Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

We gave up, they never did


ladypanther

Recommended Posts

We laughed (and cringed) when the players (and coaches) talked of the possibility of the playoffs during the losing streak.

 

If I remember correctly there was talk that Rivera had lost the team.

 

Well, it looks like that was wrong.  The players kept saying the right things.  Cam was losing but not moping. Rivera & Co made changes and kept he team focused.  They believed.  We did not.

 

Tailg8or has an amazing post about the opportunity this team has.   If you have not read it you must.

 

Our fan status was tested this season and most of us failed. Regardless of what happens Saturday I am very proud of this team and I hope I have learned from them.

 

This team has dealt with a lot of adversity.  I am not just talking about the football Greg Hardy type.  Start with DeAngelo losing his mother. His love for her and his devotion to working to find a cure for breast cancer has changed the NFL. It must be do hard for him now.  He keeps a smile on his face.

 

Greg Olsen's son...gee..had an additional unexpected heart surgery.  Greg spent nights at the hospital and days at practice. An wow did he show up on game days.  How he did it I cannot imagine.  He did this quietly, never talked about what he and his family were going through. Seeing TJ sitting on Sirr Purr's lap before the pounding of the drum Sunday was very,very touching.

 

Charles Johnson is dealing with the terminal illness of his grandmother.

 

And then there is The Car Accident.

 

Lose the locker room???? How in the hell did Rivera ever get their attention???

 

This is a team of extremely high character people.  Players and coach.  They deserve great fans.  I hope we work to live up to that.

 

I think the Panthers will win Saturday.  These guys have believed all along.  Should be easy for me now, right? And, well,  if that does not work out...... I am still glad I am a Panther fan.  This team has taught me this season to be a real fan.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

let's be honest, the only reason we even get to have this conversation is because the second place team in the NFCS couldn't muster a better record than 7-8-1. the only reason we're counting these hardships as memorable bumps in the road instead of kicks while we're down is because this division was historically pathetic.

 

but nobody could help that, and whether or not the team deserved our support before is irrelevant. they deserve it now. i can't fuging wait for saturday.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Can't question this teams toughness.

There is a laundry list of reasons the guys could have packed it in, but they never did.

So many great examples of the keep pounding mentality. I have to think Sam would be proud of the character of this team.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7-8-1 or 8-8-1 don't really mean anything. The Seahawks were once 4-3. It's all about what you've done lately. The Panthers are 5-0 and go against a 6-0 Seahawks team. That's how I see the game.

 

The NFL is a short season so you don't get the opportunity to develop as a team throughout a season. That's why we've seen teams with mediocre records like the Giants and Cardinals go all the way to the Super Bowl. All you have to do is develop and play your best football at the right time. Last year we peaked before the playoffs. This year we're right where we want to be.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I never gave up but that's because I want to win even when we are eliminated and every win costs us a draft place because winning is what matters. All those late season runs to 6-10 and 7-9 have mattered and haven't hurt our drafts. In fact we had less pressure to take the right players simply because they fell to us.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Per Adam Schefter: https://x.com/AdamSchefter/status/1920523706624823739 Expected, but just want to rub it in here.
    • I try to keep up and project the roster with color-coded charts.  You can see priorities and gauge who has the best chance of making the roster--you can see the priorities as well.  Here, Yellow is a 2025 draft pick, green is an undrafted free agent, and orange is a free agent. The depth chart will obviously change and I am not sure about roles (positions in all cases), so that is not the real issue at this time, but yellows and oranges show how the team focused on which aspects of the defense:     In the front 5, there were 3 draft picks, 3 free agents (not including players we re-signed), and two undrafted players signed. In the back 6, there was 1 draft pick and 2 free agents (LB, S), and four undrafted free agents. The undrafted free agents are always long shots, but by identifying them, you can tell which longshots might make the roster.
    • The rise of analytics in sports goes back to the use of sabermetrics in baseball.  The ironic thing is that the whole point of Bill James work was to objectively figure out each players contribution to to a team's wins throughout the season.  This is possible in baseball because each at bat is essentially a 1v1 with an objective outcome.  Applying statistical averages also works a lot better with hundreds of plate appearances over 162 games a year. PFF grades plays subjectively, and then puts them into buckets.  They then create different statistics based on those buckets.  That's all well and good and I'm not saying it's useless.  But calling it analytics like it's some kind of objective science is a far cry from what is actually going on.
×
×
  • Create New...