Monday, December 30, 2013

Who the Panthers will play in the playoffs -- my odds on the 3 possibilities



We now know a lot more about who the Panthers will play in their first home playoff game in five years, which will be Sunday, Jan.12th, 2014, at 1:05 p.m. at Bank of America Stadium.

There are five other teams in the NFC playoff race, and No.2 seed Carolina is only eligible to play three of them (No.3 Philadelphia, No.4 Green Bay and No.5 San Francisco) in the divisional round game. Here are my odds of who is the most likely opponent for Carolina and why:

1) PHILADELPHIA (50 percent). The Eagles are the No.3 NFC playoff seed and host sixth seed New Orleans Saturday at 8:10 p.m. The most likely scenario for Carolina is that the Eagles win this game at home against the Saints (who were 3-5 on the road this year) and come to Charlotte the next week.

If the Eagles win, the result of the Green Bay-San Francisco game DOES NOT MATTER in terms of who the Panthers will play in their Jan.12 game. That's because the Panthers, as the No.2 seed, must play the higher-seeded NFC team left after the first-round games. If the No.3 Eagles win, that has to be Philadelphia.

The Eagles would be a very difficult challenge for Carolina's defense, with their creative, fast offense led by quarterback Nick Foles and running back LeSean McCoy, who led the NFL in rushing this year. Their defense, however, is erratic, as Dallas quarterback Kyle Orton showed Sunday night.

2) SAN FRANCISCO (30 percent). The 49ers travel to play at Green Bay on Sunday, Jan.5th at 4:40 p.m. This game only comes into play for Carolina IF No.6 New Orleans can upset No.3 Philadelphia Saturday night in Philly.

If that happens, the Saints automatically will travel to play No.1 seed Seattle the following weekend, because the Seahawks are guaranteed the lowest remaining seed after the first-round games, and you can't get lower than No.6.

So if the Saints pull that upset, then the winner of the 49ers-Packers game will come to Charlotte. Even though that game is at Green Bay, I believe the 49ers will win it. San Francisco ended the season on a six-game winning streak, made the Super Bowl last year and, at 12-4, had a far better regular-season record and a better defense than the Packers (8-7-1).

3) GREEN BAY (20 percent). Same scenario as No.2 -- New Orleans would have to win first. Then the Packers would need to beat San Francisco. If they could manage that, Aaron Rodgers would come to Charlotte to face the Panther defense. Green Bay, in my mind, would be the best first-round matchup of the three for Carolina -- but at this point no one is easy.

And if the Panthers (12-4) win that Jan.12th game (in which they will wear black jerseys, if you are thinking that far ahead)? They would play in the NFC championship game Sunday, Jan.19th, at 6:30 p.m. Eastern time. That game would be at Carolina if Seattle gets upset on Jan.11th, when it hosts its first playoff game. It would be at Seattle if the Seahawks win.

If you are interested in trying to buy some of the approximately 7,000 seats the Panthers will put on sale for the Jan.12 playoff game on Wednesday, follow this link for more information. I expect those tickets will be gone in 5-10 minutes given all the outlets Ticketmaster has, so be ready. But DON'T show up at Bank of America Stadium -- its box office will NOT be open for this 10 a.m. sale on Wednesday.

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Panthers win another thriller, clinch a playoff bye and home game



The Carolina Panthers' fans can't ever seem to get off Thunder Road, but they had another thrill ride Sunday that ended well, as they edged Atlanta, 21-20, on the road to clinch a first-round bye and a home playoff game in Charlotte.

The Panthers ended up as the NFC's No.2 seed after Seattle's win Sunday -- the Seahawks are No.1. The Panthers will be playing either Jan.11 or 12 in Bank of America Stadium for sure. They won't have to play next week at all. About 7,000 single-game tickets are expected to go on sale Wednesday for the home playoff game -- more to come on that. The date of the game (Jan.11 or 12, Saturday or Sunday) is not yet set. If Carolina wins that one and the Seahawks win, too, the Panthers would have to beat Seattle in Seattle on Jan.19 in the NFC title game to advance to the Feb.2 Super Bowl in New Jersey.

5 things that went right for the 12-4 Panthers in a game they certainly could have lost:

1) Melvin White. With Carolina down 10-0 and looking awful, the rookie White made what I thought was the biggest play of the game in the second quarter. His pick-six of a Matt Ryan pass made it 10-7 and turned it into a game.

2) The defensive line. The Panthers got an incredible, franchise-record nine sacks off of Ryan, including two huge ones on what turned out to be the Falcons' next-to-last drive. Four came from Greg "Kraken" Hardy, who was truly monstrous. And, fittingly, it was the defense that won it at the end.

3) Cam Newton's legs. Newton was on and off throwing the ball, including starting 1-for-5 for eight yards and throwing an early interception again. But his legs kept the Panthers in the game offensively, particularly on a 96-yard TD drive at the end of the first half that culminated in the 3-yard TD pass to Ted Ginn Jr. that you see in the above picture.

4) Greg Olsen. He was the Panthers' most reliable receiver on a day where the team badly missed Steve Smith. Olsen caught a strike from Newton for the go-ahead touchdown in the third quarter.

5) Crowd noise. Panther fans came out in force in the Georgia Dome, and although outnumbered overall, they screamed loud and long at some very key times. In fact, Atlanta's center (who made a terrible bad snap that short-circuited the Falcons' final drive) said later he couldn't hear because of the Panther fans' crowd noise in the final seconds. At a road game, no less! The Panther fans contributed heavily to that noise, so they actually affected a road game at a critical moment. Kudos to those who made the 250-mile hike to do that.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Panthers a sure thing over Falcons? Not so fast

I have heard from many jubilant Panther fans this week celebrating the fact that the team will finally win the NFC South and host a home playoff game in January after a heart-pounding win over New Orleans a week ago.
That celebratory tone is understandable. But it's also premature.
The Panthers have to beat Atlanta in Atlanta first (the above picture shows how they must do it -- their swarming defense needs to be huge). The Falcons are 4-11 -- the mirror image of Carolina's 11-4 record -- but they have many of the same players that got the Falcons to the NFC championship game only one year ago.

As Panther offensive tackle Jordan Gross said: "The Atlanta game now is bigger than the New Orleans game was because it's got everything on the line. And playing the Falcons at Atlanta is never an easy game for us."

-- Gross understated that fact. The Panthers have lost five straight to Atlanta on the road. It's been so long that the last time Carolina has won in Atlanta was 2007.

-- One of the most memorable Panther wins in Atlanta came in 2006. Chris Weinke only threw the ball seven times and had an astoundingly low 32 passing yards, yet Carolina won, 10-3, because the Panthers controlled the ball for more than 41 minutes and DeAngelo Williams repeatedly ran out of the wildcat for first downs on third-and-short.

-- Now it's 2013. I wish the Panthers would drop the wildcat formation entirely from their offense. Every time they line up in it, I go ahead and write down a one-yard gain in my notebook before the play is run. And Williams is in his eighth season. But one thing hasn't changed -- the running back will be a key Sunday. A Panthers win would guarantee at least the No.2 NFC playoff seed, a first-round bye and a home playoff game either Jan.11 or 12.

-- Prediction time -- and time for a look back, courtesy of alert reader of John Wilkins of Denver, N.C. Wilkins writes: "In the 2013 Panthers Kickoff Preview dated Sept.7th, you predicted the Panthers to go 10-6 where Tom Sorensen predicted 8-8. Tom said in his prediction that if the Panthers go 11-5, he would buy golf shirts in mauve, taupe, and lavender.... I think Tom needs to get coordinating golf pants if we win next week to go 12-4."

Agreed. Tom's all-black Johnny Cash wardrobe is nothing if not consistent, but it could use an update. Here's hoping the pants he buys are lavender, too.


My pick: Carolina 24, Atlanta 13.


The Panthers led Atlanta only 17-10 entering the fourth quarter Nov.3 at Bank of America Stadium, but then scored 17 fourth-quarter points to win going away, 34-10. Here Cam Newton scores a TD vs. the Falcons -- Newton will play with an ankle that is not 100 percent Sunday.

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Panther fan challenges others to make road trip to Atlanta



Panther fans were at their absolute best Sunday against New Orleans.

Buckets of rain? No problem. The rain-soaked, rowdy crowd stayed until the end and literally shook the stadium on Domenik Hixon's 14-yard TD catch to win it in the final minute. If you were there, you know what I mean.

I felt it and thousands of people there did, too -- one fan in the upper deck said people around him "actually fell down, but it could have been the beer." Defensive end Charles Johnson would later tweet that it was the loudest the stadium had ever been in his memory. The picture above shows fans celebrating after DeAngelo Williams' early TD run.

Fan Lisa Swygert wants to keep that enthusiasm going for the critical final regular-season game at Atlanta -- here's an excerpt from an email she sent me.

Scott,

My family and I are DAY ONE Panther PSL fans..... I think the fans finally got it! My husband, son and I have seats in the upper deck and I will tell you when anyone started getting loud when the Panthers had the ball, just about everyone around that person started yelling for them to be quiet!

Over the course of the game, I think they actually understood the importance of remaining as quiet as possible, when the Panthers have the ball and as LOUD as possible, when the opposing team has it, especially on 3rd downs.

On a different note, I have a suggestion.... I am challenging other Panther fans to attend the Atlanta game next Sunday. I personally am surprising my husband and son with this last-minute gift idea.

It can be a day trip, so if finances are an issue, no hotel needed. Tickets are reasonably inexpensive... and I believe they might even be "cheap" on game day.

It's a GREAT last-minute gift for the family and most importantly we will (for once in the history of our team) have a real presence, at an away game. The conditions are perfect for it to actually happen, if we can just get the word out and challenge Panther fans! Doesn't get much closer in distance from CLT and prices should be at an all-time low with the Falcon's performance this year, combined with the holiday season still in full swing!

Always a Panther fan,
Lisa Swygert


(OK, this is Scott again. Incidentally, Panther defensive end Greg Hardy challenged Carolina fans to do much the same thing shortly after the New Orleans game. Tickets for the 1 p.m., Sunday, Dec.29th game are available in lots of places on the secondary market online, including the NFL's official ticket exchange, stubhub.com and other places. Be careful and try to buy online from a vendor who guarantees the tickets as valid).

On another note, this will be my last blog until shortly after Christmas -- I will be posting my Falcons-Panthers prediction on Friday, Dec.27th. Have a great holiday, everyone!

I so much appreciate you making this blog -- and The Charlotte Observer -- a part of your day.

Enjoy one more pic -- here's Steve Smith making his lone catch against New Orleans, a 44-yarder, before he hurt his knee. Pretty good concentration here, huh? The news was good Monday on Smith's knee, and although I'm sure he won't play against the Falcons I believe he will return at some point in the playoffs.

Monday, December 23, 2013

How the Panthers could host 2 playoff games and other NFC playoff analysis



It's still a long shot, but the Panthers could end up as No.1 playoff seed in the NFC for the first time in team history.

Here's how it would have to work. Three things must still happen (it used to be four, but San Francisco did the first by beating Atlanta Monday night):

1. Carolina must beat Atlanta at 1 p.m. Sunday.

2. San Francisco must beat surging Arizona on the road Sunday at 4:25 p.m.

3. St. Louis must beat Seattle on the road Sunday at 4:25 p.m.

The least likely of these things to happen would have to be No.3, given the Seahawks aren't likely to lose two straight at home. But St. Louis already did Carolina one favor -- beating New Orleans a couple of weeks ago -- and might again, you never know.

The Panthers can only control their own game, which will be played before Nos.2 and 3. Beating Atlanta assures a first-round bye and a home game on either Jan.11 or 12. That would be only the fourth playoff game the city of Charlotte has ever hosted (the Panthers have beaten Dallas twice -- following the 1996 and 2003 seasons -- and got clobbered by Arizona in the most recent one, in 2008 when Jake Delhomme had six turnovers).

There's still a way the Panthers and their superb defense (above, that's Greg Hardy putting Drew Brees on his back from Sunday's 17-13 win) could host two playoff games even if they end up as No.2 seed. Let's assume Seattle is No.1.

If the Seahawks are upset the weekend of Jan.11 and 12 by a to-be-determined opponent and Carolina wins that same weekend -- both teams would be coming off a bye in that scenario -- then the Panthers would get to host the NFC championship game for the first time in team history because of their higher seeding.

But a loss to Atlanta would likely push the Panthers to a No.5 seed, because I just don't see New Orleans losing at home to Tampa Bay Sunday. And in that scenario, there would be no home playoff games -- unless the No.6 seed and the No.5 seed both pulled two straight upsets -- and a much tougher, literal road for Carolina.

So beating Atlanta on the road is essential -- and cannot be taken for granted. If the Panthers do not do that, the team will likely be a No.5 or 6 seed and on the road at Philadelphia, Dallas, Chicago or Green Bay the weekend of Jan.4-5.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

An unbelievable victory for Panthers over Saints



The Panthers came up with one of the most miraculous drives in team history Sunday, going 65 yards in the final minute with no timeouts Sunday for the game-winning TD to edge the New Orleans Saints, 17-13, in a rainy and raucous Bank of America Stadium. The Panthers (11-4) clinched a playoff berth with the victory.

Here are 5 things that went right in a very tight game:

1) The defense. Holding the Saints to 13 points is a fairly amazing feat. The Panthers intercepted Drew Brees twice (Thomas Davis and Luke Kuechly) and sacked him numerous times. The only hiccup was a big one -- a 97-yard drive in the fourth quarter. But the defense came up big time and again. And the crowd noise was a big part of this -- Charles Johnson would later tweet it was the loudest he had ever heard Bank of America Stadium.

2) Domenik Hixon. What an amazing catch on the game-winning TD (above)-- diving into the side of the end zone for a Cam Newton bullet. Hixon was only playing due to Steve Smith's knee injury, which looked serious.

3) Cam Newton. After 59 minutes of high throws, a red-zone interception and just plain ineffectiveness, he made three incredible throws on the final drive (to Ted Ginn, Greg Olsen and then Hixon).

4) The rain. It didn't hurt the Panthers a bit that the third quarter was played in mostly monsoon conditions. Graham Gano punched a 40-yarder in through the rain that was a key play. And it kept Drew Brees and company on their heels for a couple of series. Check out the rain picture at the bottom of this blog post.

5) The final drive. Just remarkable. Much more coverage to come, but the fact that it was all done without Steve Smith makes it even nuttier.

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Panthers vs Saints Round 2 -- my prediction



On Sunday at 1 p.m. in Charlotte, the Carolina Panthers play their biggest game in, oh, what, about two weeks?

It was only Dec.8th when the Panthers and New Orleans Saints first locked up, and the Saints embarrassed the Panthers in the Superdome, 31-13.

What will be different this time in a game in which the winner is guaranteed a spot in the playoffs?

Not much if Carolina's defense can't do any better with Drew Brees (shown above talking with Steve Smith after the first game). A whole lot if the Panthers play Brees with more ferocity and Cam Newton has a better game.

The two quarterbacks in this game will be, by far, its biggest keys. Newton was mostly ineffective against the Saints two weeks ago, and that was partly because he got very little help from his receivers who kept getting pushed around and an offensive line that was occasionally manhandled.

Brees, on the other hand, was his usual wondrous self. Here's an instructive stat. Brees threw for 313 yards against the Panthers that first time around. Pretty darn good, right?

In terms of yardage, that didn't even make Brees' top five against just the Panthers. It barely qualified for his top 10 (it was eighth).

So Brees is going to pile up some yardage. No doubt. But he has to be made uncomfortable. He can't be allowed to step into every throw. He can't be allowed to have time to get to his third read when the first two are well-covered.

-- As for Newton, he had a measly 111 net passing yards against New Orleans. He took five sacks for 49 yards and threw for only 160. No Panther receiver could get to 50 yards as the Saints simply outplayed the Panthers everywhere.

-- In this game, Newton has to be very good to win. And he's going to have to hit a few deep throws. In the first game, of Newton's 34 passes, not a single one was completed for a gain of 20 yards or longer. The screen pass could also be a big Panther weapon Sunday, but Newton will also have to make quicker decisions.

-- It will be a pleasure hearing Joe Buck and Troy Aikman in the broadcast booth for those watching this one at home. They are a great pairing.

-- I'd like to see Mike Tolbert a lot more involved in this Saints game as the Panthers try to establish the run again early. The Panthers almost eliminated Tolbert from the offense the first time around -- he only touched the ball five times. And the Saints do give up yardage to pounding backs of the Tolbert variety. St. Louis bruiser Zac Stacy ran 28 times for 133 yards last week in St. Louis's upset of the Saints.

-- How many points does Carolina need to score to win? At least 20 is a must. In the 50 games that Sean Payton has coached for New Orleans in which the opponent scores 20 or less, the Saints' record is 47-3.

-- On Dec.8th, I picked the Panthers to upset New Orleans. This was a serious mistake. So.... fool me once, shame on you. Will the Panthers fool me twice?

Maybe so. But I think the Panthers will pull it off in front of the home crowd. My prediction: Carolina 30, New Orleans 27.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Some Panther notes as Saints week looms



-- Are visions of playoffs dancing in your heads as Panthers/Saints, The Sequel, looms (that's Drew Brees and Cam Newton hugging after the first one above)? Is it weird to you that with only two weeks to go, the Panthers still could finish as the 1,2, 5 or 6th seed in the NFC playoffs -- or out of them entirely? Check out Jonathan Jones' excellent breakdown of all the scenarios. Here is the simplest, though -- if the Panthers win Sunday at home against New Orleans they are IN the playoffs no matter what else happens. Go 2-0, and they win both the NFC South and a first-round bye. Lose to the Saints, and they sure better win at Atlanta the following week or face the danger of falling out entirely.

-- Come join The Observer's Joseph Person, Jonathan Jones, Tom Sorensen and myself, as well as WBTV's Delano Little, for a fun and FREE pre-game tailgate Sunday before the Saints game. We will have free Papa John's Pizza on The Observer's front lawn (600 South Tryon Street) as well as trivia contests with prizes and, at 11 a.m., a Q and A with all of us as we get ready for the big Panthers-Saints game.

-- Speaking of events at The Observer, we have another one this THURSDAY from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in our lobby at 600 South Tryon Street called "Holiday Store." There is limited free parking under the building for this one. Several current and former Observer-ites who have also authored books will be personalizing them with signatures and selling them in The Observer lobby for those two hours if you need last-minute Christmas gifts.

I will have copies of my new Panther book -- "100 Things Panthers Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die" -- there for sale (one book for $15; two for $25). This is probably your best chance to get it before Christmas -- a number of stores in the area, as well as Amazon.com, are sold out.

-- Our wonderful food writer Kathleen Purvis will be selling copies of both of her superb books in the Savor the South series, "Pecans" and "Bourbon," for $18 each. Former Observer religion writer Ken Garfield will be signing and selling copies of his excellent book on Billy Graham. And editor Roland Wilkerson will be selling a book version of the popular "I'm So Clever" Observer series of reader home tips for $5.99. Come see us. All sales must be by cash or check at this event.

-- Lastly, my friend Brandon Uttley sent me the picture below of Baller the ball python at Discovery Place, who appears to be reading one of my columns before using it for... well... whatever snakes use their cage liners for. This was taken Saturday, and Baller was apparently interested in reading about the Bobcats.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

5 performances I liked in big Panther win over Jets



The Panthers broke open a close game in the fourth quarter at home Sunday, whipping the New York Jets, 30-20, and raising their record to 10-4. And with New Orleans losing on the road to St. Louis, it couldn't have been a better Sunday for the Panthers. The Panthers can win their last two games (home against New Orleans, on the road vs. Atlanta) and win the NFC South with a 12-4 record. Here's my column about the possibilities Sunday opened up.

And here are 5 performances I really liked Sunday:

1. Brandon LaFell. Not only did LaFell have a big-time 36-yard catch in traffic when he held onto the ball while getting drilled, but he also threw a big-time block on DeAngelo Williams' 72-yard touchdown run with a screen pass (that's DeAngelo above, running down the right sideline as Jets coach Rex Ryan looks on).

2. Captain Munnerlyn. Two sacks, one interception returned for a TD to break Mike Minter's pick-six team record?! Promote this man to general.

3. DeAngelo Williams. That 72-yard scamper showed us the speed that we sometimes forget DeAngelo has, and he also had some key tackle-breaking runs as he rushed for 81 yards on 15 carries.

4. Cam Newton. Threw for 224 yards in the first half alone (and 273 altogether), repeatedly putting the ball on target to tight end Greg Olsen in particular. Seemed to take a hard hit at end of first half and was slow coming out for the second -- he had wound up stubbing his toe, but in a pretty painful way -- but didn't miss a play and didn't have a turnover. In the picture at the bottom of this post, he's celebrating Mike Tolbert's touchdown.

5. Jason Williams. The genial, behind-the-scenes special teamer came up with what may have been the biggest play of the game, blocking a punt with the score 16-13, Carolina, early in the fourth quarter. That set up Mike Tolbert's touchdown and gave Carolina breathing room in what was a close game for a long time. The Panthers are now 6-1 at home and about to face the Saints in a 1 p.m. game Sunday that WON'T be flexed, although I keep getting emails and tweets wondering if it will be.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Picking Panthers to rebound vs Jets and other pregame notes



If the Carolina Panthers beat the New York Jets on Sunday at 4:05 p.m., life returns to normal. The 31-13 loss to the New Orleans Saints fades into the distance. Another Saints game looms, but this time at home. The Panthers would be 10-4 and sitting pretty in the NFC playoff race, dancing much like Steve Smith is in the above picture.

But this is a game the Panthers can't afford to lose. And shouldn't lose. Although the Jets have won some big games this season, the fact remains they are 1-5 on the road and have a rookie quarterback in Geno Smith who is tied for the NFL lead with 20 interceptions. If you can't beat a team like that at home, you probably don't deserve a playoff berth.

-- If you are watching the game on television Sunday, remember that it will be found on CBS (WBTV in Charlotte) and not on the usual Fox outlets. The longtime NFL rule holds that when there is an inter-conference game like this one, the visiting team holds sway in terms of who televises it. CBS does AFC games and Fox does NFC games, so that's why the visiting Jets have placed this game on CBS with Greg Gumbel and Dan Dierdorf as the announcers.

-- Over-under on how many Rex Ryan shots we get during the telecast? I put the number at 25.

-- I have heard from a number of people who have had difficulty finding my new Panther book -- "100 Things Panthers Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die" -- because of temporary sellouts. Amazon.com, for instance, for much of this week had the book labeled as not being available for "1 to 3 months" due to back-orders.

-- So this should help. First of all, BN.com has the book available immediately online. Secondly, I will be signing books at Park Road Books in Charlotte Saturday, Dec.14th, from 2-3 p.m. and also at The Observer building (600 South Tryon Street) during a newspaper event that also will include author signings from Kathleen Purvis and Ken Garfield from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Thursday, Dec.19th. Come on by.

There are now signed copies of the Panther book available at Blis Uptown, a gift shop in Charlotte, in Founders Hall as well as at Barnes and Noble in Birkdale Village. And if you live in the Gastonia area, I will be signing books and speaking on Saturday, Dec.21st, at 2 p.m. at the main Gastonia library (1555 Garrison Blvd).

-- A number of folks have emailed me after my note last week about me wanting to hear from fans who have received a football directly from Cam Newton after a touchdown for a story coming up. However, I would still like to hear from others, too. Email me directly at sfowler@charlotteobserver.com if you are one of those people or know somebody who is.

-- Prediction stuff: I overestimated the Panthers last week and picked them to upset New Orleans on the road -- an unwise choice. That dropped my seasonal record to 9-4 -- the same as Carolina, although I have not picked the Panthers to win every week. My pick this week: Carolina 23, New York Jets 13.

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Panthers will go with all black look on Sunday



The Carolina Panthers will go with their all-black look for only the third time in team history this Sunday afternoon in their home game vs. the New York Jets, according to my sources.

UPDATE: The team has now confirmed the look. The Panthers will wear black jerseys, black pants and blue socks -- the combination that won NFL.com's "Greatest Uniform in NFL history" contest in a major upset over the summer.

The Panthers have not worn black on black except for the 2012 regular season against Denver -- a game which they lost 36-14 and which Greg Olsen's TD (above) was one of the few good moments -- and a preseason game against Philadelphia this season, which they also lost. So the "back-in-black" look will be looking for its first win.

While jersey colors are decided months in advance -- the home team gets to pick first -- and cannot be changed, pants color is optional and can be changed at the last minute. The Panthers generally wear silver pants with their black jerseys.

No matter whether Panthers win or lose Sunday, they will wear black jerseys and silver pants vs. New Orleans at home Dec.22 (the Saints wore all black while eviscerating the Panthers Sunday night). Panther fans have long clamored to see the all-black look more often, although some of them would rather the team also had a black helmet it could wear with them (the Panthers do not and have no plans to do so).

The bolt of color in the all-black look -- the electric blue socks -- comes courtesy of Steve Smith, who in 2012 got a sneak peek at the black uniforms before they debuted and was allowed to choose the sock color. So blame No.89 if you don't like that part of it.

The Panthers defeated the San Francisco 49ers' current uniform in the finals of the NFL.com contest, getting about 90 percent of the vote in a contest where fans could vote an unlimited number of times (despite the fact the uniform had only been worn once in team history at that time).

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Updated NFC playoff picture with 3 games to go



Let's take a look at the crowded NFC playoff picture with 3 weeks left in the regular season. If it ended today, this is how it would stand.

Current seeds:

1. Seattle (first-round bye) 11-2

2. New Orleans (first-round bye) 10-3

3. Philadelphia 8-5

4. Detroit 7-6 (wins tiebreaker with Chicago due to series sweep)

5. Carolina 9-4 (higher than 49ers due to head-to-head win)

6. San Francisco 9-4

Outside looking in: Arizona (8-5); Dallas (7-6); Chicago (7-6); Green Bay (6-6-1)

First-round playoff games the weekend of Jan.4-5:

Carolina at Detroit

San Francisco at Philadelphia


Here are the remaining schedules for the 10 NFC teams in playoff contention:

CAROLINA: New York Jets (6-7); New Orleans (10-3); at Atlanta (3-10)

NEW ORLEANS: at St. Louis (5-8); at Carolina (9-4); Tampa Bay (4-9)

SEATTLE: at New York Giants (5-8); Arizona (8-5); St. Louis (5-8)

ARIZONA: at Tennessee (5-8) at Seattle (11-2); San Francisco (9-4)

SAN FRANCISCO: at Tampa Bay (4-9); Atlanta (3-10); at Arizona (8-5)

PHILADELPHIA: at Minnesota (3-9-1); Chicago (7-6); at Dallas (7-6)

DALLAS: Green Bay (6-6-1); at Washington (3-10); Philadelphia (8-5)

DETROIT: Baltimore (7-6); New York Giants (5-8); at Minnesota (3-9-1)

CHICAGO: at Cleveland (4-9); at Philadelphia (8-5); Green Bay (6-6-1)

GREEN BAY: at Dallas (7-6); Pittsburgh (5-8); at Chicago (7-6)

Panther analysis: Winning two out of the final three should virtually assure a Panther wild-card spot, and it really helps that the Panthers beat San Francisco by harassing Colin Kaepernick so well (see above picture).

In case of a three-way tie for the wild card -- with San Francisco, Arizona and Carolina all finishing 11-5 -- the Panthers would win the three-way tiebreaker and get the No.5 seed, San Francisco would be No.6 and Arizona would be out (In that case, 49ers and Arizona would use the two-team tiebreaker, eliminating Cards due to 49ers' better NFC West record, and then Carolina would be seeded higher than 49ers due to head-to-head victory).

Note: Carolina could actually clinch a playoff spot this week, but it would require ALL of these things to happen: Carolina wins, and Arizona, San Francisco and Dallas all lose; OR Carolina wins and Arizona, San Francisco and Philadelphia all lose (in the Eagles' case only, a tie would also work).

Winning the NFC South division for Carolina would require New Orleans to go 1-2 over its final three games and the Panthers to go 3-0 (New Orleans wins the tiebreaker if the teams both finish 12-4). So the Saints need only to win two of three games for a first-round bye and at least one home playoff game. (Or New Orleans could go 0-3 and Carolina 2-1, although the Saints ain't going to be going 0-3).

Most likely, the Panthers will not host a home playoff game now. If they are the No.5 seed, they could host the NFC championship, but only if the No.6 seed also advances to that game.

If Carolina goes 1-2 over its final three games, the Panthers would finish 10-6 and stand a chance at being caught by a variety of teams -- that's when it gets dicey, as I point out in my Tuesday column. A 10-6 Chicago team did not make the playoffs in 2012. And an 0-3 ending would likely doom the Panthers, although I don't see that happening.

General NFC analysis: Arizona has the most difficult schedule remaining of the playoff contenders, and Panther fans should cheer for Cardinals to lose every week. Seattle needs to win two of three to assure homefield advantage throughout the NFC playoffs by virtue of its win over New Orleans.

Detroit and Chicago are tied atop the NFC North, but Detroit's sweep of the Bears means that the Lions would win the tiebreaker. Philadelphia has a fairly favorable schedule and a strong chance at winning the NFC East, although it will likely come down to the Eagles' season-ender at Dallas. Remember, all four division champions get one home playoff game, regardless of record.

Monday, December 9, 2013

5 things that went wrong in a bad Panther loss to Saints



The Panthers had a downcast locker room after the game for the first time in a couple of months. Offensive tackle Jordan Gross probably provided the best perspective on the loss, saying: "It was just tough. But I feel good that we can learn from this and get a little bit revitalized. You win eight in a row and everything is peaches and cream every Monday... When you lose, you get reminded of all your little faults. It might not be bad for us."

Gross reminded everyone that the Panthers' 9-4 record is "great. We're right in the mix of the playoff picture. The worst thing we could do is hang our heads and mope around and let one loss turn into two.... We might have a better sense of urgency now than had we won. I'd rather get my butt kicked this week than three weeks from now or four weeks from now."

Now, onto the list of the five things that went most wrong (as well as some analysis of the Panthers' playoff chances):

1) The coverage. This was the night that the secondary -- and the linebackers in coverage -- really got exposed. Drew Brees had a classic Drew Brees day -- 30 of 42, 313 yards, four TDs and no interceptions. He was accurate as usual, but often his receivers were open by 3-4 yards. Coach Ron Rivera said afterward that the Panthers weren't physical enough with the Saints' receivers, which linebacker Luke Kuechly agreed with. Kuechly gave up one TD pass to Jimmy Graham where he said "I needed to get my hands on him."

2) The offensive line. Cam Newton had a bad day, but that was partly because he was harried so often. Newton was sacked five times and took big losses on most of them -- a total of 49 yards. He scrambled out of trouble many more times. The offensive line simply looked overmatched against the Saints' pass rush, and DeAngelo Williams never went longer than nine yards on his 13 carries. And, to make matters worse, the oft-injured Jonathan Stewart may have a serious knee injury.

3) Newton himself. He threw 34 passes, and not a single completion went for more than 17 yards. "I was trying to take what the defense gave me," said Newton, who targeted Greg Olsen 12 times. Olsen caught eight of them, but for only 40 yards.

New Orleans coach Sean Payton praised his team for "minimizing the chunk plays," and the Saints certainly did that. It wasn't all Newton's fault. His receivers didn't get enough separation, Rivera said. Brandon LaFell in particular had a bad day, with only two receptions for 22 yards and one drop.

4) The pass rush. Brees was only sacked twice even with all those attempts. Now he gets the ball out really quick, but c'mon. The Panther simply didn't get there enough with their base four-man rush, and Brees picked them apart in the 21-point second quarter that decided the game. The Saints were great in the red zone behind Brees, while Carolina was bad, kicking field goals instead of scoring TDs.

5) Coaching. The players didn't blame the game plan, but it certainly didn't work. The Panthers only netted 111 yards passing. Mike Tolbert disappeared. The Saints found every hole in the Panther defense. The offensive line couldn't hold up. The Panthers tried to start blitzing more after halftime, which disrupted Brees a little, but he looked like a much different quarterback than the one who was so messed up by Seattle on Monday night. They get another chance Dec.22, at home.
"It's a great measuring stick for who we are and where we have to go," a somber Newton said. "The best thing about this tonight is we have opportunity to face this same team in two weeks."

OK, as for the playoffs: Carolina would be the No.5 NFC team, going on the road to play Detroit, if the playoffs began today (here are the NFL standings). The Panthers must be careful, though. They now share the same record as San Francisco -- 9-4 -- but the Panthers hold that tiebreaker. However, if Carolina loses once more -- say, to the Jets at home on Sunday -- then there's a possibility Arizona (8-5) could catch Carolina. And Arizona holds the tiebreaker against Carolina. So the Panthers are no sure thing to make the playoffs as of now -- 11 wins would almost certainly get them there, which would require a 2-1 finish. Anything less than that would be very iffy. So the Panthers can't afford a holiday hangover.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Panthers over New Orleans? I just have a hunch



Do you know how rare this is?

All of it, I mean.

The Panthers on an eight-game regular season winning streak (never has happened). The Panthers getting "flexed" into a Sunday night game out of what used to be a Sunday 1 p.m. game (happened five years ago, against the New York Giants, but that seems like a long time).

New Orleans and Carolina both 9-3, meeting for the first bout in a two-game, 15-day, home-and-home series (never has happened).

Me going to Cafe du Monde to load up on coffee and beignets, getting powdered sugar all over myself and never being able to entirely brush it off just before a game at the Superdome (all right, that has happened a few times).

-- Look, the Panthers are going to give up yardage Sunday night. No way around it. Drew Brees has thrown for 325 or more yards seven times in his New Orleans career against Carolina. Seven times! You know how many times Cam Newton has thrown for 325 yards or more in his entire career against everybody? Three.

-- On the other hand, do you remember that DeAngelo Williams (shown above on his touchdown run against San Francisco) rushed for a franchise-record 210 yards in the season finale at New Orleans a year ago? The Panthers certainly do. I've always thought Williams is one of the Panther players who excels on artificial turf, which accentuates his speed and cutting ability. I'd be surprised if he doesn't get at least 15 carries Sunday.

-- Look, this has nothing to do with the game, but it's a good cause. If you're feeling lucky about the Panthers' chances of making the Super Bowl, you ought to consider entering a raffle for two Super Bowl tickets, plane fare and luxury accommodations for the big game on Feb.2, 2014. The raffle tickets are expensive -- $100 each -- but they benefit a very good cause (Children's Home Society of North Carolina) and only 1,200 will be sold. And the prize is big-time. Click here if interested in learning more.

-- One more thing unrelated to this game: I am thinking about writing a column about some of the kids and families who have gotten a "touchdown football" from Cam Newton at a Panthers game over the past three years. You know what I mean -- one of the balls that Newton physically hands to a kid in the end zone after a Panther score. As you can imagine, however, no one keeps a list of such families. If you are one of these families or know of one I could contact to talk about what the ball means to them and so on, please email me at sfowler@charlotteobserver.com. This is called crowd-sourcing, people -- help me out!

-- OK, onto the prediction.

The Saints should win this game, really. They are undefeated at home in 2013. By my totally unscientific measure, I believe they are 10 points better at home than they are on the road. They are coming off an awful loss to Seattle that was a nationally televised embarrassment, and anxious to make up for it. Brees is ridiculously good.

All week I have planned to pick the Saints. And yet that Monday night game keeps giving me pause. I know it was in Seattle, but it was a blueprint. And the Panthers should have Charles Johnson back. And they have a ton of confidence. And I just have a hunch. Could be a bad one. Could be too many beignets. But I'm picking: Carolina 33, New Orleans 29.

What if Panthers had begun play in 1955? An imagined history of the logo



Matt Stevens is a dreamer, which comes in handy in his work as a graphic designer in Charlotte. So when his friend Ryan Kalil, the Panther Pro Bowl center, asked him recently to imagine what the Panthers' history would look like if the team had been founded a long time ago instead of in 1995, Stevens couldn't stop thinking about it.

As a personal project, with no endorsement from or affiliation with the Panthers, Stevens decided to imagine a logo and brand history for the Panthers if they had been founded in 1955 instead of 1995.

The results are pretty stunning if you're into that kind of stuff. Stevens said he put "about 30 hours" of work into the project, which he then posted on his own blog. I'm reprinting some of his work here, but if you want to know more about how he did all this, I'd recommend checking out this post. The level of detail is amazing, as Stevens not only designed a fake logo, but also a fake game program and fake football cards (Kalil's name is hidden in one of them -- notice the guy on the left is a made-up player named Bryan Lilak (which is "Kalil" backwards.)

.)

Stevens, 42, grew up in Asheville, graduated from UNC Charlotte in 1994 and has lived in Charlotte ever since. After working in small to mid-sized graphic design and branding shops for most of his career, he opened his own company two years ago. His is a small, one-person office in the Cotswold area. He has a wife and three children and did one of the sketches for the program cover while waiting for a pizza at Hungry Howie's on a Friday night to bring home to them.

This sort of "on spec" project thing has worked for him before. He has obsessed with Nike shoes in the 1980s and so he did some creative illustrations about one particular brand of Nikes not long ago. Nike saw them and eventually hired him for a project. He has also done work for Facebook and Pinterest.

"I like to do things I'm passionate about," Stevens said. "And I'm a huge football fan and a huge Panther fan, so this made sense."

Stevens got to know Kalil when he designed a logo for a charitable foundation that Kalil does some work with called "LittleKings.org," and the designer began to realize quickly that Kalil was no dumb jock.

"Ryan has all sorts of creative interests," Stevens said. "Movies, comics, design -- he's into lots of stuff."

After Stevens finished the project, he put the work on his website Monday. Kalil gave it an online boost by sending out the link on Twitter, and the link has since been picked up by one of Sports Illustrated's website and several other national sites. Stevens said his personal website usually draws around 500 hits a day, but that increased to about 12,500 per day this week.



Based on feedback Stevens has gotten, the most popular part of his design seems to be the black Panther on top of the silhouette of North and South Carolina. So he's making a modified version of that one into a T-shirt, figuring he will sell at least a few of them at $30 each. It won't outsell the "Ice Up, Son" T-shirts, but I think it's cool, as is the rest of this stuff. Stevens didn't imagine any results for the team in these 40 "lost" seasons -- I guess he's going to leave that to you. (All the pictures reproduced here are used with Stevens' permission).

Monday, December 2, 2013

What New Orleans loss to Seattle means to Panthers

Well, no one expected that.

Seattle absolutely torched New Orleans on Monday night, blasting the Saints 34-7 in Seattle and sending New Orleans skidding into its key game with Carolina Sunday. The Saints and Panthers now have identical 9-3 records entering the Sunday night game at New Orleans. Here are the full NFL standings. New Orleans would still win the division if the playoffs started today because it holds the tiebreaker edge.

How can Carolina get by the Saints and win the NFC South and the automatic home playoff game that goes with the title (as well as a likely first-round bye)? Two ways:

1) Beat the Saints twice. That head-to-head advantage would guarantee the Panthers a home playoff game no matter what the results of the two teams' other games were. With the Saints on a "short" week and somewhat beaten up by the physical Seahawks, this is at least possible, although playing in New Orleans is a rigorous test. Here's my column about the New Orleans "sandwich."

2) Split with the Saints and.... win against Atlanta and the N.Y. Jets, and hope New Orleans loses once more in its other December games at St. Louis (5-7) and home vs. Tampa Bay (3-9). In that case Carolina would finish 12-4 and New Orleans 11-5.

So what happens if both teams finish 12-4 and tied in the NFC South by splitting against each other and each winning their other two games? That is a pretty likely scenario, and in that case New Orleans would be the NFC's No.2 playoff seed (with a first-round playoff bye) and Carolina would be the No.5 seed and have to travel for a first-round playoff game (likely to Dallas, Detroit, Chicago or Philadelphia).

The reason: New Orleans would win the fourth tiebreaker after the first three failed to break the tie. That relevant tiebreaker -- best NFC record -- would go to New Orleans (10-2 vs. 9-3 in this hypothetical) because the Saints' two other losses this season were to AFC teams and Carolina lost to Arizona, an NFC team, along with Buffalo. Both, of course, lost to Seattle. (The head-to-head, division and common opponent records would all be tied in this scenario). So the Panthers' best bet, by far, is a sweep of the Saints.

-- One interesting side note to Monday night's game: it gave me a strong sense of deja vu from the biggest game I ever saw in person in Seattle. That was the Panthers' 34-14 loss to Seattle in the 2005 NFC title game.

Like New Orleans, Carolina seemed totally discombobulated early in that one. Both teams fell behind the Seahawks by scores of 17-0, 27-7 and 34-7. It was really over by halftime in both cases. Ed Hochuli even was the head official in both games, for gosh sakes. In both cases, the Seahawks crowd was a huge factor. The only real difference was that Carolina scored a late meaningless TD to make it sound more respectable, and New Orleans didn't. The Saints, incidentally, gave up more points to Seattle in 13 minutes than Carolina did in 60 in the 2013 season opener.

And the Saints' defense really looked vulnerable to the pass, if Cam Newton can be anywhere near as accurate as Russell Wilson was Monday. The New Orleans offensive line also looked vulnerable as Seattle got more pressure on Drew Brees than I have seen in a long time. It makes Carolina's 12-7 loss to Seattle look a little better, although of course Seattle is a totally different team on the road.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

5 things I liked in big Panther win over Bucs



The Panthers moved to 9-3 Sunday with their eighth straight win, a 27-6 manhandling of Tampa Bay that was close early until the Panthers began to dominate. Here are five of the things I liked the most about the victory, which included Brandon LaFell (above, celebrating) scoring the Panthers' first TD:

1) Riverboat Ron. I thought the key play of the game was when "Riverboat" Ron Rivera went for it on fourth-and-goal from the 1 with 30 seconds to go with Carolina holding a 10-6 lead. No doubt Rivera would have kicked the field goal there earlier in his career and gone into halftime up 13-6. Instead, he goes for the jugular, Newton gets over the top a half-yard before fumbling and Carolina had a 17-6 lead and all the momentum.

2) Team defense. Even when the Panthers play badly on defense, they seem to have just enough to make up for it. Case in point: Drayton Florence gets torched for a 60-yard Vincent Jackson pass. But Florence manages a shoestring tackle at the Carolina 4, and from there the Panthers hold for two plays and Mike Glennon has an awful fumble on the third one. No points, and once again -- after yet another second-half shutout -- the Panthers will retain their overall No.1 rank in the NFL in scoring defense. The run defense was particularly effective.

3) Mike Tolbert. What a banger. With DeAngelo Williams out, he took a larger role and took the old Sam Mills motto ("Keep Pounding") to an extreme.

4) Ted Ginn Jr. He's seemingly good for about one big play a game, but what a big play it can be. Ginn's visit to Darrelle Revis's "Island" resulted in Ginn burning Revis for a 36-yard touchdown and putting the game out of reach.

5) A.J. Klein. Several times in this game the rookie linebacker looked so much like Luke Kuechly that it was tough to tell the difference. Some fans had to catch themselves as they started the old cheer of "L-U-U-U-K-E" after Klein's big sack of Mike Glennon.

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Predicting Panthers to beat Bucs Sunday



As anyone who follows the NFL even casually knows, Sunday is not a "gimme" for the Carolina Panthers, even though they are 8-3 and Tampa Bay is 3-8.

This game looked like a six-inch putt a few weeks ago, but it has morphed into a four-footer with a sidehill lie. The Panthers can't lose focus against the Bucs, who have won three in a row and nearly beat Seattle in Seattle, which was their most impressive accomplishment of all. A few game notes:

-- The Panthers are going to have to rattle former N.C. State quarterback Mike Glennon to win (the picture above is of Greg Hardy sacking Glennon in the Oct.24 meeting and was taken by The Observer's Jeff Siner). But Glennon is not easily rattled. Glennon has thrown just one interception in the past six games -- the lowest number of interceptions by any NFL quarterback over that time period. Because he has thrown so few interceptions, Glennon's quarterback rating is slightly higher than Cam Newton's (91.6 vs. 88.3).

-- Carolina is tied for third in the NFL with 15 interceptions -- already four more than the Panthers had in all of 2012 -- but were not able to pick off any of Glennon's 51 throws in the teams' first meeting Oct.24th. That's partly because a lot of them were dump-offs, but still.

-- You better believe Newton will know where No.54 is at all times Sunday. That's Lavonte David, the Buccaneers' most dynamic defender and the closest thing Tampa Bay has to Luke Kuechly. Like Kuechly, David is in his second season and very fun to watch.

-- To quantify the "Riverboat Ron" nickname a little, check this out. Since the Week Two loss to Buffalo, when Ron Rivera was burned by not going for the first down on fourth-and-1 in a loss to the Bills, he has gone for it seven times on 4th-and-1.

Carolina has converted six out of seven, including a key one last week when the Panthers were down by 10 points and on their own 41. On the seventh, Brandon LaFell dropped an easy pass against Arizona.

-- Incidentally, I was on a radio show with former Panther general manager Bill Polian earlier this week. Polian said he never would have gone for fourth-and-10 at his own 20 with 2:33 to go and trailing by three points, as Rivera did last week against Miami. He did go, the Panthers made it, and they ended up scoring the winning TD on the drive.

-- I don't foresee an easy game on Sunday, but I do foresee the Panthers' eighth straight win. Like the Panthers, I am 8-3 predicting their outcome this season. My prediction: Carolina 24, Tampa Bay 17.

Olympic swimmer Ricky Berens retires again -- this time for good he says



Two-time Olympic gold medalist Ricky Berens of Charlotte said Thursday he was retiring from swimming -- this time for good.

Berens said in a phone interview Thursday from Austin, Texas, that his swimming career had "run its course." He has accepted a full-time paid position with the University of Texas athletic department, where he is working with the Longhorns' fundraising arm and its lettermen's club.

Berens, 25, graduated from Texas and helped it win a national championship during his time there. He had been working as a volunteer swim coach for the Longhorns for the first part of 2013 while still pursuing his own swim career.

"I've put off the real world long enough," Berens said. "It's time to pursue some other passions."

Berens originally retired following the 2012 Olympics after winning his second gold medal in the 4 x 200-meter freestyle relay. In an interview with The Observer minutes after that gold medal, he said he was retiring immediately.

But after a few weeks, he reconsidered and decided to give swimming one more season. He swam in the 2013 UltraSwim meet in Charlotte as usual. And he participated in the world championships in Barcelona this summer, anchoring the U.S. 4x200 freestyle relay to another gold medal.

"That was very scary," Berens said. "I had never anchored before. I held off one of the Russian swimmers to win it in what will turn out to be my last competition. Not a bad way to go out."

Berens originally made this "second" retirement announcement on SwimSwam.com, the swimming website run by another former Charlottean and Olympic gold medalist -- Mel Stewart.

Berens said Thursday he wants to work in collegiate sports administration as a career and that his eventual goal is to be an athletic director at a college. He promised this retirement would stick and that he would not return for another comeback.

"If you had told me 10 years ago I would go to even one Olympics, I would have said you're crazy," Berens said. "I got to participate in two and win three Olympic medals (two gold, one silver). Everybody always wants more, but I have no real desire to swim competitively any longer. It's time to get on with life."

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

3 interesting Panther numbers to ponder



As you prepare for a Thanksgiving feast of football, food and family, here are three Panther numbers I find significant:

8 -- Although it has been widely reported the Panthers have now tied the team's all-time winning streak record with seven consecutive wins, that's only sort of true. In the regular season, yes, that's right -- the 1996 team was once 5-4 and then finished 12-4 with seven straight. But that '96 team then beat Dallas in its first playoff game, so really it won eight straight. To get to eight, the Panthers will need to beat Tampa Bay at home Sunday at 1 p.m., a task that looks a little more daunting now than it did three weeks ago when the Bucs were 0-8.

15 -- That's the total number of Panther interceptions this season, and that's significant. Last year's team only had 11 all year, and no single defensive back had more than two. This year three players (Mike Mitchell, Luke Kuechly, pictured above after one of his picks, and Robert Lester) already have three. The fact that the Panthers are catching most of the balls they have a chance to catch this season -- not all of them, though, and I'm talking to you, Captain Munnerlyn -- has played a big part in the defensive success.

27 -- The Panthers are now No.1 in scoring defense by a wide margin, allowing 13.7 points per game. How wide is that margin? Kansas City and Seattle are tied for No.2 in the NFL in scoring D. But if KC and Seattle shut out their opponents this weekend and Carolina gave up 27 points to Tampa Bay, the Panthers would still be No.1.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Once 66-1, Panthers now are 10-1 shot to win upcoming Super Bowl



You may not want to hear this if you are superstitious, but:

The Carolina Panthers, have dramatically lowered their odds of winning the Super Bowl in February 2014. The Panthers, authors of a seven-game winning streak that is the longest current streak in the NFL and employers of popular linebacker Luke Kuechly and the NFL's No.1-ranked scoring defense, are now 10-1 to win the Super Bowl. Just before the regular season began, they were 66-1.

So if you put $100 in Las Vegas down on the Panthers right now to win the upcoming Super Bowl and they did, you would get back $1,000. If you had made that same bet in early September and it paid off, you would receive $6,600.

Here are the current odds to win the 43rd Super Bowl, to be played Feb.2nd in (and why is this again?) in New York/New Jersey. The odds are courtesy of Bovada.lv. I have listed the current odds first -- the worst teams aren't even on this list because they won't be making the playoffs. Below that, just for fun, are the odds as they were Sept.3, 2013:

(AS OF TODAY)

Odds to win the 2014 Super Bowl XLVIII


Seattle Seahawks 3/1

Denver Broncos 7/2

New England Patriots 13/2

New Orleans Saints 13/2

Carolina Panthers 10/1

San Francisco 49ers 14/1

Cincinnati Bengals 22/1

Kansas City Chiefs 22/1

Indianapolis Colts 28/1

Dallas Cowboys 33/1

Detroit Lions 33/1

Green Bay Packers 33/1

Philadelphia Eagles 33/1

Arizona Cardinals 50/1

Pittsburgh Steelers 50/1

Baltimore Ravens 66/1

Chicago Bears 66/1

San Diego Chargers 75/1

New York Giants 100/1

Miami Dolphins 150/1

Tennessee Titans 150/1

New York Jets 250/1

Washington Redskins 300/1

St. Louis Rams 350/1

Odds to win the 2014 Super Bowl XLVIII

(As of Sept.3rd)


Denver Broncos 6/1

San Francisco 49ers 6/1

Seattle Seahawks 17/2

New England Patriots 10/1

Atlanta Falcons 12/1

Green Bay Packers 12/1

Houston Texans 16/1

New Orleans Saints 18/1

Chicago Bears 25/1

Cincinnati Bengals 25/1

Dallas Cowboys 25/1

New York Giants 25/1

Baltimore Ravens 28/1

Pittsburgh Steelers 28/1

Washington Redskins 33/1

Detroit Lions 40/1

Indianapolis Colts 40/1

Miami Dolphins 40/1

Minnesota Vikings 40/1

St. Louis Rams 40/1

Kansas City Chiefs 50/1

Philadelphia Eagles 50/1

San Diego Chargers 50/1

Tampa Bay Buccaneers 50/1

Carolina Panthers 66/1

Arizona Cardinals 125/1

New York Jets 125/1

Buffalo Bills 150/1

Cleveland Browns 150/1

Tennessee Titans 150/1

Oakland Raiders 250/1

Jacksonville Jaguars 300/1

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Panthers win another thriller over Dolphins, 20-16



The Panthers finally broke one of the most curious streaks in their history Sunday. The only NFL team they had never beaten until Sunday was Miami, and it took all they had to grab a come-from-behind, 20-16 victory on the road.

In what was an often flat performance, the Panthers (8-3) did just enough to win their seventh straight game by going 80 yards on their last drive of the game when they absolutely had to have it. Here were 7 of the most notable reasons why they won:

1. 4th-and-10. On the Panthers' final drive, the most important play was a fourth-and-10 the team converted when Cam Newton hit Steve Smith in tight coverage. Smith bounced off two guys and gained 19.

2. The rest of that drive. Mike Tolbert, Newton, Greg Olsen (who had the one-yard touchdown catch pictured above), the offensive line -- it all came together at the end, and Miami's 15-yard late hit penalty on a Newton run didn't hurt. "One good drive can fix a lot of problems," Olsen said afterward.

3. End of first half. Although it will be overshadowed by that final drive, this was huge. Miami had the ball first-and-10 from the Carolina 11, already ahead 13-3. The Dolphins had to take a field goal -- Luke Kuechly had another controversial flag pickup in the end zone after jarring the ball loose -- and then Carolina drove down for its own field goal with Brandon LaFell's smart, get-out-of-bounds-at-just-the-right-time 29-yard grab to keep the halftime deficit at 16-6, far more manageable than 20-3 would have been.

4. Riverboat Ron. With Carolina facing a fourth-and-1 on its own 41 in the third quarter and down 16-6, Ron Rivera gambled big-time. The Panthers converted on a Newton run and eventually got a TD on an 83-yard drive (afterward, Newton purposely mimicked LeBron James' knee-lifting dance in tribute to LeBron, whom he counts as a friend). Newton also posed with Mike Shula and father Don -- the legendary former Dolphins coach, now 83 -- following the game (see the picture at end of this blog post).

5. Brad Nortman. The punter had a tremendous day, booming one big one after another in a game where field position really mattered.

6. Defensive stinginess. After allowing Miami such a big first half, the Panthers shut down Mike Wallace and company in the second half, doing just enough for Carolina to pull it off. Wallace nearly caught a Hail Mary that would have been a game-winner after safety Mike Mitchell for some reason allowed Wallace to get behind him on a play you simply can't let that happen, but Wallace dropped it. That's the way it is going for the Panthers this year -- part karma, part confidence, as I write in this column.

7. Close-call confidence. I don't think the Panthers would have won this one except for the fact they won in very similar circumstances against San Francisco and New England over the past two weeks. Close wins are contagious, just like close losses are.

Teal appeal: Changing colors back to purple and teal makes sense for Bobcats//Hornets



If you are going the nostalgia route, you need to go as far down the path as you can.

So the Charlotte Bobcats -- soon to be the Charlotte Hornets -- are absolutely correct to change their primary colors to purple and teal starting with the 2014-15 season, to coincide with their nickname change. Team officials talked in depth about the decision in this exclusive interview with The Observer's Rick Bonnell.

I don't mind the old Hornet uniforms getting a slight tweak. That makes sense. But the primary colors had to stay the same. Purple and teal -- particularly teal -- were a huge part of the Bobcats' original appeal.

In their 14 years in the NBA before George Shinn moved the franchise to New Orleans, the Charlotte Hornets led the league in attendance eight times. That color scheme – designed by Alexander Julian – was incredibly popular. It regularly outsold the merchandise of every NBA team except Jordan’s Bulls.

Of course, it all went bad for the Hornets. They moved away in 2002. The Bobcats came in for the 2004-05 season, and since then have mostly struggled to make a wide swath of the Charlotte area care deeply about the NBA again.

A color and uniform change won't do that alone, of course. The Bobcats will need to win, too -- although they are a respectable 7-7 now in their final season as Bobcats. But evoking nostalgia makes a lot of sense for the soon-to-be Hornets, or else why would you go back to the original nickname in the first place?

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Predicting the Panthers to beat Miami by 14 and other notes



If you were a Carolina Panther defensive lineman and you absolutely did not want to miss a certain game, that game would be Sunday against the Miami Dolphins.

The Dolphins have allowed more sacks this season than any other NFL team. Ryan Tannehill has gone down 41 times, which is literally a staggering number for a quarterback. It is no coincidence that the Dolphins' bullying scandal took out two of the team's offensive line starters.

Unfortunately for the Panthers, their defensive line will not be at full strength, either, for Sunday's 1 p.m. game at Miami. I would not be surprised if defensive end Charles Johnson (above, being carted off Monday night) misses 2-3 games with that sprained ligament in his knee, perhaps not returning until the key showdown at New Orleans Dec.8th. He's definitely out for this one. (And speaking of New Orleans, the Saints won again Thursday night, edging Atlanta 17-13 with the help of a terrible decision by Falcons coach Mike Smith at the end. Smith incomprehensibly tried a 52-yard field goal down four points with less than three minutes remaining. In that situation, even though it's fourth-and-15, you've got to go for it, because otherwise you will never see the ball again with Drew Brees needing just a first down or two to seal it. The Saints (9-2) now lead the NFC South by 1.5 games over Carolina (7-3). But I digress....

-- The news could have been worse after Johnson was viciously leg-whipped by New England's Marcus Cannon Monday night -- Cannon was fined nearly $16K for the play -- but it still doesn't help Carolina this week. There will be a big opportunity for some of the Panthers' young ends in this game, as Greg Hardy will now attract the double-team on most plays -- assuming Hardy is OK to play, which he should be.

-- To me, the steady progression of Cam Newton as a quarterback can best be defined statistically by how good he has been on third down this season. That's when Newton does his best scrambling work, and he also has been very good throwing the ball under pressure this year.

He's always been above average on third down, which is the down that makes or breaks quarterbacks. The Panthers were No.10 in third-down conversion percentage in Newton's rookie year (2011). They rose to No.6 in 2012. But now Carolina ranks No.1 in the NFL third-down conversions, a shade above Denver, which is the gold standard of NFL offenses this year. The Panthers have converted almost half of their third downs -- 62 of 128 for 48.4 percent.

-- I will be at the Barnes and Noble in Huntersville's Birkdale Village signing copies of my new book, "100 Things Panthers Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die," from 5:30-7 p.m. on Friday, Nov.22nd. If you can't get by there, the store will stock signed copies now through Christmas. If you want more information on the book, here's a link and an excerpt..

Like the Panthers, I am 7-3 this season -- in my case, that's my record picking the team's outcome each week. (As you may recall, before the season I picked the Panthers to go 10-6 and make the playoffs; that one I did not feel too good about after the 1-3 start). I have managed to get seven of the past eight weeks right, getting back on track last week by choosing Carolina to beat New England by three (the Panthers won by four). This one I don't believe will be that close. My prediction: Carolina 27, Miami 13.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Miami (Not) Nice: Panthers have never beaten Dolphins



This is a little weird. The only NFL team the Panthers have never beaten in the regular season is their next opponent -- Miami.

The Dolphins and Panthers have only played each other four times, and in each case the Panthers have managed to mess it up. They've lost to Miami when Carolina was good (the 2005 playoff season) and when Carolina was bad (the 1-15 2001 season). They've lost to Miami when Dan Marino was the quarterback and Jay Fiedler was the quarterback (and he threw for more yards than Marino).

They lost a game once when Steve Smith had one of the best games of his career -- three touchdowns and 170 receving yards. They allowed the forgettable Oronde Gadsden to burn them for 102 receiving yards.

In other words, history says not to take these Dolphins (5-5) lightly. The Panthers (7-3) just got the two biggest victories of Ron Rivera's tenure in an eight-day span -- the winning touchdown was scored by former Dolphin Ted Ginn Jr. (above) against New England. But Carolina would give back some of that hard-earned ground if they lost.

The four-game series:

1998: Dolphins 13, Panthers 9.

2001: Dolphins 23, Panthers 6.

2005: Dolphins 27, Panthers 24.

2009: Dolphins 24, Panthers 17.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Immaculate Perception? Robbed Gronkowski? Nicknaming the big play



I asked the Twitterverse on Tuesday to come up with a nickname for the last play of the Panthers-Patriots game Monday night, when Carolina linebacker Luke Kuechly was first flagged for pass interference against New England tight end Rob Gronkowski in the Panther end zone with 0:00 on the clock. Then the call was reversed after the officials determined Gronkowski couldn't have caught the ball anyway, and the Panthers won, 24-20. Had the original call stood, the Patriots would have gotten one play from the 1 to try and score a game-winning touchdown.

Here were some of the best entries, all submitted via Twitter to @Scott_Fowler. A three-person panel judged "Immaculate Perception," written by David Wood, as the winner of the modest prize -- a copy of my new book chronicling the Panthers. Thanks to all who entered.

Sweet Hug Carolina

Cuddle-kowski

Man Hug

LUUUUUUU-cky

Karma

Mug the One You're With

Gronkitis

Need a Hug

Cool Hands Luke

Immaculate Perception

Immaculate Interception

Immaculate Exception

The (Un)Catch(Able)

Hanky Panky

The Incredible Edible Flag

Robbed Gronkowski

5 things I liked in dramatic Panther win over Patriots



They seem to be getting the old band back together again -- does it not seem to you like the Cardiac Cats are back? Carolina edged New England, 24-20, Monday night on a game not decided until the final play. The 5 things I liked the most (as well as a couple I didn't):

1. The dramatics. Hey, if you're a little tired on Tuesday, suck it up. Was that game not worth it? It wasn't decided until the last play, when Tom Brady threw an interception in the end zone and a pass-interference flag on Luke Kuechly was controversially waved off (due to the ball being deemed uncatchable by Rob Gronkowski, who Kuechly was bear-hugging. This was one of the most electrifying wins in Panther franchise history. (Also, I am holding a quick contest on Twitter only -- best nickname of that final play wins a copy of my new Panther book. Enter by going to Twitter and putting your nickname and @Scott_Fowler in your tweet to make sure I see it). Deadline is 3 p.m. Monday.

2. Cam Newton. Simply put, one of his best games ever. Three TD passes. Zero turnovers. A 14-yard scramble you had to see to believe. And the signature fourth-quarter TD drive his career needed. Here's my column on Cam's performance, which netted him a 125.4 quarterback rating and, far more importantly, a win. He thought he could fly (see picture at very bottom of this blog) and it turned out that he could.

3. The crowd. "It was phenomenal," coach Ron Rivera said. "This city wants it, and we're going to give it to them." Rarely has it been louder at B of A.

4. Thomas Davis and Kuechly. Unofficially, Davis had a remarkable 17 tackles and Kuechly had 12 (as well as that bear hug of "Gronk" on that last play that was not called).

5. Robert Lester. On the final play, the rookie undrafted safety was in the right position and intercepted Brady. After watching the Georgia-Auburn game Saturday, you know that it's not a sure thing to make that interception right at that time.

There were a number of problems this game showcased for the Panthers, too. Brady shredded Carolina for 296 yards and the Patriots ran for another 107. Charles Johnson got leg-whipped by the Patriots' Marcus Cannon (it should have been a penalty) and his injury status is unclear, although I was amazed to see him back in the game late. Cornerback Melvin White looked overmatched many times and was obviously targeted by the Patriots. The Panthers couldn't run the ball at all, as the offensive line had all sorts of trouble run-blocking and the running backs did little.

But, hey, they won another close game over another extremely good team. It was a huge win on a number of levels, and it pushed the Panthers to another in what recently has been a series of mountaintops. Here's how Greg Olsen felt about it in a postgame hug with Rivera (and no wonder Olsen is so sure-handed; he has three hands). And then look at this Newton "flying" picture (all of the pictures in my blog are from our excellent Observer photographers - Jeff Siner and David Foster were shooting Monday night's game and did a great slideshow you can find elsewhere at charobs.com).



Sunday, November 17, 2013

Tony Dungy says Panthers are best team in the NFC



4 notes before the Monday night game, in which the Panthers will wear black jerseys and silver pants and want their fans to dress in black for a "blackout" night:

-- I wrote this weekend about Jon Gruden being very bullish on the Panthers -- he believes they will win "10 or 11" games, reach the playoffs and have a shot at the Super Bowl. Another high-profile coach with a Super Bowl title in his pocket added his name to the "Panther respect" list on "Sunday Night Football." At halftime of the Kansas City-Denver game, former Indianapolis and Tampa Bay head coach Tony Dungy added his voice to the chorus, saying he thought the Panthers were the best team in the NFC right now, saying "Defense. Defense. Watch." The other members of that studio team -- Hines Ward and Rodney Harrison -- picked Seattle as the NFC's best and disagreed with Dungy. But Dungy's endorsement carries way more clout than that of those two former players.

-- One thing I didn't have room for in the story about Gruden: he said he thought both offensive coordinator Mike Shula and defensive coordinator Sean McDermott would get head coaching interviews after the season.

-- The Panthers got no help in the NFC South division race on Sunday. They could have benefited from a San Francisco win over New Orleans, but instead the 49ers mismanaged a late two-minute drill and lost to the Saints, 23-20. So no matter what happens in the New England game, the Panthers are going to be trailing New Orleans (8-2) for awhile (the Saints do still have to play Seattle, as well as the Panthers twice). If Carolina (6-3) loses to the Patriots Monday night, they still will be tied in the wild-card race and would win the tiebreaker right now on the basis of a better record in the NFC. Also, if you care about statistics, they could become the No.1 scoring defense in the league Monday night following the conclusion of Week 11 if they can hold New England to 22 points or fewer, since Kansas City had such a hard time with Denver in its 27-17 loss to the Broncos.

-- Here's my story on Mike Tolbert (above). The blocky running back leads the Panthers in both touchdowns and nicknames, and I love his unofficial philosophy on having fun while playing football. "You stress up, you mess up," he said. As well as a lot of other things -- the story also includes a list of seven of his nicknames. Check it out.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Memories of gentlemanly Mike McCormack and the Panthers



You could argue that Mike McCormack -- who died at age 83 on Friday in California -- had the most successful front-office tenure in Carolina Panther history, even though it was brief.

Panther owner Jerry Richardson hired McCormack (whose statue outside Bank of America Stadium is pictured above) as a consultant in 1989, and his main job was to help Richardson and his partners win an NFL franchise for Charlotte.

“Just his presence gave our ownership instant credibility,” Richardson said once.

Every one of my dealings in those early years with McCormack was fun. He was consistent and classy, a guy who had done everything in the NFL but never tried to lord that over you.

McCormack was a genuinely kind person -- Sam Mills once called McCormack the "ultimate gentleman," and coming from Mills that's quite a compliment. By the time Richardson hired him, McCormack had been in the NFL for nearly 40 years. He was a Pro Football Hall of Fame offensive tackle, earning that honor after paving holes for Jim Brown in Cleveland and blocking for quarterback Otto Graham. His old coach, Paul Brown, once said he was “the finest offensive lineman I ever coached.”

McCormack then turned to coaching. He was the head coach of three different NFL teams in his career – for the Philadelphia Eagles, Baltimore Colts and Seattle Seahawks. He also served as the Seahawks’ president.

The Panthers were awarded an NFL franchise on Oct.26, 1993. McCormack was the team’s first general manager, but later was elevated to become its first president when he and Richardson hired Bill Polian as the GM.

Then McCormack stayed on through the heady first two years of the Panthers – the better-than-expected 7-9 season of 1995 and the NFC championship game appearance in 1996. Right after that, McCormack retired, so he got to skip the next six years of playoff misses.

My longtime colleague Charles Chandler just reminded me of a story that shows how much even reporters who covered the team were affected by McCormack. In 1996, when Charles was the head beat writer covering the Panthers and I was his backup for The Observer, we got a landline at the stadium. We needed to establish a voicemail so we could check it every day. We picked the password "1951," which was in honor of McCormack's rookie year in the NFL.

Richardson thought so much of McCormack that he made McCormack the first inductee into the Panthers’ Hall of Honor. A statue of McCormack was unveiled outside the stadium in 1997.

McCormack would wonder later if he had retired too soon from Carolina. He had a year left on his contract, and his moderating influence was obviously missed in the front office. But he was 65 by the time the Panthers began play in 1995. He thought he was leaving the team in the hands of a strong front-office man in Polian – his handpicked successor – but Polian left for the Indianapolis Colts only a year later.

“When I left, I felt it was in good hands and everything would be fine,” he said once in an interview with The Observer. Instead, the team slowly unraveled, although McCormack also hastened to say that he might not have been able to stop the decline, either.

But McCormack, who moved back to the West Coast after his retirement, remained a fan of the team and was cheered by its three playoff appearances in the 2000s. He is still one of the men remembered most fondly from the Panthers’ early days.

As Richardson said when announcing McCormack would be the first man in the Panthers’ Hall of Honor: "Mike is a person who typifies everything the Panthers stand for. We think he's the best benchmark for all of us in the organization. There is no more appropriate person than Mike to start our Hall of Honor. It sets a high standard for all who follow.”

I would like to suggest something to those Panther fans who come to Monday night's game against New England. Walk by McCormack's statue outside the North Gate and pay your respects. Thank a kind thought or say a prayer for him. He was a great man who lived a long and fulfilling life. May he rest in peace.

Predicting Panthers over Patriots and some pregame notes



It has been eight years since New England visited Charlotte, and that is an eternity in the NFL. The Panthers and the Patriots have not played very often, but when they have it's been memorable. They have only played five times in games that counted, but four of those have a spot in Panther history. In order of importance, they were:

1) The Super Bowl. Following the 2003 season, the Patriots bested Carolina in the most important game the two teams have ever played. Jake Delhomme (shown above, running out onto the field with his teammates before that Super Bowl) threw for 211 yards -- in the fourth quarter! He led three touchdown drives in the Panthers' final three possessions and Carolina still lost, 32-29, because Tom Brady was even better.

2) The Seifert Bowl. In George Seifert's final game as the Panthers' head coach, more than 50,000 empty seats mocked the team as New England decimated the Panthers, 38-6 in the last game of the 2001 season.

3) The Redemption Bowl. Two years after the Super Bowl, the Panthers upset New England, 27-17, in Week 2 of the 2005 regular season in Charlotte. It was the first indication that Carolina was ready to go to the playoffs (the team would finish 11-5).

4) The Kasay Bowl. Carolina's first-ever road win came in 1995, when John Kasay won the game in overtime, 20-17.

-- The Panthers are wearing black jerseys Monday night and want fans coming to the game to wear black as well for a "blackout" effect.

-- This is scary good -- since the 2010 season, the Patriots are 24-1 in the second half of the regular season (Games 9-16 each year). Yes, that's correct: 8-0 twice, 7-1 once and 1-0 so far this season.

-- Tom Brady is 13-4 on "Monday Night Football," which means he's played more than one regular season's worth of games on Monday night. Suffice it to say the moment is not going to be too big for him.

-- This is weird: Carolina and New England are two of the three NFL teams NOT named for either a specific city or a specific state. The third? Tampa Bay.

-- I missed my Panthers' pick last week, breaking a string of six straight hits. This time I think the Panthers will prevail, paced once again by a defense that will rise to this momentous occasion. Prediction: Carolina 21, New England 18.