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Zod

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Jul 30 1:37 ET

RB Jonathan Stewart said his injury problem is where the Achilles tendon attaches to his left heal. He had surgery to repair that after the season, but still feels some pain.

Jul 30 12:55 ET

Although he's currently on the PUP list, RB Jonathan Stewart said he’ll be ready for the season opener. "My foot is getting better and the progress is on point for the season and everything, so there's nothing to worry about there," he said.

http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/teams/page/CAR/carolina-panthers?tag=pageContainer;NFL_teams

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Gantt tweeted that Sutton was on the sidelines with his left leg in a wrap...could be just a hammy. With the heat stuff like that is gonna happen. I was reading some tweets from around the league today and at Ravens camp it was 70 degrees. I think in the long run I like that guys are out there in the heat...what doesn't kill you only makes you stronger.

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    • Just to clarify: I'm not arguing that height or footwork can’t affect QB play. I'm asking how those concerns translate into measurable, consistent outcomes. That’s the standard we should be applying to all QBs, not just Bryce. If height is such a limitation, then we'd expect to see elevated batted passes or poor pressure evasion. Yet none of that shows up in the data. Bryce was one of the lowest in the league for batted passes and his 16.9 pressure-to-sack ratio is good enough for 9th out of all QBs with 300+ dropbacks. So if you believe footwork tied to height is a meaningful issue, what metric shows that because two that would aren't doing so? This isn't about denying flaws. It's about applying fair, consistent standards because otherwise we’re not evaluating performance which means that it's not analysis taking place... it's just going off of the vibes that somebody has consciously decided on. Citing one red zone play you remember doesn't provide that consistent standard. I don't say that to dismiss your memory, but to emphasize that anecdotal evidence (especially from an avowed skeptic) shouldn’t carry more weight than consistent tape or analytics. For example, there was recently dissonance over Bryce's deep ball accuracy where it was implied that he was inaccurate throwing 20+ yards. Yet, the data and film show otherwise. And I unfortunately have to still ask since you won't directly answer: What specific metrics do you believe matter when evaluating whether a QB is top-10? You've mentioned YPA and passing yards per game, and that's fair. If that's what you're prioritizing, then let's call that your criteria but clarity matters because it prevents moving goalposts when the data doesn’t match one's expectations. I appreciate the response and hope that your holiday weekend goes well also. ❤️
    • Me too. I got other things I can do. Tie it up 2-2 and I will be back, but Im tired of watching us get swept.
    • Svechnikov and I'm voting cause I'm pissed. 
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