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Introductory Press Conference


SaltAndPepper
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4 hours ago, jamos14 said:

He definitely ripped the attitude of this past years team.    Turnover going to be high over next 24 months and we need it.

I hope he sets the example by trading Burns.   Everybody knows that even the "star" will be gone if they don't toughen up.

Remains to be seen but there were plenty of opportunities to mention Burns as an example if they planned on giving him the mega contract he's looking for.  I'd guess he's gone. 

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37 minutes ago, Paa Langfart said:

I said the same thing.  Nothing has changed regardless of the bs Tepper spouts.  Mr and Ms Tepper are in charge.

yeah, everyone this time of year is going to say exactly what folks want to here.  They know what you want to here.  They say it. 

I mean, who here doesn't want this offense....

It's going to be innovative, it's going to be creative. We will always be working to get better. And then we're going to do it the right way – on and off the field.

you have to get the ball vertical down the field. You have to get chunk plays. All the statistics, all the analytics . . . that’s one of the reasons why I’m excited to work for Mr. Tepper

sounds good.  Sounds like what we are starving for.  That's what the last guy told us was coming lol.  It's all a sales job.  Morgan playing to us about the old Panthers is too.   Like somehow he wasn't part of what was been being built prior to him getting promoted. 

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    • This.  He knows where the seam is about to open, cuts, and accelerates hard. He’s slippery and tacklers always seem to be taking awkward angles to get to him. No dancing. Runs low and powerful. Almost never goes backwards for a loss. We’ve rarely had the guy who bounces off of tacklers. It’s nice seeing another one. 
    • I can't speak for others but yes I read it. The conclusions are based heavily around the use of the statistical metric DYAR created by football outsiders and used by ESPN for this article. It only includes players whose production began in 2000. But excluding HOF running backs who produced BIG in an iteration of the NFL that was not yet catered to making things much easier for offenses in order for them to prop up more recent candidates is rather absurd and seems like just playing favorites regardless of where one might fall on their opinion of the use of the metric in question. 
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