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2024, what we could see...


musicman
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4 minutes ago, CRA said:

I think if we had our #1 overall pick, the Bryce Young experiment would have basically been Clausen 2.0 and we moved on taking one of these dudes.  And that's all he got.  Stays on the roster and probably had a better shot at re-emerging than Clausen did though.    

Pretty much unless the defense was shitting the bed or something. As of right now we would be looking at Sanders pretty hard…

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I am fine with whatever the win total. If it is 5 or 6 that is twice this year's total and it means Bryce played much better. Let's keep pounding.  If it is only 2 then we have a really high draft pick and we swing again for the right QB draft pick to be our next Cam Newton. Consolation for the suffering. I won't venture we would win more than 6 games so there you go. Good news no matter what.

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Here is what scares me: 

We have to hit on 2 starters, 3 contributing players in this draft with 2nd 3rd and 4th rounders.  A WR, maybe 2 has to hit the jackpot.  In the history of the Panthers since Smith, name a wr we have drafted that was really good-Moore?  any others?

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23 hours ago, Donald LaFell said:

Without getting into the sunk cost fallacy, the team invested too much in Bryce to not make this season all about him. 
 

Give him the best chance to succeed so we can move forward. If he blows then we are in a better spot for a new QB or vet to take over. 


Bro, giving him the best chance to succeed means 2-3 new/good linemen and a completely different WR corps.

Thats not happening.

He might get two of each, but they’ll be rookies or jags.

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26 minutes ago, MHS831 said:

Here is what scares me: 

We have to hit on 2 starters, 3 contributing players in this draft with 2nd 3rd and 4th rounders.  A WR, maybe 2 has to hit the jackpot.  In the history of the Panthers since Smith, name a wr we have drafted that was really good-Moore?  any others?

History says we get one starter from this group.

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On 3/6/2024 at 10:03 AM, Jon Snow said:

Lol. This team is not winning 6 or more games. They will be lucky to win 3 games.

I'd say this is a little pessimistic, coaching failed us in at least 1-3 games this past season. Five games won is a possibility, ''lucky to win three'', I'm not going that far. 

6-6 with Darnold / Walker, McAdoo, and journeyman HB's with just one WR in Moore won't allow me to COMPLETELY sell on a functional offense in 24'. 

The OL in my opinion regressed because Frank came in and tried the ''my offense'' approach versus building on what we actually did well. 

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What will you see? Tons of holes in the roster. Guys you thought you really liked getting benched, and those you never heard of until preseason getting reps. A lot of close games that they end up losing.  People you wouldn't expect to become leaders leading, and those that are supposed to be leaders letting you down. The fanbase at odds with one another on whose fault it is, the new coach or they players that they have been told are good. 

It's growing year, buckle up. 

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28 minutes ago, Leaky_Faucet said:

What will you see? Tons of holes in the roster. Guys you thought you really liked getting benched, and those you never heard of until preseason getting reps. A lot of close games that they end up losing.  People you wouldn't expect to become leaders leading, and those that are supposed to be leaders letting you down. The fanbase at odds with one another on whose fault it is, the new coach or they players that they have been told are good. 

It's growing year, buckle up. 

Most of us know whos at fault- david tepper. 

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    • I’m not necessarily advocating sticking with Bryce. His highs show the ability is there, but there’s enough bad film out there to doubt that he can consistently enough play at a high enough level. But this video from Brett Kollman is a pretty good argument to give it a bit more time, whether that be rolling with Bryce just next year or picking up his 5th year option (not extending him).      The gist is that the structural (wider hashes) and rule (3 yd vs 1 yd thresholds for intelligible offensive lineman downfield penalties) differences in the college and NFL have led to wildly different play calling and scheme diets in college. There is much more shotgun and RPO calls in college and screen/quick throws. This simply doesn’t set up young QBs to be able to play under center, which is more preferred in the NFL due to RBs being able to more effectively run out of that formation.  They don’t know how to do it and have to learn. Yes, the NFL has trended more toward college style offense in the last decade or so, but it isn’t that pronounced and is more out of necessity than desire. And on top of all that, they ask the young QBs to do all this learning with coaching and other personnel churn going on around them.  Bad results lead to coaches getting fired and new ones with different ideas on scheme and footwork and different terminology and playbooks coming in. It makes it harder on those young QBs to learn.     So we may drop Bryce for a young QB starter in the draft and be in a similar situation. With a QB who is going to take years to learn how to operate in an NFL style offense and will struggle along the way.  So you have to weigh whether the struggles we see from Bryce are more due to this learning process vs solely physical limitations on his part. It’s almost undoubtedly a bit of both, but the answer to that question I think dictates your strategy at QB over the next few years. And of course, you have to consider what the alternatives available are.    I’m neither a Bryce hater or a Bryce Stan and I don’t have an answer to that question. But I do fear that if we move on from him, unless it’s for an established player, we’re just in for continued frustration on the QB front because it’s going to take a few years for a college QB to develop (Drake Maye’s don’t grow on trees). 
    • The defense has pulled that feat off this season though.  Multiple times. offense has not had a single good first half all season.  Only and good opening scripted drive paired with disappointing play.  defense has been the actual unit you can measure real and consistent improvement IMO.  Still holes and flaws to it that aren’t going away until new bodies get here but they really are the story of the season IMO
    • One thing about RB's and LB's is they are going to get hurt. It's inevitable. Having a fresh Chuba is not a bad thing.  My only criticism of this entire situation is that I wish our staff would adjust personnel to matchup a little better. I think Chuba is a lot better than Rico against the stacked boxes we've seen the last two weeks. They are very different backs with very different strengths, and I love them both. Rico is so good at identifying the hole early, and hitting it full speed early. He's much better at breaking the big run. Chuba is a much more patient back, and finds 3 yards when there's nothing there better than Rico.  It's in no way a criticism of either, but I think Chuba would have had more success than Rico the way the Saints and Falcons attacked us from a Defensive standpoint.  When you put 9 in the box, often times there is no hole to attack. 
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