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Panthers make it 2 in a row!




CAROLINA PANTHERS WEEK 5 REVIEW
Panthers hold off Saints 24-21 to move to 2-3 and 2-1 in the NFC South





EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Panthers have now won two straight and suddenly look alive in the NFC South. Carolina beat the Saints 24-21 on the road, moving to 2-3 overall and, more importantly, 2-1 in the division.

This was the cleanest offensive blueprint of the season. Carolina ran the ball 43 times, controlled possession 27:39 to 16:21, converted 7 of 13 third downs, and finished without a single turnover. With Andrew Walter still out, Joey Harrington again delivered a composed performance: 11/18, 198 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INT and a 135.9 rating.

The Saints had more total yards, but Carolina controlled the game state. The Panthers built a 24-7 second-quarter lead, then survived the Saints’ passing comeback behind a workhorse day from Najeh Davenport, explosive receiving from Terrell Owens, Roy Williams and Eric Johnson, and enough late defensive resistance to protect the lead.







WEEK 5 SCOREBOARD
TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Final
Panthers14100024
Saints0140721





GAME SUMMARY
Carolina started fast and played its best first half of the season. The Panthers opened with an 11-play, 66-yard drive capped by a 1-yard Najeh Davenport touchdown, then stretched the lead to 14-0 when Joey Harrington hit Roy Williams for a 33-yard touchdown.

The Saints answered through the air, but Carolina kept the pressure on. Harrington found Eric Johnson for a 15-yard touchdown, and Ryan Longwell added a 44-yard field goal to make it 24-7 before halftime. New Orleans closed the gap to 24-14 just before the break, then made it 24-21 in the fourth quarter on a 39-yard Kassim Osgood touchdown.

Unlike the early-season losses, Carolina did not panic. The Panthers stayed committed to the run, avoided turnovers, and used possession control to keep the Saints chasing. It was not a dominant scoreboard finish, but it was a mature road division win.














TEAM STATS
CategoryPanthersSaintsEdgeGM Read
First Downs1714PanthersCarolina finally sustained drives consistently.
Total Offence328351SaintsNew Orleans had yardage, but Carolina controlled the game script.
Third Down7/135/11PanthersMassive improvement from the Atlanta loss.
Rushing Yards14574PanthersThis was the run-game performance the offence needed.
Passing Yards183277SaintsSaints won through the air, but Carolina was more efficient.
Passing TDs23SaintsSecondary gave up scores, but the lead held.
Turnovers00EvenFor Carolina, this was the key improvement.
Time of Possession27:3916:21PanthersCarolina won this game with control.
Red Zone TDs2/32/2SaintsPanthers were good enough, Saints were perfect.













KEY PERFORMERS
PlayerUnitStat LineGradeGM Read
Joey HarringtonOffence11/18, 198 yards, 2 TD, 0 INT, 135.9 ratingASecond straight strong start. Efficient, controlled and turnover-free.
Najeh DavenportOffence28 carries, 103 yards, 1 TDA-Workhorse performance and the backbone of the win.
Terrell OwensOffence2 catches, 64 yardsB+Low volume but high impact. Helped stretch the defence.
Roy WilliamsOffence3 catches, 57 yards, 1 TDA-Continues to deliver explosive scoring plays.
Eric JohnsonOffence2 catches, 32 yards, 1 TDB+Reliable red-zone and intermediate target.
Steve SmithSpecial Teams / Offence96 kick return yards, 1 catch for 12 yardsBQuiet receiving day, but important field-position contribution.
Michael BoulwareDefence6 tackles, 1 TFLB+Led the defensive box score on a day the secondary was tested.
Ryan LongwellSpecial Teams1/1 FG, 3/3 XPA-Still automatic. The 44-yarder ended up being the winning margin.












SCORING SUMMARY
QuarterTeamScoreGame Impact
1stPanthersNajeh Davenport 1-yard Rush TDPerfect opening statement: long drive, run finish, early lead.
1stPanthersRoy Williams 33-yard TD from Joey HarringtonExplosive strike made it 14-0 and put Saints under pressure.
2ndSaintsPatrick Estes TD from Ben RoethlisbergrSaints answered and stayed alive.
2ndPanthersEric Johnson 15-yard TD from Joey HarringtonRestored the two-score cushion.
2ndPanthersRyan Longwell 44-yard FGStretched the lead to 24-7 and proved decisive.
2ndSaintsKassim Osgood 9-yard TD from Ben RoethlisbergrCut the lead before halftime.
4thSaintsKassim Osgood 39-yard TD from Ben RoethlisbergrMade it a one-score game, but Carolina held on.















TEAM GRADE SUMMARY
UnitGradeTrendGM View
QuarterbackAUpHarrington has gone from emergency cover to stabilising force. No turnovers was the headline.
Running BacksA-UpDavenport gave Carolina identity and possession control.
Receivers / TEB+PositiveWilliams, Owens and Johnson all made efficient high-value plays.
Offensive LineBImprovedThree sacks allowed, but 43 rush attempts and 145 rushing yards shows the line gave Carolina a platform.
Defensive Line / EDGEC+MixedOnly one sack, but the Saints were held to 16 rush attempts and Carolina controlled game flow.
LinebackersB-StableRyans and Witherspoon were active, though Saints passing efficiency created stress.
SecondaryCConcernAllowed 279 passing yards and 3 TDs. Keith Lewis injury now makes this the biggest watch area.
Special TeamsA-StrongLongwell perfect again; Smith gave strong kick-return value.
Coaching / GameplanA-StrongBest offensive plan of the season: run-heavy, efficient passing, no giveaways.
OverallB+PositiveRoad division win, clean turnover game, and real signs of identity.





TACTICAL READ
This was the formula Carolina needs until Andrew Walter returns: run the ball, protect Harrington from high-volume passing, hit explosive shots when available, and stop giving games away. The Panthers ran 43 times against only 18 pass attempts, and that balance produced their most controlled offensive performance of the year.

The concern is the pass defence. New Orleans threw for 279 yards and 3 touchdowns, with Kassim Osgood catching 8 passes for 105 yards and 2 TDs. With Keith Lewis now out for 9 weeks, safety depth and explosive-pass prevention become urgent issues.









NFC SOUTH STANDINGS
RankTeamW-L-TPctDiv
#1Falcons5-0-01.0001-0
#17Panthers2-3-00.4002-1
#15Buccaneers2-3-00.4001-1
#25Saints1-3-00.2500-2





STANDINGS IMPACT
The Falcons are still running away at the top of the NFC South at 5-0, but Carolina has now done the most important thing available: win division games. At 2-1 in the division, the Panthers are ahead of both the Buccaneers and Saints on divisional footing despite the poor overall start.

The season has shifted from damage limitation to survival mode with upside. Carolina is not chasing Atlanta yet, but it has put itself firmly back into the wildcard/divisional conversation if the win streak continues.







INJURY REPORT
PlayerPosOVRLengthImpact
Keith LewisFS809 weeksMajor blow. Safety depth and pass defence become immediate concerns.
Andrew WalterQB803 weeksStill out, but Harrington has bought the offence real breathing room.















WEEK 6 PREVIEW: PANTHERS AT CARDINALS
CategoryPanthers RankPanthersCardinalsCardinals RankEdge
Overall RecordW22-3-03-2-0L2Cardinals
Points Scored/Game31st15.230.26thCardinals
Total Offense/Game26th284.8409.85thCardinals
Pass Offense/Game24th188.2318.64thCardinals
Rush Offense/Game22nd96.691.224thPanthers
Points Allowed/Game9th19.427.825thPanthers
Total Defense/Game3rd272.8331.615thPanthers
Pass Defense/Game3rd188.0225.217thPanthers
Rush Defense/Game9th84.8106.415thPanthers
Turnover Differential29th-5-324thCardinals





CARDINALS MATCHUP READ
The Cardinals are a dangerous Week 6 test. Their offence ranks 5th overall, 6th in scoring, and 4th in passing, which directly attacks Carolina’s new problem: safety depth after the Keith Lewis injury.

The good news is Carolina’s defence has been excellent statistically, ranking 3rd in total defence, 3rd against the pass, 9th against the run, and 9th in points allowed. This is strength versus strength: Arizona’s passing offence against Carolina’s defensive structure.

The Panthers’ path is clear: keep the same ball-control identity from the Saints win, protect Harrington, run through Davenport, and keep Arizona’s passing game off the field. If this becomes a shootout, the Cardinals have the clear scoring edge.

























PANTHERS SCHEDULE
WeekOpponentResult / Status
P1at Giants #18Won 29-14
P2at Eagles #8Won 9-6
P3vs Patriots #7Won 34-12
P4vs Steelers #11Lost 16-22
1at Rams #2Lost 9-14
2vs Texans #14Lost 10-13
3at Falcons #1Lost 16-33
4vs Buccaneers #15Won 17-16
5at Saints #25Won 24-21
6at Cardinals #12Match-up
8vs Colts #26Match-up
9at Titans #6Match-up
10vs Falcons #1Match-up
11at Packers #31Match-up
12vs Saints #25Match-up
13vs 49ers #22Match-up
14at Jaguars #27Match-up
15vs Seahawks #9Match-up
16vs Cowboys #4Match-up
17at Buccaneers #15Match-up





FINAL GM LINE
The Panthers have flipped the season from 0-3 panic to 2-3 belief. This win over the Saints showed the clearest identity yet: run the ball, control the clock, protect Harrington, and trust the defence. The warning is obvious — Keith Lewis is out for 9 weeks and Arizona’s 4th-ranked passing offence is next. If Carolina survives that test, the season is officially back on.

Forum Discussion (by D_Roberts on 06/03/2026) Replies - 0 :: Views - 0
Panthers get first win




CAROLINA PANTHERS WEEK 4 REVIEW
Panthers get off the mark with a 17-16 divisional win over Tampa Bay





EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Panthers finally have their first win of the season, and it came in the exact kind of game they had been losing through the first three weeks. Carolina beat the Buccaneers 17-16, moved to 1-3, and improved to 1-1 in the NFC South.

This was not a clean performance, but it was a meaningful one. The Panthers lost time of possession 25:38 to 18:22, allowed Tampa Bay to reach the red zone three times, and still found a way to win because the passing game finally delivered explosive touchdowns instead of settling for field goals.

Joey Harrington gave Carolina the stabilising QB performance it badly needed with 192 yards, 2 TDs, 1 INT and a 122.7 rating. Roy Williams delivered the game-winning play, Terrell Owens struck before halftime, and the defence was led by a dominant pass-rush performance from DeMarcus Ware.










PANTHERS FRONT OFFICE
RoleNameDetailGM Read
GMDaren RobertsSalary: $78.57MRoster is tight against the cap but the Week 4 win keeps the season alive.
Head CoachJ. DavidsonCap Penalty: $24.01MNeeded a response after the 0-3 start and got one.
Offensive CoordinatorB. MuirCap Room: $2.43MPassing script finally produced explosive touchdowns.
Defensive CoordinatorM. TrgovacBase: 4-3Front seven carried the win.
Special TeamsD. CrossmanLongwell reliable againSpecial teams remain one of the team’s safest units.







WEEK 4 SCOREBOARD
TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Final
Buccaneers0130316
Panthers370717





GAME SUMMARY
Carolina opened the scoring with a 52-yard Ryan Longwell field goal, but Tampa Bay controlled much of the second quarter and built a 13-3 lead behind two James Tuthill field goals and a late Derek Anderson touchdown pass to Kevin Everett.

The turning point came at the end of the first half. With only 19 seconds left, Joey Harrington hit Terrell Owens for a 38-yard touchdown to cut the deficit to 13-10. That score changed the entire feel of the game.

Tampa Bay extended the lead to 16-10 in the fourth quarter, but Carolina answered with its best drive of the day: 5 plays, 71 yards, capped by a 43-yard Roy Williams touchdown from Harrington. The defence then protected the one-point lead and closed out a badly needed divisional win.














TEAM STATS
CategoryBuccaneersPanthersEdgeGM Read
Total Offence215247PanthersCarolina finally paired modest volume with explosive efficiency.
First Downs1410BuccaneersTampa sustained more drives, but Carolina hit the bigger plays.
Third Down6/134/11BuccaneersStill an area Carolina needs to clean up.
Rushing Yards5774PanthersNot explosive, but enough to keep balance.
Passing Yards158173PanthersHarrington gave the offence a vertical spark.
Passing TDs12PanthersThe difference from Weeks 1-3: touchdowns, not just field goals.
Turnovers11EvenFirst game where turnovers did not bury Carolina.
Time of Possession25:3818:22BuccaneersCarolina still needs longer offensive control.
Red Zone Trips30BuccaneersOdd profile: Panthers won without a red-zone snap becoming decisive.












KEY PERFORMERS
PlayerUnitStat LineGradeGM Read
Joey HarringtonOffence12/17, 192 yards, 2 TD, 1 INT, 122.7 ratingA-Exactly the stabilising QB performance Carolina needed with Walter out.
Roy WilliamsOffence4 catches, 87 yards, 1 TDADelivered the winning explosive play and earned Offensive Player of the Game.
Terrell OwensOffence2 catches, 40 yards, 1 TDB+Huge halftime momentum swing with the 38-yard TD.
DeMarcus WareDefence7 tackles, 2 TFL, 3 sacksA+Game-wrecking performance and Defensive Player of the Game.
DeMeco RyansDefence10 tacklesA-Continues to look like the defensive centrepiece.
Will WitherspoonDefence5 tackles, 2 sacksA-Excellent pressure support from the second level.
Ryan LongwellSpecial Teams1/1 FG, 2/2 XPB+52-yarder set the tone early.












SCORING SUMMARY
QuarterTeamScoreGame Impact
1stPanthersRyan Longwell 52-yard FGEarly lead and strong special teams start.
2ndBuccaneersJames Tuthill 43-yard FGTampa tied it after a long 71-yard drive.
2ndBuccaneersJames Tuthill 48-yard FGTampa moved ahead 6-3.
2ndBuccaneersKevin Everett 2-yard TD from Derek AndersonCarolina fell behind 13-3 late in the half.
2ndPanthersTerrell Owens 38-yard TD from Joey HarringtonMassive response on the final play of the half.
4thBuccaneersJames Tuthill 39-yard FGTampa stretched the lead to 16-10.
4thPanthersRoy Williams 43-yard TD from Joey HarringtonGame-winning score and the defining play of Week 4.















TEAM GRADE SUMMARY
UnitGradeTrendGM View
QuarterbackA-Major UpHarrington was efficient, aggressive and composed. Best QB game of the season so far.
Running BacksCStableDavenport and Graham combined for 61 yards, but the run game still lacks punch.
Receivers / TEA-UpRoy Williams and Owens supplied the touchdowns; Eric Johnson added useful chunk gains.
Offensive LineB-ImprovedAllowed 3 sacks, but run/pass balance held up enough and blocking numbers were solid.
Defensive Line / EDGEAStrongWare was dominant and the front controlled Tampa’s run game.
LinebackersAStrongRyans and Witherspoon carried the defensive spine.
SecondaryBSolidAllowed efficient completions, but limited damage and got an interception through Drayton Florence.
Special TeamsB+ReliableLongwell stayed perfect and the coverage game avoided disaster.
Coaching / GameplanBUpBetter QB efficiency, better explosive passing, and enough defensive pressure to close the game.
OverallBPositiveNot perfect, but a massive morale win and the first proof this team can finish a close game.





TACTICAL READ
The difference from the first three weeks was quarterback efficiency. Carolina did not dominate possession, did not win the red-zone battle, and did not run the ball particularly well. But Harrington averaged 11.29 yards per attempt, hit two explosive touchdowns, and avoided the multi-interception collapse that had been killing the offence.

Defensively, this was the strongest front-seven showing of the season. DeMarcus Ware produced 3 sacks, Will Witherspoon added 2 more, and the Panthers held Tampa Bay’s main back Chris Perry to just 29 yards on 17 carries. That is the defensive identity Carolina needs while Walter is injured.









NFC SOUTH STANDINGS
RankTeamW-L-TPctDiv
#1Falcons4-0-01.0001-0
#13Buccaneers2-2-00.5001-1
#22Saints1-2-00.3330-1
#21Panthers1-3-00.2501-1





STANDINGS IMPACT
This win matters because it keeps Carolina from falling completely out of the division picture. The Falcons are already 4-0 and setting the pace, but the Panthers are now 1-1 in the NFC South and have dragged Tampa Bay back toward the pack.

The record is still poor at 1-3, but this is the first result that changes the tone of the season. Carolina now has a road game at the Saints in Week 5, and a win there would move the Panthers to 2-1 in the division despite the rough overall start.






INJURY REPORT
PlayerPosOVRLengthImpact
Andrew WalterQB804 weeksStill a major absence, but Harrington’s Week 4 performance buys the staff breathing room.








UP NEXT
WeekOpponentStatusGM Read
5at Saints #22Match-upHuge divisional opportunity. Win this and the 1-3 start starts to look recoverable.
6at Cardinals #8Match-upTough road test before the bye. Must carry over the defensive pressure.
8vs Colts #28Match-upPotential get-right game after the bye if Carolina can stay alive.

























PANTHERS SCHEDULE
WeekOpponentResult / Status
P1at Giants #25Won 29-14
P2at Eagles #7Won 9-6
P3vs Patriots #15Won 34-12
P4vs Steelers #9Lost 16-22
1at Rams #4Lost 9-14
2vs Texans #23Lost 10-13
3at Falcons #1Lost 16-33
4vs Buccaneers #13Won 17-16
5at Saints #22Match-up
6at Cardinals #8Match-up
8vs Colts #28Match-up
9at Titans #3Match-up
10vs Falcons #1Match-up
11at Packers #29Match-up
12vs Saints #22Match-up
13vs 49ers #24Match-up
14at Jaguars #31Match-up
15vs Seahawks #16Match-up
16vs Cowboys #6Match-up
17at Buccaneers #13Match-up





FINAL GM LINE
The Panthers finally won the kind of tight game they had been throwing away. Harrington gave the offence a clean enough passing performance, Roy Williams and Terrell Owens supplied the explosive touchdowns, and DeMarcus Ware led a defensive front that looked capable of carrying the team while Andrew Walter remains out. At 1-3, the season is still fragile — but this win keeps the division door open.

Forum Discussion (by D_Roberts on 05/30/2026) Replies - 0 :: Views - 6
Panthers start 0-3, lose Walter for 7 weeks




CAROLINA PANTHERS WEEKS 1-3 REVIEW
0-3 start defined by turnovers, red-zone stalls and QB instability





EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Panthers open the season 0-3, but this is not a talentless football team. Carolina has been competitive for long stretches, losing one-score games to the Rams and Texans before falling away late against the Falcons.

The problem is clear: the Panthers are not finishing drives and are losing the turnover battle badly. Through three weeks, Carolina has scored only 35 total points, has leaned heavily on Ryan Longwell, and has given the ball away 10 times.

The injury to Andrew Walter in Week 1 has changed the offensive profile. Andy Hall has produced explosive passing yardage at times, but the interception volume has made the offence volatile. Defensively, DeMeco Ryans, DeMarcus Ware, Dennis Weathersby and Mike Hawkins are giving the Panthers real pieces to build around.








WEEKS 1-3 RESULTS
WeekMatchupResultScoreGame StoryGrade
1at Rams #5Loss9-14Controlled key stats, but 2 turnovers and 0 red-zone TDs turned a winnable game into a narrow road loss.C
2vs Texans #12Loss10-13 OTDefence forced 2 INTs and 5 sacks, but 3 offensive turnovers and a late TD drive cost Carolina.C-
3at Falcons #3Loss16-33Panthers tied it 16-16 in the 3rd, then collapsed in the 4th as turnovers and 3rd-down defence broke the game open.D+












TEAM SNAPSHOT THROUGH THREE WEEKS
AreaTotal / RateTrendGM ReadPriority
Record0-3Bad startTwo one-score losses before the Falcons game got away late.Urgent
Points For35 total / 11.7 PPGPoorOffence is not producing enough touchdowns.High
Points Against60 total / 20.0 PPGPlayableDefence has mostly kept games within reach, but Week 3 exposed late-game cracks.Medium
Turnovers10 giveawaysCriticalThis is the defining issue of the season so far.Very High
Rushing Offence264 yards / 3.26 YPCInconsistentVolume exists, but efficiency varies too much week to week.Medium
Passing Offence585 yards / 1 TD / 8 INTVolatileExplosive plays are there, but backup QB turnover risk is killing drives.Very High
Special TeamsLongwell 7/8 FGStrongKicking has been one of the few stable advantages.Low







WEEK 1 REVIEW: PANTHERS 9, RAMS 14
TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Final
Panthers03339
Rams070714





WEEK 1 GAME SUMMARY
Carolina did enough statistically to win this game, but not enough in the red zone. The Panthers won first downs 14-6, won time of possession 24:50 to 19:10, and outgained the Rams 255-223. The difference was finishing.

The Rams found the end zone twice, including a 66-yard Torry Holt touchdown and a long 4th-quarter scoring drive. Carolina answered only through Ryan Longwell, who hit field goals from 24, 46 and 38 yards. That kept the game close but also summed up the problem: drives were happening, touchdowns were not.










WEEK 1 KEY STATS
CategoryPanthersRamsGM Read
Total Offence255223Carolina moved the ball well enough to win.
First Downs146Strong control metric for Carolina.
Turnovers20The hidden cost in a low-margin game.
Red Zone TDs0/21/1The decisive stat.
Rushing128 yards / 3.88 YPC71 yards / 3.09 YPCRun game was functional.










WEEK 1 KEY PERFORMERS
PlayerUnitStat LineGM Read
Najeh DavenportOffence22 carries, 93 yardsWorkhorse performance, but no touchdown finish.
Steve SmithOffence / ST4 catches, 61 yards; 72 KR yardsStill the field-position and explosive-play engine.
Ryan LongwellSpecial Teams3/4 FGKept Carolina alive.
DeMarcus WareDefence4 tackles, 1 sackPressure profile is showing early.
Kris JenkinsDefence3 tackles, 1 sackInterior disruption showed up.





WEEK 1 GM LINE
This was a winnable road game lost through red-zone failure and turnovers. The structure was good enough, the defence was good enough, and the run game was good enough. The offence simply could not finish.







WEEK 2 REVIEW: TEXANS 13, PANTHERS 10 OT
TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4OTFinal
Texans00010313
Panthers0703010





WEEK 2 GAME SUMMARY
Carolina had a clear path to its first win. Steve Smith broke the game open with a 65-yard touchdown from Andy Hall just before halftime, and Ryan Longwell extended the lead to 10-3 in the 4th quarter.

The defence delivered enough winning plays: 5 sacks, 2 interceptions, and a strong individual game from Dennis Weathersby. But the offence gave the ball away 3 times, and Houston forced overtime with a late 80-yard touchdown drive before winning it with a field goal.










WEEK 2 KEY STATS
CategoryTexansPanthersGM Read
Total Offence253275Carolina had enough production.
Turnovers23Again, the losing margin.
Rushing110 yards / 3.55 YPC67 yards / 2.09 YPCRun game stalled badly.
Passing143 yards208 yardsExplosive but unstable from Carolina.
Defensive Sacks15Panthers pass rush was excellent.










WEEK 2 KEY PERFORMERS
PlayerUnitStat LineGM Read
Steve SmithOffence / ST5 catches, 125 yards, 1 TD; 93 KR yardsCarried the explosive-play burden almost alone.
Andy HallOffence203 yards, 1 TD, 3 INTBig plays and bad mistakes in the same game.
DeMarcus WareDefence5 tackles, 2 sacksClear impact pass rusher.
Dennis WeathersbyDefence6 tackles, 2 INT, 3 deflectionsDefensive player of the game level performance.
DeMeco RyansDefence8 tackles, forced fumbleAlready looking like a defensive centrepiece.





WEEK 2 GM LINE
The defence gave Carolina a winning platform. The pass rush and secondary both made plays. But three offensive turnovers and the inability to close the game turned a likely win into an overtime loss.







WEEK 3 REVIEW: PANTHERS 16, FALCONS 33
TeamQ1Q2Q3Q4Final
Panthers376016
Falcons31301733





WEEK 3 GAME SUMMARY
This was competitive until it suddenly was not. Carolina fought back to 16-16 in the 3rd quarter after field goals from Ryan Longwell, but Atlanta dominated the 4th quarter with 17 unanswered points.

The Panthers had explosive passing production, with Roy Williams and Eric Johnson both producing big yardage games, but the overall offensive execution was poor. Carolina went just 1-for-11 on third down, threw 4 interceptions, lost 5 total turnovers, and held the ball for only 17:13. Against a top-ranked Falcons team, that is not survivable.










WEEK 3 KEY STATS
CategoryPanthersFalconsGM Read
Total Offence319322Yardage was not the issue.
Turnovers53Carolina lost another high-leverage category.
3rd Down1/1110/17The biggest tactical failure of the game.
Red Zone TDs1/42/6Falcons were more efficient when it mattered.
Time of Possession17:1326:34Defence was left on the field too long.










WEEK 3 KEY PERFORMERS
PlayerUnitStat LineGM Read
DeMeco RyansDefence16 tackles, 1 sackMassive individual performance in a losing effort.
Roy WilliamsOffence3 catches, 96 yardsShowed big-play upside.
Eric JohnsonOffence4 catches, 90 yardsProductive, but drops remain a watch item.
Najeh DavenportOffence14 carries, 51 yards, 1 TDEfficient enough, but game script moved away from the run.
Ryan LongwellSpecial Teams3/3 FG, 1/1 XPReliable again.





WEEK 3 GM LINE
This was the first game where the Panthers looked like a losing team rather than an unlucky team. The yardage was there, but the 1-for-11 third-down rate, 5 turnovers and 4th-quarter collapse made the final score fair.








GAMEPLAN TRACKING
WeekOpponentResultOff PBPass%AggHB%Def PBBaseGM Read
1RamsL 9-14Steelers505580Ravens4-3Conservative structure kept the game close, but red-zone TD output was missing.
2TexansL 10-13Steelers405080Ravens4-3Run-first adjustment did not create rushing efficiency, but defence played well enough to win.
3FalconsL 16-33West Coast405080Bears4-3More explosive passing, but QB volatility and 3rd-down failure broke the plan.





GAMEPLAN OUTLOOK
The Steelers offensive playbook kept Carolina competitive in Weeks 1 and 2, but it did not solve the touchdown problem. The West Coast switch in Week 3 created more passing production and better chunk-play output, but also increased the exposure of the backup quarterback situation.

Defensively, the Ravens 4-3 package produced the best overall control, especially against Houston. The switch to the Bears 4-3 did not solve the biggest Week 3 problem: Atlanta converted 10 of 17 third downs. The front seven is talented enough, but the package needs to get off the field.






INJURY REPORT
PlayerPosOVRStatusImpact
Andrew WalterQB805 weeks, injured in Week 1 lossMajor. Walter’s injury has forced Carolina into Andy Hall and Joey Harrington snaps, increasing offensive volatility and turnover risk.















TEAM GRADE SUMMARY
UnitGradeTrendGM View
QuarterbackDDownWalter injury is a major blow. Hall has arm talent moments, but the interception count is too high.
Running BacksCMixedDavenport is giving volume and some structure, but the run game is not efficient enough yet.
Receivers / TEB-PositiveSmith remains the engine. Roy Williams and Eric Johnson showed Week 3 upside, but drops matter.
Offensive LineCMixedNot disastrous, but not stable enough to protect backup QBs or create consistent rushing efficiency.
Defensive Line / EDGEBPositiveWare, Jenkins and Tubbs are creating enough disruption to believe in the front.
LinebackersA-StrongDeMeco Ryans already looks like the defensive identity. Witherspoon remains reliable.
SecondaryB-PlayableWeathersby and Hawkins are making plays, but explosive passing scores and 3rd downs remain a concern.
Special TeamsA-StrongLongwell has been excellent and is keeping the scoreboard respectable.
Coaching / GameplanC-Needs adjustmentThe team is competitive, but the QB plan needs to become safer while Walter is out.
OverallC-FrustratingNot a hopeless 0-3 team, but very much a self-inflicted 0-3 team.










BIGGEST ISSUES TO FIX
IssueEvidenceImpactFixUrgency
Turnovers10 giveaways in 3 gamesKilling close games and short fields.Simplify QB reads, reduce risky middle-field throws, lean on defined first reads.Very High
Red-zone finishingToo many FG drivesLongwell is scoring, but the offence is not finishing.More 2TE, inside run, Smith isolation and safer short-yardage concepts.High
3rd-down offence1/11 at AtlantaDrives are dying before the defence can rest.Shorter 2nd/3rd down distances through early-down rushing and quick passing.High
3rd-down defenceFalcons 10/17Turns competitive games into long defensive slogs.Keep Ryans/Witherspoon central in nickel and create more pressure looks.Medium-High
QB protection planBackup QB volatilityOffence is too high variance without Walter.Lower pass %, reduce deep isolation volume unless protected by play-action.High








UP NEXT
WeekOpponentStatusGM Read
4vs Buccaneers #9Match-upDivision game. Must avoid 0-4 and cannot gift short fields.
5at Saints #20Match-upWinnable if the defence travels and the offence plays cleaner.
6at Cardinals #6Match-upTough road test before the bye. Needs a more conservative QB plan.





















REGULAR SEASON SCHEDULE
WeekOpponentResult / Status
1at Rams #5Lost 9-14
2vs Texans #12Lost 10-13
3at Falcons #3Lost 16-33
4vs Buccaneers #9Match-up
5at Saints #20Match-up
6at Cardinals #6Match-up
8vs Colts #26Match-up
9at Titans #2Match-up
10vs Falcons #3Match-up
11at Packers #30Match-up
12vs Saints #20Match-up
13vs 49ers #21Match-up
14at Jaguars #31Match-up
15vs Seahawks #16Match-up
16vs Cowboys #4Match-up
17at Buccaneers #9Match-up





FINAL GM LINE
The Panthers are 0-3, but this is not a roster collapse. This is a margin-collapse start. The defence has real pieces, the receiving room has enough explosive talent, and special teams are stable. The season now depends on surviving the Andrew Walter injury window: reduce the turnovers, simplify the passing script, keep feeding the defence field position, and turn field-goal drives into touchdowns before the division schedule gets away.

Forum Discussion (by D_Roberts on 05/27/2026) Replies - 0 :: Views - 10
Panthers make final tweaks before week 1
CAROLINA PANTHERS 2006 Injury and Toughness Boosts
Panthers invest in wellness and conditioning
FS Keith Lewis has missed extensive time so hopefully this will prevent some of that - he has missed 8 weeks over his rookie and sophomore seasons. Siegler is more of an insurance as he has yet to miss time.



Injury and Toughness Boosts
PlayerInjury Pre BoostToughness Pre BoostInjury Post BoostToughness Post Boost
FS Keith Lewis21104437
LOLB Richard Siegler82518765
Forum Discussion (by D_Roberts on 05/17/2026) Replies - 0 :: Views - 11
Panthers 2005 stats and predictions for 2006
CAROLINA PANTHERS 2006 STATISTICAL OUTLOOK
Where the Panthers should improve after the roster retool
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Panthers were a bottom-tier team statistically last season. The offence ranked last in scoring at 14.1 points per game, while the defence allowed 30.8 points per game and was one of the worst units in the league against the run. The roster retool should change that profile significantly.

The biggest jump should come on defence. The additions and reshuffle of DeMarcus Ware at LE, DeMeco Ryans at MLB, Will Witherspoon at ROLB, plus Kris Jenkins, Marcus Tubbs, Sheldon Brown and Michael Boulware, give Carolina a legitimate defensive identity.

The offence should also improve, but more modestly. Najeh Davenport and Earnest Graham should lift the run game, while Steve Smith, Terrell Owens, Roy Williams and Eric Johnson give Andrew Walter a much better support structure. The question remains whether the offensive line can hold up with Brad Butler and Jason Brown starting in development-heavy roles.
LAST SEASON BASELINE
UnitCategoryLast SeasonLeague StandingGM Read
OffencePoints per game14.132ndLeague-worst scoring output.
OffenceTotal yards263.9Bottom tierNot enough sustained production.
OffencePassing yards193.7Lower thirdPlayable volume, not enough efficiency.
OffenceRushing yards70.3Bottom tierMajor drag on the whole offence.
Offence3rd down %25%32ndDrive-killer. Biggest offensive efficiency issue.
DefencePoints allowed30.831stToo many games got away from them.
DefenceTotal yards allowed383.9Bottom tierCould not control field position or tempo.
DefencePass yards allowed235.3Lower thirdToo many explosive passing days allowed.
DefenceRush yards allowed148.632ndCatastrophic. This has to be fixed first.
Defence3rd down % allowed41%Bottom tierCould not get off the field.
DefenceSacks20PoorNot enough pressure.
DefenceTakeaways25DecentThe one defensive stat that was not broken.
PROJECTED OFFENSIVE IMPROVEMENT
CategoryLast SeasonProjectionProjected RankWhy It Improves
Points per game14.119.5–21.520th–25thBetter WR support, stronger HB room, improved drive structure.
Total yards263.9295–31522nd–27thMore balance and fewer dead drives.
Passing yards193.7205–22520th–25thSmith, Owens, Roy Williams and Eric Johnson give Walter better targets.
Rushing yards70.395–11018th–24thDavenport/Graham gives the team a real HB rotation.
1st downs11.513.0–14.018th–24thMore manageable downs through improved rushing efficiency.
3rd down %25%31%–35%20th–26thBetter short-yardage structure and more reliable receiving options.
Red zone trips2535–4218th–25thMore sustained drives should create more scoring chances.
Total turnovers2220–26Middle/lower-middleDepends heavily on Walter and pass protection.
OFFENSIVE OUTLOOK
The offence should not be expected to become elite immediately. The passing weapons are strong, but the unit still depends on Andrew Walter proving he can turn arm talent into consistent CPU production. The line also has risk because Brad Butler at LT and Jason Brown at C are development-first starters rather than proven safe options.

The biggest likely improvement is the run game. Last season’s 70.3 rushing yards per game was a huge drag on the whole offence. With Najeh Davenport, Earnest Graham and a 2TE structure, Carolina should be much more credible on early downs.

Most likely offensive rank: 22nd–25th overall
Ceiling: 18th–20th if Walter and the line hold up
Floor: bottom 8 if protection collapses or turnovers spike
PROJECTED DEFENSIVE IMPROVEMENT
CategoryLast SeasonProjectionProjected RankWhy It Improves
Points allowed30.820.5–23.58th–16thFront seven is now much stronger and better structured.
Total yards allowed383.9315–3358th–16thBetter run defence should reduce opponent control.
Pass yards allowed235.3200–2208th–18thBetter pass rush plus strong CB room.
Rush yards allowed148.690–1108th–18thRyans, Witherspoon, Seigler, Ware, Jenkins and Tubbs should transform the front.
1st downs allowed16.112.5–14.08th–16thImproved early-down defence should reduce long drives.
3rd down % allowed41%32%–36%6th–16thRyans and Witherspoon in nickel is a major sub-package upgrade.
Red zone visits allowed5835–458th–18thFewer sustained drives should reduce red-zone exposure.
Sacks2030–3810th–18thWare at LE changes the pass-rush ceiling.
Takeaways2526–34Top 10–middleBetter pressure should support an already decent takeaway profile.
DEFENSIVE OUTLOOK
The defence has the potential to make a massive jump. Last season’s defence gave up 148.6 rushing yards per game, 30.8 points per game, and allowed opponents to convert 41% of third downs. Those numbers should fall sharply because the roster now has the right structure.

The new defensive spine is clear: DeMarcus Ware at LE, Kris Jenkins and Marcus Tubbs inside, Dennis Johnson at RE, DeMeco Ryans at MLB, Will Witherspoon at ROLB and Richard Seigler at LOLB. In nickel, the key is that Ryans + Witherspoon should remain on the field as the two linebackers. That should directly improve third-down defence.

The only meaningful warning is safety durability. Keith Lewis is talented, but his injury rating makes FS depth important. If the safeties hold up, this defence can move from bottom two to top half immediately.

Most likely defensive rank: 10th–15th overall
Ceiling: Top 8 if Ware at LE works and the run defence lands
Floor: around 18th if safety injuries or pass-rush inconsistency return
BIGGEST EXPECTED JUMPS
AreaLast Season ProblemExpected ImprovementReasonConfidence
Rush defence148.6 yards allowed per gameHuge drop expectedRyans/Witherspoon/Ware/Jenkins/Tubbs fixes the front sevenHigh
Points allowed30.8 per gameMajor improvementBetter run defence and third-down defence should reduce scoring chancesHigh
3rd down defence41% allowedStrong improvementRyans + Witherspoon in nickel is a major upgradeHigh
Sacks20 totalModerate to large jumpWare at LE raises the pass-rush ceilingMedium-High
Rushing offence70.3 yards per gameClear improvementDavenport/Graham gives Carolina a functional HB roomMedium-High
3rd down offence25%Moderate improvementBetter run game and Owens/Eric Johnson underneath optionsMedium
Passing offence193.7 yards per gameSome improvementReceiving talent is strong, but Walter/OL decide the ceilingMedium
FINAL PROJECTED RANKINGS
CategoryProjected RankGM View
Scoring offence22ndBetter, but still not explosive enough to project top half.
Total offence24thShould move out of the basement.
Passing offence22ndWeapons are strong; Walter is the variable.
Rushing offence20thBiggest offensive jump expected.
3rd down offence23rdShould improve but remains a key watch item.
Red-zone offence20th–24thMore trips expected, but finishing drives still uncertain.
Scoring defence12thMost important team improvement.
Total defence13thFront-seven structure should transform the unit.
Pass defence14thBetter rush should help a strong CB room.
Rush defence12thFrom disaster to strength if the front seven performs.
3rd down defence10th–14thRyans/Witherspoon is the key package upgrade.
Sacks14th–18thWare should add pressure, but depth still matters.
Takeaways8th–14thAlready decent; pressure could lift it further.
FINAL GM LINE
The Panthers should no longer look like a 1-15 team. The offence should climb from dead last to the low/mid-20s because the run game and receiver support are better. The defence should make the real leap, moving from 31st to roughly 10th–15th if the Ware/Ryans/Witherspoon front-seven reshuffle lands. The route back to relevance is clear: play defence, run the ball better, protect Walter enough, and let the elite WR room create the difference.
Forum Discussion (by D_Roberts on 05/16/2026) Replies - 0 :: Views - 13

All Team News Stories

At A Glance

PANTHERS FRONT OFFICE
GM D_Roberts
Head Coach J.Davidson
Offensive Coordinator B.Muir
Defensive Coordinator M.Trgovac
Special Teams D.Crossman
Salary $78.57M
Cap Penalty $24.01M
Cap Room $2.43M

INJURY REPORT
PLAYER POS OVR LENGTH
Panthers Keith Lewis FS 80 9 weeks
Panthers Andrew Walter QB 80 3 weeks

NFC South
RNK TEAM W-L-T PCT DIV
#1 Falcons Falcons 5-0-0 1.000 1-0
#17 Panthers Panthers 2-3-0 0.400 2-1
#15 Buccaneers Buccaneers 2-3-0 0.400 1-1
#25 Saints Saints 1-3-0 0.250 0-2

PANTHERS SCHEDULE
Preseason
WK DATE OPPONENT SCOUT/RESULT
P1 Sat at Giants Giants #18
Won 29-14
P2 Fri at Eagles Eagles #8
Won 9-6
P3 Fri vs Patriots Patriots #7
Won 34-12
P4 Thu vs Steelers Steelers #11
Lost 16-22
Regular Season
1 Sun at Rams Rams #2
Lost 9-14
2 Sun vs Texans Texans #14
Lost 10-13
3 Sun at Falcons Falcons #1
Lost 16-33
4 Sun vs Buccaneers Buccaneers #15
Won 17-16
5 Sun at Saints Saints #25
Won 24-21
6 Sun at Cardinals Cardinals #12 Match-up
8 Sun vs Colts Colts #26 Match-up
9 Sun at Titans Titans #6 Match-up
10 Sun vs Falcons Falcons #1 Match-up
11 Sun at Packers Packers #31 Match-up
12 Sun vs Saints Saints #25 Match-up
13 Sun vs 49ers 49ers #22 Match-up
14 Sun at Jaguars Jaguars #27 Match-up
15 Sun vs Seahawks Seahawks #9 Match-up
16 Sat vs Cowboys Cowboys #4 Match-up
17 Sun at Buccaneers Buccaneers #15 Match-up