Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Carolina Panthers at Detroit Lions Stats and Thoughts


Jeremy Igo

Recommended Posts

Here is a statistical snapshot of this week's Carolina Panthers at Detroit Lions game.

car-det.jpg

 

Random Thoughts

Matt Stafford is having a pretty decent year under the radar.

On paper, this is a Carolina Panthers victory.

Detroit defense is ranked 4th in sacks per pass play. Pittsburgh was also highly ranked here. Result was not great.

There is every opportunity for the Carolina Panthers to get back on track here. Detroit is pedestrian both in the passing and run game. They also allow a ton of sacks. No excuses for the D. They need to rebound in a huge way if they want to earn any respect.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Jeremy Igo said:

I dunno. Road games in the NFL are rarely easy. I would be happy with a solid 4 quarters and a 3 point victory honestly.

I have no fear that Cam and Co can drop 35 on this team. Especially because it's basically NEs defense. I'm also confident that Stafford is the worst QB to have with a even bad Panthers defense. He's not your low risk Dink and dunk guy that kills us. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/14/2018 at 10:12 AM, Jeremy Igo said:

I dunno. Road games in the NFL are rarely easy. I would be happy with a solid 4 quarters and a 3 point victory honestly.

if we want to squeak into the playoffs and lose immediately by 40, sure. We need 40+ and to hold to less than 20. Honestly, looking at their playmakers, we're about the same in those terms. If we don't tackle, it's over. Norv needs to get the checkdown option back out there. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The beatdown in Pitt was a nice example of the home team running away with it on Thur night as soon as the road team makes a few miscues. The failed jumping of the route on Pitt’s first play, the silly penalty on the ensuing return, and Cam’s rookie mistake to heave the ball into the middle of the field rather than taking the safety started another familiar Thur night landslide.

Short week’s preparation, a hostile national TV home crowd, the glitter of the lights...two straight Thur night 31pt beatdowns for the road team.

Fortunes change fast in the NFL. About 3 weeks ago, Det was 3-3 and facing a stumbling SEA team at home. Today, Det is 3-6 with little hope of finishing with a winning record.

The exact metrics for this game feel irrelevant given the Pitt disaster for Car and Det’s all too familiar mid-season swoon. 

Det is again reliant on Stafford to keep them in games with a middling Rush game (101yds/game) and another weak defense. The obvious key in this game will be for Car strong Run game to keep the ball away from Stafford and the home AstroTurf. The 3rd ranked Rush offense vs the 5th worst Rush defense will determine the story of this game. 

This must be a game where Car plays smart and disciplined. Stafford at home has beaten Brady’s PATS and Rodgers’s Pack this year at home and were able to control the clock. Car weakness is Pass D so to give Stafford too many chances invites a predictable home dog win both SU and ATS.

Both teams are good with Penalties and TOs so can not rely on mistakes from the other side to give opportunities. As is the most typical refrain this year for Car: They must play good red-zone defense. A shootout where the teams trade TDs all day long will benefit Det’s odds.

65% of the cash is going to Car in this game and I too will give the pts with Car. A Stafford win at home would not shock me though.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • QUARTERBACKS (10): Marc Bulger, Randall Cunningham, Jake Delhomme, Doug Flutie, Rich Gannon, Jeff Garcia, Donovan McNabb, Eli Manning, Steve McNair, Tony Romo RUNNING BACKS (31): Shaun Alexander, Terry Allen, Jamal Anderson, Tiki Barber, Larry Centers (FB), Jamaal Charles, Stephen Davis, Corey Dillon, Warrick Dunn, Charlie Garner, Eddie George, Priest Holmes, Steven Jackson, Chris Johnson, Thomas Jones, John Kuhn (FB), Vonta Leach, Dorsey Levens, Jamal Lewis, Marshawn Lynch, Eric Metcalf (also WR/PR/KR), Glyn Milburn (also WR), Lorenzo Neal (FB), Clinton Portis, Tony Richardson (FB), Robert Smith, Darren Sproles (also PR/KR), Fred Taylor*, Chris Warren, Ricky Watters, Ricky Williams WIDE RECEIVERS (21): Anquan Boldin, Donald Driver, Antonio Freeman, Irving Fryar, Torry Holt*, Joe Horn, Chad Johnson, Brandon Marshall, Derrick Mason, Herman Moore, Muhsin Muhammad, Jordy Nelson, Andre Rison, Jimmy Smith, Rod Smith, Steve Smith Sr., Demaryius Thomas, Hines Ward, Reggie Wayne*, Wes Welker, Roddy White TIGHT ENDS (6): Ben Coates, Vernon Davis, Antonio Gates, Jeremy Shockey, *Delanie Walker, Wesley Walls OFFENSIVE LINEMEN (26): Willie Anderson* (T), Bruce Armstrong (T/G), Matt Birk (C), Lomas Brown (T), Ruben Brown (G), Jahri Evans* (G), Travis Frederick (C), Jordan Gross (T), Ryan Kalil (C), Lincoln Kennedy (T), Olin Kreutz (C), T.J. Lang (G/T), Nick Mangold (C), Logan Mankins (G), Tom Nalen (C), Jeff Saturday (C), Mark Schlereth (G/C), Josh Sitton (G), Chris Snee (G), Joe Staley (T), Dave Szott (G), Brian Waters (G), Richmond Webb (T), Erik Williams (T), Steve Wisniewski (G), Marshal Yanda (G) DEFENSIVE LINEMEN (18): John Abraham (DE also LB), Jared Allen* (DE), La'Roi Glover (DT/NT), Casey Hampton (DT/NT), Robert Mathis (DE), Chester McGlockton (DT), Haloti Ngata (DT), Simeon Rice (DE), Clyde Simmons (DE/DT), Justin Smith (DE), Neil Smith (DE), Henry Thomas (DT/NT), Justin Tuck (DE), Ted Washington (NT/DT), Vince Wilfork (DT/NT), Jamal Williams (DT/NT), Kevin Williams (DT), Pat Williams (DT) LINEBACKERS (20): Jessie Armstead, Brendon Ayanbadejo, Cornelius Bennett, Lance Briggs, Keith Brooking, NaVorro Bowman, Tedy Bruschi, Donnie Edwards, James Farrior, London Fletcher, James Harrison, Luke Kuechly, Willie McGinest (also DE), Ken Norton Jr., Julian Peterson, Bill Romanowski, Takeo Spikes, Terrell Suggs, Mike Vrabel, Lee Woodall DEFENSIVE BACKS (18): Eric Allen* (CB), Eric Berry (DB), Antoine Bethea (S), Dré Bly (DB), Kam Chancellor (S), Nick Collins (DB), Antonio Cromartie (CB), DeAngelo Hall (DB), Rodney Harrison* (S), Eugene Robinson (DB), Samari Rolle (DB), Allen Rossum (DB), Bob Sanders (S), Aqib Talib (CB), Earl Thomas (S), Charles Tillman (CB), Troy Vincent (CB), Darren Woodson* (S) PUNTERS/KICKERS (15): David Akers (K), Gary Anderson (K), Darren Bennett (P), Jason Elam (K), Jeff Feagles (P), Jason Hanson (K), John Kasay (K), Sean Landeta (P), Shane Lechler (P), Pat McAfee (P), Brian Moorman (P), Matt Stover (K), Matt Turk (P), Mike Vanderjagt (K), Adam Vinatieri (K) SPECIAL TEAMS (2): Josh Cribbs (KR/PR also WR), Brian Mitchell (KR/PR also RB)
    • That excuse would be interesting if it was really true. In the first halves, we’ve given up 50 points. In the 2nd halves we’ve given up 23 points. Both the Chargers and the Saints scored TDs on their opening drives, before Young even stepped on the field. The Saints scored on every single possession they had until we finally stopped one drive in the 4th quarter. This D has been run over, regardless of how bad Young played.
×
×
  • Create New...