Panthers Wire mailbag: What fans want to know ahead of Week 1

Panthers Wire contributor Jared Feinberg answers some of your questions as we head into Week 1 of the 2024 season.

The Carolina Panthers enter the opening week of the regular season with plenty of question marks yet to be answered. Fans are curious about how their team will perform heading into the year, and want to gauge what is to come.

With Week 1 just days away, let’s reach into our very first mailbag here at Panthers Wire and answer a few of your inquiries . . .

(Note: Some questions have been edited for length and clarity.)

Expectations for Jonathan Mingo

Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

Justin asks – What are you expecting from Jonathan Mingo in Year 2?

There was a lot of criticism about Mingo’s play as a rookie in 2023. The second-round pick’s spatial awareness and feel as a wideout were inconsistent at best—resulting in him being out of position, overrunning passes thrown his way and, overall, just offering a skill set that was plain raw.

It’s not Mingo’s fault that the bar may have been set too high. The former Ole Miss standout was a bit overdrafted, and struggled in a bad 2023 Panthers offense. Grace should be given to the 23-year-old.

Mingo turned in a terrific summer where he displayed strides as a route runner and an improved feel for the game. He all but established himself as the No. 2 outside receiver–the off-ball Z–and a potential top target for fellow draft classmate and Panthers quarterback Bryce Young.

This season should see Mingo come close to doubling his yardage total from last year, where he caught 43 passes for 413 yards and no touchdowns. He’ll be the team’s top run-after-catch playmaker outside of rookie Xavier Legette and should receive a decent number of targets.

Xavier Legette’s role in the current rotation

Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images

Chris asks – How do you think they work Leggette into the rotation? I assume he’ll start the season as WR4.

Chris, you are correct. Legette is currently listed as the team’s No. 4 receiver on the unofficial depth chart. While some fans have voiced concerns about Legette potentially not seeing ample playing time early in the season, the team’s first-round selection should hit the gridiron plenty.

Legette will likely be in when the team needs a big play downfield, or if they want to get him in space where he can split defenders and create yards after the catch. He would rotate in with Adam Thielen and Mingo, with snaps as the Z-receiver and in the slot to garner off-coverage looks. But, no, I don’t expect him to get eight to 10 targets per game—at least early on.

Look for Canales and offensive coordinator Brad Idzik to get him schemed targets and allow him to function as a quality rotational piece before getting more snaps throughout the campaign.

How the new DBs could play a role in the secondary

Katie Stratman-USA TODAY Sports

Malte asks – Do you see any of the new DBs cracking the rotation besides Mike Jackson?

As Malte alluded to, the team traded for Mike Jackson and is expected to start him alongside Jaycee Horn. Then, last week, Carolina took advantage of the No. 1 priority on the NFL’s waiver wire and came away with three cornerbacks.

Those three players–Keenan Isaac, Tariq Castro-Fields and Shemar Bartholomew–are all players with size, length and athleticism. That has value. It’s possible we see these three on special teams and occasionally rotated in to give Horn and Jackson a breather.

However, it’s also possible that one of these three could be inactive depending on the matchup and how each player performs in practice. All three received quite favorable Pro Football Focus grades, which matched some of the tape displayed during the preseason with their former teams.

It’s important that Carolina added bigger corners that resembled their starters. By doing this, it gives them depth with the expectation that their level of play is elevated.

Biggest strength and weakness of the roster

Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images

CoastalPanther asks – What areas of the roster do YOU feel are our strongest and weakest this season? For me, I feel for the first time in ages WR is bright and I feel DE and a strong No. 2 CB are areas of concern until we see how the new additions shake out. But, feel great with direction and seriousness.

Great question! I do agree with you that there is alignment, direction and deliberateness in the Panthers’ process currently.

President of football operations and general manager Dan Morgan is making it known what he is looking for with the Seattle prototype of big, lengthy cornerbacks. I’m intrigued with the waiver wire additions. But until it shows on the field, it’s an unknown.

The biggest weakness on this roster is the No. 2 outside linebacker spot. The team claimed an undrafted free-agent edge rusher, Jamie Sheriff, to add depth to the room. However, head coach Dave Canales has yet to determine who will be starting opposite of Clowney for the season opener in New Orleans.

Carolina’s biggest strength is undoubtedly the safety room. While Canales has made an argument for his group of wideouts, it’s hard to ignore the talent and depth the team’s backend possesses.

Xavier Woods and Jordan Fuller will be manning the deep thirds this season. And backup Nick Scott, who could start on several teams, gives the unit a seamless transition if one of the two were injured.

Additionally, second-year defensive back Jammie Robinson is the physical player in the group—providing physicality and power as a tackler while adding value on special teams.

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Panthers DC Ejiro Evero on team’s pass rushers: ‘They’re inexperienced, but talented’

Panthers DC Ejiro Evero on team’s pass rushers: ‘We’ve seen a lot of growth from a lot of young guys.’

Where is the Carolina Panthers’ pass rush going to come from in 2024? Well, there may be no better person to ask than defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero.

The highly-coveted 43-year-old play-caller spoke with reporters following Monday’s outing of training camp. He was asked about the biggest question mark facing his unit entering this season—their pass rush.

“We feel really good about the group,” Evero replied. “[Jadeveon] Clowney, obviously, his résumé speaks for itself. But the group is doing a heck of a job. They’re inexperienced, but there’s a lot of talent there. They’re working hard and they’re improving.”

Evero, who is entering his second season in Carolina, wasn’t able to generate much of a pass rush in his first. The Panthers finished last in the NFL in sacks for the 2023 campaign, recording just 27 takedowns of opposing quarterbacks.

That task may be tougher in 2024—especially after the departures of two-time Pro Bowler Brian Burns, Frankie Luvu and Yetur Gross-Matos. Carolina has tried to replenish those losses, as they signed veterans in Clowney, D.J. Wonnum and K’Lavon Chaisson this spring.

But it could be the younger guys who give the defense some answers.

“We’ve seen a lot of growth from a lot of young guys,” Evero added. “Gotta give a lot of kudos to Eku [Leota]. He’s done a really good job. DJ Johnson’s shown improvement. Luiji’s [Vilain] shown improvement. So it’s been fun to watch them develop.”

Leota must’ve been particularly fun for Evero to watch this past Thursday. The second-year outside linebacker was all over the field in Carolina’s preseason opener against the New England Patriots, as he notched a team-high four pressures as well as a pair of stops.

So hopefully for Leota and the rest of the group, the pressure stays on throughout the summer and into the regular season.

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Panthers get big names back from injuries on Monday

Monday’s practice saw a few important Panthers return to the practice field.

The Carolina Panthers are getting healthy.

Monday’s installment of training camp played host to a handful of notable, and much-welcomed, returns. On offense, the team got back wide receiver Xavier Legette (foot) and tight end Tommy Tremble (hamstring).

Head coach Dave Canales talked a bit about Legette’s recovery from his injury on Saturday.

“Yeah, he’s doin’ great,” Canales said of his rookie pass catcher. “Again, it’s a really a day-to-day thing. And we’re just trying to get the discomfort out of the foot completely, clear it up before we start getting him into really fast change-of-direction things. So the in-line stuff is great. And we’ll be smart about that and bring him along.”

Canales, however, didn’t seem hopeful about Legette or Tremble suiting up for this weekend’s preseason matchup with the New York Jets.

Also joining the party this morning was linebacker Shaq Thompson, who has been sidelined with a hamstring issue of his own. Defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero was asked how the 10th-year veteran looked during his first day back.

“He looked good, he looked good,” Evero replied. “He picked up where he left off at. The one thing you don’t have to worry about with Shaq—whether he’s rehabbing or out there playing is that he’s gonna work his butt off. I didn’t see any rust or anything like that from that standpoint.”

Thompson missed 15 games last season after fracturing his fibula in Week 2 against the New Orleans Saints. The 30-year-old is currently on the final season of his contract.

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Panthers S Jordan Fuller named potential breakout star for 2024

The Panthers defense needs big plays. Luckily, they’ve signed someone who’s accustomed to making them.

The Carolina Panthers defense is in dire need of takeaways coming out of the 2023 season, and they might’ve just signed someone who can help them with that.

Cody Benjamin of CBS Sports recently named 16 under-the-radar NFC players who could be stars for their teams in 2024. He selects safety Jordan Fuller for Carolina:

Purged from the Rams in free agency, Fuller isn’t necessarily a big name, but he is 26 coming off a career year in L.A., with a knack for finding the ball. As part of a young Panthers defense still boasting talent at every level, he could be primed for a big-play debut in Charlotte.

Fuller signed a one-year, $5.25 million deal with Carolina earlier this offseason. As Benjamin notes, he comes over from Los Angeles—where he played under current Panthers defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero in 2020 and 2021.

Their reunion is quite timely, as Carolina finished dead-last in takeaways this past season with 11. Fuller, through four NFL seasons, has amassed seven interceptions and four forced fumbles.

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Former Panthers S Jeremy Chinn named comeback candidate for 2024

After being an awkward fit for Carolina’s defense in 2023, has Jeremy Chinn found himself a match made in heaven with Dan Quinn’s Commanders?

Jeremy Chinn’s time with the Carolina Panthers was very much up following the 2023 season. But now, his clock has been reset—and it may start ticking with a bang.

Chris Trapasso of CBS Sports recently named four veterans who could see a resurgence here in 2024. He lists Chinn, who once showed an exciting amount of promise very early on in his career:

Just a few years ago, Chinn was a prototype. A new-age model for what teams wanted and needed at the safety position. At 6-foot-3 and 221 pounds with 4.45 speed and elite explosiveness traits, Chinn proved capable of doing it all in the back seven. Covering tight ends in man, playing linebacker and halting inside and outside runs, blitzing. He was tremendous as a rookie in 2020, finishing second in Defensive Rookie of the Year voting on the heels of a 117-tackle, five pass-breakup, two-return score season.

The 2020 second-round pick was an iron man for Carolina in his first three seasons—playing in 97 percent of the team’s defensive snaps as a rookie, 98.9 percent in 2021 and 90.7 percent in 2022. But that presence decreased mightily in 2023 under new defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero, who used the versatile defender on just 38.7 percent of his unit’s looks.

But Chinn has signed away to a coach who may know precisely what to do with his talents. Trapasso continues:

And now he’s part of the Dan Quinn Takeover in Washington under new ownership. And let’s just say Quinn has experience coaching productive safeties in his past, particularly safety-linebacker hybrids like Kam Chancellor, Keanu Neal, and most recently Donovan Wilson and Markquese Bell in Dallas.

Godspeed, Jeremy!

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Panthers LB Josey Jewell talks about familiarity in Ejiro Evero’s defense

Josey Jewell said his reunion with Panthers DC Ejiro Evero has given him a big advantage this offseason.

Not everything is new for new Carolina Panthers linebacker Josey Jewell.

The seventh-year defender, who joined the Panthers on a three-year, $22.75 million deal this offseason, spoke with reporters following Wednesday’s session of team organized activities. He was asked about how Carolina’s defense, one headed by a familiar face in defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero, is progressing thus far.

“Coming back to this type of defense with Coach E and Pete [Hansen] and some other guys, it’s been awesome,” he stated. “These last couple of weeks have been great to get to know the guys, feel each other out a little bit, communicate and really just be able to move and understand where people are gonna be. So it’s been very valuable for us.”

Jewell’s most productive NFL campaign came back in 2022, when Evero was the defensive coordinator for the Denver Broncos. He recorded a career-high 128 tackles with 2.5 sacks, two interceptions and two forced fumbles.

He was then asked about how that familiarity has translated during his transition out east.

“I mean, I’m already coming to a bunch of new things,” Jewell replied. “New players to play with, new people upstairs. So to have the familiarity with some of the coaching staff is amazing for me. And picking up the old lingo we used to have in Denver is big. Gives me a step up from where I’d be with the coaching staff I haven’t been with.”

Jewell is currently projected as one of the unit’s two starting inside linebackers. Shaq Thompson, the second-longest tenured Panther, is the other.

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New Orleans Saints game previews: Week 1 vs. Carolina Panthers

We’re kicking off our New Orleans Saints game previews with Week 1’s opener against the Carolina Panthers:

Our New Orleans Saints game previews kick off with Week 1’s opener against the Carolina Panthers. How much help does Bryce Young have? What’s different about the Panthers from the last time they crossed paths with the Saints? And how does this game impact the all-time series history between the two rivals?

Let’s start with the obvious. Neither of the two head coaches leading Carolina in 2023’s games against the Saints will be patrolling the opposite sideline this time — not after Frank Reich was fired at midseason and replaced by interim coach Chris Tabor. The Panthers recruited former Tampa Bay Buccaneers offensive coordinator and Seattle Seahawks quarterbacks coach Dave Canales as their new head coach, envisioning him as the mentor Bryce Young needs to adjust to life in the NFL.

Young could use the help. His rookie year was rough by every measure after the Panthers traded up to the top of the 2023 draft to pick him. He only completed 59.8% of his pass attempts (31st) while scoring 11 touchdown passes (28th), throwing 10 interceptions (tied for 13th-most) along the way. His 5.5 yards per pass attempt ranked lowest among the league’s 32  starting quarterbacks.

To help him, the Panthers signed free agents like offensive guards Robert Hunt and Damien Lewis, defensive tackle A’Shawn Robinson, outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney, and inside linebacker Josey Jewell while trading for wideout Diontae Johnson. They were without the No. 1 overall pick in this year’s draft after trading it to get Young, but Carolina drafted wide receiver Xavier Legette (South Carolina) and running back Jonathon Brooks (Texas) to get him more help.

There will be a lot of new faces on Carolina’s sideline, but one constant is defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero. He was retained by Canales after coaching up a defense which ranked sixth-best in yards per play (4.9) despite bagging a league-low 11 takeaways. While his run defense needs improvement  — the Panthers allowed 25 touchdown runs, more than anyone else — they also need to do a better job getting after the quarterback. Carolina’s 27 sacks were the lowest total in the league, and they traded their  best pass rusher Brian Burns (who accounted for 8 of those sacks) to the New York Giants. Evero will be leaning hard on those veteran free agents to right the ship.

As for the all-time series history? The Saints lead the Panthers 31-28, including the playoffs, with back-to-back wins last season. That’s after Carolina won three out of four games against New Orleans between 2021 and 2022. Starting the 2024 season with a win and setting good vibes right away would be big. Everything starts in September.

  • Game information: New Orleans Saints vs. Carolina Panthers
  • Location: Caesars Superdome, New Orleans, La.
  • Date: Sept. 8
  • Time: Noon CT/ 1p.m. ET
  • TV Channel: FOX

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Panthers HC Dave Canales comments on first few practices with Bryce Young

Following the first session of voluntary minicamp, Panthers HC Dave Canales talked about his early practices with QB Bryce Young.

To get back into contention, the Carolina Panthers must first get back to basics—something Dave Canales has preached ever since getting the head-coaching gig.

That message was echoed again on Tuesday, following the team’s first session of voluntary minicamp. But before getting into a little detail about the practice, Canales was asked how the outing went.

“It was great to be out there,” he replied. “This is just fun for me because the first team I coached was at my alma mater, Carson High School, black and blue, and we had the blue jerseys, we’re out in the blue jerseys. And it’s just kinda like a pinch yourself kind of moment. Surreal for sure.

“But again, to do it with some guys that I have familiarity with—saw a lot of proud big brother looks from some of the guys. And to be able to be out there with Ejiro [Evero] and the defensive guys and bringing this whole thing together, certainly a really cool day for me.”

Also out there was the vast majority of the roster, which was missing only a few players due to what Canales described as “private” situations. Included in that bunch, of course, was quarterback Bryce Young—who Canales said the following of:

Canales—who was behind the career resurgences for Seattle’s Geno Smith in 2022 and Tampa Bay’s Baker Mayfield in 2023—was hired, in part, to get Young going. Last year’s No. 1 overall pick experienced a rough rookie season, where averaged just 179.8 passing yards per game with 11 touchdowns and 10 interceptions.

So hopefully for Canales, Young and the Panthers, a small step back to the basics now leads to a huge leap forward in due time.

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Josey Jewell: Ejiro Evero, Peter Hansen were ‘big’ in decision to sign with Panthers

Panthers LB Josey Jewell on Ejiro Evero, Peter Hansen: “They were definitely big to me coming here and playing.”

Like A’Shawn Robinson before him (literally), Josey Jewell spoke about how familiarity pulled him into the Queen City.

The 29-year-old linebacker spoke with reporters on Wednesday afternoon, his first such chat since signing with the Carolina Panthers out of free agency last month. He was asked how much the team’s coaching staff, specifically defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero and linebackers coach Peter Hansen, had influenced his decision and his game.

“They were definitely big to me coming here and playing,” Jewell replied. “Really enjoyed my time with them, even though it was just a year. Just the way they coach the game and they allow you to play the game and just go out there and flow and play to its true value and just go out there and findin’ the football. So that’s what I’ve enjoyed playin’ for them. Enjoyed bein’ in a specific room with Pete and he’s just a great coach.”

Josey, Pete and Ejiro spent the 2022 campaign together in Denver. That also just so happened to be the most productive season of Jewell’s NFL career—as he amassed 128 total tackles, 2.5 sacks, two interceptions and two fumble recoveries.

Jewell, who inked a three-year, $22.75 million pact, is currently projected to start alongside Shaq Thompson in the middle of Carolina’s defense.

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A’Shawn Robinson on why he signed with the Panthers: ‘Why not?’

Why did A’Shawn Robinson sign with the Panthers this offseason? Well, why not?

Some familiar faces helped lead A’Shawn Robinson into unfamiliar territory.

On Wednesday, the veteran defensive lineman sat down for his first press conference since signing a new three-year, $22.5 million deal with the Carolina Panthers. He confirmed that his past connections with the coaching staff, most notably defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero, was a key to landing in him in the Queen City.

“I think it played a good part of that,” Robinson said. “Comfortability, knowing the scheme. Coming from it in L.A., just being used to that. Knowing the coaches, them knowing how I play and me knowing how they operate and how they want things done—I think that was very important to me. I know that they’re honest and they’re real about everything, and they want guys to be on point and honest and real about everything that goes on.”

Robinson and Evero shared a sideline in Los Angeles for two seasons, when the latter was a safeties coach and secondary coach/passing game coordinator in 2020 and 2021. The two helped the Rams capture its second Lombardi Trophy in their 23-20 win over the Cincinnati Bengals in Super Bowl LVI.

The big man was then asked why he joined the Panthers, who were the furthest team away from that mountaintop in 2023.

“Why not?” he replied. “It’s a great scheme, a great team, great city. I love the south, comin’ from Alabama. It feels like home. But coming to this scheme, I feel like it fits me perfectly.”

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