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!

     

Panthers reach rock bottom scenario: roll with Teddy for another year or draft Mac Jones at 8?


No other options  

121 members have voted

  1. 1. Big Mac vs Lil' Teddy

    • Draft Mac Jones
      40
    • Roll with Teddy for another year
      81


Recommended Posts

2 minutes ago, Catsfan69 said:

He's got arm talent for days.

He makes full field reads.

I'd take him over Jones anyday.

1) He does have arm talent. 
2) He *can* make full field reads. He often does not and that is part of the reason he has been so up and down during his four years of college. 
3) I don’t want Jones either. If Mond was around in the fourth maybe I’d look at him but I don’t see him being able to start this year and he’s so different from Teddy that I don’t see it being a great learning spot for him for a year or two. It’s just not a good marriage here for him. 

  • Pie 1
  • Beer 1
  • Poo 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, Varking said:

1) He does have arm talent. 
2) He *can* make full field reads. He often does not and that is part of the reason he has been so up and down during his four years of college. 
3) I don’t want Jones either. If Mond was around in the fourth maybe I’d look at him but I don’t see him being able to start this year and he’s so different from Teddy that I don’t see it being a great learning spot for him for a year or two. It’s just not a good marriage here for him. 

Lance has to sit for 2 years as well tho. I don't mind drafting the future and having it sit.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jones cannot run, but he can move in the pocket.  His arm strength is average.  He processes faster than most other QBs.  He is accurate.

So if anyone can explain it to me why Jones is not going to be a good QB in the NFL, tell me what it is you see.  Remember, Brady just won a ring and he has more rings than all the Super Bowl champs with mobile QBs combined.  So tell me what it is about Jones that makes him such a bad option?   Be specific, and use stats if you can.  And do not say "The league is now all about mobile QBs."  The Tampa Bay Bucs and the Alabama Crimson Tide won titles THIS YEAR. 

Again, be specific and use stats to support your answer.

  • Pie 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, MHS831 said:

Jones cannot run, but he can move in the pocket.  His arm strength is average.  He processes faster than most other QBs.  He is accurate.

So if anyone can explain it to me why Jones is not going to be a good QB in the NFL, tell me what it is you see.  Remember, Brady just won a ring and he has more rings than all the Super Bowl champs with mobile QBs combined.  So tell me what it is about Jones that makes him such a bad option?   Be specific, and use stats if you can.  And do not say "The league is now all about mobile QBs."  The Tampa Bay Bucs and the Alabama Crimson Tide won titles THIS YEAR. 

Again, be specific and use stats to support your answer.

He is a QB that only has a 1/3 field arm.

He can't drive the ball downfield. 

He can't drive the ball to the field boundary. (This means from far hash to the opposite boundary.)

He routinely underthrows wide open go routes costing tds.

He can't drive the ball into tight windows. 

 

People keep comparing him to Brady. Brady definitely has more arm talent. 

  • Pie 2
  • Poo 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, Catsfan69 said:

He is a QB that only has a 1/3 field arm.

He can't drive the ball downfield. 

He can't drive the ball to the field boundary. (This means from far hash to the opposite boundary.)

He routinely underthrows wide open go routes costing tds.

He can't drive the ball into tight windows. 

 

People keep comparing him to Brady. Brady definitely has more arm talent. 

 

So are all of these your opinions or do you have specific sources?  How can you do what you describe and complete 77.4% of your passes for an average of 350 yards per game?  42 TDs and 4 Ints.  It does not add up. 

If he has all those problems, how did he do that?

Edited by MHS831
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, MHS831 said:

This is all opinion.  Experts I have seen talk about him do not say this.  Where are you getting it?  Not being a smartass, I just want to see the source of this. 

for example, he routinely under throws wide open go routes.  How routinely?  He completed 77.4% of his passes and he averaged 11.2 yards per pass attempt.

It's not opinion. I posted all 22 footage of him in multiple threads.

He excelled on 1/3 field throws and struggled on everything else. 

He has great fundamentals which helps him overcome his limitations. His ceiling is reached and won't get better.

He is not worth the risk.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Catsfan69 said:

It's not opinion. I posted all 22 footage of him in multiple threads.

He excelled on 1/3 field throws and struggled on everything else. 

He has great fundamentals which helps him overcome his limitations. His ceiling is reached and won't get better.

He is not worth the risk.

All qbs have weaknesses.  Can you answer my questions?  If he has this much concern, how did he have so much success? I provided the numbers.  Can you explain it?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If Mac is the option we need to trade down and draft a oline.  Honestly Jones is a solid prospect.  People are hating on him, but he had a lights out season.  I'd take Jones over Lance.  It's all to do with scheme for and floor vs ceiling.  Yeah, Lance has a higher ceiling but his floor is bust basement.  Jones on the other hand seems serviceable and think Brady and Rhule could make him Teddy but with a little more youth and daring.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, mickeye76 said:

If Mac is the option we need to trade down and draft a oline.  Honestly Jones is a solid prospect.  People are hating on him, but he had a lights out season.  I'd take Jones over Lance.  It's all to do with scheme for and floor vs ceiling.  Yeah, Lance has a higher ceiling but his floor is bust basement.  Jones on the other hand seems serviceable and think Brady and Rhule could make him Teddy but with a little more youth and daring.  

I am not sold on Jones, but I am not sold on any of them.  Most qbs will tell you, success is dependent upon how quickly you can process--if you have the tools. 

And people criticize me about comparing Jones to Brady for the purpose of demonstrating the success of a non-mobile QB.  I think it is not a fair comparison because Jones is better.

Why do I say that?  Compare Jones' senior year of college to Brady's senior year of college.

They want to compare Jones in college to the Brady we know now.  That is not fair to Jones.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, MHS831 said:

All qbs have weaknesses.  Can you answer my questions?  If he has this much concern, how did he have so much success? I provided the numbers.  Can you explain it?

I can give you lots of reasons. 

His receivers are wide ass open.

Great offensive architecture at Alabama provides great route concepts. 

Alabama has the luxury of calling plays that fit his strength. 

Stats wise like teddy he had tons of completions at the line of scrimmage or behind.

Like Teddy he got lots of yac.

God I'll post a video for you hold on.

You watch. Especially the checkdown. The over is NFL open 46 is beat but he checked down like Teddy.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Catsfan69 said:

I can give you lots of reasons. 

His receivers are wide ass open.

Great offensive architecture at Alabama provides great route concepts. 

Alabama has the luxury of calling plays that fit his strength. 

Stats wise like teddy he had tons of completions at the line of scrimmage or behind.

Like Teddy he got lots of yac.

God I'll post a video for you hold on.

You watch. Especially the checkdown. The over is NFL open 46 is beat but he checked down like Teddy.

 

these are still opinions. Do you think general, unsupported statements prove your point? Did Trevor have wide open WRs?  His numbers were not as good.  Do you think your list applies only to Alabama players or could all programs try to do those things?

And some of the statements are simply not true.  Stats like Teddy behind the LOS--etc.  His average pass attempt was 11.2 yards.  Come on, man.  Shoot straight.

I can provide a video that praises Jones--so I am still unconvinced.  You may be right, but I wanted some concrete evidence to support your position.  Did not get anything but hyperbole and cherry-picked video.  He did not have any unfair advantages--he did not have a super team and everyone else had sand lot rejects---he won and did so impressively.  77.4% at an 11.2 yards per attempt, 350 yards per game and 42 TDs vs 4 Ints.  Not many people have come close to that.

Edited by MHS831
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • SI https://www.si.com/nfl/2025-nfl-draft-grades-analysis-for-every-team#_s4q414nom Grade: A- Analysis: The Panthers’ gamble to neglect the defense in the first round paid off, with the team selecting talented edge rushers Scourton and Umanmielen. But their prize from this draft class is the 6' 4", 213-pound McMillan, who will make life easier for Bryce Young because of his massive catch radius. McMillan got dinged a bit in the lead-up to the draft due to a few concerns with his work ethic, but he has the skill set to be the best wideout from this class when it’s all said and done. It’s tough to gauge where the Panthers are in their rebuild, but they’re finally giving Young a fair shake to succeed. —GM PFF https://www.pff.com/news/draft-grades-for-all-32-teams-2025-nfl-draft#car A+ 1 (8): WR Tetairoa McMillan, Arizona McMillan — The Panthers continue to build around Bryce Young, who led the NFL in big-time throws from Week 8 through the end of the regular season. Now, he has another downfield target. McMillan has been one of the most productive receivers in college football over the past two seasons, ranking in the 85th percentile or better among qualifying NCAA wideouts in receiving grade versus single coverage, yards per route run and contested-catch rate. 2 (51): ED Nic Scourton, Texas A&M Scourton — The Panthers trade up the board for an opportunity to add much-needed firepower on the defensive side of the ball. Scourton, the 29th-ranked player on the PFF Big Board, has an alluring combination of size and pass-rush moves, as well as the versatility to play in 3-4 or 4-3 fronts. Over the past two seasons, his 91.7 PFF pass-rush grade against true pass sets charted in the 94th percentile. 3 (77): ED Princely Umanmielen, Ole Miss Umanmielen — The Panthers moved up to target some pass-rush help with the selection of Umanmielen. The Ole Miss product was the No. 50 overall player on the PFF Big Board, and his 91.1 PFF grade ranked sixth among players at the position in 2024. 4 (114): RB Trevor Etienne, Georgia Etienne — At 5-foot-9 and 205 pounds, Trevor Etienne, brother of Jaguars running back Travis Etienne, is stoutly built and it showed on tape, as he forced 30 missed tackles on 126 rushing attempts. Despite missing time throughout various points of the season, Etienne still managed to rush for nine touchdowns while putting the ball on the ground only once. With Chuba Hubbard’s emergence this past season, Etienne provides Carolina with a power back who can spell him in short-yardage situations. 4 (122): S Lathan Ransom, Ohio State Ransom — Carolina continues to address areas of need on their defense by selecting Ransom after already adding a couple of edge defenders in previous rounds. The Panthers ranked 31st last season in explosive pass percentage allowed at 17.6% overall and now add to their secondary. 5 (140): DI Cam'Ron Jackson, Florida Jackson — Ranked No. 130 on the PFF Big Board, Jackson is a massive presence who can control the point of attack against the run. He posted an 80.9 run-defense grade last season along with a 9.3% run-stop rate. 5 (163): TE Mitchell Evans, Notre Dame Evans — Evans dominated defenders with the ball in the air in 2024, posting an impressive 72.7% contested-catch rate. 6 (208): WR Jimmy Horn Jr., Colorado Horn — Horn earned a 65.1 receiving grade last season while averaging 11.9 yards per reception. NFL.COM https://www.nfl.com/news/2025-nfl-draft-final-snap-grades-for-all-32-teams B- McMillan could be a threat in the mold of Drake London, but Carolina might have been better served by drafting one of the top tight ends (Colston Loveland, Tyler Warren) or defensive players (Jalon Walker) at No. 8. The Panthers doubled up on pass rushers Scourton and Umanmielen on Day 2. They could have improved the secondary with one of those picks, though, and found another edge defender on Saturday. Carolina used the fourth-round pick it received from Dallas in the Jonathan Mingo trade to select Etienne. That decision stood out since the team rewarded Chuba Hubbard with an extension last year, signed Rico Dowdle in free agency and spent a top-50 pick on Jonathon Brooks, who is recovering from his second ACL tear in as many years, in 2024. Ransom's downhill play should get him on the field for the Panthers quickly, as will the size and surprising agility of run-stopper Jackson. I expect Evans to thrive early in his career in 12 personnel. CBS https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cbssports.com/nfl/draft/news/2025-nfl-draft-grades-for-every-team-giants-raiders-commanders-deliver-steelers-49ers-receive-poor-marks/amp/ I love the way general manager Dan Morgan approached this draft. Get Bryce Young a premier weapon first, then throw loads of resources at the defense. Scourton and Umanmielen have polished games and rocked in the SEC at defensive end.  Etienne is a young runner with Chuba Hubbard-like ability, and Ransom will provide stability at safety. Jackson blocks out the sun on the interior, and Evans is an overachieving tight end who could become a favorite security blanket for Young.  Grade: A-
    • The NFL average for running backs on the active roster is 3.6. Cleveland was the only teams to carry less than 3. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BB0RlET2BU3TiotTmk6hMWl-36d06VAaSLUsr4jS_hM/pubhtml
×
×
  • Create New...