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  2. A violent hit on a sliding QB vs. a shove on a QB still inbounds. Yeah, you're right. There is no comparison. One was a dirty illegal play and the other was completely legal.
  3. You are not a little better at watching football than the average fan. You are much, much worse mr. horse
  4. We desperately need a FS. He couldn’t cost that much. No problems with seeing what the dolphins want for him.
  5. I agree. That wasn't a dirty hit. He actually made contact with his back and knocked Stroud's head onto the ground. He was trying to turn away from the hit but had too much momentum. Dumb, but not dirty. The guy that pushed Bryce saw him going out of bounds and decided to shove him for good measure. 100% intentional.
  6. Making excuses. Come on, you can do it. Throw better balls.
  7. Literally said that about his INT. Came out wobbly and then the wind took it. That’s as rough as it gets
  8. I don't think we can blame that int on him. But he does seem to have terrible luck, such as slipping
  9. Is it me or do bad things just tend to happen whenever XL is the target? I like the guy, but everytime I see the ball going his way I'm holding my breath. Namely ints... Maybe it's just in my head but it kinda feels like the last half a dozen or so we're passes thrown to XL.
  10. Looked worse as a throw to me than it was, and I still said he should have caught it. Now where are you calling out Bryce's shitty fluttering passes he throws every week? Where's "Throw better balls"?
  11. you didn’t start with that. Starting talking about ball placement. Catch the ball.
  12. just saw betting favorite to be first qb is thr alabama qb...
  13. I'm not sure why you're needing to quote me over and over when I said he should have caught the ball already Edit: Not worth fighting Bryce obsessed fans...
  14. bryce young for any decent qb and panthers could go deep in the playoffs.
  15. the 49ers coaching is pretty amazing like half the teams starters are injured and they just keep winning.
  16. Lol I'm the furthest from a Bryce apologist but there is enough to complain about without creating false narratives. To say his ceiling is 100 to 150 when most of his games have been above that is creating a false narrative.
  17. https://x.com/mattwaldman/status/1985428433791484131?s=46&t=W75E23VenL1ei42iX22E5g
  18. Am I the only one that expected this to be about Dan and Dave?
  19. Looks like he saw the safety and wanted to lob it to Legette's outside shoulder at the pylon. Wind killed it and moved it in towards the field of play. Probably could have fired it like he did at Miami. Low and to a spot. Bad decision to lob it in that wind and it was a little wobbly out of his hands.
  20. Ceiling in context would imply it is reached more than once a year. 1 or 2 games per season of 300+ yardage that mostly happens in garbage time when trying to mount a comeback with the opposing team playing soft defense up front is not consistent with what many would define as an elevation worthy of aspiring.
  21. Deep ball? Sounds edgy and innovative. Where can the Panthers get some?
  22. layer Defensive Snaps Special Teams Snaps Mike Jackson 65 (100%) 4 (24%) Nick Scott 65 (100%) 3 (18%) Jaycee Horn 65 (100%) Tre'von Moehrig 65 (100%) Trevin Wallace 63 (97%) Tershawn Wharton 59 (91%) 4 (24%) Derrick Brown 53 (82%) 4 (24%) Nic Scourton 51 (78%) 4 (24%) DJ Wonnum 49 (75%) Christian Rozeboom 48 (74%) Chau Smith-Wade 40 (62%) 4 (24%) A'Shawn Robinson 32 (49%) 4 (24%) Lathan Ransom 29 (45%) 7 (41%) Trevis Gipson 18 (28%) 5 (29%) Bobby Brown III 6 (9%) 4 (24%) LaBryan Ray 5 (8%) Claudin Cherelus 2 (3%) 14 (82%) Tershawn Wharton is back and playing a major role. The defensive tackle barely came off the field, logging 59 of the 65 defensive snaps (91 percent). With him and Derrick Brown (81 percent) playing the vast majority of the game and A'Shawn Robinson playing 49 percent, they only needed 11 snaps combined out of backups Bobby Brown III and LaBryan Ray. That illustrates the work the Panthers defensive front has done this year. Perhaps no player had a higher snaps-to-plays-made ratio than Christian Rozeboom. He played 74 percent of the snaps (coming off in a few obvious passing-down packages), but still had a career-high 15 tackles in those 48 snaps. Speaking of high-percentage players, starting outside linebackers Nic Scourton (78 percent) and D.J. Wonnum (75 percent) were out there most of the time, since they were thin at the position because of injury. Trevis Gipson, signed Tuesday, played 28 percent of the snaps as the only rotational sub there, since Princely Umanmielen was inactive with an ankle injury.
  23. Snap Counts Take a look at the snap counts and playtime percentage for the Panthers in Week 9 of the regular season against the Packers. Player Offensive Snaps Special Teams Snaps Austin Corbett 58 (100%) 3 (18%) Ikem Ekwonu 58 (100%) 3 (18%) Yosh Nijman 58 (100%) 3 (18%) Bryce Young 58 (100%) Damien Lewis 56 (97%) 3 (13%) Jake Curhan 49 (84%) 3 (18%) Tetairoa McMillan 49 (84%) Rico Dowdle 42 (72%) Jalen Coker 38 (66%) Tommy Tremble 32 (55%) 4 (24%) Xavier Legette 32 (55%) Ja'Tavion Sanders 29 (50%) 10 (59%) Mitchell Evans 24 (41%) 4 (24%) Brycen Tremayne 15 (26%) 9 (53%) Jimmy Horn 14 (24%) Chuba Hubbard 13 (22%) 4 (24%) Chandler Zavala 11 (19%) Trevor Etienne 2 (3%) 4 (24%)
  24. Its the same play from the Jets game where he is "throwing " to a spot. But he was way off and he cannot see the safety reading the play. They clearly watched tape on him.
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