All Activity
- Past hour
-
He was a bitch about leaving, fug him. Enjoy your lost money
-
It’s not a long term commitment…
-
Go on get you some, cuck
-
It’s 131 I think
-
In theory sure but A)thats never been done before and B) thats one expensive as hell back up
-
He doesn’t have to be a guaranteed starter for the entire year. We can bring in an adequate backup to put pressure on him. He has shown progression each year. I expect even better next season.
-
This feels a bit like 2022 when I had wanted to focus on building up the team even more, so that we could potentially make major moves in 2024. But we went in a different direction and it feels like it took this long just to get back where we were before. So yes, I kind of see Canales/Young as a bridge for something even better because the inconsistency with those two are maddening. But another year with those two would at least mean we can use the next offseason to plug in even more holes in the roster. At least then, if you end up replacing Canales/Young, then it's a far more attractive job and you're giving the next QB an actual team around them from the start.
-
Request: Can someone do a deep dive on our Defense?
*FreeFua* replied to CanadianCat's topic in Carolina Panthers
Damn, look who it is! Hope you’re doing good -
not saying you are wrong but do you have an example of this? would love to see the circumstances of a scenario like that.
-
If Bryce played like he did yesterday consistently I wouldn't have a problem with it. He's never going to be a guy who thrives off of insistently pushing the ball down the field or driving the ball into tight spots. He can still play well if he can make a few of those throws per game to keep the D honest it just honestly gives us a smaller margin of error as an overall offense and team versus most NFL QBs. It just is what it is. Bryce has to be almost perfect given his skill set and that's why he struggles with consistency. He just has a much smaller margin of error than a QB with better physical tools.
-
Put in a claim just so we don't have to see Moore in the lineup again.
-
Xavier Legette has a fan
-
I havent seen one poster downplay the two great throws he has made. You are trying to troll and argue for the sake of trolling and arguing and you literally just admitted to trolling which in a former life on here would get you banned. But good luck to you
-
yeah I dont agree with that. teams bring in competition all the time. picking up the 5th doesnt mean hes here forever, just buys the team some time. good thing is the decision makers on Mint St dont have to decide today.
-
Oh yeah definitely. If I he had a choice I think he would go there or Denver. I wouldn’t rule out SF
-
You are essentially tying yourself to Bryce as a starter for the next 2 years. What have you seen from him that would warrant this? Dave and Dan would be anchoring their careers to him and if its a perpetual 7ish win season in 26 and 27 then thats probably their ass
-
I found the below information on the web this morning. It's rather long, but it pretty much sums up Bryce's career (to date) with the Panthers. When he plays well, we play well. When he delivers a typical "Bryce Young Performance" the team struggles. The segment detailing the meaning of a his career YPA completely describes his tenure in Carolina ------ In the modern NFL, anything around 7.5 yards per attempt (YPA) or higher is considered good, and 8.0+ YPA is typically viewed as very good to excellent. YPA Benchmarks (Modern NFL) 6.5 and below — Poor (As of yesterday Young's career mark is 6.4) 6.6 to 7.2 — Below average to average 7.3 to 7.6 — Solid/Good 7.7 to 8.2 — Very good 8.3+ — Excellent / top-tier QB efficiency (Yesterday Young posted a mark of 10.3) Why 7.5+ is “good” League-wide YPA in recent seasons typically sits in the 7.1–7.3 range. So once a quarterback is consistently above ~7.5, he’s operating above league efficiency and generating chunk plays without excessive short passes. What a Sub-6.5 YPA Typically Means 1. Inefficient passing You’re gaining fewer yards per throw than the league norm (~7.1–7.3). This usually correlates with: Fewer explosive plays Struggling to sustain drives Lower scoring offenses YPA is one of the best simple efficiency indicators, so being under 6.5 usually means the passing game isn’t functioning well. 2. Overly conservative passing A low YPA often reflects: Too many checkdowns Short, low-risk throws Not pushing the ball downfield Play calling designed to avoid mistakes rather than gain yards This is common with rookie QBs, backups, or teams with poor pass protection. 3. Difficulty completing intermediate and deep throws Low YPA can mean: The QB isn’t hitting big-play throws Accuracy issues Arm strength limitations Receivers not getting separation 4. Poor supporting structure Sometimes it’s not the QB—low YPA can also result from: Weak offensive line (forcing quick dump-offs) Below-average receivers Predictable or safe play calling Injuries limiting the scheme 5. Usually correlates with losing Historically, teams with <6.5 YPA tend to have: Below-average offensive efficiency Poor 3rd-down conversion Lower points per game Losing records YPA correlates strongly with winning; sub-6.5 teams often finish near the bottom.
-
Those are absolutely fair criticisms. You are definitely a lot more reasonable with your assessment of Bryce than others on here. A lot of people here are majorly downplaying any good plays he makes and refuse to give any credit where it’s due. Some others are just spewing vitriol towards our quarterback and I find it pretty odd, especially when we’re winning
-
Put a claim in just so he doesn't end up in Tampa.
-
Member Statistics
