Where do the Panthers stand in NFL power rankings heading into Week 3?

This shouldn’t be much of a mystery, should it?

With another tally to the loss column and another quarterback potentially in the waste bucket, the Carolina Panthers are already in line for a disappointing 2024 campaign.

Let’s see where they stand across the power rankings following their Week 2 loss to the Los Angeles Chargers . . .

USA TODAY

Author: Nate Davis

Rank: 32 (-1)

Take: “If Joe Flacco could come off the couch to save the Browns at age 38 a year ago, why shouldn’t Andy Dalton be able to do it at age 36 by simply turning his clipboard, er tablet, over to Bryce Young after the team stunningly pulled the ripcord on him after two 2024 starts?”

NFL.com

Author: Eric Edholm

Rank: 32 (-)

Take: “With just under four minutes left in the first half Sunday, the Panthers — trailing 13-0 — gained their first first down of the game. Then, on the next play, Bryce Young forced an interception into traffic. Three plays later, J.K. Dobbins somersaulted into the end zone for a 43-yard TD, pushing the Bolts’ advantage to 20-0, and that was all she wrote. The Panthers mustered two 40-yard drives on Sunday; the rest came in at 13 yards or fewer. Carolina crossed the Los Angeles 43-yard line on exactly one possession. The Panthers ran one red-zone play, and it ended in an incompletion. This offense is somehow worse than last year’s so far, averaging fewer than 15 yards per possession. On Monday, Dave Canales made a massive switch, benching Young and turning the ball over to Andy Dalton. It’s a bold call that also might be the right one. Young looks underwater for the first three quarters of every game, and he’s barely treading by the end. This might mark a setback in Young’s already-slow development, but this team can’t score with him right now.”

ESPN

Author: David Newton

Rank: 32 (-)

Take (on most important role player/backup): “Yes, the Panthers are a mess all around, particularly at quarterback with Bryce Young’s struggles through the first two weeks leading to his benching. But if any member of the starting offensive line goes down, it could get even worse. Christensen has shown he’s capable of being a starter at guard and tackle, and he’s now the backup center for Austin Corbett. Talk about multitasking.”

CBS Sports

Author: Pete Prisco

Rank: 32 (-)

Take: “They hope benching Bryce Young for Andy Dalton can liven up things. It won’t be any worse. But what does that mean for Young?”

Pro Football Talk

Author: Mike Florio

Rank: 32 (-)

Take: “David Tepper is just another former Steelers minority owner who has no idea how to be a competent majority owner.”

Yahoo Sports

Author: Frank Schwab

Rank: 32 (-1)

Take: “Benching Bryce Young after two games is shocking. Young hadn’t done anything to deserve to keep his QB job, but it’s hard to remember a team giving up on a No. 1 overall draft pick so quickly. The Panthers could still turn back to Young and he could revive his career, but there’s not much reason for that kind of optimism after Monday’s news.”

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Where do the Panthers stand in NFL power rankings heading into Week 2?

As was the case for much of last season, there’s nowhere to go but up for the Panthers in the power rankings.

Well, here we are again.

Let’s see where the Carolina Panthers stand across this week’s power rankings following their humiliating 47-10 loss to the New Orleans Saints this past Sunday . . .

USA TODAY

Author: Nate Davis

Rank: 31 (-)

Take: “Adding injury to insult, Pro Bowl DE Derrick Brown – arguably Carolina’s most valuable player – might now miss the entire season with a knee injury.”

NFL.com

Author: Eric Edholm

Rank: 32 (-)

Take: “All the offseason moves the Panthers made were, in some way or another, geared toward helping QB Bryce Young thrive and making the team more successful. Yet, in Week 1, the product somehow looked even worse than what last season’s 2-15 squad put forth. Carolina allowed 47 points to a Saints team that scored 24 or fewer in all but five games in 2023. The Panthers scored 10 points (after staking the Saints a 30-0 lead), which was below their paltry 13.9-point average last year. And to bring the fiasco full circle, one of Carolina’s best defenders, Derrick Brown, is now out with what could be a season-ending injury. Thinking that wasn’t the kind of first game Dave Canales imagined when he went to bed last Saturday. There’s a lot to fix and not much time to get it done. Before you ask, yes, the Bears still have more to gain from the trade that enabled the Panthers to add Young: They own Carolina’s second-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft. Pretty rough.”

ESPN

Author: David Newton

Rank: 32 (-)

Take (on best newcomer performance from Week 1): “If there was a small bright spot in an embarrassing 47-10 loss at New Orleans, it was first-round pick [Xavier] Legette. After a training camp in which he was at best the No. 4 wide receiver, Legette had a team-leading four receptions. They were for only 35 yards, but the Panthers had 161 total yards passing. It’s encouraging that Legette was getting open for QB Bryce Young.”

CBS Sports

Author: Pete Prisco

Rank: 32 (-)

Take: “Just when we thought it couldn’t be worse than last season, it was against the Saints. This team isn’t good and Bryce Young is an issue.”

Pro Football Talk

Author: Mike Florio

Rank: 32 (-)

Take: “At this rate, David Tepper will be throwing drinks on himself by Columbus Day.”

Yahoo Sports

Author: Frank Schwab

Rank: 32 (-1)

Take: “Nothing about the Panthers looked good in Week 1. But the real concern is Bryce Young. The problem with Young last season was there were so few ‘wow’ moments from the first overall draft pick. But it was OK to give him a fresh start in his second season with a better cast. And the first game of his second season looked even worse. That should be really, really scary going forward for the Panthers.”

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Composite power rankings have Cowboys all over map, but ultimately looking good vs Browns

From @ToddBrock247: A look at 21 sets of power rankings has Dallas as high as 5th and as low as 19th for their season opener. The truth is somewhere in between.

Power rankings can be fun to look at and certainly make for serious sports debate, but it’s always important to take the source into consideration. For every analyst who thinks Team A is markedly better than Team B, there’s another talking head from somewhere else who says just the opposite.

The truth usually lies somewhere in the middle.

Germany-based stats guy René Bugner, familiar to NFL fans for compiling draft report cards every year and giving composite grades, has worked his spreadsheet magic on power rankings for Week 1 of the 2024 regular season. Using the published rankings from 21 different outlets, Bugner delivers a more comprehensive look at where each team in the league really falls in the eyes of all the major analysts, not just one.

Unsurprisingly, there’s quite a bit of fluctuation in how the experts see the Cowboys shaping up for their opener in Cleveland, but the overall average ranking should leave fans feeling optimistic about Sunday’s game versus the Browns.

Dallas ranks as high as 5th, earning that spot from both Mike Clay at ESPN and Frank Schwab at Yahoo Sports. John Kosko at PFF has the Cowboys slotted 6th, and Josh Kendall of The Athletic puts them at 7.

https://twitter.com/RNBWCV/status/1831709001450504464

Those relatively high marks get dragged down somewhat by Nate Davis at USA Today and Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk, who have the Cowboys ranked 18th and 19th, respectively. Mark Maske of the Washington Post grades them slightly better, at 15th, while the New York Post‘s Ryan Dunleavy and Vinnie Iyer of Sporting News rank Dallas 14th this week.

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The other 12 sets of power rankings, though, all have the Cowboys sitting between 9th and 12th. And that’s where the Cowboys finish, with an overall average ranking of 11.00, good for 10th-best in the league this week.

The Browns aren’t too far behind, ranking as high as 9th and as low as 19th. Their average ranking of 13.19 signals that the two teams will likely be well-matched for a close contest when they meet on the shores of Lake Erie.

Related Links:

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Steelers drop in latest ESPN NFL power rankings

ESPN says wide receiver George Pickens is the Steeler on the hot seat this season.

After a highly productive offseason, the Pittsburgh Steelers seemed to be poised to push for an AFC North title. Many pundits were hyping up the team’s additions and warning the rest of the AFC.

Now, through two preseason games, the hype around the Steelers has calmed and the bandwagon has plenty of great seats available. The Steelers offense has looked dreadful and many are questioning if the new additions actually made the team better or not.

ESPN has updated their NFL power rankings with one preseason game left to play and in the rankings the Steelers dropped one spot to No. 16. They were bumped out of the top 15 by the New York Jets who rose two spots to leapfrog Pittsburgh.

Steelers writer Brooke Pryor noted in the rankings that wide receiver George Pickens is the player on the hot seat this season.

The trading of Diontae Johnson in the offseason put Pickens, the 2022 second-round pick, firmly in the top receiver slot, but with that comes more responsibility and pressure — especially ahead of an offseason when he becomes eligible for a contract extension. Games like last year’s two-touchdown, 195-yard performance against the Bengals show Pickens is capable of carrying an offense, but he’s also temperamental and prone to sideline outbursts when things aren’t going his way. Pickens’ ability to grow and mature will largely dictate the success of the Steelers’ passing game — and his ability to land a lucrative extension in 2025.

If the Steelers offense doesn’t show improvement over last season, Pickens won’t be the only member of the Steelers on the hot seat.

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Vikings don’t budge in latest power rankings by ESPN

The Vikings remain the same in the latest power rankings.

Prior the training camp and the preseason, the Minnesota Vikings were ranked 23rd in ESPN’s power rankings. Fast forward to J.J. McCarthy’s injury, the signing of Stephon Gilmore, and the Vikings going 2-0 in the preseason — Minnesota still slots in at No. 23 in the latest power rankings.

It’s not too surprising that the quarterback situation is a huge question mark. With McCarthy’s season over, Sam Darnold will enter Week 1 as the unquestioned starter. The Vikings’ defense hasn’t looked overly sharp this preseason, especially the secondary. But with Minnesota bringing in Gilmore, a former Pro Bowl corner, the Vikings should be better on the back end.

Minnesota will have to prove that it can be competitive and win games in close situations. Turnovers killed Minnesota last season — before the injury bug hit the Vikings’ locker room. Minnesota has the weapons around Darnold to make the Vikings’ offense good.

But will Darnold’s time to shine come out? Will the Vikings get enough stops on defense? Those are the two big questions surrounding the Vikings.

Where to the Bucs land in The Athletic’s NFL power rankings?

See where the Tampa Bay Buccaneers land in the latest 2024 NFL power rankings from The Athletic

It’s that time of year, as NFL training camps are opening up across the entire league, and preseason projections start flooding in from every national outlet.

The latest set of NFL power rankings for the upcoming 2024 season comes from The Athletic, and they’re not sold on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers keeping up their streak of NFC South titles this year.

Tampa Bay comes in at No. 22 on this list, still ahead of the New Orleans Saints and Carolina Panthers, but below the Atlanta Falcons.

Here’s what The Athletic’s Josh Kendall had to say about the Bucs:

Most of the Buccaneers’ offseason work consisted of holding on to their own free agents — quarterback Baker Mayfield, wide receiver Mike Evans and safety Antoine Winfield Jr. chief among them. The status quo feels fine to the Bucs these days after four straight seasons making the playoffs. That has happened only once before in the team’s 47-year history. A fifth straight trip would set a team record but likely will require holding off a restocked Falcons team in the NFC South. Given the recent history of both teams, the Bucs probably like their chances.

It seems like most national outlets are expecting the arrival of Kirk Cousins in Atlanta to immediately make the Falcons the favorites to win the division, but that’s a strange gamble to make. Meanwhile, the Bucs proved last year that they don’t need Tom Brady to win the division, as Baker Mayfield led them to a third straight NFC South crown.

To check out The Athletic’s full power rankings for the 2024 NFL season, click here.

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Where do the Bucs land in ESPN’s NFL future power rankings?

See how ESPN feels about the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ future in their crystal-ball power rankings for the NFL down the road

It’s always fun to look into the NFL crystal ball and imagine what will happen in the future, and that’s exactly what the folks at ESPN have done with their “future power rankings” exercise, looking at the strength of each team looking down the road.

Every team was ranked in four different categories: Overall roster (minus QB), quarterback, coaching, and front office.

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers come in at No. 18 overall on their list, getting their highest ranking for the front office (12th), and their lowest in coaching (27th).

Here’s what ESPN’s Dan Graziano, Louis Riddick, and Aaron Schatz said about the Bucs’ rankings:

Reason for hope: The Buccaneers are a three-time defending division champion, so they know how to finish off a season. Safety Antoine Winfield Jr. is a star on the back end of the defense, and while they don’t have the youngest roster in the league by any means, quarterback Baker Mayfield isn’t even 30 years old yet and looked as good last season as he has at any point in his career. — Graziano
Reason for concern: Mayfield was fantastic last season and was rewarded with a new three-year deal. But he will have a different coordinator this season, with Liam Coen — who was the OC at Kentucky in 2023 — signing on to run the offense. It is critical that Coen develops the same kind of game-day chemistry with Mayfield and the offensive playmakers that former coordinator Dave Canales had. How quickly can that group come together? — Riddick
Nugget to know: Running back Rachaad White finished second in the NFL in touches last season (336), trailing only Christian McCaffrey. But he had poor production as a runner, gaining only 3.6 yards per carry and finishing 39th in rushing DVOA among qualifying RBs. In the past decade, only three running backs had more carries than White’s 272 with a lower DVOA: Todd Gurley II in 2016, LeSean McCoy in 2017 and Josh Jacobs in 2020. White is one of five different 2022 draft picks projected to be starters for the Buccaneers this season, and all five are under contract for two more seasons (White, right tackle Luke Goedeke, tight end Cade Otton, defensive end Logan Hall and cornerback Zyon McCollum). — Schatz

It makes sense to grade the Bucs’ front office highly, but it’s strange to see Todd Bowles and his coaching staff getting so little credit, since they’ve won the NFC South in each of his two seasons as the head coach.

To check out ESPN’s full future power rankings for every NFL team, click here.

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Steelers stuck in the middle of the pack in new NFL power rankings

The Steelers have been the very definition of a middle of the road football team in recent years.

Middle of the road is a great way to describe the Pittsburgh Steelers under head coach Mike Tomlin for the past decade. They were never a terrible team but never a contender. So when Pro Football Talk put out their new NFL power rankings, seeing the Steelers in the middle of the pack makes perfect sense.

They have the Steelers as the No. 14 team overall and No. 8 among AFC teams. The Steelers are also the No. 4 ranked team among AFC North teams.

The Steelers have made serious strides this offseason to improve the roster on both sides of the football. We firmly believe this team is going to be better in all three phases but their ultimate success will depend on if they did enough to keep pace with all the other teams who got better as well.

Pittsburgh has a chance to quiet all the critics with what is the toughest schedule in the NFL in 2024. The league backloaded the Steelers schedule putting all six conference games in the final eight.

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ESPN Power Rankings: Cowboys fall out of top 10, ‘most improved’ unit gives hope

From @ToddBrock24f7: Falling 2 spots to No. 11 after free agency, the Cowboys nevertheless should improve simply by having linebackers play linebacker again.

Cowboys veterans and rookies are preparing to take the practice field together for the first time this offseason, and they’ve already got some ground to make up over where the team ended up in January.

ESPN’s post-free agency power rankings say Dallas has taken two steps back from even their humbling home loss to the Packers in the postseason. They were previously in the No. 9 spot; now they sit just outside the top 10 at No. 11.

The ranking pegs the Cowboys as the NFC’s fifth-best team, behind San Francisco (2), Detroit (4), Philadelphia (5), and Green Bay (10).

And while Cowboys coaches are said to be impressed with their rookie draft haul and undrafted free agents, there’s one positional unit that has improved more than the others this offseason, according to the network’s designated Cowboys/NFL Nation reporter.

“Linebacker is really the only answer,” Todd Archer writes, even while acknowledging major questions at running back, offensive line, defensive line, wide receiver, and in the secondary.

Archer singles out the signing of Eric Kendricks as a main contributing factor to the optimism. The 32-year-old veteran was a second-round pick of Mike Zimmer in Minnesota and was his defensive field general there for seven seasons.

Now Kendricks will play a key role in getting his new Cowboys teammates on the same page as Zimmer in his first year back in Dallas as coordinator.

“He always used to say, ‘You take care of me, I’ll take care of you,’ and things like that,” Kendricks said of Zimmer recently. “I have talked to the guys about Zim. It is a big difference, but at the same time, ball is ball and we’ve got to be disciplined on our cues.”

Kendricks remembers playing against Dallas last season (while with the Chargers) and recalled “a lot of explosiveness.” He believes the unit has “talent at all levels,” but there promises to be even more at LB than what Kendricks saw last year in L.A.

Archer points out that DeMarvion Overshown will be back from a preseason knee injury to make his true Cowboys debut. That could be a huge development if the Texas product lives up to what he showed last summer.

Additionally, the team spent a third-round pick this year on Notre Dame’s Marist Liufau, who says he’s looking forward to learning from Kendricks.

“He’s been in the game so long and played at such a high level that, as a young guy, you want to get as much knowledge from him as you can,” Liufau explained as rookie minicamp got underway, “learn from him and kind of be under his wing.”

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There will be watchful eyes on Liufau, as many draft experts thought the Cowboys reached to select him 87th overall. But the Hawaiian-born linebacker has already shown tendencies to potentially be a leader in the Kendricks mold, having blown Zimmer away during a pre-draft visit by rattling off the specific job of every single defender on the field during a play breakdown.

“There’s a standard at Notre Dame,” he told reporters, “end especially for linebackers that we have to lead the defense and know what the guys around us are doing so that we can always, obviously, just do our job at the best ability but also to be there for our teammates.”

Even with the new names at linebacker in 2024, Archer stresses that the real improvement for the Cowboys should come from one simple thing: “they will have linebackers playing linebacker” again, after a trend (and often a last-resort emergency plan) under Dan Quinn to bring safeties up to moonlight at the middle level.

Now with a revamped linebacker crew, the Cowboys hope to not only march back into the league’s top 10, but see just how much higher they can climb.

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NFL power rankings: Where do the Bucs land after free agency?

See where the Tampa Bay Buccaneers land in the latest NFL power rankings following the early waves of free agency

NFL free agency has slowed to a crawl, as most of the big-name signings have already taken place throughout the league.

Most of the Tampa Buccaneers’ marquee moves involved re-signing their own pending free agents, including wide receiver Mike Evans, linebacker Lavonte David, and quarterback Baker Mayfield.

Are those moves enough to have them back in the playoff hunt in 2024 after four straight trips to the postseason?

If the latest NFL power rankings from Jarrett Bailey at Touchdown Wire are any indication, perhaps not.

Bailey has the Bucs at No. 21 in his rankings, clearly unimpressed with what they’ve done in the offseason so far:

Tip of the cap to Baker Mayfield for getting paid after the best year of his career and his second career playoff win. I do question if the Bucs can repeat that success, though, especially without Dave Canales. At the very least, they’ll be competitive week in and week out. At most, they’ll be a playoff team once again.

It’s strange to see the Bucs so low on this list, considering they’re currently riding a three-year streak as NFC South champions, and a four-year streak of playoff appearances. Most of their key players are back on both sides of the ball, and last year’s impressive rookie class should make an even bigger impact this season.

The change in offensive coordinators is obviously notable, but the fact that Mayfield has already worked with Liam Coen before, as well as his experience under some of the coordinators that also had Canales on their staff, means the transition shouldn’t be too difficult.

To check out the full NFL power rankings at Touchdown Wire, click here.

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