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!

     

Mike Florio & Rich Eisen discuss Rhule & Tepper


BlitzMonster
 Share

Recommended Posts

19 minutes ago, Basbear said:

Being professional and using logic about the team he took over. Give him a real shot at his vision. Does a FULL rebuild only take 2 years now? Like rebuilding the QB(he has failed and still failed), OL, TE, DL, LB, CB, SS, STs etc etc. Like if your boss gives you a huge old strip mall and theres not a fully functioning deluxe condominium its place within 2 years, you stuck and should be fired?

 

What free unsigned HCs and staffs are out that you want? Doug Petterson has been tossed around, but Im meh at best.....theres no one I can think of were Im like" he is the one and can save this team". Goat Bill is going no where, dont want another college guru, andy reid loves KC BBQ, Macvay is in his heaven's land. No OCs or DCs out there worth a shot, maybe the dallas guy but my god hes soo young. So who do you got/want?

A wasted year in the name of "professionalism"? That seems the opposite of logic.

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, mrcompletely11 said:

I hated it.  We let a ton of talent slide right past us in the name of adding picks.   Who is contributing right now from this draft?

Horn looked amazing before he was hurt.

Hubbard looks pretty good as a backup. Tremble, Taylor and Nixon have all had their moments, as did Marshall when we used him.

Christensen would probably look pretty good too but he's being so poorly handled by this amateur hour coaching staff that it's hard to know.

  • Pie 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Mr. Scot said:

Horn looked amazing before he was hurt.

Hubbard looks pretty good as a backup. Tremble, Taylor and Nixon have all had their moments, as did Marshall when we used him.

Christensen would probably look pretty good too but he's being so poorly handled by this amateur hour coaching staff that it's hard to know.

I know people don’t like JAGs but I’ll take 1 potential super star and a draft full of rotational talent  which could develop into good talent any day.

Wish we would have picked up another lineman but I’d rather have this draft then that shoe horn abomination from 2016

Edited by Panthercougar68
Link to comment
Share on other sites

24 minutes ago, Mr. Scot said:

For one, the bullsh-t that a guy who had only coached at places like Temple and Baylor (and hadn't even won so much as a conference championship at those places) deserved to have full control of an NFL operation.

Don't care how hot a coach anyone thought Rhule was at the time. That was one of the stupidest decisions I've ever seen, and that comes from someone who watched fifteen seasons of Marty Hurney running the team.

I don't really know what you expected.  Isn't a GM and Coach supposed to work together to get the guys the coach wants that fit his scheme.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Panthercougar68 said:

I know people don’t like JAGs but I’ll take 1 potential super star and a draft full of rotational talent  which could develop into good talent any day.

Wish we would have picked up another lineman but I’d rather have this draft then that shoe horn abomination from 2016

Fitterer's guidelines on the type of players they wanted were set by Rhule, yet it still worked out pretty well.

Would love to see what happens when you get a better coach in here to work with him.

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

18 minutes ago, mrcompletely11 said:

I hated it.  We let a ton of talent slide right past us in the name of adding picks.   Who is contributing right now from this draft?

FYI - I do not judge rookies unless they are cut or make pro-bowl. After the 2nd full off-season I start.

Id have to reaaallly out out on limb and stretch the reasons hardcore.

A tad unfair cause Horn looked like a legit CB, rookie or not.

TMJ, boy...I think Brady was fired for him, Teddy, Sam, and just making bad opinions...

Christ has gotten a few reps and looked "decent" at LT,RG,LG.

Temble looks like the best TE and that means nothing.

Hubbard, ok good 4th rounder. High effort and energy

Taylor- best 5th rounder league wide, jewel of this draft...

Nixon- got IR'd was giving 15-20 high quailty snaps before

Brown- Rhule thinks hes too fat...been non-factor

Shi- non-factor

Forgot name- Long safety that was IR'd to save face. Joke of pick

Hoskins- when fianlly given a jersey, looked petty good for a 7th

 

Id trade the 2022 3rd for CJ henderson right now again. NO question. Darryl Johnson for a 6th, well thats on Dan morgans plate. Can not expect much form an 6th in any draft. He did get 7th for Greg Little. Got a improved 6th for Perryman who seemed to be be a bad fit(i disagree). 

No GM bats 1.000

 

Edited by Basbear
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, grimesgoat said:

I don't really know what you expected.  Isn't a GM and Coach supposed to work together to get the guys the coach wants that fit his scheme.

I'm fine with that sort of arrangement, but ours is not that simple.

Rhule has final say over everything in the program. It's the same model Seattle has with Pete Carroll, but Pete Carroll was a guy with real NFL experience and a far higher level of success at the college level than Matt Rhule.

Giving Rhule that kind of power was like taking the assistant manager at the local McDonald's and making him CEO of the corporation.

Edited by Mr. Scot
  • Pie 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Basbear said:

Do you want to fire any HC that struggles? If that the case the panthers would have had 21 more HCs during their history. 

No. I want to fire any head coach who struggles while looking utterly clueless with ample signs that he's losing the locker room and instilling a culture of no accountability. Rhule is checking every box. I would feel completely differently if we were struggling whole showing signs of progress. This is the opposite of that. Everyone on the roster looks like they're regression and schematically we look like a mid-major college team. Hmmm... imagine that.

 

 

  • Pie 3
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

    • Here’s a summary of the JJ and Luke podcast transcript. Opening / Bryce Young Fifth-Year Option     •    JJ: Breaking news — Panthers picked up Bryce Young’s fifth-year option at $25.9M, guaranteed, coming in 2027. Combined with his 2025 salary of ~$6M, that’s $31M over two years — called it a “no-brainer.”     •    Luke: Enthusiastic about the move. Highlighted Bryce’s improving TD/INT ratios (11/10 → 15/9 → 23/11) and the value of entering year three with Dave Canales. Noted $25M is a bargain relative to the $60M top of market. Luke’s Personal Update — Charlotte Christian Football     •    Luke: Working with Charlotte Christian school football program, which hired a new head coach. Coaches include Greg Olsen, Luke, and Greg’s dad Chris Olsen (a New Jersey State coaching Hall of Famer).     •    JJ: Jokingly quipped that Charlotte Christian’s coaching staff is “the world’s greatest” — a Fox analyst, a Hall of Famer, and the best Panthers RB ever — all coaching middle school football.     •    Luke: Praised Chris Olsen’s deep football knowledge spanning decades and his ability to connect with kids. Round 1, Pick 19 — Monroe Freeling, OT, Georgia     •    JJ: Panthers were on the clock and submitted their pick almost immediately — a sign of confidence and preparation. Freeling is 6’7”, 320 lbs, played in the SEC in a pro-style system.     •    Luke: Loved the pick. Emphasized you can never have too many quality offensive linemen. Noted Freeling’s size, athleticism, and arm length as key traits. Said the pick also reflects team’s philosophy of drafting great people, not just great players.     •    JJ: Noted reporter Darren Gantt compared Freeling favorably to Jordan Gross — bigger, heavier, and faster — as a potential franchise left tackle.     •    Luke: Pointed out that young players like Freeling still have physical development ahead of them, comparing the trajectory to Christian McCaffrey’s growth from age 20 onward. Round 2, Pick 49 — Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech     •    JJ: Panthers traded up from 51 to 49 (pick swap with Minnesota) to grab Hunter. Played audio from Panthers area scout Kaden McLuhan, who scouted Hunter.     •    Scout Kaden McLuhan (audio): Said Hunter’s size is immediately striking, and that everyone around him spoke glowingly about his character, energy, and love for the game.     •    Luke: Praised Hunter as a massive (6’3”, 320 lbs, ~34” arms) two-gap nose tackle who fits perfectly in the Evero defense. Compared his prospect profile to Akiem Hicks. Said having Derek Brown, Bobby Brown, Derrick Brown, Terson Wharton, and now Hunter creates varied body types that stress offensive linemen.     •    JJ: Noted Hunter ranked third among all prospects in run-stuff rate and sixth in interior pass-rush win rate — addressing a perception that he couldn’t rush the passer. Rounds 3–7 Highlights     •    Luke: Highlighted WR Brazle (3rd round, 6’4”, 437 speed, 1,000+ yards at Tennessee) as the vertical threat the offense needed. Also praised OL Sam Heck (5th round) as a technically sound player whose “short arms” caused him to fall but who has proven himself.     •    Luke: Mentioned CB Will Lee (6’1”, 33” arms) fits the Panthers’ DB prototype — big, long corners.     •    Luke: Praised S/LB hybrid Zaki Wheatley (5th round, 6’3”) as a big nickel similar to Trayvon Merek.     •    Luke: Excited about the linebacker competition between Devin Lloyd, Trevvin Wallace, and Claudin Cherless.     •    JJ: Noted Panthers had the #1 “steal/overreach” rating in the entire draft — drafting players lower than consensus big boards projected. Around the League     •    Luke: Admitted being “a little jealous” that the Miami Dolphins drafted LB Jacob Rodriguez (Luke’s favorite LB in the draft). Has personal connections to Miami’s coaching staff (Jeff Hafley, DC Shawn Dugen — a childhood teammate).     •    Luke: Also noted Miami’s selection of OT/G Kaden Proctor out of Alabama, who will likely move to guard. League Trends — Bigger Tight Ends / 12 & 13 Personnel     •    JJ: Observed the NFL saw its highest run rate in ~11 years (~52%) and a notable pivot toward big blocking tight ends in this draft.     •    Luke: Explained the cyclical nature of NFL offense/defense evolution — as defenses get smaller to match spread offenses, teams counter with bigger personnel (12/13 formations), which then forces defenses to get bigger at the nickel/“big nickel” spot. Called it an ongoing arms race.
    • Dan Vladar is their best player and that is going to be the difference in the series 
×
×
  • Create New...