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SI Panthers Mock Draft


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RD 1, Pick 8: WR Tetairoa McMillan (Arizona)

The Panthers can go in a lot of directions here with the eighth overall pick. If McMillan is off the board here, I'd expect they'll go defense. But for now, we're saying he'll slip right into the Panthers' lap. This would be the best-case scenario, in my opinion. Sure, Abdul Carter and Mason Graham would provide an immediate impact on defense, but McMillan would help take Bryce Young and this young offense to a whole new level. 
 

 

RD 2, Pick 53: LB Jack Sawyer (Ohio State)

There are a few guys every year that you'll watch tape of and think, "Woah, that's a Dan Morgan guy." Jack Sawyer is one of two "Dan Morgan guys" that I have mocked to Carolina in this projection. He's tough as nails, plays bigger than his frame, and is a true leader. I'm not exactly sure where he would fit in Ejiro Evero's defense, but he'll find a home and be a playmaker wherever that spot may be.

 


 

RD 3, Pick 73: S Andrew Mukuba (Texas)

The Panthers have five safeties who will become free agents this offseason - Xavier Woods, Jordan Fuller, Nick Scott, Sam Franklin Jr., and Lonnie Johnson. They were part of a defense that gave up the most points in NFL history. I seriously doubt all five will be back. Carolina needs a younger option in the back end who can make plays on the ball. Mukuba finished near the top of the nation in interceptions (5) to go along with seven passes defended. Carolina has never drafted a Clemson Tiger, but Mukuba played the first three years of his career there, so does it count?
 

 

RD 4, Pick 109: CB Cobee Bryant (Kansas)

Jaycee Horn needs a little bit of help. Okay, actually, a lot of help. Bryant makes a ton of sense due to his ability to make plays on the ball and tackle in the open field. He picked off 13 passes over four seasons and had 22 passes defended. With Bryant on the field, opposing teams can't just throw the ball to the opposite side of Jaycee Horn all the time. They're going to have to challenge him.

 

 

RD 4, Pick 113: C Jared Wilson (Georgia)

There are a lot of questions at center for the Panthers this offseason. Do they bring Austin Corbett back? If they do, does he start? Do they bring Cade Mays or Brady Christensen back? If they do, do either of them have a chance to be the guy? I'd imagine at least one of the three makes a return to compete for the job, but Morgan will probably take a good, long look at drafting one on day three. Wilson, the Winston-Salem native, is our pick for now.
 

RD 5, Pick 140: RB Cam Skattebo (Arizona State)

Here is the other "Dan Morgan guy." Skattebo is exactly who you would think of if you tried to envision what Morgan wants in a running back. Chuba Hubbard is clearly RB1, but with Jonathon Brooks suffering another knee injury, Carolina is going to need another back or two to complement Chuba. Skattebo can be the short-yardage/goal line back, which can help take some big hits off of Hubbard.

 

 

RD 5, Pick 148: DL Aeneas Peebles (Virginia Tech)

Peebles is a little undersized at 6'2", 280 lbs, but he can make up for it with his athleticism. In his final season with the Hokies, he registered 31 tackles, seven tackles for loss, and three sacks


 

RD 5, Pick 163: DL Anto Saka (Northwestern)

Saka needs to continue filling out his frame but could be a depth option off the edge while contributing on special teams.

 

RD 7, Pick 226: TE Gavin Bartholomew (Pitt)

Ian Thomas, Tommy Tremble, and Feleipe Franks are all set to become free agents. There's a good chance only one returns, so they'll need to add some bodies to the room this offseason. Bartholomew proves during his collegiate career that he can be a receiving threat, catching 105 passes for 1,257 yards and 11 touchdowns.

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If we take a receiver 1st, we have to go with someone who isn't in the typical mold we go after. They need to be smaller, more agile, and quick.

I would also really, really like Cam Skattebo if he lasts until the 3rd round. That dude is a bowling ball and could play full back, h-back, 3rd down running back, and eventually be a 3 down back. He may end up being the steal of the draft for whomever takes him.

EDIT: I didn't read beyond the first round pick...so my mentioning of Cam is just coincidence here. He is a monster and keeping him away from a team like the Ravens is a must, in my opinion.  

Edited by CPcavedweller
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12 minutes ago, CPcavedweller said:

If we take a receiver 1st, we have to go with someone who isn't in the typical mold we go after. They need to be smaller, more agile, and quick.

I would also really, really like Cam Skattebo if he lasts until the 3rd round. That dude is a bowling ball and could play full back, h-back, 3rd down running back, and eventually be a 3 down back. He may end up being the steal of the draft for whomever takes him.

EDIT: I didn't read beyond the first round pick...so my mentioning of Cam is just coincidence here. He is a monster and keeping him away from a team like the Ravens is a must, in my opinion.  

Exactly.  If we had taken Ladd last year then TMac would be alright, but the fact that we have taken big physical receivers without a lot of quickness or change of direction for like 3 years in a row hurts that.  XL and a Tmac is a seriously flawed pair of receivers as far as how they fit together. 

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Just now, Tr3ach said:

Exactly.  If we had taken Ladd last year then TMac would be alright, but the fact that we have taken big physical receivers without a lot of quickness or change of direction for like 3 years in a row hurts that.  XL and a Tmac is a seriously flawed pair of receivers as far as how they fit together. 

We need a Theilen mold receiver, and we need to re-sign Theilen if he wants to play another 2 years. I think a playoff window for us could open and instead of burning it down, as has been done in the past, we need to double down. 

If you go receiver, you go finesse to counter the Legette size, and I really think you need to develop a Deebo style cut-out for Legette to fully take advantage of his athletic skills. 

I also think Cam Skattebo would be a huge miss for anyone who doesn't take him. He ran over and around Texas like no one has all season, playing behind a Big 12 offensive line. By the end of the game, every guy he was hitting was bouncing off and by the very end, nearly every play saw someone have to leave. I didn't see someone make Texas look like they regretted hitting him all year long. 

For anyone who didn't watch the ASU - Texas game, go back and watch it. 

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4 minutes ago, PadresPanthersFan said:

Skattabo reminds me of Peyton hillis or maybe even Mike alstott and in the 5th I'd be more than happy with that. 

As far as the rest of the mock draft I'd rather have graham/ Carter in the first and a quick, shifty wr in the 3rd or 4th. Otherwise this draft would make me happy. 

If we are absolutely positive hes not another Eric Shelton...

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23 minutes ago, Daddy_Uncle said:

Definitely don't hate it. Got a few of my favorites. Jack Sawyer isn't falling to 53 though

Even if he did, our current pick based on the Rams winning is pick 58. If the Rams bear the Eagles, welp we are pick 61+. Feels like watching our CMC draft picks get worse and worse every week SF won.

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WR and LB in the first two rounds does have a Dan Morgan ring to it.

Going that direction at pick 8 would certainly accelerate the clock for Young and Canales and there would be no excuses for the offense stumbling out of the gate in September.

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    • Why? Bryce wasn’t good with him. 
    • I would give him a 10M 1year no guaranteed.
    • Yes, it would be totally fair to remove the best game or two from every player's stats when you want to look at averages, just as it would be fair to remove their worst game or two as well. Average stats do NOT equal average performances.  You're basically trying to use Bryce's best (or two best) games of his entire career to skew his overall averages to make it seem like those are his average performances every week. I also think it's funny that you're arguing about removing a game's stats from a player's averages, but yet you only want to look at Bryce's last 10 games and not include the ones before it.  Which is exactly why I didn't bother looking up QB's who averaged 2 TD's a game, because if you really want to do that correctly, you need to go through the game logs of every starting QB and only look at their best 10 game stretch this year, and no, I'm not going through that effort. Also, looking at QB TD averages just isn't a fair way to compare QB's performances either. Let me ask you this.... do you think Bryce is even in the same league as Jared Goff right now? Because according to you, Bryce's 2.0 TD average to Goff's 2.17 TD average (on the full season) says they're pretty close to even (less than 3 TDs more over a 17 game season).  But if you dig deeper you'll see that Goff's best 10 game stretch this year was 2.6 TDs per game.  Dig a little deeper and you'll see that we had 12 rushing TD's this year by players not named Bryce Young, while the Lions had 2 players who EACH had at least 12 rushing TD's for a combined 28, thus taking away A LOT more TD opportunities for Goff than were taken from Bryce. Or how about this one, Bo Nix had 33 TDs this year, 1 TD short of averaging 2 TD's a game over the full season he played. But he had 25 TDs over his final 10 games of the season, averaging a full half TD more per game than Bryce did over that span, or 8.5 TD's over the course of a full season.  You're criticizing me for wanting to remove Bryce's best game when looking at his averages, but at the same time want to look at Bryce's 10 game averages against 17 game averages for other players. But as you can see from all this, looking at average stats over the course of a large sample size of games is just an extremely flawed way of judging and comparing players, particularly when one or two games over that stretch drastically skew the averages. And again, no, Bryce is NOT about average when it comes to yards.  Because you're trying to compare his final 10 games yards vs the NFL's overall passing yards per game, where a few teams drastically lower than average.  But like I pointed out previously, there were 22 QB's to start at least 8 games this year who averaged more yards per game than Bryce did over his last 10. In a league with 32 teams, being the 23rd best QB at something doesn't make you average, it's the literal definition of below average.  And again, that's comparing Bryce's best 10 game stretch vs the full season for the rest of the league, if you pull out only their 10 best starts, I'm sure he falls at least a few more spots down in that order.
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