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!

     

What is the Panthers Mission Statement?


Recommended Posts

I agree, actions speak louder than words. But right now the Panthers haven't delivered on either. The Ravens just won their second Super Bowl. The heart of this discussion is do the Panthers have the right mindset? Do the Panthers set the right goals? Or is getting new sponsorships for the stadium all Jerry cares about? You can sit here and say "offseason", "who cares", well I care. I want and expect us to be a well run franchise. I spend my money on this team, I want to believe in the product I buy.

 

Yes this is the offseason. I don't even visit this site during the regular season. It's unbearable wading through page after page of irrational opinions and trolling. I much rather come here during the offseason when there is optimism and news about player transactions. I don't really give a fug if Carolina Chuck thinks Ron Rivera sucks and the Panthers need to tank for Luke Joeckel. I don't give a fug if someone thinks Cam needs to stop celebrating touchdowns with a hint of racism. I'm tired of that stigma that "offseason" posts are a bad thing because quite frankly you guys make a ton of poo posts during the regular season.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Panthers Mission Statement: We are going to try to win 10 games and kick some ass. We promise to let opposing fans run rampant in our stadium. We are here for the fans as long as you wear a shirt, sit down, and don't cuss when Rivera calls a timeout at the end of a half giving the opposition a field goal attempt that will be the difference in the game. Go Panthers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Vikings bring back WR Thielen from Panthers Vikings get: WR Adam Thielen, conditional 2026 seventh-round pick, 2027 fifth-round pick Panthers get: 2026 fifth-round pick, 2027 fourth-round pick Vikings grade: A- Panthers grade: C+ The Vikings have re-united with their longtime receiver Adam Thielen. Assuming the conditions of the 2026 pick headed to Minnesota are met, the Vikings will have moved back two rounds in next year's draft and one round in 2027's draft to acquire the single year remaining on the 35-year-old receiver's contract. This is fine business. The Vikings' receiver depth will be tested early this season, as WR3 speedster Jalen Nailor recovers from a hand injury and WR2 Jordan Addison serves a three-game suspension. Depth receiver Rondale Moore had a season-ending knee injury early this offseason, leaving rookie Tai Felton and veteran Tim Jones as the depth behind Justin Jefferson to start the season. Thielen should slot right into a familiar offense and provide a good safety blanket for young quarterback J.J. McCarthy, who needs strong early performances in September to boost his confidence and generate some positive momentum. I like the deal a lot for that reason: McCarthy won't spend the first three starts of his NFL career endeavoring to make up for bad receiver play. This is actually a bigger risk for the Panthers than it appears. From Week 8 on last season -- the stretch in which quarterback Bryce Young came back and looked solid -- Thielen was the Panthers' best receiver. Sure, guys like Jalen Coker and Ja'Tavion Sanders were having breakout games, and the backs were getting involved as pass catchers, but it was Thielen who drove the ship. Thielen averaged 2.47 yards per route run in that stretch, which was the 14th best number in the NFL. He also caught 80% of his targets when Coker and Xavier Legette caught 63.2% and 56.4%, respectively. Thielen was so valuable that the Panthers gave him a raise in March worth $1.5 million to encourage him to stave off retirement. The drafting of first-round receiver Tetairoa McMillan always foretold a decrease in target share for Thielen. But keeping Thielen around for another year would have helped smooth the transition. Now the Panthers enter the season with a starting receiver trio (McMillan, Coker and Legette) full of big-play potential but no proven chemistry with Young over the middle of the field. That's an important cornerstone of the Panthers' offensive system that needs replacing. -- Solak
    • You guys are such chicken littles. Its a relatively minor procedure. He will miss week one and that's it.
×
×
  • Create New...