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Evero


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2 hours ago, DaveThePanther2008 said:

This seems to be a never-ending story with our head coaches.  How many coaches have we had that have played people they are paying big money too when others are outperforming them.  

It surely does get old. 

I think our coaches are being pushed by the front office to play the big contract/high draft pick guys so the front office doesn't look like a bunch of morons.  

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25 minutes ago, OldhamA said:

So what he's saying is that if people don't get off their blocks, good things happen for the O?

I think it was a little more than that. Scheme and alignment were predictable with no adjustments. Bills found a play and blocking scheme that worked so they just kept running it until we made them do something else. We didn't. Maybe a run stunt or something where the defenders wouldn't constantly be exactly where you want them.

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1 hour ago, PleaseCutStewart said:

This was definitely Evero's worst game to date with playcalling (up there with JAX refusing to cover the seams when JAX kept running the same pass play).

 

Let's also recognize that nobody in the front 7 won a one-on-one block that game. I think teams will start realizing running away from DB and running toss plays to make our LBs quickly make the correct read is a good way to run on us

Wait until Tucker Kraft and Love try out those seams

yeeee doggie

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3 hours ago, PleaseCutStewart said:

. I think teams will start realizing running away from DB and running toss plays to make our LBs quickly make the correct read is a good way to run on us

They were running right at DB on Sunday which is traditionally how you handle dominant DTS

If they run away from him it gives him an opportunity to throw someone out of the way. 

If they just double up and run right at him they can better manage him, and then its up to someone else to make a play on the ball and, whelp 

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11 minutes ago, electro's horse said:

They were running right at DB on Sunday which is traditionally how you handle dominant DTS

If they run away from him it gives him an opportunity to throw someone out of the way. 

If they just double up and run right at him they can better manage him, and then its up to someone else to make a play on the ball and, whelp 

they said they ran to the edges . thats how you neutralize a dominant interior line. our lbs didnt set the edge or fill correctly. if we had a competent middle lb to line everyone up it wouldnt have been that bad

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30 minutes ago, carolinanimal said:

they said they ran to the edges . thats how you neutralize a dominant interior line. our lbs didnt set the edge or fill correctly. if we had a competent middle lb to line everyone up it wouldnt have been that bad

Our LB's are bottom 3 in the NFL. They correctly analyzed that.

That's what a good coaching staff does.

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    • 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.
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