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!

     

One big silver lining will come from last night's officiating disaster


Sam Mills Fan

Recommended Posts

Officials are really going to overcorrect for Cam for at least the next few weeks if not the whole season. If a Niner so much as breathes on Cam in 9 days, they're going to throw the flag. Now we could probably beat the Niners with Joe Webb playing QB and I doubt any Niner gets much pressure on Cam anyway, but just watch. Refs have a long history of overcorrecting worse than Gano's second field goal try to win the game last night when they have egg on their faces.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Toolbox said:

Yeah cam has taken bad beatings and last year not even one personal foul called in his favor.. why change it now??

The hits hadn't happened in a massively watched nationally televised game like this before. Everyone is talking about the no-call killshots in the media today.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Toolbox said:

Yeah cam has taken bad beatings and last year not even one personal foul called in his favor.. why change it now??

Because last year it wasn't on national tv in the only game that has been played done to the reigning league MVP by the defending Super Bowl champions and therefore has dominated headlines for 24 hours.

That said, I doubt anything is done becauseits ultimately the officials who are at fault and they get every excuse imaginable said for them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, ItsNotGonnaBeAlright said:

Because last year it wasn't on national tv in the only game that has been played done to the reigning league MVP by the defending Super Bowl champions and therefore has dominated headlines for 24 hours.

That said, I doubt anything is done becauseits ultimately the officials who are at fault and they get every excuse imaginable said for them.

 

4 minutes ago, Sam Mills Fan said:

The hits hadn't happened in a massively watched nationally televised game like this before. Everyone is talking about the no-call killshots in the media today.

 

Sad it took a national game to even talk about this now..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, that's what I've been telling myself - starting out 0-1 and having Cam take a beating will be worth it in the long run IF it means he gets fair protection from the refs moving forward.  I'm not at all convinced that will actually happen though.

I am glad though that it happened on primetime national TV and the media has really jumped on it and not just the sports media.  This is getting pretty widespread attention and they're really taking the NFL to task for their hypocrisy.  If anything is going to get Cam fair treatment, this is it.  If it doesn't happen after this, it'll never happen.

It's insane to me that we're having to hope and beg that our MVP QB actually gets protection from the NFL after watching guys like Manning, Brees, and Brady get coddled for years.  If those guys simply take a hard hit, it's a penalty.  It doesn't have to be technically illegal, if they just plain take a hard, legal hit there's a good chance a flag will fly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

33 minutes ago, Mr. Scot said:

I'm not absolutely convinced we can count on that.

I sure as hell ain't convinced.

They've been allowing him to take a beating for 27 straight games now with no calls, why should they all of a sudden think they're wrong now?

The NFL gave us their "Oops!" today by deigning to allow us to know that, yes, Brandon Marshall's hit was cheap as fug.  They may think that's plenty.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • To understand why a player with all the tools to be successful in the NFL would bust is remarkably difficult.  While Isaiah Simmons has had a disappointing career to this point, there is a reason he is back in Carolina.  Yes, special teams are important and he does well in that role.  My intent is to examine in what situations he has been successful and develop a theory about the reason he might have experienced success in some capacity vs. the times he has flopped.  Is he a CB?  A Safety?  A LB?  An Edge?  No.  He has been all of them at some point and has yet to settle into a position.  I think the Panthers will do the same thing.  I think I know (besides special teams) how they might use him effectively on defense.  First, think of Simmons as a unicorn. Create a position that he does not have to fit into, but one that fits into his skill sets.  I think we need to designate him as our Big Nickel, and then we need to modify that position into something of a rover, for lack of a better term.  He is a hybrid--but lets not make him the hybrid, let's make the position the hybrid.  Isaiah Simmons has been most effective in the NFL as a Big Nickel and on special teams, specifically in sub-packages where he can leverage his elite speed (4.39 40-yard dash) without the constant physical demands of a traditional linebacker.  A big nickel is a third safety, designed to match up with the big TEs, basically, and provide better run support.   Based on what I have read, Simmons is slowed when he has to know the Xs and Os and the position is focused on complex interpretations that may require adjustments in certain situations, etc.  He excels in special teams, for example, because he is turned loose and he simple reacts to what he sees in front of him, it seems.   I think the Panthers may create a big nickel role that turns him loose on defense.       Simmons has been in the league for about 6 years and has been issued five playbooks.  His position has shifted in an effort to find where he could best fit in.  Getting back to basics, here is a chart that demonstrates how much more effective he was as a big nickel than a traditional LB, that required more reading blocking and run game schemes:     Last season, Ransom was the big nickel, the Panthers are high on him and not looking to replace him by any means.  It is my theory that Ransom will be used alongside Moehrig in some situations.  He can also provide depth behind Moehrig.  It is also my opinion that Simmons may not be the ideal fit for every situation involving the big nickel.  Simmons could be used, for example, as a blitzing big nickel who can cover the flat and stuff the run, while Ransom may be the better lock-down TE coverage guy--I dunno.  But I see Simmons playing a bigger role on D.   Here is a comparison between Ransom and Simmons: Lathan Ransom: A 2025 fourth-round pick, he is viewed as a starter candidate to provide security opposite safety Tre'von Moehrig, with the Panthers high on his potential. Isaiah Simmons: Recently re-signed (March 2026), Simmons has thrived as a special teams ace but is considered a prime candidate to develop into a big nickel linebacker/safety hybrid due to his unique versatility. Context: The Panthers' defense under Ejiro Evero requires safety depth, and both players bring different strengths to that position group. Throw in Nick Scott, a pure free safety who just signed, it is starting to get a bit clearer.  Does this mean we will not draft a S?  Not at all.  Who do we have to give depth at FS?  Let's hope its Scott. It is my view that Simmons needs to find one or two things he does well on this defense and focus on that and not everything else.  What are his natural talents (6'4" 238 and runs sub 4.4--who does that?  Can you not make that work for you?)  This tells me the problem is mental.  Too many cooks in the kitchen.  Instead of asking him to do everything behind the DL, let's get him to do one thing that aligns with his skill set and history of success.  A situational big nickel/rover seems to be a fit.    
    • Who had us getting arguably the best receiver in the draft last April? Dan believes in sticking with his board. That's what the Panthers will do. It's that simple.
×
×
  • Create New...