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Carolina Panthers Mock Draft Rounds 1 - 3


Jeremy Igo
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the fact at 30 there is a chance at drafting Hunter .. Should be a reality check for you.. Ebron was a top 10 pick ... Nobody at 30 had a chance to even consider drafting him.. Think about that before posting Pawned or drafting grades from 2 different drafts..lol

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Here is my 3rd mock

1)  Kevin Dodd, DE, Clemson  - As far as Gman kepts telling us BPA, I still do not believe him and I believe he still drafts for Need w/ BPA in mind. I wanted  Jason Spriggs, OT, Indiana   but I can't bring myself to picking him. Plus, Dodd is a perfect replacement for Big Money long term. 

2)  Tyler Boyd, WR, Pittsburgh  - This pick is incredible tough, as there are many offense players that could be had on this pick. From  Hunter Henry,  Derrick Henry, or your flavor of Slot WRs. This pick will depend on the Panthers brass of talent positions. There is a possibility of a DT, but I think Cam will get some help with this pick. The possiblity of moving up on this pick is in play, but I'm starting to think that might happen in the first rd.

3)  Sheldon Day, DL, Notre Dame  - 

Edited by Panic
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33 minutes ago, Panic said:

Here is my 3rd mock

1)  Kevin Dodd, DE, Clemson  - As far as Gman kepts telling us BPA, I still do not believe him and I believe he still drafts for Need w/ BPA in mind. I wanted  Jason Spriggs, OT, Indiana   but I can't bring myself to picking him. Plus, Dodd is a perfect replacement for Big Money long term. 

2)  Tyler Boyd, WR, Pittsburgh  - This pick is incredible tough, as there are many offense players that could be had on this pick. From  Hunter Henry,  Derrick Henry, or your flavor of Slot WRs. This pick will depend on the Panthers brass of talent positions. There is a possibility of a DT, but I think Cam will get some help with this pick. The possiblity of moving up on this pick is in play, but I'm starting to think that might happen in the first rd.

3)  Sheldon Day, DL, Notre Dame  - 

Other then the WR'S I like your draft better..

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10 minutes ago, Promethean Forerunner said:

Pawned? What are you, 9?

You talk like a pre-teen. At any rate, who cares if he came from the SEC. It's the most overrated conference in college football. There's been more busts from SEC than any other conference in the last five years, especially in the first round.

Again, he's average. Perhaps slightly above average but he's not first round worthy. This is the weakest TE talent pool in quite some time and you want to draft a guy who doesn't even stand above his peers from that class because he played for the SEC and did not drop a pass all season long?

Ha!

when I talk about SEC im talking about defense, and no its not overrated who are the national champs? Are you  ACC fan dont lie? 

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44 minutes ago, WOW!! said:

the fact at 30 there is a chance at drafting Hunter .. Should be a reality check for you.. Ebron was a top 10 pick ... Nobody at 30 had a chance to even consider drafting him.. Think about that before posting Pawned or drafting grades from 2 different drafts..lol

Ok caption hero, Not all top picks pan out  where there drafted & IMO Ebron hasn't produced  what  a top 10 pick should. He is kind of smiliar to Olsen maybe not a better athlete, but makes it ups in run blocking wasn't Greg Olsen like 31st pick. I am basing my argument based on the eye test & measureables. Another good example is Kawaan Short, If we do get him in the 31st pick or 2nd round it just means we got the better value for our pick. 

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17 minutes ago, The_Rainmaker said:

Ok caption hero, Not all top picks pan out  where there drafted & IMO Ebron hasn't produced  what  a top 10 pick should. He is kind of smiliar to Olsen maybe not a better athlete, but makes it ups in run blocking wasn't Greg Olsen like 31st pick. I am basing my argument based on the eye test & measureables. Another good example is Kawaan Short, If we do get him in the 31st pick or 2nd round it just means we got the better value for our pick. 

qrkx5messu0hweahnzr6.png

 

We were talking about as draft prospects.. So ..... You bringing up anything other is a little off..

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Just now, The_Rainmaker said:

And all draft prospect are kind of compared to players in the NFL. 

No ... let me type this slowly ...

I said Ebron was a better draft prospect you disagreed and did the pre teen ownege..Thing..

Ebron was a top 10 pick.. Hunter won't be close to that..  You are wrong. 

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2 minutes ago, WOW!! said:

No ... let me type this slowly ...

I said Ebron was a better draft prospect you disagreed and did the pre teen ownege..Thing..

Ebron was a top 10 pick.. Hunter won't be close to that..  You are wrong. 

He was a better draft prospect because team overreached him & his  production shows that. Far as prospect rating its near identical. 

Screen Shot 2016-03-21 at 8.10.54 PM.png

Screen Shot 2016-03-21 at 6.07.03 PM.png

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53 minutes ago, The_Rainmaker said:

He was a better draft prospect because team overreached him & his  production shows that. Far as prospect rating its near identical. 

Screen Shot 2016-03-21 at 8.10.54 PM.png

Screen Shot 2016-03-21 at 6.07.03 PM.png

And nobody is looking to overreach for Hunter.. Plus it's hard to overreach when most draft analyst had him as a top 15 pick.. Again Nobody has Hunter as a top 15 pick.. please stop posting these stupid draft grades .. They change every year and if we actual compare .. Some of these stiffs have the same grade as HOFs.. Stop trying to use a this as your argument.. Basic facts.. 1 was considered a top 15 pick 1 isn't.. You're wrong..

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"" style="border: 0px; vertical-align: bottom;">

 

QB5

BLAINE GABBERT

QB  MISSOURI

Photo of Blaine Gabbert
 
 
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GRADE
8.49?
  • 4.62 SEC
    Top Performer
  • 33.5 INCH
  • 120.0 INCH
    Top Performer
  • 6.84 SEC
    Top Performer
  • 4.26 SEC
BLUE STAR  =  TOP PERFORMER
  • 6'4"HEIGHT
  • 33"ARM LENGTH
  • 234LBS.WEIGHT
  • 10"HANDS
 

OVERVIEW

Gabbert has it all physically, but has a long way to go before he's ready to lead an NFL offense. He played in a spread offense and will have to learn to take snaps under center and make progressions in the pocket. However, he is a smart football player that seems to understand coverages and he has the arm strength to fit the ball into tight windows. He is also very mobile and elusive in the pocket and shows the ability to make plays with his feet. Overall, Gabbert's tools will be too alluring for a team without a quarterback, and he will likely be a top-10 pick, maybe even the first QB off the board.

ANALYSIS

STRENGTHS

 Gabbert has prototypical size and excellent speed for the position. Shows the ability to make the right pre-snap reads. Possesses a quick release and has the arm strength to make all the throws. Well-balanced passer that rarely misses on short-to-intermediate throws. Extremely mobile to extend plays and fast enough to move the chains. Vocal leader and hard worker.

WEAKNESSES

 Trusts his arm too much and puts the ball in harm's way too often. Does not show good touch on passes over the middle and needs to learn to take a little velocity off certain throws. Struggles to throw an accurate deep ball. Late feeling pressure at times which neutralizes his very good mobility. Will need to learn a pro style offense.
 
 
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8 hours ago, Promethean Forerunner said:

Yes, it's overrated. Deal with it.

You still didnt answer the question, I beleive your the one who needs to deal with fact that SEC is a pretty darn good conference , everyconferene has busted players time to time but there is nothing overrated about the SEC.

JyObZQv.jpg

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    • all offense.  OT. TE. G. in rd 1 to 3    Rd 1 19. Carolina Panthers: Blake Miller, OT, Clemson   OFFENSIVE TACKLE  6Grade: 1st–2nd rd. Blake Miller Clemson Has the physical traits, football IQ and toughness that NFL teams will bet on every time. A former high-level wrestler, four-year starter and team captain, Miller plays with great consistency and has the football IQ to make up for his penchant for playing tall. He may never dominate, but he could start for a decade.   Overview Hometown: Strongsville, OH Birthday: February 25, 2004 Age: 22.2 Jersey: No. 78 High School: Strongsville Year: Fourth-year senior A four-year starter at Clemson, Miller was a mainstay at right tackle in former offensive coordinator Garrett Riley’s balanced gap/zone scheme. Highly recruited out of the Cleveland area, he earned a starting job from day one at Clemson and was a model of consistency for a mostly inconsistent college offense. He started all 54 games the past four seasons (most consecutive starts by a non-specialist in school history) and set the Clemson record for career offensive snaps played (3,778). Miller has a good mix of on-field talent and intangibles. In pass protection, he is quick off the ball, with the range to mirror rushers up the arc and a surprisingly sturdy anchor to answer different types of rushers. Miller also shows his foot quickness and physical demeanor to move bodies in the run game. He isn’t a great bender, though, and savvy NFL rushers will find some success using his aggressive techniques against him. His coaches rave about his smarts and football character (NFL scout: “I think he missed one practice in four years. The thought of letting down his coaches and teammates kills him.”). Dane’s takeawa Miller has an upright play style that could lead to issues vs. NFL competition, but he has the type of profile (physical traits, football IQ, competitive toughness) that teams will bet on every time. He should compete for a starting right tackle role as a rookie Combine stats Hover any column header to see its definition. STAT HT   WT   HAND   ARM   WING   BP   10   20   40   VJ   BJ   SS   3C   Combine 6′63/4 317 93/4 341/4 837/8 32 1.75 2.92 5.04 32 9′5 DNP DNP Pro Day 6′65/8 318 93/4 343/8 823/4 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 4.65 7.75 Note: Combine: Limited workout (choice). Strengths Prototypical size — broad shoulders, outstanding arm length and athletic build Urgent in his setup and the way he operates (Duke edge rusher Wesley Williams said Miller was the best blocker he faced in 2025) Sets with a wide, sturdy base to withstand bull rushers down his middle Quick to respond and find balance after first contact in pass pro Has play strength to press rushers off him and keep them at bay Thudding, decisive hands as a run blocker; able to generate movement on drive blocks Shows off athleticism as a puller and on the move Voted a senior captain; member of the leadership council (NFL scout: “Love his focused mindset. Doesn’t cheat himself or his teammates.”) Remarkable toughness and consistently plays through bumps and bruises (broken wrist during 2025 spring practices required surgery, but he missed only one practice) Weaknesses Upright posture and inconsistent technique in pass protection Delivers adequate pop but doesn’t have overwhelming power to create knockback Can be late to draw hands from holster, opening his chest to rushers Gets caught leaning; requires a half-beat to get back in position NFL rushers will find some success setting him up Would like to see better control on perimeter to make it harder on defenders to avoid him Almost all (96.5 percent) of college snaps came at right tackle — lingering questions about his position flex   Rd 2  51. Carolina Panthers: Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt   Eli Stowers Vanderbilt A mismatch-creating, explosive pass-catcher who must show he can block at the NFL level.     Overview Hometown: Denton, TX Birthday: April 15, 2003 Age: 23 Jersey: No. 9 High School: Guyer Year: Fifth-year senior A two-year starter at Vanderbilt (three-year starter overall), Stowers was a detached tight end (70.7 percent of snaps in the slot) in offensive coordinator Tim Beck’s run-heavy scheme. A highly recruited quarterback out of high school, Stowers began at Texas A&M and then New Mexico State but suffered multiple shoulder injuries, which forced him to change positions (Stowers: “I could never throw the same.”). With Diego Pavia as his quarterback for that transition, Stowers’ receiving production improved each of the past three seasons, including 769 receiving yards in 2025, tops among FBS tight ends and earning him All-America honors and the Mackey Award. An above-average athlete for the position, Stowers attacks defenders’ techniques and uses his quickness to consistently win one-on-one on slants, digs or seam balls. Because of the quarterback and scheme at Vanderbilt, he was asked to use his burst for quick windows and is unproven in other areas, although he has the speed to be more of a deep threat in a pro-style scheme. He delivered mixed results when asked to attack in traffic, but he has reliable hands and fluid adjustment skills. As a blocker, he has questionable physicality and sustain strength but competes when sealing or walling off defenders. Dane’s takeaway Stowers will need to prove himself as a serviceable blocker at the NFL level, but he is explosive as a pass catcher, and I love the way he maximizes his catch radius. He has mismatch-creating potential and can eventually develop into an NFL starter. Combine stats Hover any column header to see its definition. Scroll right to see more metrics. STATHTWTHANDARMWINGBP102040VJBJSS3C Combine6′33/423993/4325/8793/4DNP1.592.624.51451/211′3DNPDNP Pro Day6′31/224291/2327/879DNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNP Note: Combine: Limited workout (choice). Strengths Broad-shouldered frame, with adequate bulk and room to add mass “Freaks List” athlete, which is reflected on the tape and in testing Graceful speed to attack down the seam or after the catch Fluid route runner who can sink and cut on command Quarterback background is an asset when reading coverages and finding windows Solid ball skills, especially for a former quarterback (3.9 percent career drop rate) Frequently widens catch radius to make proper adjustments and bail out his quarterback NFL scouts say he logs “countless hours” at the facility and wants to be coached “harder than the rest of the team” Team captain; driven attitude made him a leader at Vandy Led FBS tight ends in 2025 in receiving yards per game (64.1) Weaknesses Lean muscle structure — more linear body type than what some teams prefer Competes but has marginal play strength as a run blocker (21 percent of snaps came inline) Light in the pants and likely will never overwhelm defenders at point of attack Not consistently efficient blocking backside on the move Can do a better job selling route movements with his eyes/shoulders Want to see him be more aggressive finishing on the ball in traffic Durable after moving to tight end at Vandy but had two key injuries before that: injured right (throwing) shoulder in high school, then tore labrum during freshman year, which required postseason surgery (Jan. 2022); torn PCL and meniscus in left knee in 2019 state championship game, which required surgery (Jan. 2020).         rd 3 83. Carolina Panthers: Jalen Farmer, G, Kentucky   Jalen Farmer Kentucky An athletic boulder who projects as a starter in the right scheme.   Overview Hometown: Covington, GA Birthday: January 6, 2004 Age: 22.3 Jersey: No. 52 High School: Eastside Year: Fourth-year junior A two-year starter at Kentucky, Farmer lined up at right guard in former offensive coordinator Bush Hamdan’s balanced scheme with gap-run principles. He struggled to see the field in two seasons in Gainesville, but he got in better shape after transferring to Lexington and things started to click. He started all 24 games at right guard the past two seasons and impressed during Senior Bowl week. Farmer has outstanding size, play strength and presence. Using his long arms and leg drive, he can fit up and dump defenders in the run game. He has a stout anchor and heavy punch in pass protection and is quick to replace his hands and recover when he’s initially beaten. His pad-level issues pop up more than you’d like, and the nasty flashes need to become more consistent. Dane’s takeaway Farmer is an athletic boulder in pass protection and a bulldozer as a run blocker. He should continue to ascend with pro coaching. He has NFL starting-caliber ability, especially if he lands with a team that specializes in a downhill, smash-mouth run game. ADVERTISEMENT Combine stats Hover any column header to see its definition. STATHTWTHANDARMWINGBP102040VJBJSS3C Combine6′47/831291/4341/4825/8DNP1.752.884.93279′0DNPDNP Pro DayDNP320DNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNPDNP Note: Combine: Limited workout (choice). Strengths Boasts an NFL body — broad chest, thick core and long arms Strong at the point and flashes a finishing demeanor Drives his legs in the run game to generate jarring power at contact Functional mobility to wall off defenders and execute pulls Stout as a pass blocker to gobble up bull rushers Can be caught leaning out front but recovery skills are impressive Forceful hands to put dents into defenders when he connects Flagged just once in 2025 (holding vs. Eastern Michigan) Served as a team captain in four games in 2025 (NFL scout: “Matured and took better care of his body after transferring.”) Started all 24 games the past two seasons Weaknesses Pops upright too often at the snap, with inconsistent sink Can be caught oversetting and crossed up by quickness Late with his hands — would like to see him tighten his carriage Tardy working through slow-developing pressures and games Can do better job refitting in the run game when he doesn’t initially establish leverage Inconsistencies redirecting and adjusting in space will be more noticeable vs. NFL athletes Position flexibility questions — 100 percent of college snaps came at right guard ADVERTISEMENT College stats Hover any column header to see its definition. YEARSCHOOLGPGSPOS 2022Florida20— 2023Florida20— 2024Kentucky1212RG 2025Kentucky1212RG 2022 Enrolled May 2022 2024 Enrolled January 2024 Background Jalen Farmer, who has a brother (Tristan), was born and raised in the Atlanta area by his mother (Kartella Fuller) and father (Shaun Farmer). While growing up in a football family, he was “always around” the game and had several cousins who played. Farmer started playing at age 7 and was a defensive lineman and linebacker before moving exclusively to the offensive line. Farmer enrolled at Eastside High School in Covington, Ga., which is the alma mater of NFL players Sheldon Rankins and Eric Stokes. He was a four-year letterman on varsity and started 11 games as a sophomore left guard in 2019. Farmer returned as the starting left guard as a junior in 2020 and helped Eastside to 10 wins. As a senior, he played left guard and defensive tackle and was named 2021 Class 5A Region 8 Lineman of the Year. Farmer posted 50 tackles, five tackles for loss, two sacks and one forced fumble as a senior, while adding a 1-yard rushing touchdown. He also lettered in track at Eastside, setting personal bests of 33 feet, 5 inches in the shot put and 61-4 in the discus.  A three-star recruit, Farmer was the 31st-ranked interior offensive lineman in the 2022 class and the No. 73 recruit in Georgia. After he became a starter as a sophomore, he picked up his first scholarship offer the following spring, from Georgia Tech (May 2020). Before his senior season, Farmer added an offer from Florida and committed to former head coach Dan Mullen, who then was fired a few months later. In the weeks before signing day, Farmer received a late flurry of offers from Alabama, Auburn, Kentucky and Mississippi State. But thanks to a strong push from new Gators head coach Billy Napier, Farmer stayed committed to his first choice. He was the 13th-ranked recruit in Napier’s first class in Gainesville. After two seasons buried on the depth chart, Farmer entered the transfer portal in December 2023 and committed to Kentucky.  He elected to skip his senior year and declare for the NFL Draft. Farmer accepted a late invite to the Senior Bowl. ADVERTISEMENT    
    • Unfortunately you just can't get through to some of these folks. The most successful season in Panthers history our #1 WR was Ted Ginn Jr who had just as many bone headed drops as he did highlight touchdowns. We already have the highest paid OL in the league two years running. We need a balanced roster more than anything else clearly.
    • https://pantherswire.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/panthers/2026/04/06/nfl-draft-trade-rumors-panthers-chargers-quentin-johnston/89484524007/?link_source=ta_first_comment&taid=69d47a425bd91b00016ecfb1&utm_campaign=trueanthem&utm_medium=trueanthem&utm_source=facebook Saw this hypothetical trade down scenario on Panthers wire where they had us dropping from 19 to 22 trade with the chargers which also knitted us the addition of Quinton Johnston personally I would take this deal because the players available at 22 and 19 are largely the same you could pick up maybe a tackle or even one of those defensive tackles that we liked like banks.  Grabbing a wide receiver who could probably replace legate and be a deep ball threat would be just what the doctor ordered in my opinion Yes he's kind of a reclamation project similar to legette but I think he's shown he can play and has more big game moments than legette. I think it would be like getting two for the price of one really allowing us to feel more holes getting a wide receiver and another spot filled for nothing but two or three draft spots.
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