raleigh-panther
HUDDLER-
Posts
11,500 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Huddle Wiki
Forums
Gallery
Everything posted by raleigh-panther
-
Watching Zach Wilson play reminds me EXACTLY of Corral
raleigh-panther replied to DMathematics's topic in Carolina Panthers
Drew Brees comes to mind -
Something to talk about besides last Sunday and the weather this Saturday Here’s all free agent QBs in 2023 https://www.spotrac.com/nfl/free-agents/quarterback/?ref=trending-pages Here are the current top 10 QBs in draft (High level) https://www.profootballnetwork.com/2023-nfl-draft-top-10-quarterbacks/ Top 10 Quarterbacks in the 2023 NFL Draft: Bryce Young, Anthony Richardson Boast Great Upside The 2023 NFL Draft class presents a varietal who's who among the top 10 quarterbacks. Who lands at No. 1? Does your favorite crack the top 10? ByIan Cummings December 14, 2022 10) Clayton Tune, Houston If you’re forced to choose a QB from the 2023 NFL Draft who goes from Day 3 pick to eventual NFL starter, make Clayton Tune your choice. He’s quietly one of the most intriguing passers in a class that’s starting to become starved for depth with players returning. Tune has been lights out for Houston over the past two seasons — not only statistically but in specific situational moments as well. He’s a clutch, exceedingly confident QB who has a gunslinger’s mentality when faced with risks — and he has enough athleticism and arm talent to make things happen. 9) Dorian Thompson-Robinson, UCLA The importance of athleticism is becoming more and more distinct for modern QBs in the NFL. Having high-end athleticism can give you so much more flexibility, freedom, and room for error as a passer. That’s the kind of athleticism that Dorian Thompson-Robinson brings to the fold. Thompson-Robinson, a Shrine Bowl commit, is one of the most prolific creators in the 2023 NFL Draft. He also has a great deal of experience and underrated natural arm talent. Consistency remains an area of interest, but his tools can buoy him up in high-pressure situations. Cameron Ward, Washington State Odds are, Cameron Ward returns to school to further build momentum for the 2024 NFL Draft cycle. But until the redshirt sophomore does, we’re going to list him where he deserves to be mentioned: within the top 10 of the 2023 NFL Draft QB class. Ward is still incredibly young. In fact, he’d be the youngest QB in the 2023 NFL Draft if he declared. And out of this group, he might have the most elastic arm. He’s supremely flexible off-platform and able to manipulate arm angles with ease that invokes envy. And his lateral twitch allows him to consistently create as well. 7) Jaren Hall, BYU For a prospect as productive as Jaren Hall was over the past two seasons, you barely hear any buzz about him. Since taking over for Zach Wilson at BYU, Hall has put up almost 6,000 yards, 51 touchdowns, and just 11 picks. This past year, Hall was a bright spot for a 7-5 Cougars team, providing sturdy leadership off the field and enticing film on it. His accuracy and ball placement noticeably improved in 2022, and he’s long had the athleticism to sustain a career as a solid backup or spot-starter. 6) Bo Nix, Oregon We still don’t know for sure whether or not Bo Nix is going to declare or return. But if he declares, he played well enough in 2022 to become a true wild card in the 2023 NFL Draft. He’s a prospect with legitimate early-round ability, and he fits the new-age-QB mold. Nix has quantifiably elite creation capacity with his combination of instincts and short-area athleticism. On top of that, he has high-level arm talent. His ability to work off-platform effortlessly gives offenses so much flexibility, and his accuracy drastically improved in 2022. 5) Hendon Hooker, Tennessee “Efficiency” is the word that frequently comes up with Hendon Hooker after his time with the Tennessee Volunteers. Over the past two seasons, Hooker completed nearly 70% of his passes while averaging almost 10 yards per attempt, registering an unfair 58-5 TD:INT ratio. Hooker has starting talent — both with his athleticism and arm strength. The real question is how teams will value him. He’ll be a 25-year-old rookie, and an ACL tear suffered in November could cloud his medicals. But if things check out on that front, it’s hard to imagine him falling out of Day 2. 4) Will Levis, Kentucky Will Levis, much like Anthony Richardson, will be a polarizing figure through the entirety of the 2023 NFL Draft cycle. Richardson gets the nod over Levis here for one simple reason. They’re both high-upside prospects with room for growth, and Richardson is younger. But Levis has appeal, too. 2022 was a bit of a diluted season for Levis, who battled a turf toe injury for much of the year and experienced inconsistent offensive line play. He still needs to improve his processing and decision-making, but he has the athleticism, toughness, and rocket arm to hit new heights with professional coaching. 3) Anthony Richardson, Florida There will be skepticism around Anthony Richardson. That part is certain. But at a certain point, for prospects like Richardson, the conversation becomes simple. With how young he is and how early he is into his development, just how high is the ceiling? For Richardson, the answer is very, very high. And that’s why he could be an early-first-round pick, despite his polarizing outlook. Over the past five draft classes, his physical ceiling is on par with quarterbacks like Justin Fields and Justin Herbert. You bank on those kinds of tools. 2) C.J. Stroud, Ohio State C.J. Stroud completed 235 of 355 attempts for 3,340 yards, 37 touchdowns, and six interceptions in 2022. He was a Heisman finalist. It almost feels wrong for Stroud to lose his QB1 spot after putting up the numbers he did — but a few questions remain in spite of his success. Most notably, Stroud remains in need of more comfort off-script. He still gets happy feet a bit too easily, and he doesn’t have the creative instincts of his challenger at the top. But regardless, his arm talent and ability to work in structure at a high level makes him a worthy top pick. 1) Bryce Young, Alabama There’s been a changing of the guard within PFN’s walls, as a new QB1 emerges on our postseason list. It’s still very close between the two passers at the top, but Bryce Young is now officially PFN’s QB1 in the 2023 NFL Draft (for the time being). What Young has, that Stroud visibly lacks, is elite creation capacity and instincts off-script. He’s always in control amidst the chaos, but he doesn’t rely on that chaos, either. He has the poise and processing ability to work in structure, and the arm to layer tight-window throws at multiple levels.
-
Full draft choices
-
The “Maybe Not So Obvious” Elephant in the Room
raleigh-panther replied to WarHeel's topic in Carolina Panthers
Have you seen the Rams stadium…or the Broncos…two old franchises…their stands are empty because they suck this year. The Rams were so concerned about the optics they were trying to figure out how to get fans into Sofi’s lower bowl and they were the SB winners. They aren’t the only ones winning is all there is in pro sports. to attend a college game is a whole lot cheaper and based on a wholly different type of loyalty the Panthers product is poor. Poorly run…no stars to think of…a guy from Pittsburgh runs the team and he has no idea how to connect with the fans here. Frankly, PSL holders don’t like him. I know. I am one. When we stop showing up, it’s a real problem and had we not stopped showing up, Rhule would still be here That’s the flip side of PSLs everything that made the Panthers special is gone…even little things like the end zone were kids would wait to get footballs after touchdowns. Those have been replaced for his soccer team he better get this next decision right and his happy ass needs to get a QB in this draft that isn’t a failure …his franchise depends on it. There are decent evaluators in the NFL, he needs to find one -
That 21 play drive was the most plays in a drive since
raleigh-panther replied to GoobyPls's topic in Carolina Panthers
Yes the panthers were outcoached and outplayed. The Steelers knew exactly what the panthers were going to do in both sides of the ball and beat the crap,out of them crowd noise can’t overcome that -
Mike Kaye, Observer comment on Wilks support
raleigh-panther replied to raleigh-panther's topic in Carolina Panthers
You all do know you can block or ignore someone in your options dont feed trolls -
Mike Kaye, Observer comment on Wilks support
raleigh-panther replied to raleigh-panther's topic in Carolina Panthers
Wilks lost me this Sunday cupboard bare or not, you play to win the game, not to avoid being embarrassed those field goals in the red zone sent a message not just to the Steelers but to his own team …and it wasn’t a good one -
Mike Kaye, Observer comment on Wilks support
raleigh-panther replied to raleigh-panther's topic in Carolina Panthers
The very Panther thing to do is: beat Detroit. Lose to New Orleans That way, screw draft position and playoffs at the same time and still Hire Wilks the lions defense is susceptible to the run a veritable trifecta of Panther fandom -
Yep it never seems to change for this team makes me incredibly sad a fan tries to be joyful and optimistic on Sunday about their football team but in true Panthers fashion, that joy gets crushed like a grape in a matter of seconds they are like the bully in a Christmas Story’, it’s all good until they get hit in the mouth im trying to be fair to Wilks. He was handed a poo sandwich but the lack of even trying something different Sunday and going for field goals did me in for some of those play calls in the red one, Darnold had no outlet. It was as poor a design as I’ve ever seen then again, Wilks didn’t select mcadoo either but come on man
-
The Charlotte Observer reported in November that Wilks has internal support within the organization. That support hasn’t wavered, as the Panthers have won three of their past five games. Despite that backing, Wilks will need to endure the rigors of a coaching search in Carolina. The Panthers, like all other teams, need to comply with the Rooney Rule, which prioritizes external minority candidacy. Carolina will need to interview two external minority candidates before making a permanent hire or taking the interim tag off Wilks’ title. While Wilks is a minority candidate, under the Rooney Rule he is considered an internal option. The search could also take some time, as coaches in the playoffs can’t be interviewed for jobs until after the wild-card round of the postseason. If the Panthers want to have multiple interviews with a candidate who makes it all the way to the Super Bowl, the hiring process could extend beyond January into mid-February. That timeline would push a final hire date past the major college all-star games in early February.
-
I have a CMC signed Panthers helmet. I hope it’s worth something some day
-
The “Maybe Not So Obvious” Elephant in the Room
raleigh-panther replied to WarHeel's topic in Carolina Panthers
https://www.milehighreport.com/2022/12/18/23516283/broncos-record-third-most-no-shows-ever-vs-cardinals?fbclid=IwAR3lt1dHRDP5VDEDdBr4htMrqyGR8EKkl8VxXYIye784h8MuQ9MWKOtP8X8 Losing teams have issues throughout the NFL. It’s not just Carolina -
…for the other team…
-
You see what I did there, huh i was all in with Wilks, hoping for a miracle but alas, another dose of ‘a wishin and a hopin’ …dashed
-
You probably have a better chance with Sunday
-
I get you are a fan as the old saying goes ‘can’t fix what isn’t acknowledged’ this team is poorly put together and poorly coached and has been since 2019 it is time for a full, clean sweep, GM, all of it this team had a huge game Sunday, at home, the first in 3 years for a playoff run, and neither the players or the coaches showed up it’s the theme these days Had they won that game, or didn’t look like a bunch of disinterested, overpaid under prepared athletes, I’d feel differently Detroit doesn’t run a 3 4 defense and they are not as stout against the run, and Campbell isn’t Tomlin, who knows what will happen but it changes nothing from the long view I’m not crowning Pinero until he makes kicks under pressure. At this moment that situation isn’t good based on the one time he was. I wanted Wilks to succeed in the worst way. I take no pleasure in anything I say. As Parcells used to say ‘you are what your record says you are’. no one is going to come rescue them. For fans like you, I hope they at least look like a pro team Sunday.
-
My seats are in section 342 so I can’t speak personally but maybe this will help you https://seatgeek.com/venues/bank-of-america-stadium/seating-chart/views there are others out there if you goggle it
-
It an assumption, facts It’s the 15th game of the season with the same players lets start with that the oline has been the same oline with the exception of Bozeman who is supposed to be an upgrade the dline is the same dline since training camp none of this should be new at this point gap control is gap control Gap fits are gap fits If the A gap is being lost, correct the positioning if you have a CB getting the poo beat out of him, either take him out or give him help we are not talking nuclear fission or even fusion as a concept here when talking about gap control and techniques for getting off a block This team, collectively, is simply not good enough in any phase or position except punter
-
You made a huge assumption I have played sports. I do play sports. it’s not my job nor is it yours these people are pros, coaches as well I’ve followed football for decades position coaches are forever on the bench with chalkboards. Whiteboards. Dirt back in the day reviewing with players These players on this team make the same mistakes over and over and over again to the point it is past predictable it hasn’t changed so either it’s the players or the coaches or both.
-
Wilks stated in his news conference ‘young guys’ and fundamentals for the poor oline and d performance so, 15 games into the regular season still issues fundamentally… really and the coaches on the field with Microsoft surface pro devices couldn’t visually correct the player in the sidelines ? these guys are supposedly pros. They get paid to execute. They do it, or are supposed to be doing it, over and over again in practice If Moton was having a problem with his hand technique, the coach on the sidelines should have seen it and addressed it the same gap control on the D Simply mind boggling ..biggest game of the year at home and we are talking fundamentals hard to give two shakes of a rat’s ass at this point
-
The “Maybe Not So Obvious” Elephant in the Room
raleigh-panther replied to WarHeel's topic in Carolina Panthers
For all the complaining, the tickets up for sale can be bought by anyone. Including Panthers fans some as low as $25 some couldn’t even be given away so much easier to sit in the sofa and bitch about others -
From the look of that oline yesterday, I’m not so sure guards look like trash
-
I appreciate the OP’s points For me, though, yesterday was the breaking point of yet another pitiful iteration of the pathetic Panthers it isn’t all coaching It would be better if it was How is it that team with everything to gain came out that apathetic ? there are a bunch of ‘just guys’ on this team. Even the ones that we on this board think so highly of when it matters, that defense fails over and over again, a defense with a lot of high draft picks investment from both Rivera and Rhule and that rebuilt offensive line ain’t all that either there are a lot of guys walking around with ‘C’ on their jerseys that disappear when it matters want to know why the stands are devoid of Panthers fans? Because this team is collectively gutless and fans know it and won’t invest time and money to see it hit them in the mouth and they take their raggedy asses to a corner and give up unfortunately, they can’t play Atlanta every week
-
Yep takes ‘hero ball’. To just get a first down it takes Jesus ball to get a touchdown