CSR Weekend Warriors: 1/2-1/4

imagn-24959164.jpg


Greetings, Panthers fans. Welcome to the weekend.

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

You know the drill.

This is now an open thread

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/the-scratching-post/57565/csr-weekend-warriors-1-2-1-4
 
Reacts Results: Y’all think the roller-coaster won’t stop today

gettyimages-2191784081.jpg


The Carolina Panthers have been quite rude to their fans this season. Inconsistency, anemic passing, and significant injuries have combined to prevent the Panthers from seizing a moment that has lain waiting for them all season. All it would have taken was a single win over the Arizona Cardinals or the New Orleans Saints and the Panthers would have sewn up the NFC South at least a week ago, if not more. One more upset built on surprisingly strong first halves against the San Francisco 49ers or the Seattle Seahawks could have done the same. Instead, the Panthers are fighting for a position they should have locked up—and never really should have been in, per preseason projections—with two division games this weekend deciding their postseason fate.

Just being in that fight is an accomplishment that most Panthers fans seem to recognize. Our season long confidence graphic—look for it in the offseason—is likely to be sued by Carowinds for copy-right infringement, but there has been a steady upwards trajectory in spite of Carolina’s roller-coaster record over the last eight weeks. In fact, fan confidence in the direction of this team has not dipped below 50% since the season low of 9% after their Week 4 loss to the New England Patriots.

Carolina_1_010226.png

This week that number rests at a comfortable 79%. Folks aren’t convinced, superstitions aside, that the Panthers are going to the Super Bowl this season. But most of us think that Dave Canales and Dan Morgan will lead the team to the playoffs more often than once every eight years.

Carolina_2_010226.png

Of course, a majority of fans also believe the 8-8 Carolina Panthers are going to the playoffs this season. A plurality of fans even think the Panthers will punch their own ticket with a “statement” win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. 18% of y’all have bought more into the vibes of this season and are expecting chaos and shenanigans, via an Atlanta Falcons win over the Saints, to be the Panthers path to postseason contention.

I guess we’ll find out who is right soon enough.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...yall-think-the-roller-coaster-wont-stop-today
 
Panthers playoff picture: What Week 18 vs. Buccaneers means for NFC standings

gettyimages-2254526829.jpg


Well, that happened. The Carolina Panthers, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the weather, and the referees combined to defeat the Panthers hopes for a clean entry to the playoffs this season. There will be a lot to say about this game come Monday, but for right now all eyes are on the Atlanta Falcons and the New Orleans Saints for tomorrow’s proxy NFC South championship. If the Falcons win then the Panthers win and if the Saints win then the Bucs win. The only things for certain right now is that the champion of the NFC South will have a losing, 8-9 record and that they will host a home playoff game for at least the wild-card round of the playoffs.

Panthers finish 8-9​

  • If the Bucs sweep then the Panthers are out.
  • If they split AND the Bucs beat Miami AND the Atlanta Falcons lose one more game then the Panthers are out
  • If they split AND the Falcons beat the Saints then the Panthers are in

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

NFC South standings​

  1. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 8-9
  2. Carolina Panthers 8-9
  3. Atlanta Falcons 7-9
  4. New Orleans Saints 5-10

Current NFC playoff picture​

  1. Seattle Seahawks 13-3
  2. Chicago Bears 11-4
  3. Philadelphia Eagles 10-5
  4. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 8-9
  5. San Francisco 49ers 11-4
  6. Los Angeles Rams 11-4
  7. Green Bay Packers 9-6-1
  8. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 7-9

NFC teams eliminated from playoff contention​


Dallas Cowboys

Minnesota Vikings

Detroit Lions

Atlanta Falcons

Arizona Cardinals

New Orleans Saints

Washington Commanders

New York Giants

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...inch-eliminated-scenarios-seeding-tiebreakers
 
Recap and Reaction: Panthers can’t overcome turnovers and officiating

gettyimages-2254526828.jpg


The Carolina Panthers were victims of their own mistakes and some questionable refereeing as they lost a pseudo playoff game to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

First Quarter​


The Bucs got the ball first and scored against little resistance. Bucky Irving ripped off a few nice runs before Baker Mayfield found holes in the Carolina defense both as a scrambler and a passer. He found a wide open Cade Otton up the seam to open the scoring just a few minutes into the game. The Panthers responded by gaining 15 yards on a Tampa Bay penalty then doing nothing before punting.

The second Bucs drive looked a lot like the first, though they met a little bit more resistance from the Carolina defense. A silly unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on Mike Jackson aided the drive, but it stalled out in the red zone and ended in a Chase McLaughlin field goal.

The first quarter ended with the Panthers in opposing territory after a Bryce Young completion to Brycen Tremayne.

Second Quarter​


Young threw a low ball to Tetairoa McMillan, who got his hands on the ball but couldn’t reel it in on third down. Sam Martin’s punt was downed on the five.

The defense continued to get progressively better. After a couple of shaky passes by Baker Mayfield, he didn’t see Christian Rozeboom shading underneath an in breaking route. He ran it back inside the 20. A couple plays later, Young found Tommy Tremble completely uncovered in the flat. He strolled in to the end zone to make the score 10-7.

Tre Tucker fumbled the ensuing kickoff after Maema Njongmeta got his hand on the football, but Tampa Bay was able to jump on it. The defense had a couple chances to get off the field on third downs early in the drive, but they couldn’t make tackles to get off the field. Some Buccaneers self sabotage eventually helped end the drive. Mayfield knocked over Tucker on a handoff then lost the ball trying to throw a pass to set up third and long that the Bucs simply ran a draw on.

The Panthers had one more chance to score before the half and moved the ball out around midfield by the two minute warning. On the second play after that, Young threw a ball late and behind McMillan and it was intercepted. The Buccaneers had time to put together a touchdown drive, but they called it very conservatively and played for a field goal from the start. The half ended with the Bucs up 13-7.

Third Quarter​


The Panthers took possession to start the second half and matriculated into Bucs’ territory. They picked up a 4th and short along the way with a strong run from Chuba Hubbard, and a long completion from Young to McMillan moved the Panthers into scoring range. There, they were victimized by a brutal officiating mistake. Young tried to check the ball down to Dowdle and clearly threw the ball backwards to get it to his back. The ball hit the ground but was immediately picked up by Dowdle, who was prevented from running forward by the officials blowing the play dead. Expedited review corrected the call and ruled it a fumble that the Panthers recovered with the ball being ruled dead at the spot of the recovery. It cost the Panthers six yards. That proved to be vital, as Ryan Fitzgerald’s field goal attempt came up pretty significantly short from 54 yards.

Carolina again got victimized by some questionable officiating on their next possession. Tommy Tremble got his helmet ripped off without a flag. On the next play, McMillan got called for an offensive pass interference swimming off a pressing defender that canceled out a long completion. The loss of yardage forced the Panthers into a 3rd and long that they couldn’t convert, and they punted the ball away.

The third quarter ended with the Bucs on a drive aided by a pass interference called on Nick Scott because Cade Otton tripped over his own feet in the vicinity of Nick Scott on a hopeful pass by Mayfield that ended up hitting Scott in the back.

Fourth Quarter​


The field position the Bucs gained on that phantom pass interference call gave them just enough space to get into Chase McLaughlin’s field goal range, and the kicker put Tampa Bay up 16-7.

Carolina drove down the field and advanced into scoring territory with a bunch of normal, effective plays. They tried to run a flea flicker, but Rico Dowdle slipped when trying to toss the ball back to Young. The ball fell to the turf, and the Buccaneers pounced on it.

Mayfield found Tez Johnson on a deep out to get the ball out to midfield. A few nice runs and intermediate completions moved Tampa Bay into the red zone. On a 3rd and 5, Mayfield escaped several pass rushers and found Cade Otton on the sideline for a four yard gain. On replay, it was clear that Otton landed out of bounds, and without replay assist stepping in like they did to help the Bucs earlier, Dave Canales had to throw his challenge flag. The call was somewhat surprisingly overturned, given how the game had been going. The Panthers stepped up and blocked a kick for the first time this season to keep the score within nine.

A nice catch and run by Tommy Tremble got the drive started. After a couple of nothing plays, the Panthers were faced with a 4th and 8. As they have done over and over in the second half of the season, the Panthers looked deep in that situation. Young found McMillan behind the defense for a 40 yard gain. Two plays later, he tossed a jump ball to Jalen Coker, who rose up to bring down the touchdown pass.

The Panthers had to force a three and out to give themselves a chance to win the game. After two stops on first and second down, Mayfield rolled out on a play action and found Cade Otton to pick up a first down and effectively end the game.

Overall Outlook​


It’s usually corny to complain about the officiating, but it directly impacted the Panthers in the second half, and it did so tremendously. The Panthers had four very significant calls all work against them in a very short span of time—the bad whistle on the backwards pass, the soft offensive pass interference on McMillan, the missed call on Tremble getting his helmet ripped off, and the pass interference on Nick Scott when he didn’t make any contact with the receiver. All of those cost the Panthers several yards and drastically affected field position and down and distance situations. And all of it happening in the second half gave the Panthers little time to make up for all of their misfortune.

The Panthers did have their own share of mistakes. Young’s interception was bad, and I’m not sure what Dowdle was doing on the flea flicker, and it’s not entirely clear if it was even a designed flea flicker. The defense played pretty well after the beginning of the game. There was just a little too much to overcome.

We’re all Falcons fans now. If the Falcons beat the Saints tomorrow, the Panthers still make the playoffs.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...thers-cant-overcome-turnovers-and-officiating
 
The Los Angeles Rams will visit the Carolina Panthers for Saturday Wild-Card game: Updated

imagn-27867743.jpg


The 12-5 Los Angeles Rams beat the 3-14 Arizona Cardinals this afternoon to secure the fifth seed in the 2025 NFL Playoffs and a trip to Charlotte, North Carolina to play the fourth seed, 8-9 Carolina Panthers. They will play at 4:30 ET on Saturday, January 10th.

The Panthers famously beat the Rams in a 31-28 Week 13 thriller that established the Panthers are quasi-contenders for a playoff berth. Now they will face each other again, with the odds most certainly favoring the Rams once again.

The keys to that Week 13 win were a strong running attack and three first half turnovers forced by the Panthers defense. Neither of those keys are expected to be reproducible at will this week. Look for news about the health of Jaycee Horn. Mike Jackson, and Robert Hunt as we get closer to the game. Positive news on all three fronts will increase the Panthers meager odds of victory, while any bad news stretches them that much further.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...-the-carolina-panthers-for-the-wild-card-game
 
The Optimist: Nothing matters more than being here

gettyimages-2249229160.jpg


The Carolina Panthers are in the playoffs. Say that out loud sometime today so that you can hear it in your own voice. It’s been long enough that you might need a minute to really hear it. At 8-9 the Panthers are going to be this year’s “least likely to” in every category in every game in the post season. For teams like the Los Angeles Rams, the San Francisco 49ers, and the Philadelphia Eagles, being in the playoffs comes with expectations of success. They have to win a game or two, maybe even the Super Bowl, to keep their fans happy. For the Panthers, it really is just an honor to be here.

The Panthers haven’t been in the playoffs since the 2017 season. They have neither won their division nor a playoff game since 2015. There are as many differences as you can think of between this team and either of those teams, but the only thing they have in common is the only thing that matters: they all made the playoffs. Go ahead and say it again if you’re struggling with the concept. It’s OK if you’re rusty rooting for your own team in January.

How did we even get here?​


Over the past several weeks, fans have been split into two camps. One has been hopeful to see a playoff game and didn’t care how the Panthers slipped into the playoffs. The other was worried that the Panthers wouldn’t deserve the chance if they didn’t earn it with a declarative victory. Any one over the Saints, Seahawks, or Bucs in Weeks 15, 17, or 18 would have done. Unfortunately for that second camp, the 7-6 Panthers went 1-3 after their bye in Week 14 and very much slid into the playoffs through a back door tie-breaker in a sad, hapless division.

Over the past many years the Panthers have endured Kyle Allen, P.J. Walker, Teddy Bridgewater, Sam Darnold, and Baker Mayfield being coached by Ron Rivera, Matt Rhule, and Frank Reich. Fans have had to make do with seven win seasons as a highlight, where the playoffs were out of reach by midseason and the future was as uncertain as the quarterback position.

The 2025 Panthers shouldn’t be different.

They have more warts than you can count, somehow making it all the way to wild-card weekend without a simple, resounding answer on Bryce Young that every fans agrees on. The version of the Panthers that was confident and riding a winning streak into the playoffs never materialized. This is not a team that should be expected to succeed. Their first opponent knows that and also knows they cannot underestimate them. The Los Angeles Rams are first up and, having already lost to these Panthers this season, are probably hungry for revenge.

Where are the Panthers going from here?​


To the divisional round of the 2025 NFL Playoffs if they can beat the Rams a second time this season. None of that history of bad quarterbacks and worse coaches matters today. The Panthers are here and are truly in one-game-at-a-time territory. Of course, winning is a tall order and one that has to be delivered with flawless execution and boundless luck against one of the best teams in football that has been playing in the best division in football. The Rams and the NFC West are pretty much the opposite of the Panthers and the NFC South, and the opening odds for this game show it.

The Panthers had plenty of opportunities to show they were “for real” this season. Whether it was the Buffalo Bills game, the San Francisco 49ers Monday Night Football game, either of their games against the New Orleans Saints, or in their last week against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Instead those opportunities accounted for five of their nine losses and, in each of them, their offense showed up flat. That was how Carolina, Young, and Dave Canales responded to raised stakes this season.

The playoffs could be different. Sure, the stakes are higher than ever—lose and they go home for the season, keep (start) winning and bring home the first Lombardi trophy to the Carolinas—but they feel less real than the idea that the Panthers are playing with house money. Nobody at all expects them to beat the Rams. Less than nobody expects them to win the divisional round or advance to the Super Bowl if they do pull off the impossible and win their wild-card game.

When you’re in the “it’s an honor to be here seat,” then all success is gravy. Even just competing hard in a loss can feel like a win and pay huge dividends for the culture and program that Canales is still trying to build.

What if I have zero faith in Bryce Young?​


You should rejoice that he gets a big national stage to fall flat on.

You should be thrilled that the Panthers won the NFC South and get a tougher schedule in 2026 because of that.

The Panthers may be playing with house money but Young still hasn’t earned his future. If you have nothing but doubt then you can enter Saturday confident that he’ll fail to perform. If you still cling to hope then there is technically a chance he could find a new level of play on Saturday. Either way, this season and next have increased the difficulty and the amount of attention paid to Young’s play. He’ll step up or fold and that should make the Panthers’ decisions easier, be they made in the 2026 or 2027 offseason.

So what do we do as fans?​


Dust off your best wings recipe. Buy more avocados than you think you can eat and make guacamole from scratch. Maybe get a new TV? This is the Panthers Super Bowl, basically. It has been eight or ten years since the Panthers started falling apart, but only two years since they hit the rock bottom that was the Reich and Scott Fitterer fiasco. Somehow, we’re back.

Canales, for all his mistakes, has also shown a lot of promise. He has a shot at being the real deal and we get another shot at seeing him coach a big game this season—a shot that was not promised at any point during this season. Any outcome is a win for Panthers fans this Saturday. A blowout loss, while it will suck to watch, helps identify or underline the problems this team still has. A close loss is a huge win for the building confidence in next season. An actually close win would be thrilling in ways we haven’t experienced since maybe beating the Arizona Cardinals 27-16 in the 2014 wild-card round.

That was the last season where the Panthers won the NFC South and made the playoffs with a losing record. That win in the wild-card round was less expected than any of the results from the 2015 playoffs. The 2025 Panthers are further away from being considered competitive than that 2014 team was, but they also have more signature wins. The 2014 team only beat one team with a winning record, the 2025 Panthers have two wins over then-number one seeds in the Packers and Rams.

Weird things happened to get us here. Weird things conspired to see the Panthers beat the Rams the first time around. It’s going to take weird things to keep us here. I don’t know about y’all, but after years adrift with the likes of the Browns and the Jets, I’ll take rooting for weird things if it means we can dream of winning this year’s Super Bowl for even just one more week.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...optimist-nothing-matters-more-than-being-here
 
The Panthers must advance to the Super Bowl to have a winning record this season

gettyimages-2254523682.jpg


The Carolina Panthers earned the dubious honor of being the only team in NFL history to enter the playoffs with a losing record more than once. Of the five teams to have earned a playoff berth while sub .500, the Panthers are two of them. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are another, for the record, which just does not say anything good about the NFC South.

For this season, the 8-9 Panthers have an interesting path to success in front of them. They are already in the playoffs, but if they want to end the season with an overall winning record then they will have to win the Super Bowl.

Beating the Los Angeles Rams in the Wild-Card Round would move them to 9-9, but necessitate an appearance in the Divisional Round. A loss there would drop them back below .500. A wildly unlikely Divisional win would put the Panthers above .500 at 10-9 overall, but similarly necessitate another playoff game. A loss in the NFC Championship would leave them at 10-10 overall.

In the impossible world where the Carolina Panthers win the NFC Championship they would advance to the Super Bowl with an 11-9 overall record on the 2025 season and playoffs. Even a loss in the Super Bowl would leave them one game above .500.

How about it Panthers fans, how far do you think they can reasonably make it? “To the Bank of America Stadium locker rooms” is an acceptable answer here.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...per-bowl-to-have-a-winning-record-this-season
 
Ask Brian: Playoffs baby!

gettyimages-2254533752.jpg


Hello CSR! Welcome to Brian Asks, part two of your weekly Panthers fan mail bag for everyone! Congratulations Panthers fans it’s playoff season! Somehow against all odds, the Panthers squeaked into the playoffs and we have bonus football for the 2025 regular season. It wasn’t always pretty, in fact, it was often ugly, but the Panthers are in the dance and that’s all that matters.

I know there has been a lot of conversation about Bryce Young and the future of this offense. That has been mostly the talking point of the entire season. We’re going to get a look at what a Ejiro Evero playoff defense looks like as well. You all know the drill, comment down below with all your questions, whether they be Panthers related, football related, or even completely off topic! I’ll have answers for you later on this week. Let’s enjoy it while it lasts!!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-discussion/57652/ask-brian-playoffs-baby
 
Panthers Reacts Postseason Survey

gettyimages-2254530451.jpg


The Carolina Panthers are in the playoffs. That’s the bottom line after a roller coaster season full of unanswered questions. Yes, they have a losing record; yes, they are the biggest underdogs in the league heading into wild-card weekend; yes, they exceeded expectations this season; and yes, they play in the NFC South. It is what it is.

This is our final Reacts Survey for the regular season and we’re asking two questions. Obviously, we have our standard confidence question: do you feel confident in the current direction of the Carolina Panthers?

The other question, that I expect to hew fairly closely in response rate to the first, is simple: are you happy that the Panthers made the playoffs this season?

A lot of folks are just excited for the season to continue. A lot of folks are wary that any success in the playoffs will translate to a bigger and longer contract for Bryce Young. Others are concerned that ruining the Panthers draft position isn’t worth the playoffs when the team isn’t good enough to get in on their own. There is no one right way to be a fan, but I am curious how many, if any, of y’all are actually upset that we get more Panthers football before the offseason.

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

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...ssion/57663/panthers-reacts-postseason-survey
 
Who’s ready for a Rams rematch?

gettyimages-2249208559.jpg


For those of you who believe in fate, there was never a doubt the Carolina Panthers would be sitting where they are right now – that is, hosting a home playoff game for the first time in forever. After all, who can argue with such foolproof analytics based off of Jennifer Lopez’s marital status, the NFL schedule makers and THE Ohio State University?

Panthers team of Destiny pic.twitter.com/BhJl6PKTsv

— Pardon My Take (@PardonMyTake) January 4, 2026

For the rest of us, the fact that the Panthers get one more chance to play with house money on Wildcard Weekend is a shocking, but entirely welcome, opportunity. Was it the traditional route to the playoffs? No, but who cares about that anyway!

While finally getting to throw up some “NFC South Division Champions” hats, t-shirts and graphics on social media is fun, it also means the Panthers actually have to play another football game. The boys in process blue will be suiting up against a familiar, yet formidable, opponent – the Los Angeles Rams. A team that they shocked the world and beat in their first match up, but will lightning strike twice to allow for another Panthers victory this weekend?

Let’s take a look at what’s changed since their Week 13 match-up to see if the Panthers still have what it takes to come out on top.

Panthers Run Game​


Against the Rams, the Panthers rushing attack may not have been exceptional, but it was effective. 40 combined carries for 164 yards set the tone of the game and gave the Panthers the ability to hold the ball for over 35 minutes of time of possession and make it the fastest NFL game played in the last decade.

The @Panthers and @RamsNFL game took just 163 minutes (2 hours, 43 minutes), the quickest game with at least 55 points scored over the last decade ⏰ pic.twitter.com/QHcHcBIZ83

— NFL+ (@NFLPlus) November 30, 2025

In the Panthers 4 games since, they have amassed an average of 86.5 yards on 22.75 attempts per game. The Panthers win versus the Rams is also the last time they’ve won the time of possession battle. Since then, they have only held the ball on average 25 minutes and 29 seconds per game.

Should the Panthers want to win against the Rams again, they’ll likely need to rely on a similar formula as their first clash. Should the trend of the Panthers last 4 games continue and the Rams get 35 minutes of time of possession and stifle the Panthers running backs to less than 3.8 yards a carry, it may be too much for the underdog to overcome.

Matthew Stafford’s Excellence​


One of the main storylines entering the first matchup against the Ram’s was Stafford’s record breaking streak of 27 touchdowns without an interception. A streak that would become 28 before ultimately ending after a Derrick Brown tip landed in Nick Scott’s hands. Since then, Stafford has thrown 4 interceptions in 5 games, 3 of which were against the Falcons in the Rams only loss since.

Matthew Stafford's final 2025 stat line 👏

4,707 passing yards
46 passing TDs (career high)
8 INT
12 wins pic.twitter.com/f6hxRNyog1

— NFL (@NFL) January 5, 2026

The Panthers held Stafford to 243 yards, his lowest total over the last 7 games of the season. Stafford has averaged 326.8 yards, 2.8 touchdowns and 0.8 interceptions per game since. The Panthers will once again need their secondary to ball out should they want to disrupt Sean McVay’s juggernaut offense. Thankfully, Mike Jackson has continued playing extremely well to close the season (PFF’s 13th ranked corner in coverage since Week 14) and Jaycee Horn always has the potential to take over a game.

3rd Down Efficiency​


What’s going to make or break this match-up, is how efficient the Panthers are on 3rd down. While in the first match-up, the Panthers’ big plays on 4th down were what won the game, it’s highly unlikely the Rams will allow that to happen again. Therefore, being able to control the ball by converting 3rd downs and not letting the Rams convert their own will likely decide the football game.

In their first match-up, the Panthers were 7-15 on 3rd down. In the Panthers last two games versus the Seattle Seahawks and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the Panthers were 1-11 and 1-8, respectively. Over each team’s last 3 outings, the Rams have converted 44.9% (8th in the NFL) compared to the Panthers measly 25.81% (31st in the NFL) conversion rate.

The Panthers defense over the last 3 games have allowed a conversion rate of 55.55%. To put that into perspective, the San Francisco 49ers lead the league in 3rd down conversions on offense, converting 49.77% of the time. Not ideal.

3rd Down defense ranked by EPA/Play pic.twitter.com/Gyk9qDCgRP

— nicky (@PFF_Nicky) January 2, 2026

Make no mistake, the Panthers have their work cut out for them if they want to sniff their Super Bowl destiny pre-ordained by Jennifer Lopez’s love life. A 10.5 point underdog, at home, against a team that’s recently won the Super Bowl and had a fighting shot at the number 1 seed. The odds are stacked against them. But, hey, how else would you expect a Cinderella story to start?

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-analysis/57641/whos-ready-for-a-rams-rematch
 
Panthers Playoffs History: X-Clown

gettyimages-110313549.jpg


For Carolina Panthers fans, the term X-Clown brings back elated memories. Images of Steve Smith crossing the goal line, arms stretched wide fill their minds. Before the Panthers embark on their next playoff journey, let’s take a look back at this scene from Panthers history.

The Scene​


On January 10th, 2004, the then St. Louis Rams hosted the Carolina Panthers in the divisional round of the NFL playoffs. The Rams were heavily favored and led by their Greatest Show on Turf offense that included current and likely Hall of Famers like Marshall Faulk, Isaac Bruce, Tory Holt, and Orlando Pace. The Rams were the NFC West division winners with a record of 12-4 and the second highest scoring offense in the NFL. As the NFC’s second overall seed, the Rams had a bye week during the Wild Card round. Meanwhile, the Panthers, who won the NFC South at 11-5, hosted and beat the Dallas Cowboys in the Wild Card round. The Panthers were largely led by a dominant defense which boasted players like Julius Peppers, Kris Jenkins, Dan Morgan, and Mike Minter.

The Script​


The Rams took the opening kickoff and managed a field goal to take a quick 3-0 lead. From then, neither team had much success until the beginning of the second quarter, when the Rams were able to put together another field goal drive immediately following a Jake Delhomme interception. A Stephen Davis 65-yard run put the Panthers in a goal-to-go situation on the ensuing drive, which ended in a wild touchdown a few plays later. Delhomme fumbled while attempting a shovel pass, the fumble squirted into the endzone, and Muhsin Muhammad fell on it for a touchdown, giving the Panthers a 7-6 lead. The Rams and Panthers ended the half by trading field goal drives, so the Panthers went into the break leading 10-9.

After the Panthers punted to open the second half, the Rams put together yet another field goal drive to take a 12-10 lead early in the third quarter. After that, the Panthers took over the game for a while. A long Jon Kasay field goal, followed by a medium Kasay field goal, followed by a Brad Hoover touchdown run meant the Panthers had a 23-12 lead. After that, Deon Grant intercepted Marc Bulger which had the chance to seal the game. Unfortunately, a missed Kasay field goal swung momentum back to the Rams. St. Louis marched down the field and scored a touchdown and two point conversion, putting the game at 23-20 in favor of the Panthers. A successful onside kick gave the Rams the ball again. After getting into the redzone, the Rams decided to play for the tie and kicked a field goal as time expired.

The Panthers had the first chance to win the game in overtime, with Kasay making a 40 yard field goal for the win. Unfortunately, the Panthers were flagged for delay of game, and Kasay’s longer kick was no good. The Rams then got into field goal range and attempted a long field goal that ended up short. The Panthers used the short field to get into Rams territory, but two sacks and a penalty pushed them out of field goal range. Ricky Manning Jr intercepted the ball on the ensuing Rams possession and the game went into the second overtime period. That was when it happened.

The Play​


The first play of the second overtime saw the Panthers facing a 3rd and 14 at their own 31 yard line. The Panthers lined up under center in an empty set, two receivers right, Smith to the left, two tight ends both inline on the right side of the line. The route, nicknamed X-Clown because “we called it X-Clown to make the safety look like a clown” per head coach John Fox, was essentially a corner-post. The receiver breaks outside like a corner route to get the safety wide then breaks back inside like a post route. The Panthers had tried the play in practice for several weeks, but Delhomme and Smith couldn’t quite get the location and timing down. One of the main reasons was Smith flattening of the post portion of the route. Instead of a true 45 degree angle, he cut just a little bit sharper which lessened the depth of the route by a few yards. The play had worked earlier in the game for a 36-yard play in the fourth quarter. The play worked again here. Smith broke outside, getting Rams safety Jason Sehorn to turn his shoulders before cutting back inside. Again slightly altering the angle of the break, Smith flashed wide open for Delhomme. Delhomme took a five step drop, pump faked, stepped up, and fired a strike to Smith in stride. Smith caught the ball and turned up field, leaving the diving Sehorn in the dust. Smith cut back outside and was too fast for Rams safety Adam Archuleta to catch. 69 yards, touchdown, game over. Panthers win, and move on to the NFC Championship game, where they would on the road and beat the number one seed Philadelphia Eagles and earn a trip to the Super Bowl.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-history/57632/panthers-playoffs-history-x-clown
 
Pretty wild situation for Carolina to be in. Making the playoffs at 8-9 is definitely not ideal, but hey, playoff football is playoff football. The NFC South really is something else.

That X-Clown breakdown was a nice read. Still one of the most iconic plays in franchise history. The way Smith ran that route and Delhomme delivered under that kind of pressure in double overtime... that's the stuff you remember forever.

As for the Rams rematch, I think the keys they laid out are spot on. The Panthers absolutely have to control the clock like they did in Week 13. That time of possession battle is everything against a team with Stafford and McVay. If LA gets the ball for 35+ minutes, it's going to be rough.

The 3rd down numbers are concerning though. Converting at 25% over the last few games while allowing opponents to convert at 55%... that's not a recipe for playoff success. Going to need a much better showing there.

Realistically? I'd say they have maybe a 25-30% shot at beating the Rams at home. Stranger things have happened, and they already proved they can beat this team once. But expecting a Super Bowl run is probably a stretch. Still, fun to have meaningful January football in Charlotte regardless of how it ends.
 
Panthers vs Rams: Offensive Preview

gettyimages-2248677478.jpg


Somehow we’re here. Despite a season of ups and downs and more losses than wins, the Carolina Panthers find themselves hosting a playoff game. It just so happens that it’s against the Los Angeles Rams, the team the Panthers defeated at Bank of America Stadium about a month ago in what was arguably the most surprising result in the NFL all season.

The Rams do seem a little less of a juggernaut this time around. They came into the first meeting on a six game win streak in which they throttled most of their opposition. This time, they look more human. They lost two in a row before ending their season with a win that required a comeback over the Arizona Cardinals. One of those losses was at the hands of the Falcons and is one of the reasons the Panthers are here at all. Their offense is still as explosive as ever. Their defense is showing some cracks though.

The Rams had one of the best defenses throughout the season, but they allowed their opponents to average 6.4 yards per play over the last three weeks of the season. Only the Ravens, Cowboys, and Dolphins were worse. That’s despite the last two offenses they faced being known not-good offenses in the Kirk Cousins led Falcons and Jacoby Brissett led Cardinals. They were gashed on the ground, allowing 6.4 yards per carry in those three games. That sets up nicely for what the Panthers need to do to pull off another upset. And spoiler alert, it’s the same stuff they needed to do the first time around.

  • Pound the rock, but do it successfully. There are two reasons for this. One, the Rams’ offense is significantly more potent than the Panthers’. The more possessions this game goes, the more likely it is that the Rams pull away because the Panthers simply can’t keep up. That means the Panthers need to keep the clock running as much as possible to keep the total number of possessions low. Two, the Rams are a whole lot more susceptible to getting beaten on the ground than they are through the air right now. Like I said above, they have gotten run all over the last few weeks, while their pass rush and pass defense have been as good as ever. The Panthers need to hit the Rams with a heavy dose of Chuba Hubbard and Rico Dowdle, preferably in that order. Hubbard has been the much better back for like a month now, and he was decidedly the better of the two in the first meeting with the Rams. Unfortunately neither back could get anything going last week, and the Rams won’t be as forgiving if the same holds true on Saturday.
  • Bryce Young needs to hit his high leverage throws. The Panthers have somehow gotten on this roll where it seems like every 4th and short from outside of the red zone ends up turning into a long play that often ends in a touchdown. We saw it last week with the deep ball from Young to Tetairoa McMillan on a 40 yard pass on 4th and 8 that set up the Panthers’ second touchdown of the evening. We saw it twice in Panthers vs Rams part 1. It seems like Dave Canales and Brad Idzik have settled on their ideal approach being to trust the ground game as much as possible and then turn to Bryce when absolutely necessary. It’s been working, and it’ll have to continue to work. We’ll probably need to see at least a couple long touchdowns, though it’d be nice if the Panthers didn’t wait until fourth down to find them.
  • Be aggressive on fourth down. This plays into both of the first two points above. The Panthers need to stay on the field as much as possible, which means avoiding kicking the ball back to the Rams unless absolutely necessary. It’s also going to take more touchdowns than field goals to win this game. Fourth down has been a money down for this team, and it’s good that they’ve built so much confidence in themselves and in Bryce Young in particular in those situations. They’re going to be vital for any chance at postseason success.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-analysis/57702/panthers-vs-rams-offensive-preview
 
NFL Power Rankings Roundup: Where the Panthers rank in the Wild Card round

gettyimages-2249551152.jpg


The Carolina Panthers are one of 14 NFL teams still standing. But not all 14 of these teams are created equal.

With an 8-9 record and backing their way into the playoffs in a less-than-impressive fashion, there are plenty of Panthers skeptics out there. There are probably plenty of Panthers skeptics here, too, but for now Carolina is alive in the postseason and that’s all that matters.

An annual tradition among football writers is to take the playoff contenders and rank them from top to bottom, so we’re going to celebrate that tradition this year with the Panthers included. Here’s where some of the more prominent NFL sites rank the 14 teams in the playoffs, and not surprisingly they’re not very kind to Carolina.

NFL.com​


Eric Edholm of NFL.com calls this year’s playoffs “one of the more wide-open postseasons in years.” His view is this a number of teams could win this year’s Super Bowl with some of the annual postseason studs like Patrick Mahomes and Lamar Jackson watching from their couches. But when listing the contenders, the Panthers are looking up from the bottom in Edholm’s rankings.

  1. Seattle Seahawks
  2. New England Patriots
  3. Jacksonville Jaguars
  4. Denver Broncos
  5. Buffalo Bills
  6. Houston Texans
  7. Los Angeles Rams
  8. Chicago Bears
  9. San Francisco 49ers
  10. Philadelphia Eagles
  11. Los Angeles Chargers
  12. Pittsburgh Steelers
  13. Green Bay Packers
  14. Carolina Panthers

CBS Sports


Zachary Pereles of CBS Sports ranks the Panthers 14th – dead last – among all playoff contenders. But we Panthers fans shouldn’t take it personally. Pereles said the No. 14 spot was reserved for the NFC South winner, which fortuitously was Carolina. Pereles goes on to note that the last playoff team with a losing record to win were our very own Carolina Panthers back in 2014. But he doesn’t expect a repeat upset victory this year, especially with the Panthers opponent, the Los Angeles Rams, coming out as No. 1 in his rankings.

  1. Los Angeles Rams
  2. Seattle Seahawks
  3. Jacksonville Jaguars
  4. Denver Broncos
  5. Philadelphia Eagles
  6. New England Patriots
  7. Buffalo Bills
  8. Houston Texans
  9. Los Angeles Chargers
  10. Chicago Bears
  11. San Francisco 49ers
  12. Green Bay Packers
  13. Pittsburgh Steelers
  14. Carolina Panthers

Fox Sports


Ralph Vacchiano oversaw Fox Sports’ power rankings and it has something in common with most of the others:

The Panthers are ranked dead last.

But the Vacchiano goes on the insult our favorite team by claiming, “Hard to imagine they won’t be one and done in the playoffs.”

Frankly, Mr. Vacchiano, I find that statement very insulting regarding my imagination. It was easy for me to imagine hundreds of situations in which the Panthers win on Sunday. In my imagination Matthew Stafford and Puka Nacua are abducted by space aliens. Or perhaps there’s an Angels in the Endzone experience (the less popular sequel to Angels in the Outfield) where Carolina gets some divine intervention. Or maybe one of the officials owes a massive gambling debt to the Italian mafia and the Cosa Nostra happen to be big Panthers fans because of all of Carolina’s games in Europe.

Never lose the faith! Any given Sunday!

  1. Seattle Seahawks
  2. New England Patriots
  3. Jacksonville Jaguars
  4. Denver Broncos
  5. Los Angeles Rams
  6. San Francisco 49ers
  7. Houston Texans
  8. Buffalo Bills
  9. Chicago Bears
  10. Philadelphia Eagles
  11. Los Angeles Chargers
  12. Green Bay Packers
  13. Pittsburgh Steelers
  14. Carolina Panthers

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...here-the-panthers-rank-in-the-wild-card-round
 
Panthers vs Rams NFC Wild Card Round: Defensive Preview

gettyimages-2249125007.jpg


The Carolina Panthers are back in the playoffs for the first time since 2017, and are division champions for the first time in ten years. That means we get bonus football! Unfortunately, it comes against a Rams team, and more specifically their offense, that will likely be looking for blood in this rematch from the 2025 regular season. The last time around, the Panthers came up with an upset of the season candidate, as they outlasted the Rams in a 31-28 victory in Carolina. The defense played a major role in this, as they picked off two of Matthew Stafford’s passes, one of which Mike Jackson returned for a TD, and Derrick Brown forced a game clinching fumble that allowed the Panthers offense to simply run the clock out. Many say the game was perfect for the Panthers, however the defense wasn’t perfect by any means, they simply made enough big plays to make the difference. Let’s dive into how they can make that happen again.

  • Force turnovers. Dave Canales preached it ahead of the last game and in the post game press conferences after the fact; you beat really good teams in the NFL by stealing extra possessions. Whether those come via opportunistic 4th down conversions on offense, or turnovers on defense to keep the opposing offense out of the end zone. I don’t think its any secret that this Rams offense is VERY good, and up until the previous encounter with the Panthers, Matt Stafford was one of the best in the league at controlling turnovers. Since then, Stafford has thrown 4 more interceptions and fumbled the ball once, though 3 of those turnovers came against the Falcons in another stunning upset. The Panthers have to find a way to force those turnovers, as the Rams started the last game moving the ball basically at will until Stafford’s first interception.
  • The run game was quietly a problem. The Rams put a lot of resources this last off-season into improving their power rushing attack, and it showed in their previous game. They averaged 7.2 yards per carry on 21 rushes for 152 yards. The Rams sport a potent passing attack, but the thing that generally gets a team through the playoffs is a solid and consistent rushing attack, and the Rams currently rank 6th in yards per rush and 7th in rush yards per game, despite only being dead in the middle of the NFL in rushes per game. They will likely have learned from the last time around, and lean on the rushing attack this time to prevent turnovers. Blake Corum and Kyren Williams could have a field day if the game script becomes negative for the Panthers quickly.
  • Mike Jackson and Jaycee Horn’s tallest task of the season. Jaycee Horn was injured the last time these two teams faced, and while Jackson had himself a pretty good day, Davante Adams scored twice and Puke Nacua had a highlight reel catch that led to a score. With both Nakua and Adams fully healthy again, this is a marquee matchup as far as secondary vs wide receivers go. Mike Jack and Jaycee have quietly been one of the best tandems in the league at CB, while Davante Adams and Puka Nacua have been about as dangerous as we might have imagined going into the season. We can’t have Jaycee Horn slipping or making unfortunate penalties happen, these two really need to lock in for this defense to have a chance.

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

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...vs-rams-nfc-wild-card-round-defensive-preview
 
5 more Qs with Turf Show Times

gettyimages-2248677744.jpg


In Week 13 the Carolina Panthers shocked the world with their upset of the then 9-2 Los Angeles Rams. Our first iteration of an interview with a Rams blogger barely accounted for the possibility of a Panthers win, let alone a playoff rematch. Look at us now. Recent history aside, however, expectations going into tomorrow’s game against the Rams are quite similar to their first meeting. The Rams are seen as a true Super Bowl contender and are only traveling to visit the much weaker—at least on paper—Panthers due to a quirk in playoff seeding.

So, where does that leave us this week? Read on for the Rams perspective on that question and more:

What was the fan reaction to the first time the Panthers upset the Rams this season? Do you expect that reaction to be different when it happens a second time?

HA! If it happens a second time, fans on our site might just go nuclear.

The fan reaction wasn’t anything too crazy when it happened. A lot of them seemed more concerned about Matthew Stafford’s MVP case taking a significant hit, rather than being upset over the loss. In all fairness, that concern was warranted since that was when you saw the media beginning to shift from Stafford as the favorite to Drake Maye. Many fans also felt that the loss was something that needed to happen. At the time, the Rams were viewed as the league’s best team in a wide-open NFL campaign. They were dominating just about everyone they had encountered in that span, and then the Panthers took the air out of their sails. L.A. needed to be reminded that they could lose at any time and they weren’t unbeatable. While that wake-up call might not have stuck as much as it should’ve, fans could stomach it if it meant a return to their dominant ways.

Jokes aside, it is has been a long five weeks of football since the Week 13 meeting. The Panthers hit a bye-week immediately after and then went 1-3 down the stretch despite getting healthier over that time. How have the Los Angeles Rams changed as a team since their loss to the Panthers?

The Rams didn’t fare that much better, all things considered, going 3-2 since the Carolina debacle. Following the loss, L.A. won back-to-back games over the Cardinals and Lions, scoring at least 41 points in those matchups. Then, the Rams suffered a two-game losing streak, first to the Seahawks, which ended all hope of earning the number one seed in the NFC and repeating as NFC West champions, and followed that up with another Stafford three-turnover performance in a loss to the Falcons on Monday Night Football. The Seattle loss was especially frustrating because the team completely gave it away after going up 30-14. Given the stakes on the line, there was zero excuse for such a meltdown. Los Angeles has had the Seahawks’ number and picked the worst possible time to lose to them.

Their season finale against the Cardinals was also ugly, though they won it after pulling away in the fourth quarter. A three-win Cardinals team gave L.A. their all for much of the game, quite concerning since the Rams had beaten them by 28 on the road just weeks before. The Rams have been on shaky ground for a while since losing to the Panthers, though I won’t give Carolina the satisfaction of being the team that “broke” them … yet.

Stafford struggled to pass without turning the ball over against a Panthers secondary that was without Pro Bowl corner Jaycee Horn. Horn is back and the entire Panthers secondary is looking healthy heading into Saturday. Do you expect the Rams to run a more conservative offensive game plan to try to limit those mistakes from happening again?

I don’t see Horn returning doing much to alter the Rams’ offensive plans. That’s no disrespect to him at all, but the team has been aggressive and powerful on offense for much of the year, so they’ll let Matthew Stafford continue doing what he’s been doing this entire season.

Last time these two played, Los Angeles was able to move the ball quite well on the Panthers, but Stafford lost them the game with his turnovers, plain and simple. Even then, he was having moderate success through the air until the interceptions did him in. I attribute Stafford’s struggles to simply a bad game, which he was overdue for. All great quarterbacks have bad games, and after that interception-less streak he had going on entering the game, eventually mistakes were going to catch up to him. That is just how life is in the NFL.

The run game should play a prominent role again, as Kyren Williams and second-year back Blake Corum combined for 153 yards in the first matchup. When that duo’s on, there’s very little stopping this offense. Plus, tight end Tyler Higbee is back for this one, which should make the offense even better. Stafford has every reason to trust his supporting cast, and they’ll be aggressive despite past history. He’s gotten them this far, and Sean McVay’s trust in him is perhaps the highest it’s ever been during their time together in Hollywood. They have no reason not to be aggressive.

The Panthers are finally also getting healthier along the offensive line and are expecting to lean into an extremely run heavy game plan (if they know what’s good for them). How healthy and successful is the Rams’ running defense expected to be on Saturday?

The Rams should be pretty healthy along the defensive line, though it might not seem to matter how healthy they are, given their slight struggles against the run in recent weeks.

After having a top 10 run defense for much of the year, L.A.’s run defense crumbled against the Seahawks and Falcons to end the regular season, giving up 171 yards and 219 on the ground, respectively. During that two-game stretch, the defense gave up a 55-yard touchdown to Kenneth Walker and a 93-yard rushing touchdown to Bijan Robinson. This was after the Rams had bottled up the likes of Jonathan Taylor, Christian McCaffrey (twice), Jahmyr Gibbs and Saquon Barkley this season. Of course right after that mini losing streak, they held Arizona’s ground game in check. There’s nothing impressive about that because the Cardinals have zero threat at running back. However, it was important for the Rams to put up a good effort there to get back on track.

I expect them to be much better against the run this time around against the Panthers so they know more of what to expect. Take away the run and Bryce Young will not pose a threat whatsoever. Chris Shula will dare Young to make him beat the Rams through the air.

Everyone is picking the Rams to win this game and they probably will. We get that. What do you think a second Rams loss to the Panthers this season would look like?

I think a second Rams loss to the Panthers would look similar to the first, and that’s shooting themselves in the foot. It’s fair to say that no team has beaten the Rams more this season in losses than themselves.

In losses to the Eagles and Seahawks, they blew sizable leads, and killer mistakes doomed them down the stretch. Matthew Stafford was a turnover machine in losses to the Panthers and Falcons, with the latter effectively ending his MVP chances. Then, L.A. got off to a slow start in their first bout with Mac Jones and the 49ers and were unable to win because of it.

This is undoubtedly a championship team that should’ve been the NFC’s top seed if not for blunders that prevented it from happening. It was clearly not meant to be for the Rams this season in terms of that, and they made sure of it.

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/carolina-panthers-nfl-playoffs/57715/5-more-qs-with-turf-show-times
 
Panthers vs Rams: Live fan discussion for Wild-Card Weekend

gettyimages-2253935663.jpg


This is the first Carolina Panthers playoff game in eight seasons and the first playoff game of the 2025 season. Hold onto that theme ladies and gentlemen, because today could be a day of many more firsts. It could be the first time an underdog this big pulled off a playoff upset. It could be the first time Bryce Young unites the Panthers faithful.

Nobody is going to give Carolina much credit today, which means we have nothing to lose. A Rams blowout win meets expectations, ho hum. A Panthers win of any description is cause for celebration. It’s all upside.

Regardless of what happens today, at least we got to watch one more game with our team than fans of the New Orleans Saints, the Atlanta Falcons, or the Tampa Bay Buccaneers got to watch with theirs.

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

You know the drill.

This is now an open thread!

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...ams-live-fan-discussion-for-wild-card-weekend
 
Panthers 2026 NFL Draft order: 1st-round pick finalized with playoffs exit

It was delayed by a week, but the Panthers are officially on to the offseason after being eliminated by the Rams in the Wild Card Round of the 2026 playoffs. Carolina’s draft position is now locked into place at No. 19. The rest of the teams that lose this weekend will fill in slots 20-24.

Carolina ranked near the bottom of the NFL in 2026 in sacks with 30, and edge rusher is absolutely a top need heading into free agency and the draft. Rico Dowdle was the team’s leading rusher, with 1,076 yards and six rushing touchdowns, plus contributed 297 receiving yards and a touchdown through the air, and he’s hitting free agency. Christian Rozeboom, the Panthers’ tackles leader who also had two sacks, three pass break-ups, a pick and a forced fumble, will also become a free agent when the new league year ends. The Panthers are projected to have about $39 million in cap space to work with this offseason based on the 51-man projection, but obviously when they can shore up these key positions through the draft, it makes long-term team building for success easier.

Here’s the updated draft order after the Panthers’ Wild Card exit.

Updated 2026 NFL Draft order​

  1. Las Vegas Raiders
  2. New York Jets
  3. Arizona Cardinals
  4. Tennessee Titans
  5. New York Giants
  6. Cleveland Browns
  7. Washington Commanders
  8. New Orleans Saints
  9. Kansas City Chiefs
  10. Cincinnati Bengals
  11. Miami Dolphins
  12. Dallas Cowboys
  13. Los Angeles Rams (via Atlanta Falcons)
  14. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
  15. New York Jets (via Indianapolis Colts)
  16. Baltimore Ravens
  17. Detroit Lions
  18. Minnesota Vikings
  19. Carolina Panthers
  20. Dallas Cowboys (via Green Bay Packers)
  21. Pittsburgh Steelers
  22. Los Angeles Chargers
  23. Philadelphia Eagles
  24. Buffalo Bills
  25. Chicago Bears
  26. San Francisco 49ers
  27. Houston Texans
  28. Cleveland Browns (via Jacksonville Jaguars)
  29. Los Angeles Rams
  30. New England Patriots
  31. Denver Broncos
  32. Seattle Seahawks

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...ft-order-2026-updated-1st-round-picks-week-18
 
Wild-Card Weekend: Live fan discussion for Sunday

gettyimages-2174063017.jpg


The Carolina Panthers may have been the first team eliminated from the 2025 playoffs, but they won’t be the last. That’s how the playoffs work, and we know that now from recent experience. Go us.

For the first time in months, none of the remaining games have any effect on the Panthers playoff chances or draft position. We can just watch and root for good football from now until the Super Bowl.

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

You know the drill.

This is now an open thread!

Join the conversation!​


Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...d-card-weekend-live-fan-discussion-for-sunday
 
Panthers Ejiro Evero to return as defensive coordinator

imagn-11976742.jpg


The regular season may be over, but football never truly stops in the NFL. The Panthers will be bringing back Ejiro Evero for the foreseeable future, per Joe Person of the Athletic.

Dave Canales says Ejiro Evero's contract has been extended. Was originally set to expire after the '25 season.
Add Evero "absolutely" will be back as defensive coordinator.

— Joe Person (@josephperson) January 11, 2026

According to Joe, Evero is under contract through the 2027 season. The details on Evero’s contract situation were kind of murky, as going into the season the assumption was his contract expired following the conclusion of this season. Then, whispers popped up on X/Twitter from Joe and other Panthers reporters that he was already under contract. Well, his status has been clarified now.

I’m personally happy to see Evero back. I know he was maligned by many fans, but he definitely squeezed every ounce of talent he could out of this defense. Nick Scott started every game at safety, despite my love for the guy. Christian Rozeboom ended up being an every game starter as well at linebacker (when healthy), and the front seven dealt with injuries and an injection of youth this season. Evero will have another Offseason to build this defense in his image, at least in theory.

This does not necessarily rule out Evero accepting a head coaching job and going elsewhere. There are plenty of head coaching jobs out there, and as of a few days ago Evero was set to interview for at least one of them. What are your thoughts on the Panthers bringing back Evero?

Source: https://www.catscratchreader.com/ca...jiro-evero-to-return-as-defensive-coordinator
 
Back
Top