Punter Tress Way named NFC Special Teams Player of the Week

Way had a big day on Sunday with two punts pinned inside the 20 and a long of 79, giving him NFC honors for the week.

For the second week in a row, the Washington Redskins have seen one of their players named as the NFC’s Special Teams Player of the Week.

Following Sunday’s victory over the Carolina Panthers, punter Tress Way was named the POY after a brilliant display of kicking left the Panthers with a long field ahead of them. Way pinned two punts inside the 20 yard-line, with an average punt of 58 yards and a long of 79…

It’s understandable if punting stats are a bit below the midway for the common fan, so let me just tell you that those numbers are highly impressive.

This award comes for Way just a week after undrafted rookie Steven Sims Jr. was named the NFC Special Teams Player of the Week following an impressive performance against the Detroit Lions in which he had a 91-yard kick return for a touchdown. Coupled with running back Derrius Guice being nominated for a POY award after his big day on Sunday as well, things are starting to look up in Washington.

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Ranking the 7 best candidates to replace Ron Rivera as the Panthers’ new head coach

Lincoln Riley isn’t leaving Norman for Carolina … but a Panthers fan can dream.

For the first time in nine years, the Panthers are in need of a head coach. Carolina fired Ron Rivera after a semi-successful run, which included three division titles and a trip to the Super Bowl in 2015.

With the team trending down since that Super Bowl run, it was clear the Panthers needed a fresh start. Owner David Tepper will give it to them this offseason when he hires a new head coach this offseason. It’s unclear what Tepper will be looking for in his first coaching hire as the owner but some potential candidates have already popped up. Let’s rank those potential hires from best to worst…

1. Lincoln Riley, Oklahoma head coach

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This is the dream for Panthers fans, but it’s probably not going to happen. Maybe if Cam Newton were fully healthy, Riley could be convinced to leave Norman. But with the quarterback situation in doubt and Dallas possibly calling for Oklahoma’s coach, this probably won’t happen. Riley has a perfect set up at Oklahoma so it’s going to take a big offer for him to leave.

If he was interested in the job, NFL traditionalists might have questions about his system translating to the next level, but Kliff Kingsbury, who runs a diet version of what Riley does in Norman, has turned a terrible Cardinals roster into an above-average offense. There should be no concerns that Riley could do the same with a solid Panthers offense.

2. Josh McDaniels, Patriots offensive coordinator

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This would be another win for Panthers fans, but I just don’t see McDaniels leaving New England any time soon. The assumption is that he’s the Patriots’ coach-in-waiting. He’s had his chances to leave in recent seasons and passed on them. I don’t think an injured Newton is enough to convince him to leave now.

3. Eric Bieniemy, Chiefs offensive coordinator

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Everyone wants a piece of the Andy Reid coaching tree, so expect Bieniemy to be a hot name in the offseason. It’s always hard to properly evaluate coordinators who work under play-calling coaches, though. But if the Panthers do keep Newton around, the offense Bieniemy would be bringing over from Kansas City would be ideal for the Carolina quarterback.

4. Kevin Stefanski, Vikings offensive coordinator

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Stefanski has quietly helped build one of the NFL’s most efficient offenses and he’s done so with an above-average quarterback in Kirk Cousins and a receiving corps that hasn’t been healthy for the last month or so. The one concern is we don’t know how much of a hand Gary Kubiak has had in crafting the Vikings’ scheme. But that is something the Panthers should be able to figure out during interviews. If this is Stefanski’s offense we’re watching in Minnesota, he’d be a good hire.

4. Greg Roman, Ravens offensive coordinator

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I get why Roman is getting a lot of love this season, but he’s not bringing Lamar Jackson along with him and the offense he’s designed in Baltimore doesn’t really work without the dynamic quarterback. And I don’t know if treating Newton as the focal point of the run game is the best strategy at this point in his career. Sure, Jackson and Newton are both dynamic talents at the quarterback position, but their styles are not all that similar.

6. Robert Saleh, 49ers defensive coordinator

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Saleh has done a good job with the 49ers defense and has the kind of exuberance that team owners love. But is anyone sold on him as a head coach? His defenses in San Francisco were among the worst in the league before 2019 when he was given too much talent to fail. He doesn’t get to bring that pass rush, which features FOUR first-round picks, or Kyle Shanahan with him. He might just be another Dan Quinn.

7. Brian Daboll, Bills offensive coordinator

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Any coordinator on a winning team is going to get a look from teams looking for coaches, but Daboll emerging as a leading candidate is a little strange. Sure, he’s done a good job of simplifying things for Josh Allen this season, but his track record as a coordinator is spotty at best. His teams have never finished higher than 18th in total offense. I just don’t see it.

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Report: Panthers QB Cam Newton plans to have foot surgery

Cam Newton will finally undergo surgery on his injured left foot, according to Tiffany Blackmon at NFL Network.

Cam Newton will finally undergo surgery on his injured left foot, according to Tiffany Blackmon at NFL Network.

The Panthers’ franchise quarterback first hurt his Lisfranc in a preseason loss to the Patriots. Ron Rivera’s decision to play Newton despite his not being healthy in the first two games of the season may have been a significant factor in his getting fired on Tuesday.

Newton aggravated the problem in the Week 2 loss to the Buccaneers. Eventually, he was placed on injured reserve.

Cam still has one year left on his contract, but there’s no guarantee he will play without an extension. A healthy Newton would have a tremendous amount of leverage over the organization given the circumstances. It’s difficult to gauge how much he has at the moment, though.

Owner David Tepper told the media yesterday no decision will be made until Newton is fully healthy. Expect that to come around March.

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Should the Redskins look to hire newly unemployed coach Ron Rivera?

Rivera was ousted in Carolina after losing to the Redskins, so could they look at him to fill their coaching void this offseason?

One more candidate just became available for the NFL coaching merry-go-round set to begin once the 2019 regular season comes to an end.

Ron Rivera was fired by the Carolina Panthers, just days after an embarrassing loss to the Washington Redskins.

Such a move is sure to cause some ears to prick up in Washington, not only because it reflects how disgraceful it is for any team to lose to them in this current state, but also because the firing provides one more highly competent coach looking for a new job in 2020, which just so happens to be the same year the Redskins will be looking to fill their coaching vacancy.

If we’re being honest, ‘River Boat Ron’ would be a great get for the Redskins, as he has a long history of successful seasons in his career.

  • Carolina Panthers Head Coach (2011-2019) (76-63-1)
  • Two-time NFL Coach of the Year (2013, 2015)
  • NFC Champion, Super Bowl 50 Runner Up (2015)
  • Super Bowl XX Champion as Player (1985)

He’s a far cry from Jay Gruden, and he has a heck of a better resume than Bill Callahan. It may be that Rivera is overqualified to coach a team like the Redskins, but they’d better at least try to get him to fill that position. He saw first-hand on Sunday that there is some talent in Washington, and with the right coaching, they could end up being pretty good.

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Ron Rivera leaves behind a respectable legacy in Carolina

That said, Rivera’s true impact on the Panthers was as a human being.

As nuanced as the game of football is and continues to become, any old-fashioned talk of the importance in establishing a certain “culture” may likely be met with an “ok, Boomer.” But—while it is possible for numerous methods of thought to co-exist—there’s certainly something to be said about instilling accountability, discipline and unity within an organization. That’s why you can’t dismiss what Ron Rivera has left behind in his nine-year tenure with the Carolina Panthers.

Right before that run was the 2010 season, where the team would have just one more win than they did players named Hilee. Rivera’s predecessor, John Fox led Carolina to a league-worst 2-14 record, finishing dead-last in point differential, second-to-last in yardage differential and a distant last in almost any category that involved putting the ball in the end zone or through the uprights.

The lowest moment of that dreadful campaign came in Week 11, in perhaps the most literal example of grabbing a guy off his couch to play. Stay-at-home dad Brian St. Pierre, who’d thrown just five passes in his seven years of bouncing in and out of practice squads, was summoned to start at quarterback against the Baltimore Ravens. It went about as well as you’d expect.

On Jan. 11 2011, 11 days after choosing not to renew Fox’s contract, Rivera entered the picture. The well-regarded defensive coordinator of the San Diego Chargers and, before that, the leader of the best defense the Chicago Bears had seen since their Super Bowl shuffle days was named the fourth head coach in franchise history.

Rivera delivered right from the start, tripling the team’s win total from the year prior to an earnest 6-10 mark. He’d also get the most out of rookie quarterback Cam Newton, who won AP Offensive Rookie of the Year honors in a record-breaking blaze while catapulting Carolina from the 32nd-ranked offense to No. 7.

Two seasons later, with some growing pains and seven victories sprinkled in-between in 2012, Rivera finally made a breakthrough. Following a 1-3 start to 2013, the Panthers refused to quit and wrapped up winning 11 of their final 12 games en route to their first NFC South title in five years and Rivera’s first of two AP Head Coach of the Year awards.

A similar hint of magic then appeared in 2014, when they’d again laugh in the face of an often fatal bad start. This time, they left behind a 3-8-1 stretch, strung together four straight victories and snuck into the postseason with a second division crown in as many seasons at 7-8-1.

Then, in 2015, the four years of rebuilding under Rivera paid off, culminating in the greatest season in franchise history. The Panthers ripped (and dabbed) through their opposition in an utterly dominant 15-win regular season campaign, heralding six First-team All-Pro selections as well as the team’s first league MVP in Newton.

Unfortunately, they’d succumb to the Denver Broncos and their generational defense in the team’s second trip to the Super Bowl. Rivera would never come close to that success, again.

Over his next three and three-quarter seasons at the helm, the Panthers went a combined 29-31. They clinched a wildcard berth after going 11-5 in 2017, their only playoff ticket since that Super Bowl appearance, and lost a heart-breaking battle to the division rival New Orleans Saints in the postseason’s first round.

While he couldn’t quite lift Carolina out of its roller coaster of mediocrity – let alone win a Lombardi Trophy – Rivera did help lead a regularly overlooked franchise to a burst of recognition it had never seen before. Highlighted by that majestic 2015 season, the Panthers achieved a small, but appreciable taste of sustained success.

Even with the 7-8-1 finish in 2014, they became the first team since the division’s current alignment to win three consecutive NFC South titles. But, just like the stark reminder that the Saints are fresh off matching that very feat here in 2019, it’s been the team’s recent and disappointing performance under Rivera that’s ultimately been his undoing.

Considering the level of talent Rivera had at his disposal, mainly Cam Newton and Luke Kuechly – the team’s record in recent years is a tough pill to swallow. That advantage may have been squandered for the next coach, too. We don’t know if Newton will get back to himself again after Rivera’s mismanagement of his shoulder and foot injuries.

Those missteps cannot be ignored.

That said, Rivera’s true impact on the Panthers was as a human being. On top of inspiring that aforementioned old-school, disciplined, never-quit mentality in his players, the son of 32-year U.S. Army veteran has been a beloved and unquestioned commander of sorts—the personification of a player’s coach.

He’s also helped foster some of the game’s well-noted humanitarians. His support for the respective off-field initiatives of Newton, Greg Olsen, Thomas Davis, Julius Peppers and Charles Tillman has, in part, developed another type of culture within the organization—one that promotes a close connection to community.

He wasn’t the slickest football mind out there, nor the most progressive coach. In fact, he’s about as stubborn as they come between the headsets. But through all the peaks and valleys, Rivera had nearly a decade as head coach of the Carolina Panthers to earn his place both as a man and a leader of men. And that is one opportunity he certainly didn’t miss.

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Top 3 college coaching candidates for the Panthers to replace Ron Rivera

Here’s a look at some of the top college coaching names Tepper could be considering over the next few weeks.

It’s entirely possible that the person who makes the decision on whether Cam Newton will return as a Carolina Panther in 2020 does not even have a placard in the office yet. And with team owner David Tepper refusing to look behind Rivera’s back for a new coach, it’s likely the future coach does not even know he’s under consideration.

There are a number of candidates currently in the NFL who would make a good fit for the Panthers. Tepper may want to start fresh, though. That could mean that college is the best place to begin the search.

Here’s a look at some of the top college coaching names Tepper could be considering over the next few weeks.

Lincoln Riley: Oklahoma

Lincoln Riley
(Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

One of the more successful coaches in recent memory in college, Riley is the next big name in a league where younger, more progressive coaches such as Los Angeles’ Sean McVay, are beginning to take over the league. Riley took over the head coaching position for the Sooners in 2017 and has gone 30-5 since, only losing once to a team nationally ranked outside of the top three. Riley’s innovative schemes have helped bring success to quarterbacks such as Baker Mayfield, Kyler Murray and Alabama outcast Jalen Hurts. Although his potential move from Oklahoma is uncertain, he remains the top option in college football for the foreseeable future.

Panthers vs. Falcons: Time, channel, stream for Week 14 matchup

The game will be broadcast live on Fox.

The Panthers will play their first game of the post-Ron Rivera era on Sunday against the Falcons.

Here’s all the info you need to follow this week’s matchup.

Game information

Carolina Panthers (5-7) vs. Atlanta Falcons (3-9)

Sunday, Dec. 8, 1:00 p.m. ET

Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, GA

Television: FOX

The game will be broadcast live on Fox. Check back later for TV maps.

Broadcasters

Chris Meyers, Daryl Johnston

Referee assignment

Clete Blakeman

Weather at kickoff

Indoors

Stream

You can stream the game live on Fubo TV. (Start your free trial).

Listen

The team’s flagship radio station is WBT 1110 AM.

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Cam Newton shares emotional ‘thank you’ message to Ron Rivera after firing

“Thank you for allowing me to be me!!”

Cam Newton has had only one head coach during his impressive NFL career – Ron Rivera.

Now the injured QB will have a second coach, as Rivera was fired by the Panthers on Tuesday.

Rivera went 76-63-1 during his 8-plus years with Carolina. He teamed up with Newton to lead the Panthers to a 15-1 record in 2015, a year in which Newton was named NFL MVP and the team lost to the Denver Broncos in the Super Bowl.

Newton posted a heartfelt message to Rivera on Tuesday, saying:

“Will be forever grateful because of the impact you had on my life… Thank you for giving me an opportunity. Thank you for believing in me. I can go on & on but most importantly; thank you for allowing me to be me!! …this one hurt deep!!”

Here’s his post:

Rivera likely won’t be out of a job for long. Many Cowboys fans hope he’ll end up in Dallas.

But the bond he and Newton built over the years was a special one.

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Panthers players share thoughts on Ron Rivera getting fired

Here’s how a few of them are reacting on Twitter.

The Carolina Panthers made a huge change today, firing Ron Rivera after nearly nine years and naming Perry Fewell their interim head coach.

It’s an emotional day for everyone in the organization, no doubt. Some of the players are sharing their feelings on social about the news and they are not exactly thrilled. Here’s how a few of them are reacting on Twitter.

DT Kawann Short

G Trai Turner

CB Donte Jackson

FB Alex Armah

Former RB Jonathan Stewart

Rivera leaves behind a complicated legacy. Whoever comes in and takes the job full-time next season has big shoes to fill.

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Ron Rivera had success with the Panthers but it still feels like he failed

The Panthers won plenty of game but it always felt like they could do more.

After nine seasons, the Panthers parted ways with Ron Rivera on Tuesday, bringing an end to the most successful era in the history of the franchise, while at the same time giving fans renewed hope for the immediate future.

The timing of Rivera’s firing was surprising but the move itself was not. The franchise had been trending down since the 15-1 Super Bowl season in 2015, and with a relatively new owner, it was clear Rivera was working on borrowed time. David Tepper gave Rivera two seasons to prove his worth and he was clearly underwhelmed with the returns.

If you had told Panthers fans in 2011 that Rivera would have brought the team three NFC South titles and a trip to the Super Bowl over the course of the decade (while winning two Coach of The Year awards), I think most of them would have signed up for that. At the same time, it feels like this team underachieved given the talent it’s had on the roster during Rivera’s tenure.

Cam Newton’s prime — which may or may not be over depending on how he recovers from this foot injury — certainly feels wasted. While most of the blame for that should fall on a front office that wasn’t able to surround him with adequate weapons until it was too late, the coaching staff shares some of the blame. It was Rivera who let former offensive coordinator Mike Shula — currently overseeing the Giants’ high-flying offense — use Newton as a bludgeon in the red zone and in short-yardage situations because he was devoid of fresh ideas.

(This is where some might credit Shula for highlighting Newton’s strengths as a runner, as if it takes an offensive mastermind to come up with the idea of running option plays with one of the best dual-threat quarterbacks ever. The rest of Shula’s offense was painfully boring which forced him to lean on those plays that exposed Cam to more hits.)

Rivera will be credited for the Panthers’ defensive success during the team’s best season but you have to wonder how much of that credit should go to Sean McDermott, who seems to have taken that magic with him to Buffalo. After finishing in the top-10 in defensive DVOA over the four years before McDermott took the Bills job, Carolina dropped to seventh the following season and then to 22nd in 2018 and 21st this season. Before the 2019 season, Rivera said he was taking a more hands-on approach with the defense and … the results haven’t changed.

Game-planning and in-game adjustments always seemed to give Rivera problems. The Panthers were never very good coming off a bye week and struggled to keep big leads or make comebacks themselves. Even games against lesser opponents — like this past loss against a two-win Redskins team — were always closer than they had to be. And Rivera was always good for at least two perplexing game management decisions a month.

Despite everything I’ve just said, I don’t think Rivera is necessarily a bad head coach. I actually think he makes a better head coach than he does an assistant — mostly because of the way he manages a locker room. I will say this: His players seem to love him and they play hard for him. For a head coach, that’s just as important as X’s and O’s. That’s especially true if you hire the right assistants, as Rivera did with McDermott and Norv Turner, who finally put Newton in a good offense before injuries deprived us of seeing what those two could do together for a full season.

Depending on where he lands, Rivera could be a good hire. Especially for a young team that is starting over. It just may be one of those situations where you have to move on in order to take that next step toward championship contention. That’s how it was in Carolina but it may have taken too long for the organization to recognize it.

In 2011, Rivera was probably what the Panthers needed. In 2019, the same can be said of his firing.

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