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!

     

Evan Silva and Josh Norris Panthers draft analysis


TheSpecialJuan

Recommended Posts

TEAM NEEDS

Silva's Analysis

Edge Rusher: Already a weakness after Ron Rivera’s disappointing Panthers Defense finished bottom six in sacks (35) and bottom two in quarterback hits (72), this need was exacerbated by Julius Peppers’ retirement, even if it was expected. Only RE Addison (45) was credited with more QB pressures than Peppers (28) by PFF last season. Carolina needs multiple reinforcements on the edge. Irvin, who turns 32 early in the season, is purely a veteran depth investment.

Offensive Line: Question marks exist at both tackle spots with Moton moving to left tackle full time and Williams coming off a lost season (knee). Left guard is wide open, and Paradis has struggled with injuries of late. Last year’s Panthers line played well early but faded down the stretch.

Secondary: Carolina’s most-obvious secondary hole is at safety, where Reid was re-signed but 38-year-old FS Mike Adams wasn’t retained after the Panthers allowed the NFL’s seventh-most yards per pass attempt (7.7). 2018 third-round pick Gaulden was mostly a non-factor as a rookie. Top CB Bradberry deserves an extension entering the last year of his deal. No. 2 quarterback behind Newton (shoulder surgery) and No. 2 running back are less-immediate but still-existing needs.

 

PANTHERS 2019 DRAFT PICKS

Norris' Options

1 (16). T Andre Dillard, Washington State - We will have more answers about the Panthers' likely starting offensive line after the draft. One option, the Panthers could draft an interior offensive lineman, have Moton play on the left side and have Daryl Williams back on the right. That is … worrisome, as the Panthers don’t have a tackle on their roster that has spent extended time on the left, and Moton has already shined at right tackle. Instead, Dillard would be a perfect selection due to his wealth of pass pro reps at left tackle, allowing Moton to stay on the right side, forcing a camp competition between Daryl Williams and Van Roten at guard.

2 (47). EDGE Christian Miller, Alabama - This might sound early to some, but hear me out. Pass rushers who move and bend like Miller often aren't available outside of round one. His flexibility as a pass rusher is really appealing. And for a team that will be more multiple on defense in 2019 (which I read as the team knowing they must manufacture pressure rather than rely on players who can win their individual matchup), Miller is a perfect fit due to his responsibilities on Alabama’s defense.

3 (77). DL Khalen Saunders, Western Illinois - Interior line is a low-key need for the Panthers. Dontari Poe offered little after signing a big deal. Vernon Butler never lived up to his first-round selection. Saunders has some legit flashes of interior disruption despite coming from a smaller program.

 

3 (100). S Marquise Blair, Utah - Stop reading this and go watch Blair’s game. He flies forward and plays outside the tackle box and inside in trash, often beating linebackers to the play. That type of upfield, aggressive style is something the Panthers clearly valued in Eric Reid. It adds to their identity on defense. This might move Gaulden to the slot.

4 (115). QB Jarrett Stidham, Auburn - I wouldn’t be surprised if the Panthers panic a bit at quarterback, selecting one earlier than expected. Pick No. 100 is feasible, especially if a player from the tier they want to choose from is selected in round two (Will Grier, perhaps). I don’t get it. I’d rather sign Josh Johnson than try to develop a non-round one quarterback.

5 (154). RB Alexander Mattison, Boise State - The Panthers had a talented backup in C.J. Anderson last year, they just refused to use him. I don’t know what style they are looking for in McCaffrey’s backup, but rather than select a bruiser, why not side with a player who also succeeds in passing situations? A player that doesn’t force you to change your style?

6 (187). WR KeeSean Johnson, Fresno State - It appears the Panthers view D.J. Moore as an outside receiver. I’d love for them to attack the position even earlier, maybe with Miles Boykin in round two. If Not, Johnson is the type of player who can create separation and sustain it out of the slot.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 minutes ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

TEAM NEEDS

Silva's Analysis

Edge Rusher: Already a weakness after Ron Rivera’s disappointing Panthers Defense finished bottom six in sacks (35) and bottom two in quarterback hits (72), this need was exacerbated by Julius Peppers’ retirement, even if it was expected. Only RE Addison (45) was credited with more QB pressures than Peppers (28) by PFF last season. Carolina needs multiple reinforcements on the edge. Irvin, who turns 32 early in the season, is purely a veteran depth investment.

Offensive Line: Question marks exist at both tackle spots with Moton moving to left tackle full time and Williams coming off a lost season (knee). Left guard is wide open, and Paradis has struggled with injuries of late. Last year’s Panthers line played well early but faded down the stretch.

Secondary: Carolina’s most-obvious secondary hole is at safety, where Reid was re-signed but 38-year-old FS Mike Adams wasn’t retained after the Panthers allowed the NFL’s seventh-most yards per pass attempt (7.7). 2018 third-round pick Gaulden was mostly a non-factor as a rookie. Top CB Bradberry deserves an extension entering the last year of his deal. No. 2 quarterback behind Newton (shoulder surgery) and No. 2 running back are less-immediate but still-existing needs.

 

PANTHERS 2019 DRAFT PICKS

Norris' Options

1 (16). T Andre Dillard, Washington State - We will have more answers about the Panthers' likely starting offensive line after the draft. One option, the Panthers could draft an interior offensive lineman, have Moton play on the left side and have Daryl Williams back on the right. That is … worrisome, as the Panthers don’t have a tackle on their roster that has spent extended time on the left, and Moton has already shined at right tackle. Instead, Dillard would be a perfect selection due to his wealth of pass pro reps at left tackle, allowing Moton to stay on the right side, forcing a camp competition between Daryl Williams and Van Roten at guard.

2 (47). EDGE Christian Miller, Alabama - This might sound early to some, but hear me out. Pass rushers who move and bend like Miller often aren't available outside of round one. His flexibility as a pass rusher is really appealing. And for a team that will be more multiple on defense in 2019 (which I read as the team knowing they must manufacture pressure rather than rely on players who can win their individual matchup), Miller is a perfect fit due to his responsibilities on Alabama’s defense.

3 (77). DL Khalen Saunders, Western Illinois - Interior line is a low-key need for the Panthers. Dontari Poe offered little after signing a big deal. Vernon Butler never lived up to his first-round selection. Saunders has some legit flashes of interior disruption despite coming from a smaller program.

3 (100). S Marquise Blair, Utah - Stop reading this and go watch Blair’s game. He flies forward and plays outside the tackle box and inside in trash, often beating linebackers to the play. That type of upfield, aggressive style is something the Panthers clearly valued in Eric Reid. It adds to their identity on defense. This might move Gaulden to the slot.

4 (115). QB Jarrett Stidham, Auburn - I wouldn’t be surprised if the Panthers panic a bit at quarterback, selecting one earlier than expected. Pick No. 100 is feasible, especially if a player from the tier they want to choose from is selected in round two (Will Grier, perhaps). I don’t get it. I’d rather sign Josh Johnson than try to develop a non-round one quarterback.

5 (154). RB Alexander Mattison, Boise State - The Panthers had a talented backup in C.J. Anderson last year, they just refused to use him. I don’t know what style they are looking for in McCaffrey’s backup, but rather than select a bruiser, why not side with a player who also succeeds in passing situations? A player that doesn’t force you to change your style?

6 (187). WR KeeSean Johnson, Fresno State - It appears the Panthers view D.J. Moore as an outside receiver. I’d love for them to attack the position even earlier, maybe with Miles Boykin in round two. If not, Johnson is the type of player who can create separation and sustain it out of the slot.

Pretty accurate on the needs and I like the draft too.  I'd like to take a higher upside receiver than Johnson in the 6th but complaining about a day 3 pick is really just nitpicking.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, Palmetto said:

Daniel Jeremiah 2019 NFL mock draft 3.0

Has us passing on Sweat  for Dilliard

 

9a196a0c-7be8-468f-9168-621a1bd4a694.png

I would not be a fan of this. You got to take Sweat if he's there. We have Moton and Williams at tackle, I'm not sure why the national guys don't get that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

TEAM NEEDS

Silva's Analysis

Edge Rusher: Already a weakness after Ron Rivera’s disappointing Panthers Defense finished bottom six in sacks (35) and bottom two in quarterback hits (72), this need was exacerbated by Julius Peppers’ retirement, even if it was expected. Only RE Addison (45) was credited with more QB pressures than Peppers (28) by PFF last season. Carolina needs multiple reinforcements on the edge. Irvin, who turns 32 early in the season, is purely a veteran depth investment.

Offensive Line: Question marks exist at both tackle spots with Moton moving to left tackle full time and Williams coming off a lost season (knee). Left guard is wide open, and Paradis has struggled with injuries of late. Last year’s Panthers line played well early but faded down the stretch.

Secondary: Carolina’s most-obvious secondary hole is at safety, where Reid was re-signed but 38-year-old FS Mike Adams wasn’t retained after the Panthers allowed the NFL’s seventh-most yards per pass attempt (7.7). 2018 third-round pick Gaulden was mostly a non-factor as a rookie. Top CB Bradberry deserves an extension entering the last year of his deal. No. 2 quarterback behind Newton (shoulder surgery) and No. 2 running back are less-immediate but still-existing needs.

 

PANTHERS 2019 DRAFT PICKS

Norris' Options

1 (16). T Andre Dillard, Washington State - We will have more answers about the Panthers' likely starting offensive line after the draft. One option, the Panthers could draft an interior offensive lineman, have Moton play on the left side and have Daryl Williams back on the right. That is … worrisome, as the Panthers don’t have a tackle on their roster that has spent extended time on the left, and Moton has already shined at right tackle. Instead, Dillard would be a perfect selection due to his wealth of pass pro reps at left tackle, allowing Moton to stay on the right side, forcing a camp competition between Daryl Williams and Van Roten at guard.

2 (47). EDGE Christian Miller, Alabama - This might sound early to some, but hear me out. Pass rushers who move and bend like Miller often aren't available outside of round one. His flexibility as a pass rusher is really appealing. And for a team that will be more multiple on defense in 2019 (which I read as the team knowing they must manufacture pressure rather than rely on players who can win their individual matchup), Miller is a perfect fit due to his responsibilities on Alabama’s defense.

3 (77). DL Khalen Saunders, Western Illinois - Interior line is a low-key need for the Panthers. Dontari Poe offered little after signing a big deal. Vernon Butler never lived up to his first-round selection. Saunders has some legit flashes of interior disruption despite coming from a smaller program.

 

3 (100). S Marquise Blair, Utah - Stop reading this and go watch Blair’s game. He flies forward and plays outside the tackle box and inside in trash, often beating linebackers to the play. That type of upfield, aggressive style is something the Panthers clearly valued in Eric Reid. It adds to their identity on defense. This might move Gaulden to the slot.

4 (115). QB Jarrett Stidham, Auburn - I wouldn’t be surprised if the Panthers panic a bit at quarterback, selecting one earlier than expected. Pick No. 100 is feasible, especially if a player from the tier they want to choose from is selected in round two (Will Grier, perhaps). I don’t get it. I’d rather sign Josh Johnson than try to develop a non-round one quarterback.

5 (154). RB Alexander Mattison, Boise State - The Panthers had a talented backup in C.J. Anderson last year, they just refused to use him. I don’t know what style they are looking for in McCaffrey’s backup, but rather than select a bruiser, why not side with a player who also succeeds in passing situations? A player that doesn’t force you to change your style?

6 (187). WR KeeSean Johnson, Fresno State - It appears the Panthers view D.J. Moore as an outside receiver. I’d love for them to attack the position even earlier, maybe with Miles Boykin in round two. If Not, Johnson is the type of player who can create separation and sustain it out of the slot.

I would actually be very happy with that draft except I think Chase Winovich if he makes it to us, more of the Clay Matthews type, and if not the 2nd round we may be able to get Parris Campbell— Christian Miller is probably available in the 3rd or worse— could be as good as Hightower but he’s got injury bugs—

i totally agree also getting a RB that is more similar to CMac instead of an opposite like we dumped last year. Get a guy that can rotate in and the offense doesn’t chance.

Khalen Sanders could actually be a draft steal. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, trueblade said:

I would not be a fan of this. You got to take Sweat if he's there. We have Moton and Williams at tackle, I'm not sure why the national guys don't get that.

Because national, and even it times, regional, and local reports don't know a thing. Only way I see us going OL is if (Sweat, Burns, and Ferrell) are all gone by 16. And with the teams ahead of us I would not be surprised if all three are still on the board. 

We need OL depth, and perhaps a Tackle to replace Williams if we can't retain him, but it is not a Day of the draft need after FA, if we'd missed on Williams, and Paradis, I'd lean towards OL. And considering the immediate need is interior OL / Tackle depth that can be resolved in Day 2, and also on the 3rd day as well. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, trueblade said:

I would not be a fan of this. You got to take Sweat if he's there. We have Moton and Williams at tackle, I'm not sure why the national guys don't get that.

We will see what Hurney does if that situation really happens. Personally the article made sense. Dillard being a true left tackle allows Moton on the right with injury bug Darryl being on backup for the year. 

Personally I don’t think Hurney chooses Dillard over Sweat, but never discount the important of protecting Cam.

we will see what happens. I’m good either way actually

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, JARROD said:

We will see what Hurney does if that situation really happens. Personally the article made sense. Dillard being a true left tackle allows Moton on the right with injury bug Darryl being on backup for the year. 

Personally I don’t think Hurney chooses Dillard over Sweat, but never discount the important of protecting Cam.

we will see what happens. I’m good either way actually

You don't pay a back up $6M in free agency. 

Moton / (Rookie / GVR) / Paradis / Turner / WIlliams

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, SetfreexX said:

Because national, and even it times, regional, and local reports don't know a thing. Only way I see us going OL is if (Sweat, Burns, and Ferrell) are all gone by 16. And with the teams ahead of us I would not be surprised if all three are still on the board. 

We need OL depth, and perhaps a Tackle to replace Williams if we can't retain him, but it is not a Day of the draft need after FA, if we'd missed on Williams, and Paradis, I'd lean towards OL. And considering the immediate need is interior OL / Tackle depth that can be resolved in Day 2, and also on the 3rd day as well. 

But it’s not what these writers or the fans think— it’s what the team thinks when the pick comes up.

if that ended up being the case, pass on Sweat and taking Dillard,... nothing anyone can do about it.

Personally I believe Sweat is a better prospect than Dillard but I’m not in a professional scouting role out there doing the job in person— and neither is anyone here.

we can only armchair what we like

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, SetfreexX said:

You don't pay a back up $6M in free agency. 

Moton / (Rookie / GVR) / Paradis / Turner / WIlliams

Maybe we do. 

Bring the best you can in Free Agency but set up for BPA for the draft. Just like Kuechly when we had Beason—- a lot of people grumbled—- we needed someone else more.

BPA

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

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


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • They traded away their 1st next year also to get James Pearce Jr. Really hope this blows up in the Falcons face. I don't care how it happens, I just want to win the division this year. Zero sympathy for other team's issues. And our pass rush looks like it needs all the help it can get.
    • I would have released him this season, tbh and worked with Christensen out there. 
    • 10/10. We're due for some good luck, and I think this team is much better than what we've had the last 2 seasons. Defensive injuries could derail us b/c our depth there is still questionable. Still worried about the pass rush getting pressure without blitzing. Pleasantly surprised by the secondary and run defense.  Dan Morgan has done a lot to resurrect this roster from the deplorable position Fitterer left it in by showing some scouting chops with hitting on these guys drafted in the later rounds or UDFAs. Lathan Ransom & Corey Thornton both look like they fit this scheme and the NFL isn't too big for them.  I'm as excited for the rookie trifecta of T-Mac, Scourton, and Princely as I can remember. On paper, this offense is the most talented since 2021, maybe 2017, and maybe 2015. None of that means this team will produce any better, but this team has offensive talent & depth like we have rarely had in team history. If you don't believe me, go Google it. We've had some awful offensive collections overall in many years, to varying degrees mitigated by superstar talents like Steve Smith, Christian Mccaffrey, or Cam Newton.  I honestly think the collective offensive talent in 2025 may be better, but Cam was so otherworldly in 2015 & 2017 that he covered any flaws. Seriously, though, Cam doesnt get enough love for 2017. I think that may have been his best season. In general, Cam doesn't get enough respect IMHO. Both in college and in the NFL, Cam took teams that without him would have had no chance and won. True definition of a guy who elevated his team. To be clear, I am in no way am I saying this team will be better than 2017 or 2015. My point is that the offensive talent is there on offense if Bryce can unlock it.  I've been a Bryce supporter, but there are no excuses not to perform with this group. This isn't the disaster we gave him in 2023 or a new scheme like in 2024 where I think he hadn't mentally removed from his rookie season to start. I dont know how you couldnt be excited about that. And we still compete in a division that isn't insurmountable. I got got in 2023 like most of us in buying into the team propaganda, but in general, I think I'm pretty realistic about the team. I knew in my heart we would be bad last year. I wasnt expecting the defense to be that bad or Bryce to start off that poorly, but I had no expectations whatsoever for making the playoffs. And I genuinely think we will be competitive all year this season. I think we win 8-9 games and compete for the division. I think the ceiling is 11 wins, and the floor is 7. The good news is after next week, we will all be proven right or proven wrong. Keep Pounding!
×
×
  • Create New...