Panthers give update on new Rock Hill headquarters, practice facility

On Thursday, the Panthers gave us an exciting, in-depth look at where the Rock Hill Development currently stands.

When owner David Tepper took over the reins of the Carolina Panthers, he had a vision. That vision is becoming clearer.

On Thursday, the team gave fans a comprehensive look into the ongoing construction of the Rock Hill Development. The site, located in Rock Hill, S.C., will be the future home of the Panthers’ headquarters and practice facility, with a targeted opening date for 2023.

Mark Hart, Tepper Sports and Entertainment and Carolina Panthers chief operating officer, calls the 240-acre property a “one-of-one project,” an endeavor centered on building the best training facility in the world, let alone the league.

“He [Tepper] wants to have something that people wanna come and see, that players, coaches and staff wanna come to work,” Hart said in the feature. “It’s very efficient, very functional to give this team the greatest edge to win football games and championships and to create a place that’s a destination for the community and to be a real attraction for this region.”

Football, now here in 2021, has far evolved past its simplest state of just a sport. It’s become a culture. And Tepper and the organization are seeking to firmly blend their Panthers culture into the Carolinas through this special venture.

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Panthers 2021 training camp: 7 takeaways from Thursday’s practice

Another training camp practice is now in the books, which was the eighth on their schedule.

The Carolina Panthers are steadily working their way towards the 2021 season. Another training camp practice is now in the books, which was the eighth on their schedule.

Here are a few takeaways from the media down at Wofford College.

What do Sam Darnold’s athletic scores tell us about his potential?

When the Carolina Panthers traded for quarterback Sam Darnold, they believed they were trading for an untapped resource.

When the Carolina Panthers traded for quarterback Sam Darnold, they believed they were trading for an untapped resource. The handling of the 2017 third overall selection was thought to be largely botched by the New York Jets, and head coach Matt Rhule sees an opportunity there.

So, what is there to tap into? As an athlete, at least according to his Relative Athletic Score, perhaps not too much.

Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb)

Darnold is, by this particular evaluation, an okay athlete. What you see highlighted in yellow, specifically in the top two categories, indicates he has decent size and speed.

Those two areas are obviously of some noted importance at the quarterback position. Darnold’s 6-foot-3, 221-pound frame and capable legs are what many teams look for in their quarterbacks, especially when durability and the dexterity to run are more vital than ever in today’s widening offenses.

While he’s not particularly explosive, as shown by his poor vertical and broad jumps, the most critical subcategory of the “explosion” and “agility” marks is the one Darnold tested nicely in. His 6.96-second 3-cone drill grades him out very-much above average, which illustrates his fluidity and quickness. For quarterbacks, those two athletic traits can translate into how well they move in the pocket.

Overall, Darnold is not an especially bad athlete, nor is he really a plus one. In fact he’s actually not as good of an athlete as his predecessor, nor the guy Carolina could’ve put under center with the eighth overall pick in the draft.

Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb)
Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb)

So, considering how much the current regime values athletic testing, there must be another fancy Darnold is tickling. Is it his ripe age of 24? Is it the arm talent that was regularly on display at the college level?

Whatever it is, the Panthers are in on this gamble, even if nearly every number on paper for Darnold since hitting the pros hasn’t exactly been pretty.

(Hey. Speaking of “pretty,” wanna see something just for kicks . . . ?)

Kent Lee Platte (@MathBomb)

*sigh*

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Panthers’ billionaire owner David Tepper: ‘I’m not building the stadium alone’

According to the Charlotte Observer, Tepper said he’s not going to build it alone and the “community” has to want to.

Panthers owner David Tepper has a net worth of around $14.5 billion, according to the latest estimate by Forbes. That won’t stop him from asking for hundreds of millions in public funding when it comes time to build a new stadium for his franchise.

Tepper made that much clear today when speaking with reporters at an event announcing a $700,000 donation for a special needs park in Rock Hill. According to the Charlotte Observer, Tepper said he’s not going to build it alone and the “community” has to want to.

“Community” of course means “taxpayers,” who will no doubt fork over whatever it is Mr. Tepper asks for without much of a fight from their elected officials.

Just because Tepper will get what he wants doesn’t make his entitlement here any less outrageous.

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Did the Panthers edit Justin Fields’ name out of their draft video?

Did the Panthers edit Justin Fields’ name out of their draft video?

On Thursday, the Carolina Panthers released their latest video feature, which followed the team’s inside activity in and around the 2021 NFL draft. And among the many compelling nuggets that were revealed throughout the 35-minute project, a bit of a conspiracy theory has now been spawned . . .

The above tweet made the rounds within the Panthers’ Twittersphere on Friday afternoon. Its author suggests quarterback Justin Fields’ name was edited out of the audio during the moment head coach Matt Rhule reviews the team’s options for their eighth overall selection.

Rhule, when speaking with owner David Tepper, general manager Scott Fitterer and salary cap manager Samir Suleiman about how the board could pan out, lists off the “cluster” of prospects they “really love.” The names that can be heard and subsequently written on the dry erase board were offensive tackle Penei Sewell, cornerback and eventual pick Jaycee Horn, cornerback Patrick Surtain II and wide receivers Jaylen Waddle and DeVonta Smith.

But when the video is paused, as in the tweet, you can see what appears to be Fields’ name at the very bottom of the list despite not actually hearing Rhule mention him. So was his name edited out by the organization’s media team?

Well, perhaps. The audio on Fields, however, probably wasn’t edited out for what this account may be insinuating.

If you take a closer look at how Rhule writes out the prospects, Fields is noticeably spaced out below the cluster that was audibly included. Additionally, his name is under what looks to be the name of offensive lineman Alijah Vera-Tucker, which also wasn’t featured in the clip.

Carolina Panthers – YouTube

The more logical assumption would not be that the Panthers are hiding something for whatever reason, but rather that Fields and Vera-Tucker were likely options had they moved down in the draft order. Their designation as potential trade-down targets explain the exclusion on the audio and distanced positioning on the board much more sensibly than a baseless conspiracy theory could.

What we can very much deduce, through that observation and even how low he’s written, is that Fields was not under serious consideration at the No. 8 spot. Even with their considerable need for a quarterback, he just wasn’t the guy for them.

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Panthers donating dirt from Bank of America Stadium to local parks

This news comes in light of the team switching to FieldTurf starting at the beginning of the 2021 season.

Have you ever wanted to run on the same soil that your favorite Carolina Panthers have? Well, if you’re local to Bank of America Stadium, your chance could be coming soon!

As noted on Thursday by Mecklenburg County, the Panthers are set to donate 300 truckloads’ worth of turf millings and root zone sand to six parks in the nearby area. The initiative, headed by the county and Tepper Sports & Entertainment, will see through that the departing gridiron soil of Bank of America Stadium does not go to waste.

This news comes in light of the team switching to FieldTurf starting at the beginning of the 2021 season. The announcement, which came on April 28, declares that the increased activity at the stadium, most notably with the addition of the Charlotte Football Club MLS franchise, calls for a the consistent turf playing surface.

Carolina’s move to turf is not particularly favorable to its own players, however, as it’s proven to cause more non-contact injuries than natural grass. Last season, Cleveland Browns center and NFLPA union president JC Tretter called for all teams to move to grass, writing that players have “a 28 percent higher rate of non-contact lower extremity injuries when playing on artificial turf.”

Turf will be cheaper for team owner David Tepper to maintain, though – and that’s ultimately why the switch is being made.

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3 big takeaways from the Panthers’ 2021 draft

Here are the three major takeaways from what could be looked back on as a watershed moment for the franchise.

Hey, Carolina Panthers fans—did this draft feel particularly different to you? Like, did it feel a little . . . special? It did, didn’t? Good, I’m glad I’m not the only one who felt it.

That mood became palpable rather early, when general manager Scott Fitterer had you all abuzz on the social media machines. Whether it was the the head-spinning rate of trades or the perceived steals they got in the process, the Panthers seemed to knock this one out of the park.

But what can we take away most from the successful flurry of activity? Here are the three major takeaways from what could be looked back on as a watershed moment for the franchise.

Watch: Panthers 2021 draft class get their life-changing calls

Panthers: Watch 2021 NFL draft class get their life-changing calls

Between their franchise-record five trades and 11 total draft picks, the Carolina Panthers might’ve had the busiest phone lines in the NFL this past weekend. They also might’ve had the most entertaining ones as well.

After ringing up their first selection Jaycee Horn, someone who should be particularly familiar with cell-phone usage, on Thursday night, the team’s brass had 10 more calls to make. And although we haven’t gone through each of the 31 other clubs’ conversations with their newest players, we’re willing to bet they pale in comparison to the banter head coach Matt Rhule, general manager Scott Fitterer and owner David Tepper got throughout the process.

Like, did anyone else’s coach’s wife demand the team take a certain player? Well, Mrs. Rhule got her wish with Oklahoma State running back Chuba Hubbard:

And did any other team take a long snapper who was willing to walk over to their new digs? Sixth-round selection Thomas Fletcher was ready to make the trek by foot from Alabama to Charlotte:

How about the raw emotion? Second-rounder Terrace Marshall Jr. was audibly overcome when the Panthers rang him up, making for a warm, feel-good moment:

Tepper couldn’t contain his emotion either. He let BYU offensive tackle Brady Christensen know he was more than elated his team was able to land him in the third round:

We can’t forget the family either. Sixth-round wide receiver Shi Smith had the cameras on while he shared the news with his loved ones:

While the phone bill at Bank of America Stadium may be a tad higher this month, it’s all worth it for the moments like these.

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Panthers’ handling of past franchise QBs could hurt their chances of getting next one

More importantly, why would a player want to buy into a system where its braintrust doesn’t go to bat for them?

Many a word was spoken during Thursday’s dual retirement ceremony for Carolina Panthers greats Thomas Davis and Greg Olsen. After all, that’s what you do at these things, right? From Olsen’s heartfelt ode to his beloved and devoted family, to Davis’s emotional pause as he cherished the moment, the day was full of beautiful memories that won’t be forgotten lightly.

But no words were more compelling than those of owner David Tepper.

“I’m glad you guys came back home,” Tepper said to the men of the hour, who both signed one-day contracts to retire as Panthers. He then added, “Don’t worry, we’ll bring the other one back home one day.”

The one? Cam Newton.

Alas, Newton was still the elephant in the room . . . without actually being in it. He was reportedly reached out to in regards to the event, obviously to no avail and was not mentioned by name throughout the event itself, as if he were Voldemort or Beetlejuice.

How could the most successful player in Carolina’s history be on such taboo terms with the team?

Well, let’s look at the top again.

A damaging slap to Newton’s face came courtesy of the Carolina brass, particularly from Tepper himself, shortly before his release last spring. Tepper, questioned about the health of his franchise’s lone MVP, did Newton no favors.

“It’s a question of how healthy his foot is and otherwise. That’s still the number one overwhelming thing, to see how healthy he is and how we can figure out when he’s healthy or not and everything comes from that,” he said from the Bank of America Stadium locker room on Feb. 11, 2019.

“And I said it a million times, ‘Is he healthy?’ And he’s not a doctor. . . So, there’s a lot of different things can happen,” he then added. “But first is, is he healthy? Tell me that and then we can talk.”

Honest, but not exactly a vote of confidence.

Tepper was understandably uncertain if Newton was a fit for the franchise at that point. But that’s not the part you say out loud, not when you’re running an organization of men who put their wellbeing on the line to line your pockets.

Those comments didn’t get past Thomas Davis then.

“If I’m that player listening to that, it sounds like a team that’s not totally committed to me,” Davis said of Tepper’s comments. “I just know, from a fan standpoint, I know everybody in Carolina absolutely loves Cam Newton. They want him back. But it doesn’t seem like the team feels that way. If I’m Cam, I’m doing what’s best for me and my career right now.”

While Newton’s time may have been up in Carolina, he deserved more respect than that. Questioning his ability in such a dismissive manner was not mindful to the nine years Newton devoted to the team, his prospects of landing on his feet elsewhere or even the Panthers’ chances of striking any value in a trade, which obviously did not happen.

Much of the same can be said of current starting quarterback Teddy Bridgewater. Much of this offseason Tepper and head coach Matt Rhule have opted for brutal honesty instead of a conventional show of support for their QB1, entering the second season of a three-year, $63 million deal.

“Unless you have that guy, for sure, that gets you to playoffs and Super Bowls, you have to keep reevaluating that,” Tepper commented on Bridgewater back in December. “Because that’s the only thing that matters is Super Bowls.”

“Just in general, I think you want someone who’s elitely intelligent. I think you want someone who’s a tremendous leader,” Rhule said a month at Senior Bowl practice when asked about what he looks for in a quarterback. “I think you want someone who’s accurate. I think you want someone who has arm talent to make all the throws. And I think you want someone who has a history of making plays in crucial situations.”

Considering Bridgewater’s repeated inability to lead scoring drives was well-documented, that last sentence may have had his ears ringing a bit. Then add those rather blatant knocks to the fact that Bridgewater was offered up in the team’s pursuit of Matthew Stafford, and general manager Scott Fitterer’s “honest conversation” with Bridgewater nor Rhule’s “He’s our quarterback” stand last week hold much water at this point.

Again, openly doubting your quarterback won’t help anyone involved. What kind of return can you really get for a QB you obviously don’t believe in? How appreciated can Bridgewater feel now considering he may very well have to be under center for you in 2021? What message does that send?

More importantly, why would a player want to buy into a system where its braintrust doesn’t go to bat for them?

That could be a fatal blow to any team hoping to, say, potentially deal for another uber-talented franchise quarterback who holds a no-trade clause. It could be even more fatal if said QB just happened to look up to Cam Newton like a big brother and mentor throughout his football career.

Players take note of how you treat them and their colleagues. While the NFL is indeed a business, the individuals who suit up on the field are still human. They should be treated with respect and understanding, not as stocks.

You can’t expect a healthy culture to be built and maintained if you mishandle player relations on a consistent basis. After all, Newton won’t be the first prominent Panther that’ll have to be reeled back into speaking terms – See Smith, Steve. See Peppers, Julius.

If the Panthers are serious about upgrading with a real star quarterback, they have to start treating them better when they get the chance.

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ESPN predicts Panthers’ starting QB in 2021 will be Deshaun Watson

In the case of the Carolina Panthers they picked Deshaun Watson. 

ESPN has released their predictions for who will start at quarterback for all 32 NFL teams in 2021. In the case of the Carolina Panthers they picked Deshaun Watson.

Here’s what Field Yates had to say about ESPN’s Watson-to-Carolina prediction.

“I’ve been on record forecasting Watson to Miami, but recently my tenor has changed with more support from the Dolphins for Tua Tagovailoa and the Panthers’ previous aggressive pursuit of Matthew Stafford. . . Houston has no interest in trading him away right now, but we know this has already been ugly. If you ultimately trade away a franchise quarterback, moving him to a team you play once every four years is preferred to an in-conference foe (assuming the offers are comparable).”

We love it, but it’s still a long-shot scenario. For one thing, Watson is still a member of the Houston Texans and as Yates mentioned, they’re insisting he’s not available.

That said, it’s clear the Panthers are ready to go all in to upgrade at quarterback. Their interest in every veteran QB who might be on the trade block is enough proof of that. Watson is by far the best of them and there’s no other starter in the league we’d rather have right now aside from Patrick Mahomes.

Any trade for Watson would come at a steep price, of course. Recently, a “bold prediction” from ESPN’s David Newton went viral for all the wrong reasons. His suggestion was Carolina could trade three first-round picks plus running back Christian McCaffrey for Watson.

Some fans will balk at that idea, but the truth is it might take even more to get Houston to budge – especially considering what other teams like the Miami Dolphins and New York Jets can offer by comparison.

If team owner David Tepper is truly determined to get Watson and Watson is truly determined not to play another game for the Texans, then eventually this organization might just make them an offer they can’t refuse.

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