News Panthers Team Notes

Is “Good Bryce” just a flash in the pan?

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Bryce Young set a franchise record yesterday for passing yards and he did it on the road against the Atlanta Falcons. After a season of struggling to move the ball through the air, that felt good to watch. Young’s ascendance would make an excellent storyline through the holidays as he spurs a nationally overlooked team into the playoffs and towards their predestined Super Bowl berth. However, as Panthers fans, we understand that false starts are more common in the Carolinas than storybook endings. This wouldn’t be the first time that Young got tongues wagging with a stellar performance against the Atlanta Falcons, only to follow it up with a complete dud.

Still, what we saw yesterday is more in line with what we hoped to see from Young to start this season. He had multiple quality performances after he was benched in 2024 and what drives the difference between “Good Bryce” and “Bad Bryce” is highly unclear. So let’s run a quick poll and see where the community stands today.

Do you think the Young we saw yesterday versus Atlanta was a sign of good things to come or just another example of fool’s gold under center for the Carolina Panthers?

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/general/56807/is-good-bryce-just-a-flash-in-the-pan
 
The Optimist: Did Bryce Young just revive his career?

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Seriously, what was that?

It was easier to believe last week that Bryce Young was avoiding his wide receivers like they owed him money than it was to believe he was so bad at passing that he could only post 124 yards against a New Orleans Saints team that only had eyes for running back Rico Dowdle. This week, Young posted a career and franchise record 448 yards passing, three touchdowns, and no interceptions against the Atlanta Falcons. The only two solid conclusions I can draw from that are that divisional games are weird and Young deserves a key to the city of Atlanta.

Young wasn’t perfect yesterday and neither were his teammates. His five sacks taken were a joint effort between himself and his offensive line. In the past, that kind of effort would have snow balled into complete ineffectiveness. Three-and-outs would have been paced by a couple of well timed four play drives and that opening touchdown would have been about the whole story of the Carolina offense. Instead, Jalen Coker, Xavier Legette, and Tetairoa McMillan came alive as a unit. Young passed with precision, confidence, and anticipation, targeting both the long ignored intermediate and deep parts of the field.

This was the Young we all saw last season against the Philadelpia Eagles, the Kansas City Chiefs, in their first game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and in their season finale against the Falcons. We’ve seen him enough to know that complaints against his size and arm aren’t intelligent arguments. He can play quarterback and he can play it well. What’s understandably maddening is that he cannot seem to do it consistently.

You can’t play like a franchise quarterback in one out of every ten games in your career and expect to be paid lile one. Young has been too many different kinds of bad to be trusted. He has also shown that he can be excellent too many times to just assume that he is only bad.

Something has to be true.

Did Young turn a corner after being embarrassed by the Saints? Has the offense finally gelled with Jalen Coker fully back from his injury? Are the Falcons just determined to be that mean to their own fans?

I’m partial to the philosophy that, in situations with as many moving parts as an NFL football team, simple answers rarely capture the totality of a complex question. They are conveniences that pave over nuance. Despite David Teppers’ nigh immeasurable wealth, the Panthers lack the resources to ignore any possibilities at quarterback. Their opportunities for both short term and long term solutions are too few and far between.

That means that, eleven weeks into the 2025 season, the team is still exactly where they started the 2024 season when it comes to Bryce Young. He has not shown enough to guarantee the team picking up his fifth year option in the coming offseason, but he has shown enough to for some fans to be optimistic down the stretch of this season.

The San Francisco 49ers and the Los Angeles Rams will provide excellent tests in the coming weeks. Young has been bad. He has been good. Now we get to see if he can be consistent against quality competition.

The Panthers find themselves in an odd position. If Young can pass that test then they are in a prime spot to make a push for the playoffs a year or two early in their rebuild strategy. The NFC South is currently led by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Bucs are at 6-4 and on a two-game losing skid. The Panthers could concievably be in first place in the division by the end of next Monday night.

On the other hand, if Young turns back into a pumpkin in the coming weeks then the team will find themselves in rebuilding limbo. Good quarterbacks are hard to find and rarely hit the open market. Their best hope for 2026 will be competition for Young, not replacement, and that could set them behind on their schedule.

In all, this is a perfectly Panthers place for the franchise to be. The team is better than expected, but still incredibly frustrating for fans to watch on a week-to-week basis. And the biggest question of their season remains: Can Bryce Young remain a good quarterback or can he only be a rollercoaster?

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...timist-did-bryce-young-just-revive-his-career
 
Panthers vs Falcons game review: Who even knows anymore

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After a putrid performance versus the New Orleans Saints I described Bryce Young as a ’conservative yet still turnover prone passer whose skillset heavily limits the ceiling and creativity of an offense’. Public perception and confidence of the quarterback had hit a season long low, and the team was heading for a game against the NFL’s top ranked passing defense in the Atlanta Falcons. All hope of having a future franchise quarterback on the roster seemed lost and any expectations of a proper passing offense seemed little more than wishful thinking.

So what does Young do in the face of all the doubt, criticism and the league’s best pass defense? He goes out and throws for a franchise record breaking 448 yards. A number that includes 12 completions of 15-plus yards, 9 of which were for more than 20 yards, according to Panthers.com.

Bryce Young vs the Falcons

dot dot dot dot dot dot dot pic.twitter.com/sOKcgvd13l

— Josh Norris (@JoshNorris) November 17, 2025

You didn’t see that coming, I didn’t see that coming, literally no one saw that coming. If you say you saw it coming, you’re lying. If you are not lying, you would have been accurately described as delusional prior to Sunday.

It’s unquestionably the story of the Panthers victory and therefore it would be disingenuous to break down anything else for this week’s game review. Let’s give Young his flowers for showing up to Atlanta with a broom and sweeping the dirty birds.

Young’s performance surpassed the previous franchise record of 432 yards set by Cam Newton during his second ever game as a Panther. On the season, Young’s performance is the highest passing yards total for a quarterback in a winning effort as well as the highest total without a turnover.

Bryce Young's 448 passing yards are the third-most in a game this season and just one of four 400+ yard passing days https://t.co/JQfdG75NJh pic.twitter.com/jrbXhjBXlS

— Matt Harmon (@MattHarmon_BYB) November 16, 2025

On passes farther than 10 yards down the field, Young completed 10 for a career-high 225 yards and two touchdowns. That’s more yardage than Young’s second highest total passing yards in a game this season, which was 199 against the Dallas Cowboys.

Bryce Young was 💰 on 10+ yard throws vs Atlanta

🚀 10/14
🚀 225 yards
🚀 2 TDs, 0 INTs
🚀 92.2 passing grade https://t.co/mGOI7aREil pic.twitter.com/0SgJorRJYA

— PFF (@PFF) November 17, 2025

Young’s 448 yard day brings his season total over 10 game total to 1,962 yards. Nearly a quarter, 22.8% to be precise, of Young’s season long production came in 1 game.

The scary part is, it likely could have been much more. Several pass protection issues flared up for the Panthers leading to 5 sacks and an injury scare that had Young limping several times over the course of the contest and even being offered a cart to take him to the winning locker room.

A couple more understood pass pro assignments and a left guard not immediately stepping on his foot on a crucial 4th down and who knows what the final stat line could have reached?

Nevertheless, that final number is not the main objective. Getting another notch in the win column was the most important thing. At least, it was the most important for that single battle. In order for the Panthers to win the so-called war, they’ll need more than a single flash in the pan game. They need him to not regress back to mediocre.
Look no further than this weekly column for what I mean. The Panthers have been wildly inconsistent the entire season. Excelling when they are doubted but being crushed when they are expected to win.

After Sunday, the team will once again receive a wave of positive publicity and a spike in public confidence. Can they continue their rise, or once again fall flat once the moment get’s a little bit bigger?

We can only find out how they manage it this time by watching the next game – and this one is during primetime. We’ll see you next week, after the Panthers take on the San Francisco 49ers on Monday Night Football. Until then, keep pounding.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...ame-review-who-even-knows-anymore-bryce-young
 
Ask Brian: The Panthers do the opposite of what I expect

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Hello CSR! Welcome to Ask Brian, part two of your weekly Panthers fan mailbag for everyone!

What a wild rollercoaster the last few weeks have been. Just last week, the narrative around these parts and the internet in general was that Bryce Young was not, in fact, THE guy. Most of the conversations on the mailbag surrounded the immediate future of the Panthers and their quarterback position, as the Panthers traveled to Atlanta for a face off against a Falcons team that desperately needed a win. And while I wish I had done this on the mailbag, I didn’t have the courage for it. But in the CSR writer’s Slack chat, I cheekily posed the following question; “What do we do when Bryce Young goes off against the Falcons on Sunday?”. And he actually did, setting a FRANCHISE record for passing yards in a game. Not at all what I reasonably expected, but sometimes my troll predictions actually do come to fruition. Which leads us to the present, where I can only reasonably say that the Panthers will do the exact opposite of what we expect them to do in a game going forward. Which leads us to another difficult topic; what the heck is going to happen against the 49ers on Sunday?

My current expectation is the 49ers offense takes the Panthers to the woodshed, but I don’t really know what to believe anymore with this team. So let’s open up the mailbag once again. As a reminder, this is YOUR place to ask all your questions, whether they be Panthers related, football related, or even completely off topic! Sound off below with your questions in the comments, and I’ll have answers for you later on this week!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...the-panthers-do-the-opposite-of-what-i-expect
 
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Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ge...ratch-reader-will-have-activity-notifications
 
2026 NFL Draft Prospect Profile: Arvell Reese

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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 Ohio State Buckeyes linebacker Arvell Reese.

Bio​


Reese ended his high school career at Glenville High in Ohio by being the keystone in a defense that did not allow a point during its six game state championship run. Despite receiving offers from Penn State and Alabama, Reese decided to stay close to home and headed to Columbus. His first college season was spent entirely on special teams, but his sophomore season saw him become a legitimate player on the Buckeyes defense. He also performed well in the classroom, earning Academic All-Big 10 honors. This season, Rese has emerged as a defensive star for Ohio State, making plays all over the field and earning some top ten pick c0nsideration in April’s NFL Draft.

Strengths/Weaknesses​


One of Reese’s main strengths is his physical profile. He has the size (6’4”, 240 lbs) and athleticism to make him a terror for opposing offenses. He brings the strength and hit power of a traditional off ball linebacker and the range of a safety when dropping back in coverage. Against the run, his length and agility allow him to easily beat blocks while his film study helps him beat blockers to their spots on occasion. Reese also has shown the versatility to be productive in multiple roles, showing good coverage skills while also notching 6.5 sacks already this season. This is in large part due to his film study habits and quick learning, rarely being beat by the same concept more than once.

As with most young players, Reese does tend to get a little over aggressive and lose some of his technique at times. This is most apparent on play action, especially against bootlegs, where he often bites hard on the play fake and loses contain on the quarterback.

Projection​


Reese is the ideal modern linebacker in today’s NFL. He’s a player who can hang with tight ends (and even some slot receivers) in coverage while also being able to fit the run and rush the passer when needed. He has all the tools you could ask for in a linebacker while also being a student of the game. Most projections have Reese becoming a dynamic defensive player at the next level.

If the Panthers retain Ejiro Evero as defensive coordinator, Reese could be an interesting fit. While Evero’s off ball linebackers are usually a little shorter than him, Reese could be a fantastic player in the middle next to Trevin Wallace and/or Christian Rozeboom. What’s more, Reese’s athletic profile fits Evero’s preferred edge defender to a T. Reese could be used as a combination linebacker and edge defender since he has shown the ability to get after the quarterback. Evero also loves dropping his edge rushers into coverage, which would work much better with Reese compared to asking Nic Scourton or Princely Umanmielen to cover.

What do you think, Panthers fans? If Arvell Reese 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.../2026-nfl-draft-prospect-profile-arvell-reese
 
Bryce Young and Tetairoa McMillan win weekly awards

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The Carolina Panthers swept the FedEx Air and Ground Players of the Week award this past week. Young also won NFC Offensive Player of the Week.

Young set a Panthers franchise record with 448 passing yards in a win over the Falcons on Sunday. He had 396 yards in regulation, and then a single pass to Tommy Tremble went for 52 yards to set up the game winning field goal and push Bryce into historic territory for passing productivity. It was the best game of Young’s career to date with the only somewhat similar performance coming last season against those very same Falcons. There’s just something about playing in that stadium I guess.

Young’s big day helped Tetairoa McMillan to the best game of his young career as well. He finished with a career high eight catches for a career high 130 yards and two touchdowns. He was able to get the ball and space and show off some run after catch after ability that he hadn’t gotten to showcase much this season. He powered through multiple Falcons defenders for his first touchdown then cooked a Falcons linebacker in a scramble drill to catch a go ahead touchdown late in the fourth quarter.

The Panthers have racked up a handful of weekly awards this season as they’ve worked their way to a surprising 6-5 record. Rico Dwodle, Tre’von Moehrig, Ryan Fitzgerald, and Sam Martin have all won some player of the week at various points throughout the season.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...young-and-tetairoa-mcmillan-win-weekly-awards
 
Panthers vs 49ers: Offensive Preview

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Just when the Carolina Panthers were down and out and it looked like Bryce Young’s career was on the ropes, Young and the Panthers went into Atlanta and put forth their best passing display of Young’s career and the entire franchise’s history. Young finished with a Panthers record 448 yards passing. Tetairoa McMillan accounted for 130 of those yards and scored two touchdowns. The pair swept the FedEx Air and Ground Players of the Week awards for their troubles.

That came on the back of an absolutely embarrassing showing against the New Orleans Saints the week prior. The Panthers were only able to put seven points on the board, and it required a questionable Saints penalty wiping out a turnover to even let that drive happen. And that came at home.

So trying to predict what the Panthers are going to look like based on the last two weeks is virtually impossible. Throw in the fact that the game is on Monday Night Football, a setting that we haven’t seen this team in since Week 2 of the 2023 season, and you’ve got a Pandora’s Box of possible outcomes.

On the other side of the field are the San Fransisco 49ers, who are much more familiar with the big stage of primetime games. They’re 7-4 but don’t look quite the same as the 49ers we’ve become accustomed to over the last six or seven years. Their offense has been extremely inefficient on the ground despite having a healthy Christian McCaffrey all season. They’ve made up for that with a passable passing game with a combination of Mac Jones and Brock Purdy throwing to a mangled receiving corps. It’s still been good enough to support an equally mangled defense that’s struggled all season.

The 49ers are 24th in defensive DVOA this season and are allowing 5.7 yards per play, which is 25th in the league. They’ve had moments but are generally struggling to hold teams at or below their averages for the season. They’ve given up over 400 yards of total offense in each of their last two games, but three Cardinals turnovers last week prevented the yardage from converting into points. It’s an exploitable defense with some of their stars out, so the Panthers have a chance to make some noise on Monday Night Football. Here’s how they can do that:

  • Ride the momentum from last week and stay aggressive attacking downfield. Bryce Young was the most confident and assertive we’ve seen him since probably the last time he played the Falcons in Atlanta. I know there’s a lot of Internet discourse about the play calling not giving Young a chance to throw the ball, but that hasn’t necessarily been the case. Young has had downfield options on plays all year, but some sort of switch seemed to flip on Sunday where he was more willing to let it fly. Hopefully the universally positive outcomes he got from doing that will give him the confidence to keep doing that in San Francisco. The 49ers have only intercepted three passes and generated 12 sacks this season, so give the plays some time and let it fly, Bryce.
  • Don’t count on Rico Dowdle for explosive runs. The Panthers offense had been heavily reliant on Dowdle generating explosive runs during their win streak. Those have dried up in recent weeks, and recent history says that’s likely to continue into this week. For all of their defensive struggles, the 49ers have given up exactly one carry of more than 20 yards in their last six games (a 23 yard run by Woody Marks in Week 8). Their total yards per carry allowed is good but not great, but it’s more from consistent smaller gains instead of letting teams break loose. No handoffs on 2nd and very long hoping to set up manageable third downs. It probably isn’t going to work.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...nthers-vs-49ers-offensive-preview-nfl-week-12
 
NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year predictions: Tetairoa McMillan or Emeka Egbuka?

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The NFL’s Offensive Rookie of the Year race in 2025 runs through the NFC South. It’s one of the more unpredictable elements of an already wild season. What began preseason seeming like a lock for running back Ashton Jeanty has now settled in to being a two-horse race between a pair of wide receivers, both in the same division, fighting down the stretch to see who can claim the award. Offensive Rookie of the Year might not be the NFL’s most coveted reward, but it’s something only a player has once chance to ever take home.

Now we look at No. 8 pick Tetairoa McMillan of the Carolina Panthers, and No. 19 pick Emeka Egbuka from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, both of whom have resumes worthy of the award, both are quickly cementing themselves as forces in the league — but playing different roles, and thriving in different ways.

Tetairoa McMillan​


54 receptions, 748 yards, 4 TD — FedEx Air & Ground Player of the Week (Week 11)
Projected: 83 receptions, 1,156 yards, 6 TD

The Panthers bucked every draft analyst by deciding to take a 1st round receiver for the second straight year, rather than address their pass rush. Early returns are showing they made a franchise-defining decision, and the correct one.

McMillan and Bryce Young’s “Cali Connection” was touted by Carolina shortly following the draft, but the two former high school rivals has proven it was more than a marketing pitch. From working together in the offseason, to flourishing together on the field — Bryce and Tet are quickly becoming a young duo to watch in the NFL.

What we’ve seen so far from McMillan is, well, everything. He has the deep threat potential to be an X-receiver on the outside, and while his top-end speed doesn’t create massive levels of separation, his ability to contest the ball at the catch point or make circus catches with defenders draped on him mean that at the very least teams need to respect the potential that he could create an explosive play any time the ball is thrown his direction. This was one of the subtle reasons Rico Dowdle had so much running success during his mid-season breakout, with McMillan freezing safeties and forcing them to play over the top — rather the climb the box to assist in run support.

While those explosive plays haven’t always materialized, McMillan has become the best critical down receiver on the Panthers. He’s caught 44 passes for first downs in 11 games, often on key third down plays. What Tet lacks in nuance as a route runner he makes up for in raw intuition, routinely finding the soft spot in zone and making big catches. There’s also an element of shared accountability, with both McMillan and Young acknowledging when they’ve missed a play, sharing discussions on the sideline on how to get better, and growing together.

A rejuvenated, aggressive downfield passing game the Panthers showed against Atlanta could manifest itself as a huge close to the season for Tetairoa McMillan as he makes his case for OROY this season.

Emeka Egbuka​


45 receptions, 717 yards, 6 TD
Projected: 77 receptions, 1,219 yards, 10 TD

This was another major surprise from the draft. Receiver was viewed as one of the least-important positions needing an upgrade for Tampa Bay, but the Bucs front office understood that their offensive identity hinged on its receivers, and there was a strong chance the team was relying on a house of cards. That came to pass in 2025 with both Mike Evans and Chris Godwin dealing with injuries, making the team’s decision to take Emeka Egbuka prescient.

Initially seen as a hopeful third option with upside for the future, Ebuka has become one of the best deep threat receivers in the NFL. His 15.9 yards-per-reception is tied for first in the league with Jaxson Smith-Njigba among receivers with over 40 catches this season. It’s the mix of both explosiveness and consistency that has set Ebuka apart.

The most remarkable element to Egbuka’s arrival in the NFL has been his ability to integrate into an established playoff offense and carve out a niche for himself. This might seem like something that’s easy to achieve, but in reality it’s far more difficult for a receiver to find a place — rather than have one explicitly built for him.

It’s a huge testament to the route running and separation Egbuka creates that Baker Mayfield has made him such a pivotal part of the offense. There’s a level of respect that comes with generating explosive plays with a rookie that comes from trust, and that’s shown itself time and time again this season. If the Bucs make the playoffs in 2025 (and the odds are in their favor), it will come down largely to Egbuka’s ability to step up and become a difference maker.

Who has the edge?​


It’s a very, very close race. There is no question that Egbuka had a lock on this award a month ago, but some nagging injuries have crept in. Meanwhile McMillan is starting to break out, and with the Panthers seemingly opening up their passing offense more to take shots downfield, there’s a very big chance that Tet could pass Egbuka statistically before the season is out.

Ultimately what might define this award is how the teams end up. It’s not necessarily fair to distill an individual award and make it about the team as a whole, but that does have sway with voters at the end of the season. The NFC South could turn into a dead heat, with the two Panthers vs. Buccaneers games towards the end of the season determining who will win the division, and who will have an early vacation.

Regardless of who gets the nod, we are seeing two future superstars spreading their wings in the NFL at a very early stage in their career. The future is bright in the NFC South at receiver, now it simply becomes about which team is better at pouring gasoline on the fire to become great.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ge...ar-predictions-tetairoa-mcmillan-emeka-egbuka
 
Reacts Results: It always feels good to beat the Falcons

With a win over the Atlanta Falcons, back above .500, and fresh off a franchise-record setting performance by quarterback Bryce Young, the Carolina Panthers are nearing their season high in fan confidence once again. 84% of fans are confident in the direction of their favorite franchise in Week 12.

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This is the fourth week that this survey has returned in the 80s and the ninth week over the 50% mark. For all that this number trends as a “did the Panthers win or lose” metric, we can say that most fans have mostly been optimistic about this team this season despite the ups and downs inherent in a 6-5 record.

What’s more, most people are chalking up the pending primetime contest against the San Francisco 49ers as a loss. Yet fans are still riding high after sweeping the Falcons with a pair of impressive performances. The reality is that the Panthers are still going to be considered playoff contenders for a couple of weeks, regardless of the result from Monday night.

The NFC South leading Tampa Bay Buccaneers are on a two-game losing skid and are now only 6-4. That puts them technically a half game ahead of the Panthers, but without the break afforded by Carolina’s clutch Week 14 bye week.

Such prognostication requires a modicum of faith in “Atlanta Bryce” showing up in other cities and against other opponents, but that’s the joy of the Panthers beating the Atlanta Falcons. It gives us room to dream a little again.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ge...ults-it-always-feels-good-to-beat-the-falcons
 
Panthers Injury Report & Transactions – Week 12

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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.

Injuries


The 6-5 Carolina Panthers have a golden opportunity to prove they’re for real as they travel to San Francisco to take on the 7-4 49ers on Monday Night Football. At this point in the season health and injuries often play a major role in which team wins and which team loses, and there are some big injury concerns this week for the Panthers.

Starting inside linebacker Christian Rozeboom left last week’s game with a hamstring issue and won’t be playing on Monday due to a hip/hamstring issue. Joe Person recently reported that Rozeboom said he was dealing with the hamstring and some “other stuff” before last week’s game against the Falcons. Rozeboom has 91 tackles on the season.

Staying with the theme of inside linebackers who won’t be playing this week, Trevin Wallace was injured two weeks ago against the Saints and missed last week’s game due to his shoulder injury. Wallace has 52 tackles and two sacks on the season.

Center Cade Mays also popped up on the injury report on Saturday and is listed as out for Monday.

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Transactions


Signed LB Jacoby Windmon to the practice squad

As noted above, the Panthers need some insurance at linebacker with Rozeboom and Wallace currently dealing with injuries, and they bought their policy with the return of Jacoby Windmon. The former UNLV and Michigan State star was an undrafted rookie who last year appeared in eight games for the Panthers with two starts, registering 22 tackles, 1.5 sacks, and two passes defended.

Windmon was invited back to the Panthers camp in 2025 but was released at final roster cuts. He didn’t latch on with a team at the beginning of the season but later signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers practice squad on October 8th. He didn’t get elevated to the 53-man roster during his brief stint with the Steelers and was released on October 28th. The 24-year-old is now back in the familiar surroundings of the Carolina Panthers.

Released S Israel Mukuamu from the practice squad

Mukuamu is a five-year NFL veteran and has appeared in 51 games with 42 tackles in his career. He signed with the Panthers practice squad on September 8th, was released on October 7th, then re-signed to the practice squad on November 4th. He was elevated to the 53-man roster for last week’s win against the Atlanta Falcons and played 11 special teams snaps. After last week’s game he was moved back to the practice squad, then released (again). Don’t be surprised if he ends up ping-ponging his way back to the Panthers practice squad sometime in the near future.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...3/panthers-injury-report-transactions-week-12
 
Brian Answers: Can Bryce Young end the Panthers playoff drought?

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Hello CSR! Welcome to Brian Answers, part two of your weekly Panthers fan mailbag for everyone! We’re coming off a confusing last two weeks of Panthers football, so the questions you’ve been asking have been all over the place. Personally, I love it. We’re certainly having a better time this season than in years past. So let’s dive into all your questions and have some conversations! Comment down below with your answers to some of this week’s questions!

TLGPanthersFan: Bad or Mid QBs can have really good games that make you turn your head. Been watching football long enough to have seen it plenty of times. So do you think this is an actual turn around or are we gonna see old Bryce against the Niners?

Its hard to say whether last week was a turnaround by Bryce Young or simply a high in what has been a peaks and valleys career. It is interesting that Bryce Young started to truly come alive after the week 11 bye last year, where this season in week 11 he threw for an all time Panthers passing record in a game. So maybe we just have to wait until week 10 going forward?

Kidding aside, I give props to Bryce Young for playing with some confidence and swagger, and Dave Canales definitely dialed up some intermediate passing looks for Bryce that he was consistently missing on all season. So I want to think that its a combination of a turn around for Bryce and Dave getting on the same page with him at the same time. I think a prime time Monday Night game against another wild card contender in the NFC should shed more light on this.

@WTMealey: Question:Given our youth and inexperience at HC/GM what is your expectation for the next 2-3 years? What does Canales/Morgan need to continue to do or change to make us more likely to be on the higher end of those wins?

I know we’ve been all over the place about the near future for the Panthers the last few weeks, and most of that hinges on whether Bryce Young should be here in the next 2-3 seasons. Given what we saw last week, my expectations right now would be to continue loading up the barracks with smart free agency spending and continuing to build thought the Draft. The Panthers seemed to have landed a heck of a rookie class this year, so building around the nucleus they are developing makes a lot of sense. Now, if they pull the plug on Bryce Young completely, a lot of resources will likely be devoted to finding his successor.

Canales needs to continue developing his playbook and scheme around the young players he has, and continuing to evolve as it goes. One thing I have liked from Dave is he seems to handle adjustments very well during a game, so the next step is not having to make so many adjustments on a regular basis. The opening game script seems to hit more often than miss, but then the momentum seems to fall off a cliff after that. We need more consistency in the first half of games. As far as Dan Morgan is concerned, he just needs to continue adding value in the cheaper waves of free agency and in the late rounds of the Draft/undrafted pool. They are on the right track to building a multi-year foundation, but this has to continue for another Offseason or two.

Pantherblueblood: I had lost faith in XL as well as Bryce only to be served a healthy portion of crow last Sunday. What are your expectations for XL Stat wise for the remainder of this year?

Xavier Legette currently has 24 catches for 264 yards and 3 TDs on the season, so I would say a 1k receiving yards season or 10 TD ending is out. However, I would think 6-700 yards and 6-7 TDs would be very doable if he stays healthy, and would be a great compliment to Tetairoa McMillan at season’s end. Certainly not what you want from a former first round pick, but he can’t control where he was drafted. I think we’ll feel a lot better about Legette’s long term prospects if he can use his size and athleticism to win some RedZone matchups since teams are going to be conscious of T Mac going forward.

facepalmjedi: Given that the Panthers have the 3rd most difficult remaining schedule by strength of opponent and the Buccs have the 27th is the 49er’s game a must win to keep any playoff (pipe) dreams alive?

At this point the Panthers probably need to win 3 games they wouldn’t be expected to in order to stay in the playoff race. The 49ers game is one that is theoretically winnable based on the matchup, though it will not be an easy one. I don’t know if the season is over if they lose, but dealing the 49ers a loss gives the Panthers an edge in the wild card race since it seems the 49ers will be a regular part of that conversation going forward.

CasualFanAlso: Is there a decent candidate that could be inserted into right guard spot available?

I think your questions was more centered around potential free agents, so I will get to that. But the easy answer to me would be to play Austin Corbett at right guard. I know his season has seen its challenges, but a few seasons ago he was a very good starting right guard for this team. I don’t quite understand why the Panthers have such conviction with playing Chandler Zavala at right guard (remember, they did this even before Brady Christensen was hurt, and he only stepped in because Zavala got injured).

The list of free agents still available isn’t great. Shaq Mason, Cody Whitehair, and Connor McGovern are names that you might recognize, but just looking at the guys not currently on a team, nobody in particular jumps out. The Panthers could possibly look to swipe up a guard from another team’s practice squad, but I really don’t think there’s anybody out there they can bring in with zero experience in the scheme that’s going to fair any better than the guys they have left on the roster.

egon petri: 1) Why do we tend to start out so slowly? Is it a failure of the coaching staff to anticipate how our opponent will defend us? A failure by the QB to recognize coverage or blitzing schemes once the script has played out? Is the overall offensive scheme too conservative?

2) Why do we tend to finish so strongly? Is it halftime adjustments by the coaching staff? Does Bryce get more familiar with the opponents defensive scheme? Or are we just entering desperation mode?


I think the offensive scheme was a bit too conservative over previous weeks, though that also wasn’t helped by Bryce Young electing to throw the check downs as often as he was either. This coaching staff seems to consistently struggle with adjusting in the first half, and I’m not sure that’s going to change. It was interesting listening to Rico Dowdle being mic’d up last week. He spent quite a bit calling for a specific play call which ended up being his catch and run that was an inch away from being a touchdown. I don’t know if that’s just the coaches in the box not identifying potential counter calls to the defense quickly or them taking too long to deviate from the initial game plan.

I do think by the same token, this coaching staff does a tremendous job of half time adjustments, something we could only dream of as fans when Ron Rivera and Matt Rhule were in power. Early in the season I think one could have called it entering “desperation mode”, but recently the defense is also adjusting well which keeps the Panthers offense in the game, hence giving them a positive or neutral game script where they don’t really have to scrap any one aspect of their play calls.

Sirpurralicious: Will Bryce Young ever throw between 200-299 yards in a game this season?

This time last season (Chiefs game), Bryce threw for between those numbers to close out 5 of the last 7 games. So I would say yes, but I’d be happy for him to throw for 300 yards in every game as well!

eastwood66: Why has Jimmy Horn been phased out the offense?

I get why fans are not understanding Horn’s usage, but he really was only used sparingly aside from when the Panthers basically had 3-4 healthy WRs on the roster. Bryce Tremayne seems to have won a lot of trust in this offense as a blocker and complimentary piece, and they haven’t been dialing up a ton of home run shots. I would expect Horn to see more and more snaps as the season goes on, I unfortunately think his rookie mistakes (which happen, I am not blaming him) caused the team to use him more sparingly now. Especially with Jalen Coker healthy. They also tend to use all 3 tight ends as part of the rotation, which means less reps for the depth wide receivers.

Chef: Hey Bri! Give me a player that we’re currently relying on quite heavily that you’d like to see us upgrade before the start of next season?

Ruffian Actual called me out on it, so I’ll go ahead and say Nick Scott, the unsung hero and unrecognized captain of this defense. The Panthers don’t really have a middle roamer/free safety type on this defense, and Nick Scott has done his best at it despite that not really being his strong suit. He’s not under contract next season, so they definitely could look for an upgrade at his position. I would also say Christian Rozeboom, even though I like what he’s brought. He’s best suited as a 2 down linebacker, but when he’s healthy the Panthers basically have to play him almost every snap. Bringing in a young dynamic linebacker to add to the group with him, Trevin Wallace, and Claudin Cherelus would really round out this group.

Irishboy: Is there any part of the coaching staff you feel maybe holding Bryce Young back, or is Bryce exactly what a lot of people are saying on here, and will never be great or consistent?

I said last week I felt the coaching staff should open up the passing attack from a play calling standpoint, and let Bryce Young either sink or swim. Clearly he swam this week. While Bryce is not going to magically have a cannon arm or grow 6 inches, he definitely wasn’t EVERYTHING wrong with this offense in the bad games. I think its a combination of Bryce needing to play with confidence and fearlessness like he did to end last season, and I think the coaching staff needs to call the plays they feel they can win with and trust Bryce to actually execute them. If he can’t, that’s more evidence he isn’t the long term answer. At this point, they should be going for broke trying to make the playoff any way they can. There really is no worst case scenario, if the offense last week was just a flash in the pan with Bryce under center, at least we know there’s something there that can be really good with good quarterback play. But I haven’t ruled out Bryce finding a way to be consistent.

That’s all for his week, Panthers fans! Enjoy Monday Night Football, and KEEP POUNDING!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...-bryce-young-end-the-panthers-playoff-drought
 
NFC Playoff Picture: Carolina Panthers can take NFC South lead on Monday

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The Carolina Panthers can take the NFC South lead with a win on Monday night. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers suffered their third straight loss on Sunday night, opening the door for the Panthers.

The rest of the top three teams stayed the same in the playoff race, but the order changed. The Los Angeles Rams moved up with a win, the Philadelphia Eagles moved down with a loss, and the Chicago Bears stayed third with tier win.

In the wild card race, the Seattle Seahawks and Green Bay Packers both won. The San Francisco 49ers need to win in Monday Night Football to keep their spot, otherwise the Detroit Lions move up.

Waiting on the outskirts of the wild card picture are the Panthers, so a win would help them in a lot of ways.

NFC South standings during Week 12​


With the second straight week of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers losing, the Carolina Panthers and the Buccaneers are tied above the NFC South for now. Tampa is undefeated in the division while Carolina has one loss, so the Bucs stay in first place for now. A win by Carolina on Monday night, and they move into the top spot.

The Falcons won this week to keep their playoff hopes alive. The New Orleans Saints lost again.

1. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-5, 2-0 NFCS)
2. Carolina Panthers (6-5, 2-1 NFCS)
3. Atlanta Falcons (4-7)
4. New Orleans Saints (2-9)

NFC standings during Week 12​


The Washington Commanders were on a bye this weekend.

1. Los Angeles Rams (9-2)
3. Philadelphia Eagles (8-3, 7-2 AFC)
3. Chicago Bears (8-3, 5-2 AFC)
4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-5, 2-0 NFCS)
5. Seattle Seahawks (8-3)
6. Green Bay Packers (7-3-1)
7. San Francisco 49ers (7-4, 7-2 NFC)
8. Detroit Lions (7-4, 4-3 NFC)
9. Carolina Panthers (6-5, 2-1 NFCS)
10. Dallas Cowboys (5-5-1)
11. Atlanta Falcons (4-7, win over MIN)
12. Minnesota Vikings (4-7, loss to ATL)
12. Arizona Cardinals (3-8)
14. Washington Commanders (3-8)
15. New Orleans Saints (2-8)
16. e-New York Giants (2-10)

The New York Giants were eliminated from playoff contention with the loss.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...na-panthers-can-take-nfc-south-lead-on-monday
 
Are the Panthers the best team in the NFC South?

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The 6-5 Carolina Panthers are tied with the 6-5 Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the win column. They trail by one game by their divisional records (2-1 compared to 2-0) and have an opportunity to take sole possession of the lead in the NFC South with a win over the San Francisco 49ers tonight. Does that make them the best team in the NFC South?

The short answer is: if they win tonight. The long answer depends on how four other questions are answered over the next six games. Let’s dive in.

Is Baker Mayfield out for an extended time?​


One of the biggest questions between the Panthers and the NFC South crown is entirely outside of their own control. Former Panthers quarterback Baker Mayfield has been dragging an increasingly injured Buccaneers team towards relevance for much of the season. He injured his left shoulder last night in a loss against the Los Angeles Rams and ultimately left the game because of it. His attempt at playing through injury was an ugly, pained pass attempt. If this injury causes him to miss significant time or even limits his ability to elevate his team then the Panthers have a serious opportunity to gain some ground in this race.

The fact is that the Bucs could barely compete with Mayfield playing. They are on a three game losing skid with him on the field and won’t be better without him. The flip side of that coin is that it will be just Carolina’s luck to see him and Mike Evans return together for either their Week 16 or Week 18 date, the results of which will likely decide the division.

Can Atlanta Bryce visit other cities?​


Bryce Young is fresh off breaking a Carolina Panthers franchise record for passing yards in a game with his 448-yard effort against the Atlanta Falcons. That was wonderful to watch, but deeply inconsistent with his previous performances this year. In fact, it was only consistent with his career performances in Atlanta.

Young’s 448 yards were 22.8% of his passing yardage for the season and raised his yards per game (YPG) by over 40 YPG, from 151 to 196 YPG.The Young who played before going to Atlanta couldn’t beat the New Orleans Saints. Panthers fans across the world want to know what the difference was. Was it something in the water? Was that Dave Canales calling a more aggressive game and Bryce delivering? Was that Young stepping up in a way he can’t do consistently? We don’t know, but he’s going to have to elevate his game compared to the rest of his season if the Panthers want to have a chance against any of the remaining teams on the Panthers’ schedule.

Can they beat a good NFC West team?​


The remaining teams on the Panthers schedule are going to be a challenge. The Panthers have three games against the NFC South, and divisional games are always weird, and three games against the NFC South. Carolina may not be the same team that lost to the Arizona Cardinals in Week 2 to drop to 0-2, but the 49ers, the Rams, and the Seattle Seahawks would all be going to the playoffs if the season ended today.

Beating the 49ers tonight would not only allow the Panthers to take first place in the NFC South, it would also let them leap frog San Francisco in the wildcard race, putting them just behind the Detroit Lions and in eighth place in the NFC. That’s one game out of the wildcard. A win tonight would mean the Panthers are serious contenders, with multiple paths to the playoffs in December. A loss would show that they just aren’t ready yet, with every path being that much harder.

Can they get healthy over their bye week?​


After their grueling two week gauntlet against the 49ers and the Rams to close out November, the Panthers get their long awaited bye-week. This late bye is well timed for a team that is as injured as the Panthers. Carolina is starting their ninth different offensive line combination in Week 12 thanks to their consistent rotation of linemen through the medical tent. Robert Hunt (biceps) won’t be back after the bye, but it is possible that everybody else will be.

Factor in lagging injuries at wide receiver, linebacker, and safety at various points across the season plus whatever pops up in the next two weeks and the Panthers will be grateful for a week of rest before three divisional games in four weeks that will likely decided the fate of the NFC South. If they can get healthier than an equally—if not more—injured Buccaneers team then they may be able to claim the title and call themselves the best team in the NFC South.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/general/56920/are-the-panthers-the-best-team-in-the-nfc-south
 
NFC Playoff Picture: Carolina Panthers can’t secure NFC South lead in Week 12

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The Carolina Panthers and San Francisco 49ers played a mistake-filled game on Monday night, but if the Panthers were able to pull it out, they would lead the NFC South. That did not happen, and Carolina falls two games out of the wild card and a half-game back of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for first in the NFC South.

Carolina and Tampa play twice over the last three weeks of the season, so there is a very clear path to the division crown even if two of their remaining games are against the NFC-leading Rams and the strong Seattle Seahawks.

Carolina actually stayed in the exact same playoff spot after the loss thanks to a tiebreaker win over the Cowboys.

On Sunday, the rest of the top three teams stayed the same in the playoff race, but the order changed. The Los Angeles Rams moved up with a win, the Philadelphia Eagles moved down with a loss, and the Chicago Bears stayed third with tier win.

In the wild card race, the Seattle Seahawks and Green Bay Packers both won. The San Francisco 49ers stayed in seventh with their win over the Panthers.

NFC South standings after Week 12​


The Panthers fall a half-game back of the Buccaneers, but with two games between the pair in the last three weeks of the season, it’s still a wide open race.

The Falcons won this week to keep their playoff hopes alive. The New Orleans Saints lost again.

1. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-5)
2. Carolina Panthers (6-6)
3. Atlanta Falcons (4-7)
4. New Orleans Saints (2-9)

NFC standings after Week 12​


The Washington Commanders were on a bye this weekend.

1. Los Angeles Rams (9-2)
3. Philadelphia Eagles (8-3, 7-2 AFC)
3. Chicago Bears (8-3, 5-2 AFC)
4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (6-5, 2-0 NFCS)
5. Seattle Seahawks (8-3)
6. Green Bay Packers (7-3-1)
7. San Francisco 49ers (8-4)
8. Detroit Lions (7-4)
9. Carolina Panthers (6-6, win over DAL)
10. Dallas Cowboys (5-5-1, loss to CAR)
11. Atlanta Falcons (4-7, win over MIN)
12. Minnesota Vikings (4-7, loss to ATL)
12. Arizona Cardinals (3-8)
14. Washington Commanders (3-8)
15. New Orleans Saints (2-8)
16. e-New York Giants (2-10)

The New York Giants were eliminated from playoff contention with the loss.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...anthers-cant-secure-nfc-south-lead-in-week-12
 
Panthers ‘Jekyll and Hyde’ offense has to stop

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The Panthers were destined to look bad on Monday night — after all, it was a primetime game. Carolina’s propensity for laying goose eggs on the brightest stage has been a calling card of the franchise for the better part of 30 years, so why stop now? First you get mad about it, then you accept it, finally all you can do is laugh, but the frustration at seeing the offense continuously vacillate from world beaters to absolutely abysmal is simply nauseating.

Dave Canales offered cold comfort in the wake of another loss. It was more of the same from the head coach, discussing a lack of execution, and failing to take advantage of key moments — which is more or less what Canales says after every loss, but this time it was a little different. There was a strong undercurrent of the coach covering his ass, saying that he thought the Panthers brought the perfect offensive game plan to San Francisco, but the team failed to execute.

Part of this is certainly true. The Panthers were exceedingly sloppy, and we saw some uncharacteristic mistakes creep into much of the game. Tetairoa McMillan dropped passes that hit him in the hands, Bryce Young’s out of structure passing was inconsistent — and Xavier Legette was, well, Xavier Legette. The 49ers opted to stack the box to ensure Rico Dowdle and Chuba Hubbard didn’t run them over, but this also had an effect where the tight ends were taken out of the passing game. This was especially prevalent after Young’s end zone interception when linebacker Ji’Ayir Brown make a great play reading the QB’s eyes and jumping the pass intended for Mitchell Evans — but from this moment on Young was wary of targeting his tight ends due to the pick.

The lingering question is why the team didn’t leverage verticality in the passing game? This was the defining weakness the Niners have had this season, with San Francisco ranking 25th in net yards per pass attempt allowed — an indication that they routinely struggle to stop deeper passing attempts. Instead, Carolina’s offensive game plan was scared to challenge the secondary 1v1, and it showed on Young’s passing chart from Monday night.

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The Panthers only attempted six passes with 15+ air yards, and while they didn’t have a great deal of success — there were enough near completions that it was worth continuing to test the secondary. This was emphasized even further when Young and McMillan scored the second half touchdown, yet the Panthers reverted to their same, negative air yard passing attack that hoped to break the secondary with YAC, rather than contesting passes in the air.

This was a fundamentally broken plan that operated backwards from what the team should have done. The week prior we saw Young set a Panthers franchise record by pushing the ball downfield. Young threw 20 passes of 10+ air yards against Atlanta, or 45% of his passes. Meanwhile against the 49ers we saw him throw just eight passes beyond the same mark, or 27% of his passes downfield.

What makes this so frustrating is that it felt as though the Panthers had turned a corner offensively. In Week 11 we saw the training wheels come off and allow Young to make significant throws downfield, but as the stakes rose against the Niners we saw a regression to scared play calling, as if Canales and Co. were far more concerned with the possibility of catching the Buccaneers that they didn’t want to risk anything — and it came back to bite them.

The lingering question remains: Does the coaching staff not trust Young to make these throws on a regular basis? Or are they scared to open up the game because they don’t trust the receivers enough?

Either way it’s unacceptable, and the weekly mood changes are too much to bear. The Panthers might not be a playoff team in 2025 based on their talent, but they definitely won’t be because of the coaching behind it all. Something has to change to inspire some confidence that Carolina is progressing as a team, and not that their six wins were all flukes.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca.../panthers-jekyll-and-hyde-offense-has-to-stop
 
Panthers Reacts Survey Week 13: Do you expect good things from Bryce Young?

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The Carolina Panthers, on the verge of controlling the NFC South and their own playoff destiny through December, laid one of their biggest offensive eggs in years. It would be sadder if it didn’t feel like a Carolina primetime tradition that transcends regime and player.

The ever lively comment section here on Cat Scratch Reader has been confident in their opinion of quarterback Bryce Young and his responsibility for the Panthers largely absent passing game. Now we’re asking the wider community how they feel about Young and we’re asking in a new way. Take a look below at that along with our standard confidence question in this week’s Panthers Reacts survey.

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...13-do-you-expect-good-things-from-bryce-young
 
The Optimist: Whiplash hurts

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Every ounce of momentum the Carolina Panthers have generated this season has been met with a bone-jarring stop. That hurt all the more last night in their 20-9 loss to the San Francisco 49ers when the Panthers were presented with a gift wrapped and golden opportunity to win their first primetime game in two years and take the division lead over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in late November for the first time in ten years. A battered to hell and back offensive line, Bryce Young, and Dave Canales couldn’t score more than three points in the first half despite three incredible turnovers. The offense was similarly unable to find any real momentum in the second half. Injuries piled up on an already hurting defense. That left the Panthers, out of gas, trying to fill up their burlap bag at the pump with what looked like a complete lack of understanding as to how you actually compete in a three-legged race.

That has been more or less the story of each of the Panthers’ losses this season. Some combination of injuries, questionable leadership, and an absent passing game have left an otherwise improving team bereft of any competitive hope. Every time the team wins it looks like they might be figuring it out and every time they lose it makes us question how they have won any games at all—let alone six.

What I liked. . .​

The defense​


The unit as a whole gets a giant shout out here. Down two starting linebackers who already felt like scraping the bottom of the talent barrel, the Panthers showed up to play team football, rallying to the ball on every down, and limited Christian McCaffrey to 3.7 yards per carry and 142 all-purpose yards on 31 touches. That man could have put up 300 yards easily with that kind of volume against the Panthers beleaguered defense.

On top of that, Jaycee Horn and Mike Jackson in coverage basically eliminated the forward pass from the 49ers playbook while they were on the field. This was the perfect performance, truly as good as you could have asked for, to put the Panthers in a strong position to win on Monday Night Football against a better built and better coached team. I hate that it was wasted, but I loved watching that first half before the injuries to Claudin Cherilus. Corey Thornton, and Horn changed the game.

Speaking of those injuries, as much as I hated watching them happen, I was impressed that the defense managed to hold on afterwards as well as they did. They held the 49ers to only ten points in the second half and forced a punt after Young’s fourth quarter interception to keep the game alive.

I don’t know what happens next season, but I do know that I want to see Ejiro Evero coaching this defense with another year’s worth of talent infusion by Dan Morgan and Brandt Tilis.

What I didn’t like. . .​

Bryce Young​


I don’t think there is much left to say. There are plenty of legitimate excuses to make for him. Tons of balls were tipped last night—something that isn’t 100% on his height. His offensive line was hurt and less effective than expected against a formerly anemic 49ers pass rush. His receivers dropped catchable balls that were accurately thrown.

And he still put up only 28 yards passing in the first half with his average depth of target being behind the line of scrimmage. I need to go back and check, but I’m not confident he completed a pass beyond the line of scrimmage until the third quarter.

It’s one thing when you have to play around new problems and your team makes new mistakes some of the time. It’s another thing when you make the same mistakes and fall into the same traps every game. After 41 games, I think it is clear that the excuses we have to keep making to justify Young’s play are closer to a description of his ceiling than an indicator of some vast, untapped potential.

Dave Canales​


In that same vein, it is getting harder to judge Canales’ performance this season. On the one hand, he is coaching a team that has one leg and one hand tied behind its back. On the other, his goal line and short yardage decision making still leaves a lot to be desired. I can’t tell if he is trying to motivate his team by giving them the opportunity to succeed against the odds or if he is trying to put enough of Young being bad in key moments on tape so that he has an iron-clad case to move on come January.

The Carolina Panthers are greatly improved over last year. They are more disciplined, more talented, and more resilient than any Panthers team we have seen in a long time. Canales deserves credit for that. That improvement has seen them win six games through 12 weeks and has them in competition for the dubious honor of the NFC South crown. But bad play calls and too much trust in Young in critical moments have held them back from being even better.

Canales has learned some over the course of the season. We’re seeing fewer empty backfields on 4th & short with Young under center, for example. And maybe he didn’t want to run the ball on 1st & Goal from the one yard line because of the unreliability of the current offensive line. Maybe Canales is growing as a very young coach, but he has burned a lot of credit with fans this season.

Tre’von Moehrig​


Moehrig’s play last night left nothing to be desired. He was a huge part of how the defense held together and limited McCaffrey as much as they did. What Horn was in coverage, Moehrig was last night against the run. However, as the clock was winding down, Moehrig punched 49ers receiver Jauan Jennings in the crotch. It was a dirty, selfish, and stupid move that will likely see him suspended for at least one game.

What’s next. . .​


The Panthers will need to limp through hosting the Los Angeles Rams on a short week before their bye week. The Rams game almost qualifies as a trap game because of the all important week off looming right afterwards. Carolina needs rest and the opportunity to revisit what has and has not worked this season before facing three divisional games in the final four weeks of their season. It doesn’t qualify as a trap game because the Panthers can’t be caught overlooking an opponent that towers above them.

The fact is that the Panthers will likely enter their bye week at 6-7 and at least a half game back in the NFC South. That’s an incredible place for them to be after starting the season 0-2. The season-long view of this team is that their rebuild is ahead of schedule at almost every position on the roster, quarterback excepted. They have the same one big question entering the 2026 off season that they have had entering every offseason since 2018. On the one hand, searching for a quarterback gets old. On the other hand, Morgan has shown a competency in free agency and the draft that has been hitherto unheard of in the Carolinas. Even an average mind choosing the Panthers next quarterback could prove a huge upgrade. And, on the other other hand, this season has been fun and it may continue to be fun through December. The Panthers have proven that a bad game one week does not guarantee a bad game the next week or the next month. Barring a surprise surge from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, we’re going to watch the Carolina Panthers compete for their division’s title. We might watch them compete all the way through Week 18. I’ll take that over the barren years under Matt Rhule and Frank Reich any day.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-scores-results/56950/the-optimist-whiplash-hurts
 
Panthers vs 49ers game review: Repeat offenders

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The Carolina Panthers showed up on the west coast to a San Francisco 49ers team that was in a generous mood. The 49ers were determined to gift the Panthers a primetime victory, a 8-6 record and top position in the NFC South.

Instead, the Panthers did what has now become the completely expected thing after they’ve earned a morsel of respect from their fans and the national media – they embarrassed themselves. Only this time, it happened in front of every football fan in America who decided to tune in to the one game on television.

Call it whiplash inducing, or Jekyll and Hyde, or even consistently inconsistent. Despite sitting at .500 after 12 games in the season, it remains impossible to define who the Panthers are at any given moment. The effort is there, players seem to be put into positions to win and many of them even take advantage of the opportunities set in front of them.

Then there are others. Those who treat praise like a sleeper cell hearing an activation phrase that triggers their objective to sabotage a perfectly acceptable football team.

Whether the actual reason is a lapse in concentration, an inability to handle pressure, a lack of preparation, or any combination of the above or something else entirely – one thing remains true: it cannot keep happening. For this week’s game review, let’s take a look at the major on-field errors that tilted the game away from the Panthers from Monday night and that we’ve seen before:

Bryce Young Backbreaking redzone turnover​

Ji'Ayir Brown takes it right back for San Francisco!

CARvsSF on ESPN/ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/980nPRdSdm

— NFL (@NFL) November 25, 2025

Tetairoa McMillan crucial drop on 3rd down​

Tetairoa McMillan is the only viable read on 3rd and 2, Bryce Young delivers an accurate throw and the rookie just drops it

Exhibit A of #Panthers not converting first down opportunities to extend drives pic.twitter.com/XifHFY1QX2

— Ricky Raines (@rickyboboddy) November 25, 2025

Momentum killing late game turnover by Young​

Peyton Manning, Eli Manning, and Jake Delhomme watch in frustration as Bryce Young throws another interception. 🏈🎙️ #NFL #MNF #ManningCast pic.twitter.com/cyBBc5Yi1M

— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) November 25, 2025

Xavier Legette losing track of the sideline​

Nice extension from Bryce Young on this play

15-yards negated by Legette stepping out of bounds prior to making the catch. Illegal touching leads to #Panthers 2nd&10 at SF41, where BY9 takes an 8-yard sack, instead of 1st&10 at the SF25 down 11 with 4 mins to play pic.twitter.com/Dbp9tdhpOf

— Ricky Raines (@rickyboboddy) November 25, 2025

Are there other costly errors and ill-timed injuries that were not included? Yes, plenty of them. Almost too many to count. But when the same units or players continue to not learn from the same mistakes, that’s where the major problem lies. Once is an accident, many more than that becomes a trend. Trends that will have to be broken should the Panthers want to have any chance in defeating the juggernaut of a Los Angeles Rams team coming up on Sunday.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...w-repeat-offenders-bryce-young-xavier-legette
 
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