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Matt Rhule said the team could keep six or seven wide receivers going into the regular season


TheSpecialJuan

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Panther beat writer David Newton said it's "another indication of how wide open this offense is going to be with three to four receivers on the field at the same time," adding that the team usually decides on "whether to keep four to six receivers." Carolina offensive coordinator Joe Brady seems committed to running a relatively fast paced, aggressive offense. The Panthers could once again be among the league leaders in pass attempts. On a completely unrelated note, Teddy Bridgewater is available in the 14th round of one-QB leagues and the tenth round of 2-QB leagues.
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Any more than 4 or 5 are really just ST players anyway, so the trade-off would be roster-bottom DBs or perhaps even LBs. Whatever position isn't on the regular roster would be loaded up on as part of the PS. Nothing to see here.

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2 hours ago, t96 said:

That quote says 4-6 that’s a lot different than 6-7... which is it? Because 7 is retarded. And so is 4 for that matter. Should be 5 or 6

maybe he is referring to in the past, hence the reason he said "usually".  

In the past we rarely had more than 3 WRs on the field at a time, so 5 made sense.  If we really run a lot of 4 receiver sets then 7 would probably be more likely than 5.  Only one extra is cutting it close.  It does seem like 6 would be a sweat spot though.

 

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3 hours ago, run-run-pass-punt said:

Or throw it before they get there.

Despite what some want to believe, Teddy has never been great at getting the ball out quickly. He was slower to throw last year than Cam has ever been as long as the NFL has been keeping advanced stats on average time to throw. Allen was faster as well and he took a pounding.

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