (333-224).

The last team to out gain their opponent by 100+ yards while losing by 30+ in a shutout (reg season + playoffs) was the Miami Dolphins on November 1, 1970 at the Baltimore Colts (+144, 35-0 loss).

— Tori McElhaney (@tori_mcelhaney) September 21, 2025

Ryan Fitzgerald​


Out of six kickoffs, Fitzgerald landed one at the Falcons 12, one at their 9, two as touchbacks, one at their two, and one at their three yard line. He was also perfect kicking on the day with three extra points and field goals of 35, 41, and 57 yards.

The defense should get a lot of credit for how they performed yesterday, but there were two factors outside of their control that made significant contributions to their shut out. One was the offense not forcing them to play from behind the whole day. The other was Fitzgerald doing a great job making sure they Falcons had poor field position.

The open thread​


Fans have been through a lot in the past eight years following the Panthers. It’s no wonder people turned on this team after just two games. Two comments from yesterday’s game thread stood out to me as typifying the Panthers fan experience.

The first, at the start of the second quarter, came from user panthersfan1995:

“I’m having a hard time getting excited by what I’m what I’m seeing. I keep waiting for the Panthers to show up.”

The second, from user JKizzle:

Best game in nearly a decade, and unlike the vast majority of wins we’ve managed…it is early in the season, against a divisional opponent, when we are still alive.

Close em out and lets get out of here

We’re not used to games like this. We’re used to tearing down coaching decisions, quarterback play, tackling efforts and the like as watch opportunity after opportunity get missed en route to a bigger-than-it-should-have-been loss or a narrow win. Beating a divisional rival 30-0 isn’t like that.

We shouldn’t get used to games like this. We all know this isn’t happening again for years, but I’m honestly glad that the open thread and post game thread were largely happy places. It’s good that we can still enjoy these when they come along.

What’s next?​


I’m not going to nitpick a win when they have been so few and far between. We all know the Falcons were bad yesterday. We all know Young did not play a world-beating level of football and that the Panthers edge rushers need some help. All of that may be important in the coming weeks, but right now let’s celebrate the shut out win.

The Carolina Panthers were near universally expected to lose yesterday and, instead, won 30-0 to advance to second place in the NFC South. We’re entering Week 4 still alive for the season for the first time since 2022. Young (and Chau Smith-Wade) and company have out scored their oppponents over the last six quarters 49-7 despite looking like they were operating at 50% of their potential the whole time.

Let’s hang our hopes on the defense getting it’s depth healthy again and playing with a lead a little more often. Let’s hang our hopes on Fitzgerald making more 50+ yard field goals look easy. Let’s hang our hopes on Young locking in the timing of this offense with Hunter Renfrow, Xavier Legette, and Jalen Coler in the weeks to come. Let’s hang our hopes on Tetairoa McMillan still leading the team as a receiver in a game where he had multiple “rookie mistakes.”

Let’s hang our hopes there because those hopes—when nurtured and grown to fruition—will have us watching a team that will be expected to shut out the Falcons 56-0 when the Panthers visit them in Atlanta in Week 12.

Oh, right, I said all jokes aside way back at the start of this. I guess I’m only being partly facetious here. The truth is that the Panthers did this to an actual NFL team. They won’t pitch shut outs every week, but set aside all your caveats and buts. The Falcons looked no worse than the Panthers have on their worst days in recent years. Mistakes may have been made on their end, but they remain an actual NFL team. The Panthers hung thirty points on them in a shutout.

Limiting mistakes, moving the chains, and controlling the clock are reasonable goals for this Panthers team. They are also keys to be competitive in any game, against any team. They might not beat most teams this season, but they could be a heck of a lot more fun to watch than what we saw in the first two weeks.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/general/55902/carolina-panthers-atlanta-falcons-analysis-recap
 
Panthers vs Falcons game review: Time to celebrate

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The players and coaches may have a 24-hour rule to soak in a victory before moving on to the next opponent, fans are not beholden to any such rule. A good thing, because the high created from a 30 to nothing smackdown on a bitter division rival deserves a few more days of enjoyment. For all the turmoil those who follow the team have suffered the last decade or so, the moments where fans can sit within a moment and savor a dominant victory are few and far between.

Enjoy 30 minutes of us beating the Falcons

NFL+ pic.twitter.com/4f94yakg4N

— Carolina Panthers (@Panthers) September 21, 2025

The first 6 quarters of the 2025 season were undeniably rough, but the next 6 quarters that followed have been a revelation of sorts as the Panthers have outscored their opponents by a whopping 42 points. A turnaround like that doesn’t just happen, so let’s take some time to celebrate the elements of the team’s drastic improvement that made the Panthers first notch in the win column possible.

Turnovers​


Anyone who has watched more than 90 seconds of Dave Canales’ press conferences knows how seriously the coach preaches the importance of turnovers – both creating takeaways on defense and limiting giveaways on offense. Sans a poor attempt to field a punt by Trevor Etienne leading to the team’s sole turnover, the Panthers otherwise managed to string together a near perfect game in this department.

Kudos to the Panthers pass defense for snagging 2 interceptions versus a clearly dejected Michael Penix, Jr. Chau Smith-Wade’s pick-6 was the backbreaker for the Falcons and Mike Jackson’s interception on 4th down gave the Panthers 4 interceptions on the season which is nearly half the total from last year (9 in all of 2024) in just 3 games. The Panthers pass defense even came through on two other attempted 4th downs for the Falcons as both balls hit the turf for 2 turnovers on downs.

Took it CHAU the way to the house

📺: FOX pic.twitter.com/te3OJISzta

— Carolina Panthers (@Panthers) September 21, 2025

Perhaps most importantly, Bryce Young and the rest of the Panthers offense came away with a clean sheet in the turnover column after giving up multiple turnovers in each of the first two games that contributed heavily to the team’s slow starts during each contest.

Run defense and tackling​


Before the Falcons ran the ball 7 times for 46 yards on their final drive against the Panthers back-ups, they had been held to 85 yards on 16 carries. Still a respectable yards per carry, but holding the team with arguably the best running back in the NFL to under 100 yards rushing is a win in my book.

In fact, the Falcons might have been better served learning on the run game despite being down by multiple scores for most of the ball game. The Falcons 4.7 yards per pass attempt speaks to the poor performance of the Falcons passing attack, but also to the Panthers consistent effort to fly to the ball to bring down receivers after minimal yard after catch.

Tre’Von Moehrig had a day against Atlanta.

Increasing Latham Ransom’s snaps to let Moehrig to play closer to the LOS while having adequate help behind him was a great move by Evero.

Penix was 8/17 passing for 100 yards and 2 ints when Ransom/Moehrig played together pic.twitter.com/8vmPcGhDkz

— Matt Alquiza (@malquiza8) September 22, 2025

Derrick Brown’s return this season continued to set the tone while the overall improvement of Trevin Wallace and tackling across the secondary from Tre’von Moehrig, Mike Jackson and even the much maligned Nick Scott heavily contributed to limiting explosive plays. They made the Falcons fight for every single yard, and the birds lost that fight often as they never once managed to cross the Panthers 30 yard line on offense.

It is awesome to know that Derrick Brown is the best player on the #Panthers roster because this has been missed for over a year.

Brute force at the POA with excellent dbl team take-ons and gap integrity. pic.twitter.com/WS1ojnFLcA

— Jared Feinberg (@JRodNFLDraft) September 22, 2025

Special Teams ingenuity​


In 2024, the Panthers consistently ranked among the worst special teams units in the NFL. While their kicker at one point was considered the most accurate in NFL history, that was short lived as he finished the season making only 84.6% of field goal attempts and a couple missed extra points tacked on for good measure. With the option to stick with the same group from 2024, the team chose a different path forward.

The Panthers now have rookie kicker Ryan Fitzgerald who has yet to miss a kick, including a field goal from 57 yards out that tied the Panthers second longest kick of all time. While perfection on field goal attempts is most important, the kicker has also dazzled (as much as a kicker can) with his placement in the landing zone on kickoffs. This year, the Panthers have implemented a new kickoff strategy that seems to have worked wonders as opposing teams have had an average starting field position after kickoffs of 20.7 yards – 2nd lowest in the NFL according to PFF.

Ryan Fitzgerald’s kickoffs were such game-changers yesterday😮‍💨#KeepPounding
pic.twitter.com/dWRZdM723O

— SleeperPanthers (@SleeperCarolina) September 22, 2025

Relish the moment and let us know in the comments which improvement the team made against the Falcons you found important! We’ll see you back here next week after the Panthers try to continue their momentum against the New England Patriots.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...-time-to-celebrate-derrick-brown-dave-canales
 
Brian Asks: Finally a positive mailbag!

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Hello CSR! Welcome to Brian Asks, part one of your weekly Panthers fan mailbag for everyone! The first two editions of this column were… not the most fun, but I appreciate all of you participation as always. As I said in the Answers part of the last two weeks, HOPEFULLY a win would allow us to have some more positive discourse. Luckily, the Panthers delivered on that front in their home opener. They shut out the Falcons, played pretty good defense, and won in pretty convincing fashion, even with the usual Panthers miscues and struggles. The comments section of the game recap and the Optimist were great fun! But, we’re onto this week, where the Panthers gear up for a trip to Foxborough to face the New England Patriots on Sunday.

You all know the drill, comment down below with your questions, and I’ll have answers for you later on this week in part two of this column; Brian Answers. You can ask (mostly) any questions you like, whether they be Panthers related, football related, or even completely off topic. Sound off below, and KEEP POUNDING!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/general/55919/brian-asks-finally-a-positive-mailbag
 
2026 NFL Draft Prospect Profile: Anthony Hill Jr

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Even though the 2025 NFL season just started, it’s never too early to 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 Texas Longhorns linebacker Anthony Hill Jr.

Bio​


Hill was a consensus five star prospect out of Texas, consistently ranked in the top 25 overall players in his class. While he had the bona fides on the football field in high school (State Championship in 2020), he also showed incredible overall athleticism as he was part of his high school’s 4x400m relay team that finished second in the state. Hill hit the ground running after committing to the University of Texas. He ended his freshman season with the Big 12 Defensive Freshman of the Year and Freshman All-American honors. Last season, he continued to demolish opposing offenses despite Texas’ switch to the SEC, earning Second Team All-American honors.

Strengths/Weaknesses​


As referenced above, Hill has insane athleticism. His speed and fluidity in coverage look like those of a safety despite him being listed at 6’3”, 235 lbs. He is able to use that speed and athleticism to create a ton of power in his hits. On top of all the athletic traits you could want, Hill is also insanely impressive under the helmet. He has advanced instincts and processes information at an elite level, allowing him to play even faster that his raw athleticism would suggest. Perhaps his biggest strength is his knack for showing up in big ways on big stages. He always seems to make a huge tackle, sack the opposing quarterback, or force a turnover when his team needs it most against top competition. That knack makes Hill’s transition to the NFL feel like it will be smoother than most.

The vast majority of Hill’s areas to improve in are technique based. Whenever he gets hemmed up by opposing linemen, especially those with longer arms, he tends to get washed out of the play. Better hand placement could help him shed some of those blocks and allow him to really use his raw pass rushing ability to its fullest potential.

Projection​


Hill should absolutely be a top 15 pick in April if he continues his dominance this season. With the Panthers desperately needing a star at linebacker, he should be at the top of their boards. Linebacker has been a bit of a weakness so far this season, and Hill could jump in and start right away. Hill’s versatility could be wasted a bit in the current Panthers defense as his blitzing ability is really an ace up his sleeve. The Panthers don’t normally send their inside linebackers on blitzes, but Evero could have him move to edge on passing downs since he loves to drop his edge rushers into coverage. Either way, the Panthers should definitely be scouting Hill heavily this fall.

What do you think, Panthers fans? If Anthony Hill Jr 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...26-nfl-draft-prospect-profile-anthony-hill-jr
 
Panthers vs Patriots: Offensive preview

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The Carolina Panthers put 30 points on the board this past weekend, but that probably overstates the effectiveness of the offense. Bryce Young and company only averaged 4.1 yards per play, which was below their season average to that point and dropped the Panthers to 30th in the stat for the season. The Falcons have had a good defense so far, and the offense was playing from ahead and trying to grind clock, so that can be explained away a bit, but it’s something to keep an eye on.

This weekend provides an opportunity to push the offense and show that it has more pop than it’s shown so far this season. The New England Patriots are 1-2 and searching for their first home win. They’re coming off a good defensive outing against the corpse of Aaron Rodgers and the Steelers, but in the first two weeks they were relatively soft. In total, they’ve allowed 5.8 yards per play, seventh worst in the league, and they rank 27th in defensive DVOA.

That makes this weekend a battle between two units that have underwhelmed thus far. It’s a bad Panthers offense versus a bad Patriots defense. One of those units is going to come away from this weekend feeling better about where they’re at. Here’s what the Panthers can do to make sure it’s them.

  • Don’t get hung up on establishing the run. Again, this might seem like a bad idea given the health of Carolina’s offensive line and receivers, but you’ve got to know who your opponent is. The Patriots have been stout at stopping the run despite their generally bad defense. All three opposing starting running backs, Ashton Jeanty, De’Von Achane, and Jaylen Warren, averaged fewer than three yards per carry in their games against the Patriots. Meanwhile, Geno Smith and Tua Tagovailoa both averaged around 10 yards per pass attempt. Everyone wants to establish the run and assert their dominance, but the Patriots have been significantly more susceptible through the air, even against questionable passing offenses. The Panthers are probably going to need to lean on their own questionable passing offense.
  • Generate some explosive plays. The Panthers’ longest play against the Falcons went for 23 yards; it was the wheel route to Tetairoa McMillan on fourth down of the team’s opening drive. The team has been grinding out drives, which is a hard way to survive on a consistent basis. There are injury issues along the offensive line and in the wide receiving group, but the Panthers can still be aggressive if they trust Bryce Young to do so. This Patriots defense has been susceptible to chunk plays in the season’s early going. Tua and Geno combined to go 8-of-10 for 212 yards and a touchdown on balls thrown over 20 yards in the air. Rodgers didn’t throw the ball down the field much but both of his touchdowns came on balls thrown about 15 yards down field. The Panthers need to chase those big plays through the air.
  • In conjunction with that, keep Bryce Young protected. For as bad as the Patriots defense has been in coverage, they’ve actually been okay at getting pressure on the quarterback. Harold Landry III and former Panthers great K’Lavon Chaisson are both top 20 for edge rushers in ESPN’s pass rush win rate. Almost Panther Milton Williams rank first in that metric for interior defensive linemen. In all, the Patriots rank tenth in total pass rush win rate, which is somewhat concerning for a beat up offensive line that has been shaky in pass protection.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...hers-vs-patriots-offensive-preview-nfl-week-4
 
Panthers vs Patriots: Defensive Preview

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The Carolina Panthers defense is coming off its first major positive performance of the 2025 season. After an ugly looking couple of weeks where the offense did the defense very little in terms of favors, the Panthers finally showed us what the defense can look like with even a little bit of support from the offense. Against a Falcons squad that looked primed to beat the snot out of this iteration of the defense, they held Bijan Robinson and Tyler Allgeier to a combined 76 yards on 14 carries, as Michael Penix was forced to throw the ball more than the Falcons likely wanted. The Panthers didn’t record any sacks, but they got enough pressure and looked to keep Penix uncomfortable and in turn he made mistakes with his reads and decisions. This week, this unit faces another 2024 rookie QB in Drake Maye, who has played relatively well despite seeing a lot of pressure and sacks throughout 3 games. Let’s dive right in.

  • Control the rushing attack again. The Patriots are another team that sports a committee of running backs who will all tote the ball on Sunday. Rhamondre Stevenson and Antonio Gibson as the veterans are joined by high 2nd round pick, rookie Treveyon Henderson. The Patriots have kept the touches relatively balanced between those 3, though Stevenson and Henderson appear to be the preferred rushing options (when Stevenson isn’t fumbling the ball away, of course). Drake Maye has also been mixed in, rushing 21 times for 87 yards in 3 games. The message here is clear; the Panthers likely will have to deal with all of them on Sunday. While the Patriots have definitely leaned more on the passing game, with about a 60-40 split with rushes, this would be the game for them to try and lean on the rushing attack a bit more. Derrick Brown will need to continue throwing fools around.
  • Finish the pressures. While the Panthers pass rush did a much better job of effecting the results of passing plays last week, they still are struggling to actually get hits on the quarterback. Drake Maye has been sacked 12 times since the start of the season, and those negative plays definitely contributed to losing efforts against the Raiders and Steelers, where the offense was in position to take the lead on many occasions. This would be the week for Nic Scourton and Princely Umanmielen to be unleashed on passing downs. Also watch for Tre’Von Moehrig flying around the backfield as a blitzer.
  • Continue to involve the young guys in the secondary. Last week, the Panthers got rookie safety Lathan Ransom a lot more involved with the starters, as he came in to allow Moehrig to play closer to the line of scrimmage where he thrives. Chau Smith-Wade also had himself a career day, as he was targeted several times but managed to make several solid tackles to limit yardage, as well as a pick six and a nice pass deflection. Mike Jackson and Jaycee Horn seem to be having quite a year on the perimeter, but the middle of the defense and the safeties will be challenged. DeMario Douglas, Hunter Henry, and Austin Hooper could all be go-to options for easy completions for Drake Maye. The younger guys will need to step up, especially at linebacker, to keep the positive vibes going.

What are you looking for from the defense this week, Panthers fans?

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...efensive-preview-stats-predictions-nfl-week-4
 
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