Panthers interim HC Steve Wilks: Playing Jeremy Chinn in Week 10 would be ‘asinine’

Panthers interim HC Steve Wilks had a pretty firm answer on Jeremy Chinn’s status for Thursday night.

Carolina Panthers safety Jeremy Chinn has now been officially designated to return from injured reserve. That, however, doesn’t mean he’ll be active against the Atlanta Falcons.

Following Tuesday’s practice, interim head coach Steve Wilks tried to get a jump on reporters in regards to Chinn’s status for Thursday night. And although he expressed that the third-year defensive back looked fine in his first session back, Wilks outright said he probably isn’t going to play him on such a quick turnaround.

“He moved around well,” he stated. “It was good to see him out there. Running around, communicating, talking. And I doubt, very likely, that I’d put him in that situation this week.”

Regardless, Wilks was promptly asked what that means for Chinn in Week 10. So, he elaborated.

“I doubt, very likely, that I will put him in that situation this week to play,” he repeated firmly. “With a day of walkthrough and he hasn’t practiced or played in six weeks—that’s like, really, asinine.”

So, uh, it seems like Chinn’s out this week, y’all.

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Panthers S Jeremy Chinn designated to return from IR

Panthers S Jeremy Chinn has been designated to return from injured reserve.

The Carolina Panthers are moving and shaking to start their short turnaround into Week 10. And now, they’re getting back one of their biggest movers and shakers when they need him most.

As announced by the team on Tuesday, safety Jeremy Chinn has now been designated to return from injured reserve. The third-year defensive back landed on IR on Oct. 5, after sustaining a hamstring injury in the Week 4 matchup against the Arizona Cardinals.

Before exiting that contest, one in which he played in just six defensive snaps, Chinn had been on the field for every single down in 2022. Over those first three games, the 24-year-old amassed 14 total tackles and a sack.

Considering what happened in Week 9, where the Panthers defense folded routinely against the Cincinnati Bengals in a 42-21 defeat, Chinn’s presence will be especially welcomed.

Carolina now has 21 days to move Chinn to the 53-man roster. He is permitted to return to practice during the three-week window.

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Christian McCaffrey trade does not signal Panthers ‘fire sale’

Despite the many interested parties, the Panthers won’t be holding a “fire sale” following the trade of Christian McCaffrey.

As soon as the Carolina Panthers fired head coach Matt Rhule five games into the season, speculations about a “fire sale almost immediately surfaced.

Then, when the team traded wide receiver Robbie Anderson to the Arizona Cardinals one week later, it seemed like those rumblings were coming alive. All that was left was for the organization to dismantle its young core, headlined by versatile running back Christian McCaffrey.

On Thursday, the Panthers did exactly that. They appeared to kick off their sale by trading McCaffrey to the San Francisco 49ers for four draft picks—three mid-rounders in 2023 and a fifth-rounder in 2024.

However, this blockbuster trade is not an indicator of a self-induced implosion in Carolina, at all. Here’s why.

The Panthers needed an organizational overhaul if they wanted to compete in the near future, as they’ve lingered in a frustrating cycle of mediocrity since their remarkable 2015 run. The experiment of matching an inexperienced head coach with a carousel of unqualified backup quarterbacks failed miserably—time and time again.

Carolina repeatedly missed the playoffs and inevitably became a chore to watch. Eventually, and most notably over the last two seasons, many fans refused to attend games, emptying Bank of America Stadium of a chunk of its home supporters.

Still, owner David Tepper’s franchise had its bright spots. General manager Scott Fitterer garnered widespread popularity for his “in on every deal” mentality.

Young defensive stars like Derrick Brown, Brian Burns and Jeremy Chinn skyrocketed to standout status. They retained stars such as wideout DJ Moore while bringing in accomplished veterans like right guard Austin Corbett and punter Johnny Hekker.

Every fan base thinks their team is only a few pieces away from being world champions, but Carolina showed enough flashes to prove it really is.

The NFL, however, doesn’t have room for the “almost great” teams. It’s either playoffs or failure, and the Panthers repeatedly fell on the wrong side of that.

It was time to make a decision: shoot for the postseason with the Baker Mayfield-McCaffrey-Moore trio, or set the team up for a successful rebuild.

After years of desperately trying to “retool” the weapons around a subpar quarterback, Carolina finally made the right choice. It’s officially rebuilding time—for the offense, at least.

For a successful rebuild, though, a team needs two things: draft picks and salary cap space. Before moving McCaffrey, the Panthers didn’t have much of either.

With just four 2023 draft selections and a negative tally in cap space, Carolina would had to have moved backwards in the coming years as they let their young stars find more enticing contract offers elsewhere. If the Panthers weren’t going to make a run at something meaningful this season, they had to realize they needed to reevaluate the parts of their roster that were holding them back—starting with the team’s stagnant offense.

And someone in the front office finally realized that.

They hit reset, gathered draft picks and are setting themselves up to rebuild the right way. If done correctly, Carolina can finally end the era of indecisive and ineffective “retooling.” It can end the era of mediocre quarterbacks holding back elite pass catchers. Most importantly, it can end the era of Rhule’s obsessive adherence to “The Brand.”

Once they realized that, it was only a matter of time before they moved on from McCaffrey. The draft pick compensation and cap savings were too enticing to keep him around throughout the rebuild. Trading McCaffrey was the perfect example of a blockbuster move that hurt the team in the short term, but was a necessary evil for the long term.

The one thing Carolina does not need is a reckless fire sale. Successful teams hardly ever trade away all of their young, surefire stars for chances at stars (a.k.a. draft picks), especially when the trades would create significant dead cap expenses. That’s exactly what a Brown, Burns, Chinn or Moore would resemble—moving a proven star in exchange for lottery tickets and money problems.

Since 2018, Moore has become one of the most valuable pieces of the Panthers offense—topping 1,000 receiving yards in each of his last three seasons while hauling in 15 career touchdowns. Impressively, he has succeeded despite the team’s quarterback carousel, building chemistry with whomever is throwing him the ball and almost instantly becoming a target magnet.

Unfortunately, Moore is on track to snap his 1,000-yard streak this year, as the dominant receiver has only amassed 204 receiving yards through the first six games of 2022. While that can almost solely be attributed to Mayfield’s struggles, Moore’s poor production inevitably lowered his trade value.

Shipping him off him now would yield relatively lesser draft compensation given his elite skill, not to mention the millions in dead cap losses the Panthers would be paying for years to come.

Much of the same is true for Brown, Burns and Chinn.

After a slow start to his pro career, Brown has taken off this year as a force in the center of the defensive line. This season, he brought in his first interception, already broke his record for passes defended and is on pace to blow his single-season tackle record out of the water. Given that Brown seems to be getting better each season—and that his dead cap hit next season would exceed $3 million—it would be irresponsible to move him for mid-round draft compensation.

Burns and Chinn have shined since their arrival. Burns has flirted with double-digit sack totals in each of his three seasons—reaching 9.0 sacks in 2020 and 2021. This year, he is on track to break that 10.0-sack barrier, as he already has 4.0 a little over a third of the way through.

Chinn came in second place in NFL AP Defensive Rookie of the Year Voting in 2020 thanks to a season made up of 117 tackles, two touchdowns and an interception. He followed up that performance with 107 tackles and five quarterback hits in 2021 before missing at least four games this season due to a hamstring injury. This is likely the lowest Chinn’s value has been since he entered the league, so the Panthers would be wise to hang on to their star of the secondary through his recovery and beyond.

Players like Brown, Burns, Chinn and Moore are the team’s future, and for now, it seems like the front office knows it. Despite Twitter users’ calls for more trades, let everyone know that the Panthers’ “fire sale” is canceled.

To be honest, it was never scheduled to start anyways.

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6 Panthers the Eagles should have interest in acquiring after Carolina fires Matt Rhule

With the Carolina Panthers firing head coach Matt Rhule and DC Phil Snow, we’ve listed six players the Philadelphia Eagles should be interested in acquiring via trade

Matt Rhule has been fired as the coach of the Carolina Panthers less than 24 hours after a 37-15 loss to the San Francisco 49ers and less than three years into a seven-year, $62 million contract he signed to leave Baylor for the NFL.

Rhule was fired with a record of 11-27, including this year’s 1-4 start. Under Rhule, the Panthers were 1-27 when allowing 17 or more points, including 25 losses in a row.

With Carolina making a change at head coach and defensive coordinator, the franchise could look to be sellers as they work to accumulate draft assets.

Here are six players the playoff-bound Eagles could look to trade for.

Panthers sign Juston Burris to active roster, Kenny Robinson Jr. to practice squad

After losing Jeremy Chinn, the Panthers brought back a pair of familiar names to help fill the glaring void.

The Carolina Panthers now have some terribly big shoes they need to fill on defense. And their first attempt at doing so will involve two familiar names.

Early Wednesday afternoon, safety Jeremy Chinn was placed on inured reserve with a hamstring issue—one that will keep him out for at least four weeks. In turn, the team has signed fellow safety Juston Burris up from the practice squad to the active roster.

Burris first joined the organization back in 2020, where he’d start alongside Chinn in 12 games. He then started in eight of his 10 outings the next season, amassing 76 tackles and two interceptions over those two campaigns in Carolina.

With free-agent signee Xavier Woods onboard this spring, Burris became a bit more expendable—and was released during the Panthers’ cutdown to their 53-man roster back on Aug. 30. The now seventh-year veteran was brought back as a member of the practice squad a day later.

To fill his spot on the practice squad, Carolina also signed Kenny Robinson Jr. The 2020 fifth-round pick was released from the group one month ago.

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Panthers place S Jeremy Chinn (hamstring) on injured reserve

The Panthers are losing Jeremy Chinn (hamstring) for at least the next four games after placing him on injured reserve on Wednesday.

The Carolina Panthers placed safety Jeremy Chinn on injured reserve, meaning he’ll miss at least the next four games while recovering from a hamstring injury.

The team announced the move on Wednesday.

Chinn, a 35-game starter for the Panthers over the last three seasons, injured his hamstring in the first quarter of Carolina’s loss to the Arizona Cardinals last Sunday. He played just six snaps before exiting.

Chinn will miss games against the San Francisco 49ers, Los Angeles Rams, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Atlanta Falcons before he’s eligible to return from injured reserve.

Through four games in 2022, Chinn has 20 tackles, two pass breakups and one tackle for loss. He produced back-to-back 100-tackle seasons in 2020 and 2021 while finishing second in the Defensive Rookie of the Year voting in 2020.

Sean Chandler and Xavier Woods are the expected starters at safety with Chinn out.

The corresponding roster move was signing safety Juston Burris from the practice squad to the 53-man roster, and the Panthers filled Burris’ spot on the practice squad by signing safety Kenny Robinson.

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Carolina Panthers vs. New Orleans Saints game recap: Everything we know

Thanks to a few big plays, the Panthers finally snapped the league’s longest active losing streak with a win over the Saints.

The NFL’s longest active losing streak no longer belongs to the Carolina Panthers.

Here’s everything we know from the big Week 3 win over the New Orleans Saints.

Gimme Him: Which Panthers players we’d steal for the Saints

Gimme Him: Which Panthers players we’d steal for the Saints, via @john_siglerr, @RossJacksonNOLA, @DillySanders, and @MaddyHudak_94:

The Carolina Panthers defense is stocked with talents like pass rush-specialist Brian Burns and safety/linebacker hybrid Jeremy Chinn, who would fit right in with the New Orleans Saints. They’re just some of the players we’d love to see suiting up in black and gold:

Panthers S Jeremy Chinn wears Chris Paul’s Wake Forest jersey in Week 1

Panthers S Jeremy Chinn threw on the threads of Wake Forest legend Chris Paul on Sunday.

Carolina Panthers safety Jeremy Chinn kicked off his 2022 jersey campaign last week, donning the No. 20 of former safety Kurt Coleman into the preseason finale against the Buffalo Bills. Today, the regular season show begins.

And the third-year defensive back began that portion with one of the best defenders the game of basketball has ever seen at the point guard position—Chris Paul.

Paul was born on May 6, 1985 in Winston-Salem, N.C. After attending West Forsyth High School in Clemmons, N.C., a stay which included the honor of being named North Carolina Mr. Basketball in 2003, he went on to play a pair of seasons at nearby Wake Forest University.

There, he’d average 15.0 points, 6.3 assists, 3.9 rebounds and 2.5 steals per contest. Paul was selected as the ACC Rookie of the Year in 2004, earned a consensus first-team All-American nod in 2005 and would later have his No. 3 retired by the Demon Deacons.

A prolific professional career, of course, would follow—as Paul has pieced together a surefire Hall-of-Fame résumé over 17 NBA seasons.

As is the case with every jersey he wears into Bank of America Stadium, Chinn will have the threads auctioned off for charity.

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Panthers announce 2022 team captains

Baker Mayfield was voted as a team captain in his first year with the Panthers.

On Thursday, the Carolina Panthers named their captains for the 2022 season.

Here are the eight men who were voted on by their teammates to, well, lead their teammates into the new campaign.