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!

     

Fitterer liked Horn’s “edge”


ncfan
 Share

Recommended Posts

https://www.si.com/.amp/nfl/2021/04/30/nfl-draft-day-2-news-notes-patriots-mac-jones-eagles-devonta-smith?__twitter_impression=true
 

The Panthers’ spot was another pivotal one in how the rest of the top 20 played out. Carolina went into the night with three guys in mind: Horn, Oregon OT Penei Sewell and Fields. My sense is that Sewell would’ve been the pick had he been there. And since he wasn’t, really it came down to Horn vs. Fields. Horn, the No. 1 guy on the Panthers’ board as they went on the clock, wound up edging out Fields and a couple others, for a number of reasons. One, they needed a starting corner, and thought Horn could clearly be a No. 1. Two, the receivers in the NFC South only highlighted that need in 2020, and probably would’ve again without reinforcements at the positions, with the team’s third-down defense a legit weakness last year. And three, Horn’s an immediate impact pick, and they didn’t want to force more resources into the quarterback position. So Horn was the pick, and as a bonus, the belief is that, in a nice-guy locker room, Horn will bring a little of the sort of edge that GM Scott Fitterer saw in the secondaries he worked with in Seattle.

  • Pie 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, therealmjl said:

yes please.

i like my corners to have that edge

What do you mean?
Richard Sherman never talked smack because he went to Stanford.

Deion Sanders?  Sang in the church choir and was embarrassed about his girl voice.

Aquib Talib?  I think he is a mute.

Josh Norman?  Wanted to make friends, that's all.

 

Seriously, I hope that was not on the top of Fitterer's list--this aint Seattle,and that may have been personalities and not a type.

 

  • Poo 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dude definitely has a lot of fight in him. He plays angry and with something to prove, but he's also very much in control. 

Yes, he got a bit handsy and got a few flags, but he'll frustrate the hell out of whoever he covers and control them on the field. He won't get much in the way of numbers, but that's because the QB won't have much of any windows to throw into so the QB will just have to find another option to throw to.

He'll get picked on and tested early on, but QBs will learn to throw at someone else.

I don't worry about him covering any player, especially any big receiver. He's up to it and he'll shut them down.

  • Pie 1
  • Flames 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Adb6368 said:

There’s a fine like between earl thomas, all-pro Seahawks safety, and early Thomas, nuclear bomb locker room destroyer. 

let’s hope everyone stays on the right side of that line 

There isn't a fine line between Horn and Thomas though. He seems a prototypical teammate with a pro approach

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, rayzor said:

Dude definitely has a lot of fight in him. He plays angry and with something to prove, but he's also very much in control. 

Yes, he got a bit handsy and got a few flags, but he'll frustrate the hell out of whoever he covers and control them on the field. He won't get much in the way of numbers, but that's because the QB won't have much of any windows to throw into so the QB will just have to find another option to throw to.

He'll get picked on and tested early on, but QBs will learn to throw at someone else.

I don't worry about him covering any player, especially any big receiver. He's up to it and he'll shut them down.

Well said.  I understand why people wanted someone else, but CB was the most glaring hole on the roster after we traded for Darnold.  Whether on not he is the answer is to be determined.

Still, it became Twilight Zone-eque continually watching the defense not be able to get off the field on 3rd downs last year.

A few stops would have made a difference even last year as many close games as we were in.

Jalen Ramsey and Aquib Talib both gave their endorsements for what it's worth.  If Horn can play like those guys, we will never regret this pick

  • Pie 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

As rather unpopular as this pick seems to have been, it is perhaps the pick that will improve the Panthers more than Slater would have.  And if Darnold balls, the Fields pick just becomes a player we trade to another team for the same value in 2-3 years.  It takes a while for things to come into focus, for you to see their rationale, but CB is a trainwreck, and we had no CB1.  That is worse than not having a WR1.  I wonder how this might impact how we use Chinn, our S, and I am very happy Jackson will not be allowed to get near a 6-5 #1 WR again.

  • Pie 5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

45 minutes ago, MHS831 said:

What do you mean?
Richard Sherman never talked smack because he went to Stanford.

Deion Sanders?  Sang in the church choir and was embarrassed about his girl voice.

Aquib Talib?  I think he is a mute.

Josh Norman?  Wanted to make friends, that's all.

 

Seriously, I hope that was not on the top of Fitterer's list--this aint Seattle,and that may have been personalities and not a type.

 

Jalen Ramsey is quite the gentleman on the field also.

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • He is a great guy but a horrible reporter. He makes my skin crawl when I hear his name. I heard that babies cry and dogs attack him when he enters a room. Other than that he is a good dude. Now go burn in hades u sum bit. 
    • The job just really passed him by. He came up when basically you just needed to get three or four quotes, toss a couple of team provided stats in there, and stretch it out to column length. you got your copy in by 330, out the door by 4, then chill/shmooze the rest of the day. If you were really good you got a book deal. Every now and then you got to write an editorial. The goal of the profession was like Peter King where ostensibly you’re a beat writer for whomever but you get paid to just shoot the poo. now it’s a 24 hour job, you’ve gotta be social media savvy, the pace has increased substantially, you’re expected to produce more than ever, you gotta be able to look through bullshit etc. there’s still risk of industry capture where you just become a mouth piece. Sheena Quick is obviously shameless. I don’t think Newton ever aspired to be more than an inoffensive beat writer, but even that relatively simple role was just more than he was cut out for. its even worse when you’re covering a team that expects the Fourth Estate to act as a PR extension, or considers them on par with buying Twitter bots to promote Bryce. there were over thirty papers that covered the panthers first training camp. In that environment there’s room for boring guys like newton, and they may even be incentivized to push the boundary a little. But today that just isn’t the case and most of the guys are hanging on until retirement (person, gantt) or they’re good and gonna be matched up like Jordan. im not defending the current state of sports journalism, just saying that what counts as a meat and potatoes beat writer passed newton by. He’s retiring well past his sell by date, but that’s pretty common for his generation in general. 
×
×
  • Create New...