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!

     

THE DRAFT NETWORK's Official Panther 7-round mock draft


TheSpecialJuan

Recommended Posts

ROUND 1, PICK NO. 16: CODY FORD, OT, OKLAHOMA

Whether some Panthers fans want to admit it or not, this entire franchise still revolves around Cam Newton. Now, Cam's shoulder was messed up during the second half of last season, and that was evident by how poorly the team closed out the year. But Cam isn't going anywhere, so if you want him to stay as heathy as possible, you better help out that offensive line.

Taylor Moton is likely going to stay at left tackle, but the Panthers need a right tackle better than Daryl Williams. Ford's natural position is that right tackle spot, and he'd be a perfect power OT to compliment the Panthers' run game.

ROUND 2, PICK NO. 47: CHRIS LINDSTROM, IOL, BOSTON COLLEGE

The Panthers needed a right tackle upgrade enough to use my first selection on the position and yet right tackle wasn't even the worst position on the offensive line for them last year. Greg Van Roten was not great last year as the left guard, earning just a 59.8 PFF grade for the season. It's a stretch to believe Lindstrom will be available this last in the second round, but if he is, I don't care if the first pick was already an offensive lineman, double up and don't let Cam die in the pocket -- or on the run since Lindstrom is an athletic interior lineman.

ROUND 3, PICK NO. 78: JJ ARCEGA-WHITESIDE, WR, STANFORD

Look, I like D.J. Moore, I like Curtis Samuel and we can even throw in Christian McCaffrey into that receiving weapons category. But the Panthers don't have that big, red zone, short yardage guy to get it done at the receiver position. No wide receiver in college football was more efficient and consistent when converting in the red zone and on short yardage than Arcega-Whiteside was in 2018. He is a missing piece this Panthers offense needs.

ROUND 3, PICK NO. 101: JUSTIN HOLLINS, EDGE, OREGON

I don't think the Bruce Irvin experiment will last much longer in Carolina, and because of that the Panthers could very well be using their first pick in the draft on an edge rusher. But I still think, in this mock draft, from the way the board fell, the three players I picked before this were the right choices. That said, if they can scoop up a guy like Hollins later on in Day 2, that would make those picks look even better.

Jalen Jelks was suppose to be Oregon's premiere pass rusher, but Hollins ended up out playing him in 2018. At 6-foot-6, 245 pounds, Hollins shows surprising flexibility, speed rush and bend for a man his size.

ROUND 4, PICK NO. 116: DANIEL WISE, IDL, KANSAS

Dontari Poe isn't going anywhere this year, but he might next year. Depending on how he performs, the Panther can can cut him one year before his deal ends next offseason and take just a $3M cap hit while saving $10M. Now, if he plays well, great, not a problem. I'm just saying that the Panthers can put themselves in position to have the power to make some moves next offseason, if things don't go as planned.

Wise was a monster during East-West Shrine Week. He was taking on double teams, beating offensive lineman off the snap and was overall one of the best players there. I was very impressed. He would, at the very least, be a very solid rotational player in his first year.

ROUND 5, PICK NO. 155: SHELDRICK REDWINE, S, MIAMI

The Panthers need a safety. They could probably afford to take one earlier than this, if they want to, but if they don't, picking up a coverage safety like Redwine would be the right move. Eric Reid is going to man the strong safety role, but a guy like Redwine, who is a converted corner, can help play the back end in coverage.

ROUND 6, PICK NO. 189: DESHAUN DAVIS, LB, AUBURN

For the first time in a very long time, Thomas Davis will not be a part of the Carolina Panthers. They have Shaq Thompson still, which is why linebackers next to Luke Kuechly aren't more of a priority, but I do think they need some fresh blood. Davis, as a player and person, just seems like a player Ron Rivera and this Panthers team would love to get their hands on late. He's limited athletically, but he's a hard worker and is very smart for a linebacker. He'd fit in great in that LB room. His best fit in the NFL might be at the SAM linebacker position, and that's the position of greatest need in Carolina when it comes to their linebacker group.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not a fan although this would turn our oline into something serious. I would only go this route if we magically picked up a starter on the edge from what's left of FA.... before next week. 

Side note: I just don't see Williams on a bench while being paid 8 mil. Also, is it just me or does it seem like the media has been seriously downplaying Moton's and William's ability?

Lastly, we are going safety in the second ...almost guarenteed unless the FO has Savage dropping to the third. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

First of all, wtf is that font? Atrocious

second of all, TDN totally forgot to do a mock draft for us, claimed they had one for every team then had a bucs beat writer spit this out.

i honestly wouldn’t mind a double dip on OL though. Would prefer 2 of DE/OT/S, but this wouldn’t be awful

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Just had Thanksgiving meal with a couple dozen family and friends. I lucked out and got one of the smoked turkey legs. Stuffing, mashed taters and gravy, green bean casserole, sweet potato casserole, kale, smoked ham, chicken and rice, corn, lima beans, cranberry sauce, and great people. My brother got his guitar out and we got to singing. Lots of actual conversations with people I hardly  ever get to see, haven't seen in a while, or who I never met before. Just a great moment to remember.
    • 3-8 would be a higher win percentage than 3-9
    • Same... With the personnel the Niners had, that defense could have been historically good in the right hands. Under Wilks they were certainly good, they didn't quite rise to that level. Honestly, I see Wilks kinda like I see Rivera: fantastic person, decent head coach. Skill wise, phenomenal DB coach, so-so DC. His greatest strength is his leadership. Hard to find many better in that department. In the Xs and Os / execution area though, not as good. Bottom Line: Wilks is the sort of coach that needs a staff that excels in those aspects of the game where he's weaker. But, like Rivera, I don't know that he scouts assistants very well. That as much as anything might be why he's not in the NFL now.
×
×
  • Create New...