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Panthers Prospect Visits/Meetings (Final Update-4/22)


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7 hours ago, kungfoodude said:

Pro day numbers are always suspect but comparing him to Funchess is laughable.

Huh? In what way did I compare them other than using Funchess as an example of pro day numbers improving over combine numbers. Unlike Tet, Funchess did run at the combine so we can see the impact of HFA pro day times. For Funchess it was 4.7 to 4.5 and Tet was unknown to 4.48. 4.5 flat and 4.48 aren’t much different so I’d suspect Tet would have run a 4.6+ at the combine.

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10 hours ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

Pro Day season is in full swing, and Arizona WR Tetairoa McMillan had his workout today. McMillan ran just one 40-yard dash—it was hand-timed at 4.54, 4.55 and 4.57 on the stopwatches of 3 teams I talked to.

Workout was good otherwise. Big-bodied guy, so times were expected.

That was just 3 of the 40 teams, some had him as low as 4.46

https://x.com/_ryanfowler_/status/1901696729491083466?s=46&t=LQU3yEizU6WVOcNoJTNyOw
 

Either way, just as I’ve said all year, he plays with more than enough speed for someone of his size, even the low end of those timings is faster than the plodding big man people on here seem to perceive him as.

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8 hours ago, joeyxfresco said:

As Texas fan I loved watching Golden play this year. Dude has that big time feel to him and made big time catches when it mattered. The 40 time is just a cherry on top 

He isn't a guy I would take until the late first/early second as a Panthers fan. 

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14 hours ago, joeyxfresco said:

As Texas fan I loved watching Golden play this year. Dude has that big time feel to him and made big time catches when it mattered. The 40 time is just a cherry on top 

Highest upside in the draft.  They said the same about Worthy last year.  I understand the concerns, but gamers step up and have the tape to back it up.  Workout warriors dont.

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5 hours ago, kungfoodude said:

He isn't a guy I would take until the late first/early second as a Panthers fan. 

You might be spot on, but I see him as a mid first round guy--a small trade back and he would be my pick.  I think he has upside and will be a better pro than the other top WRs.  but nobody knows.

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10 minutes ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

TEA LEAVE TIME!!! The coaches (ILB and DL) suggest an interest in TJ Sanders, Hemingway (DTs) and Demetrius Knight Jr. (ILB that nobody has mentioned but is probably a late third, early fourth rounder). No DB coach?  Emmanawori is their best player, a mid to late round S.   Wonder if the ILB coach will watch him as well? 

Note:  While Hemmingway is not their star DT, the Panthers talked to him at one of the bowl games or combine.  Not sure if it was formal, but I read it somewhere.

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On 3/5/2025 at 6:15 PM, kungfoodude said:

*Updated Monday 3/17/2025

Formal Visits:

Mason Graham DT Michigan

Jalon Walker OLB/ILB UGA

Shemar Stewart EDGE Texas A&M

Malaki Starks S Georgia

Josh Conerly Jr. OL Oregon

Trey Amos CB Ole Miss

Mason Taylor TE LSU

Darian Porter CB Iowa State

Cam Skattebo RB AZ State

Jonas Sanker S Virginia

Jay Higgins LB Iowa

Marcus Mbow OL Purdue

Warren Brinson DT UGA

Cam Jackson DT Florida

Collin Oliver LB Oklahoma

Andres Borregales K Miami

Sam Brown Jr. WR Miami

Shemar James LB Florida

 

Senior Bowl:

Bhayshul Tuten RB VT

Jack Bech WR TCU

Jake Briningstool TE Clemson

Willie Lampkin OL UNC

Walter Nolen DT Ole Miss

Aeneas Peebles DT VT

Princely Umanmielen EDGE Ole Miss

Donovan Ezeiruaku EDGE BC

Josaiah Stewart EDGE Michigan

Barryn Sorrell DE Texas

Dorian Strong CB VT

Jacob Parrish CB Kansas State

Billy Bowman Jr. S Oklahoma

 

Good source w/more from our Shrine & Hula Visits:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1_BTyWxt0xO8V4iye0omWMD879YJdnJdO0i6j8mT6htc/edit?gid=0#gid=0

So only 2 visits of top 10 players?

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On 3/17/2025 at 8:06 PM, joeyxfresco said:

As Texas fan I loved watching Golden play this year. Dude has that big time feel to him and made big time catches when it mattered. The 40 time is just a cherry on top 

Yeah his game reminds me of DJ Moore 

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    • There are times during the prolonged, pre-draft process that you abandon your gut feelings and allow yourself to be persuaded by popular opinion.  My gut was more consistent with what Morgan et al did than my conclusions.  Here is why (my theory): 1. With social media, one opinion is often repeated until it seems like the majority. The more you see it, the more you feel that your gut was wrong.  You second guess and conform at times.  In January, if you told me TMac would be there at 8, I would have been very interested because there weren't other WRs like him and he was dominant on a bad team.  I let the comments about film, questions about separation, etc. sway my opinion.  I started comparing him to Kelvin Benajamin in my head (work ethic). So I took him off my board. 2.  Morgan said something rather profound (parphrasing): "We did not want to be restricted by need."  IMO, the biggest needs were Edge, S, WR.  We assume that the biggest need is aligned with the first overall pick in most situations.  Everyone was talking about Jalon Walker because Micah Parsons is a similar beast and Abdul Carter would be off the board.   However, as a former coach at Salisbury High School and someone who vaguely knew Walker's father before he was born, I still could not see the fit here.  I think Walker is a great person and will be a good pro, but he did not fill our needs.  TMac was the best player who filled a primary need and we could not find another TMac-type player in the draft.  However, there would be second round Edges that were, in my view, potentially as good NFL players.  The first through early third rounds were loaded with edges.  3. Since edge was our biggest need, Morgan added 2--one in the second and one in the third.  They mentioned referring to statistics to see the likelihood of a player being available at 55 as opposed to 59, guiding their trade practices, for example.  I noticed the talent grades did not drop as much for edge players into early round three and the WR market dropped rapidly.  Morgan mentioned that they only had 3 second round WRs on their board, which is why TMac in round 1 was smart.  I also posted the following stats from the internet and it is never wrong: First-round picks in the NFL Draft have a higher success rate than those in the second or third rounds. Whilethe first round boasts a success rate of around 58%, the second round is nearly as good at 49%. However, the third round sees a significant drop, with only a 25% success rate.    So let's do math.  If you draft 1 edge at #8 he has (since it is early in the round) about a 60% chance of being successful.  Morgan would earn 6 success tokens for his Edge need. If you draft an edge in the second, Morgan would earn 5 success tokens for his edge need. If you draft an edge in the third, Morgan earns 2.5 success tokens for his edge need. So Morgan gets the draft's WR unicorn in the first round and by using the second and third round selections, addresses the biggest need by collecting 7.5 success tokens instead of 6.   Morgan has a high probability of being successful with 2 of 3 of the teams' biggest needs.  He was not needs driven, however, he was market driven.  Supply and demand.  He was smart. Had we drafted Walker, a player who is a stud and can be most effective as an ILB with versatility, I am not sure we successfully addressed the need.  Other players with first round talent either lacked college productivity or had red flags.  We would HAVE to target one of the 3 WRs the Panthers had listed as second round possibilities (I am guessing Higgins and Burden III and Beck--all far inferior to TMac).  Higgins and Burden III were drafted before they were within trade range and it is not surprising that happened--leaving the Panthers with a only Beck at pick 57.  Putting that in perspective, Edge Scourton was taken at pick 51 and Mike Green was taken at pick 59. However, there were 5 edge players taken in the second round.  There were 6 edge players taken in round 3.  Value TMac was rated #4 by PFF and J. Walker was rated #25.  Meanwhile Beck (WR), the only second round WR available in round 2 (I should point out that Tre Harris was rated by PFF at #66, and he was taken in the mid second) was rated 40.  Had we taken an edge in round 1, it is likely we would have ended up with J Walker (#25) and in round 2 Beck (#40).  Instead, we drafted TMac (#4) and Scourton (PFF #29) and Princely (PFF #50). https://www.pff.com/news/draft-2025-nfl-draft-board-big-board In terms of trade value points, the PFF scores value Morgan's first and second round vs. the probably first and second round (had we taken Walker and then the best WR available in round 2 Beck): So you see, Morgan ended up, using the PFF ranking system, doubling the value he got from the first two picks than if he had taken Walker instead of TMac and then drafted the best WR left at pick 51 or 57. In terms of what actually happened, TMac was drafted at #8 and Scourton was taken at #51--this suggests that the Panthers got great value vs. the PFF rankings.  Walker was taken at #15, (10 places higher than his rankings) and Beck was taken at 58, (18 places lower than his rankings.)  So how did Morgan do if you compare drafting Walker/WR vs TMac/Edge?   So Morgan's value was still 24% higher than it would have been had he drafted Walker.  Of course, this does not factor in trades, etc.  but you get the idea.
    • Exactly. When you play to win you are working toward creating a winning culture. 
    • I thought this was some random Juan post, but then I saw the tweet embedded. 
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