MMQB: Olsen And The Panthers Strike Back at The Bears

(picture via wsoctv.com)

(picture via wsoctv.com)

(Written by David Gabriel)

MONDAY MORNING QUARTERBACK!! Just say it 2-3. Now 3-2. Doesn’t 3-2 sound SO much better? Because it is.

A game that looked like good fortune from the start turned mighty ugly in the first half. After the Philly Brown scoop n score on the punt many things went wrong in the 1st half. Jason Avant drops a 3rd down pass to keep a drive alive, Benjamin fumbles (and the dropped passes KB! can’t be afraid to take a hit) and then Cam gets sacked and fumbles. Both turnovers lead to touchdowns. Now we’re driving! All the way into Chicago territory and then..another turnover! A tipped ball gets picked. Seriously?! Aaaaanother turnover. But here was the turning point of the game (I think). Bears drive and settle for a field goal and miss it! So no points off that turnover. Cam puts together a scoring drive right before the half and we are fortunate to be down 7 with what seemed like a million turnovers.

Whatever the coaches said to the defense at half time and whatever changes they made were game winning changes. How many times in the 2nd half did the D get a 3 and out when needed? Finally showing glimpses of last year. Pressure on cutler. Oh yea let’s reverse the fortune and the Bears are turning it over now. A Roman Harper pick (did he read mmqb last week?) DeCoud pick and a HUGE forced fumble on Matt forte by Cason. Now we were working with the short field. Finally we caught a break!

23 yards to go and a tied game. Cam and Greg strike again for the game leading and game WINNING touchdown! The black and blue never gave up yesterday they how do say it? They Kept POUNDING. And that’s what we are going to need the rest of the season. Right now sitting at 3-2 and (still) NFC South leaders.

But how about Cincinnati getting thumped by the Pats on SNF? Panther nation I loved seeing that you know why? Cause they are down. And when they are down it’s time to knock em down a little further. Going and picking a win up in Cinci won’t be easy but it can be done! It’s time to put the big boy AFC pants on and show Cinci there is only one QUEEN CITY and that’s right here in Charlotte, NC. I want to be 4-2 going into the game vs the defending Super Bowl Champs! Who’s with me? Keep Pounding panther nation! Hey at least we aren’t Jets fans!

Crown Town Basketball shirts are BACK…. with stickers!

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The Crown Town Basketball Shirt

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The Crown Town Basketball Sticker

The Crown Town Basketball shirt is BACK and this time there are stickers!

Be sure to check out our website http://www.bringbackthebuzz.com to order yours today before they sell out once again.

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MMQB: Smitty’s Revenge

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(Written by David Gabriel)

MONDAY MORNING QUARTERBACK!! say that like you want to pull your hair out. A year ago MMQB started after a disappointing loss to the AZ Cardinals and the Panthers dropped to 1-3. I was calling for Riverboat Ron’s job and called out anyone I could think of. I guess the good news here is we are 2-2 this year!…. I’ll get to the offense later but Defense, what in the world?! 38 points given up, 75 points in the last 2 games? Went from a defense that was #2 overall last year to this now. No pressure on the quarterback (thanks Greg) where ya at Charles?, secondary (*cough* Roman Harper) you better figure out something soon because here is a list of upcoming QBs we face: Cutler, Dalton, Rodgers, Wilson, Brees, Foles and Ryan. Yikes! Roman Harper just gained 100 more grey hairs. Oh and he just missed another tackle. Ice up gramps.

Now for the other side of the ball the offense, or lack thereof. A banged up quarterback with his top 3 RBs injured is not the recipe for success on any team, unless your Peyton Manning. Wait, who’s running the ball?! What’s his name? He’s on the team? That would be Darrin Reaves and Tauren Poole and to be honest I could tell you nothing about either besides they are the 3rd and 4th string RB. Can Stephen Davis come out of retirement? Cam is most effective when we can run the ball with purpose and the D can do their part to keep it a reasonable score. The past 2 weeks we have failed to do either. Panther Nation I would say I have some optimism but the body language of the team yesterday spoke volumes to me. They look defeated and it’s only week 4. The injury bug has hit the Panthers, again. But we can’t blame Roman Harper for everything.

Standing at 2-2 is not as bad as it seems. Tied for 1st place in the NFC South and the way Tampa and NO are looking is pleasing. The next 7 weeks before the bye will truly test us. Time to put these last 2 behind us and move on! KEEP POUNDING. Chicago comes to town next Sunday and for the love of my sanity please dominate (oh yea and win). As I finish this weeks disappointing MMQB I tip my hat off to you agent 89. For 11 years we had the privilege to watch you go to battle and represent our ball club. I’m not shocked at all you are turning into the #1 target and emotional leader up in Baltimore. You sure did make the secondary look like school yard kids minus Roman Harper, pretty hard to make him look young.

The Panthers collapse under bright lights once again. “The Sunday Night Film Review”

Sunday Night Football

Sunday Night Football (Luke Kuechly)

(Written By Austin Stallings)

This past weekend, NBC’s Sunday Night Football made one of it’s few-and-far-between stops in Charlotte – and brought with it an atmosphere that Panthers fans hadn’t seen in years. Crowds gathered in uptown’s Romare Bearden park and nearby tailgate hotspots to partake in game-day festivities as early as 8 hours before kickoff. Driving through Uptown was no easy feat on Sunday, but sitting in gridlocked traffic has never been more enjoyable: amongst a city-wide party, cheerfully awaiting it’s guest of honor, the 2-0 Carolina Panthers.

Unfortunately, that pre-game atmosphere didn’t stay for any after-parties, and the electrifying hype that fueled the Queen City all week failed to make it to the 4th quarter Sunday night.

No — the game didn’t go Carolina’s way for most of the evening; Offensive coordinator Todd Haley came to town with a perfect gameplan to quiet the Panther pass-rush, and [the legendary] Dick Lebeau schemed up a defensive front that hit Newton so much he couldn’t keep his pads on straight.

Years ago, I had a wise football coach tell our team – following an embarrassing home loss one week before the State Playoffs – that we would not be revisiting the film from that game. We were much better than the effort that took place on the field that night, and instead of dwelling on the loss in the film room — the tape would be trashed. Unconventional as it may have been, he was right. We quickly turned our attention to the next team and decisively won the playoff game the following week.

That could not be further from what this Carolina Panthers team has to do to improve from this loss.

This team will watch every painful frame of this tape, over and over again, as well they should. Not only to improve upon themselves, but because there are 11 teams lined up to play the Panthers this season who are salivating at the sight of this film reel. Both Offensively and Defensively, the Steelers put together a successful blueprint that – along with plenty of self-inflicted miscues – attacked this Carolina team in the right ways.

Obviously, it’s easy to point to 2 distinct Special Teams blunders that changed the course of this game. After all, both led to immediate Pittsburgh touchdowns. But amidst your [totally justified] distaste and ill will, be sure to credit what is one of the most successful coaching staffs in this league’s recent history. The Steelers were able to methodically maintain drives on Carolina’s vaunted defense, and consistently get to Cam Newton with a 3-man pass rush.

Upon further review of the film (because trust me, you don’t want to watch it), here is what the Pittsburgh coaching staff did with their extended week of preparation, and what the Panthers need to correct moving forward:

 

Offense: Screen & Run Game Will Slow Down Any Pass-Rush

If you’re a Panthers fan, you should know by now how the Carolina defense has come to earn it’s notoriety. A big, talented front seven that prides itself on sacking quarterbacks, (The unit led the league with 60.0 in 2013). It’s secondary, which for the past 2 seasons has been assembled with young undrafted talent and veteran free agents, really does not have to be elite or name-brand when playing behind such a gifted group. In the first two weeks of 2014 that formula has held up. The front seven kept quarterbacks Josh McCown and Matthew Stafford under duress, and as their number of drop-backs increased, the pressure got to them and they turned the ball over.

Enter Todd Haley, who became the offensive coordinator for the Steelers in 2012, and has since tweaked their philosophy to help protect franchise quarterback Ben Roethlisberger. Since he has been in Pittsburgh, Haley has significantly reduced the amount of full drop-backs Roethlisberger takes, and upped his number of screens and short passes (10 yards or less) to 66.2 percent.

That being said, there may not be a single player in the NFL better fit for Haley’s screen-oriented offense than Antonio Brown. In last week’s preview, I highlighted him as a matchup problem and said he might be the best player in the league after the catch — He is.

Why the preface on Haley, Brown, and the screen-game? The Steelers employed their new philosophy to perfection on Sunday night, and in-turn were able to neutralize Carolina’s elite pass-rush that it relies on. Typically when the Panthers get an offense in passing down situations – they sub in specialists (Kony Ealy and Mario Addison), assume sprinter stances, and hope they can get to the quarterback. But Haley refused to take many chances in those situations. Instead of 7-step drops and long routes, he continued to opt for low-risk quick passes and screens. Because of this, Roethlisberger often only held the ball for a second or two at a time, and was only sacked once.

 

While the Panthers were able to contain the many screen passes early on, Brown’s elusiveness began to wear on the defense and the gains got longer. This forced players like Luke Keuchly and Thomas Davis to provide more help to the sidelines, allowing a much-improved Le’Veon Bell more room to work up the middle. Bell responded with great patience and vision, waiting for blocks to develop and hitting holes with authority. After shedding 20 pounds this past offseason, Bell looks like a completely different player: Much more explosive with moves he was physically unable to make in the past.

Pittsburgh’s executions of screens, draws, and off-tackle runs proved that they were well-prepared for this defense. They removed Carolina’s strongest asset from the game by giving it’s pass-rush few shots at the quarterback. They countered the aggressive nature of the defense by making it pay when it over-pursued. And they forced a talented linebacking core to try to play both run-gap responsibility and sideline help. Minus a few costly mistakes and 4th quarter fatigue, the Panthers defense played well – despite getting put in far too many compromising positions.

Pittsburgh’s air-tight gameplan was mostly to thank for their offensive success, and was a testament to their experienced coaching staff and their extended week of preparation.

 

Defense: Hit Newton Early and Often

While watching this film, I wrote down one particular phrase a disturbing number of times:

“3-man rush gets to Cam.”

I wrote that so many times that if I were using an Apple device it would have auto-corrected any unrelated sentences to such. I wrote that enough times to make it a top search suggestion on Google.

Not that this is news to anyone, but the legendary Dick Lebeau has been the mastermind behind the Pittsburgh defense for many years now. (If that was news to you, let me know where to send you one of many coffee-table-books on NFL history.)

One of the best to ever do it, Lebeau-coached defenses are historically complex, hard-hitting units that have earned him 6 AFC Championships and 2 Super Bowl rings over the years. Against the Panthers, he dialed up schemes that were able to contain the runner in Newton and expose an offensive line that was heavily-criticized entering the season.

One of the packages in his gameplan was an enigmatic “amoeba” defense, in which all defenders in the box are standing upright instead of the traditional three-point stance. (This package is utilized by several other teams, and goes by various names.)

"amoeba" defense

“amoeba” defense

The defensive front moves around before the ball is snapped, and can rush any combination of 3 to 6 players while dropping the remainder back into coverage. This is difficult for a quarterback, who has to quickly determine who will blitz and who will drop. It’s also very difficult for the offensive line and running backs, who must adjust the pass protection accordingly to not allow any free rushers. When executed correctly, the amoeba defense can leave parts of the protection with no one to block while greatly  outnumbering a weak spot.

3 man rush with a QB spy and man coverage

3 man rush with a QB spy and man coverage

More often than not, Lebeau opted to rush some combination of 3 against the Panthers, while utilizing a quarterback spy and dropping the rest into man coverage. A “spy” is commonly used against mobile quarterbacks, and is usually a linebacker who neither rushes nor drops. Instead he assumes a zone-type stance (eyes on qb), making sure to stop him if he tucks and runs. The drawback to rushing 3 men is, well, you’re not typically going to get to the quarterback very often.

The Steelers did.

 

The Steelers rushing 3, utilizing a spy, and dropping to man coverage

The Steelers rushing 3, utilizing a spy, and dropping to man coverage

Both by scheme and by skill, the Pittsburgh front seven got entirely too many open shots on the still-injured Newton. I saw Cam take almost as much criticism for his play as he did for his post-game attire. But the truth is: When he wasn’t getting sacked, he was still getting hit; When he wasn’t getting hit, he wasn’t able to step into throws because the pocket had collapsed.

Cam under pressure

Cam under pressure

He missed a handful of throws under the pressure, but he also connected on some tough ones (including an endzone shot on which Benjamin miss-timed his jump.) Working in such an inconsistent pocket – the Panthers are fortunate he was able to avoid further injuries, albeit he appeared to be in pain most of the night.

Often after these types of games, you can point to a player or two who allowed so many sacks and pressures – but this falls on the entire group: offensive linemen, running backs, and tight ends.

Both tackles Chandler and Bell got beat pretty frequently – around the edge and flat out bull-rushes. Greg Olsen, Mike Tolbert, and Jonathan Stewart all missed a number of blocks in pass protection – which is something you don’t hear very often. Even perennial Pro-Bowler and offensive anchor Ryan Kalil blew protection assignments that led to free hits on Newton. Understanding that this style of defense can be extremely difficult to protect against, and the Steelers executed their gameplan well — This group has to come together and improve from this, especially heading into a particularly tough 8-game stretch without Tolbert and Stewart.

Part of why the Steelers had so much success rushing the quarterback Sunday night, was being able to play a pressed man coverage for most of the game. Knowing that the Panthers were without Jericho Cotchery, playing with a still-healing Jason Avant, and mostly leaning on a rookie for productivity – Pittsburgh gladly walked up their defensive backs, daring the receiving core to beat them. For much of the night it worked, as the pass-rush was able to hit or pressure Newton before any of his receivers could really get open. There were a few bright spots however:

  • Kelvin Benjamin continued to shed the rookie stigma, proving he can win one-on-one matchups in the NFL.
  • Greg Olsen played Mr. Reliable once again. After beating cornerback Cortez Allen on an out-route, he then turned up field and sped to the pylon for a 37-yard touchdown early in the 4th quarter. The play provided a much-needed spark and cut the deficit to 10. Olsen continues to make his Pro Bowl case as a primary weapon for this team.
  • Undrafted rookie Philly Brown proved that he can be an asset to the offense, using his quickness to get open for 7 receptions and 66 yards. *You already know about his special teams mishap, but making one mistake while trying to make a play will not land him in my dog house yet. Besides, who else do you propose the team field punts with? Moving on.

 

The Panthers continued in their Sunday Night struggles, and missed opportunities to remain undefeated and keep sole possession of the NFC South lead. But there is much to be learned from a loss like this, and the team must seize the opportunity to improve from it. This Sunday they will travel to Baltimore to take on their second of four AFC North teams this season. The Ravens, also 2-1, are fresh off two division wins and have a certain wideout who undoubtedly circled this week the moment the schedules were released. Stay tuned for my Week 4 preview and injury updates throughout the week.

 

 

GET INVOLED In The Charlotte Hornets Media Day!

10362944_10101780532755103_572162112_nWe were granted the privilege of being one the Charlotte Hornets fan blogs/sites that was selected to attend “Media Day” on Monday Sept. 29th. As you may have noted in the past we are not like other fan blog/sites. We like to beelieve that we are “By The Fan, For The Fan.”

This being said, we are not exactly sure what the format of the day will be but we want to try and get our followers involved.

***PLEASE COMMENT on this post any questions you want to see us ask any players and staff we may come across!***

FYI, we will also have a professional photographer with us to capture as much of the day as possible… IF that is allowed!

NEEDED: Charlotte Hornets Analyst Writer

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With the beginning of the Hornets season coming quickly we are preparing our blog to carry the large amount of information that will be flooding in.

If you see how we have constructed our Panthers pages there is a section called “4th and Growl”, currently written by Austin Stallings, who is handling the game previews and the “X’s and O’s” side of the game. We also have “Monday Morning Quarterback” which is a play on Peter King’s series but is focused on the Panthers. This is a raw, emotional, fanatical response to the game that happened the day before intended to spur debate and discussion. This is written by David Gabriel.

NOW, for the Hornets. We have a section that is called “Buzz Weekly” that will be focused on giving our audience a recap of the previous weeks events and a synopsis of what you can expect in the following week. This will provide everything from Player News to Upcoming Fan Events. This will be kick started around the time of the Charlotte Hornets “Buzz Fest“.

We are currently looking for a writers who knows the “X’s and O’s” of basketball. Somebody who knows what a triangle offense is and would have fun attempting to explain it to their friend. Obviously you must know the Charlotte Hornets. We only ask that you be able to commit to writing at least one blog post a week.

If you send us a sample please have it bee about the Hornets so we can get a feel for your knowledge of the team you will be writing about.

***Email us a writing sample at BringBackTheBuzz@gmail.com***

***Use Subject Line “BBTB Writing Sample” so we don’t miss it*** 

please understand that this is not a paying position. This is a great way for a writer to get their work seen by thousands of fans. We do it for the love.

MMQB: The Painful SNF Loss to The Steelers

(picture from Panthers.com)

(picture from Panthers.com)

(Written by David Gabriel)

MONDAY MORNING QUARTERBACK!! So I was totally wrong thinking me smashing a little Prius bumper with a Pittsburgh sticker on it was some kind of foreshadowing. Luckily no one was injured in the accident. But as far as that Steelers bumper goes…check anywhere on Ballantyne Commons for that junk.

Offense started slow again just like the Lions game. Field goals will not win games. Didn’t we find that out against San Fran last year in the playoffs?

Also Philly Brown will not win you any games. Who? Yes Philly Brown from I have no idea where but he wears the black and blue so I support. What can Brown do for you? He can drop a punt in the 4th quarter right after the defense gets a very quick 3 and out with 11 minutes left in the game down 10 and we need scores. Well Mr. Brown drops the punt and it goes all the way into the endzone recovered by Pittsburgh for a TD and the game was done after that. I’m not blaming the L on Brown at all.

Defense got a nice wake up call. Offense needs Deangelo and Stew out there and maybe some WR that can help Kelvin Benjamin. I think that guy could have been Ted Ginn Jr. Guess who would of been back there last night returning that punt Philly just couldn’t seem to handle? That’s right Ted Ginn. Who knows what if he houses it and Panthers are down 3 instead of 17! Minor details but so costly.

The final score says it all we got beat, bad. However it could have been a different game with a successful punt return or just catching the damn ball!

I have wonderful family members who live in Pittsburgh so I am not generalizing all steelers fans here but at least the people around me last night were the prime time example of a fair weather steelers fan and the lack of class fanmanship was just embarrassing for you and your “fans.”

HOWEVER PANTHER NATION it is only ONE game. Maybe we needed this. A good ol kick in the rear to fire us up and bring us down to Earth.

Apparently there will be blood and guts on the field next week…. I know 89 was my favorite player but this week he’s on the other side. My advice for you 89 ice up before and after the game. You heard it hear on MMQB Smitty will have no more than 50 yards and 0 ZERO touchdowns. Next week we need a strong rebound vs a good AFC North team in a hostile environment.

Like I said it was only one game, luckily there are 13 left. KEEP POUNDING Panther Nation!

Film Session: 2 Tight End Sets

(Written by Austin Stallings)

In their week 2 victory over the Steelers, the Baltimore Ravens were able to use multiple Tight End sets to move the ball, convert critical 3rd downs, and complete 2 touchdown passes. The combination of tight ends Dennis Pitta and newly signed Owen Daniels proved to be a matchup that the Steelers defense struggled with. Here is a film breakdown of what the Ravens did and how the Panthers will look to emulate that Sunday Night

video1

On the first of Owen Daniels’ 2 touchdown receptions, the Ravens are lined up on the 2 yard line, in a 3 Tight-End 2 Back set. They motion the full back to the strong side of the formation where they have their dual tight ends lined up. This is the side they will run the fake to.

video2

Now in an unbalance formation, the Ravens will draw most of the Steelers defense to the right with the fake to Bernard Pierce – while the lone tight end on the weak side, Owen Daniels, leaks out to the left.

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After selling the run, both backs stay in to block and Daniels is able to get behind the defense on the weak side.

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Daniels finds himself wide open for an easy touchdown, while the linebacker finds himself in a defender’s worst nightmare. Even worse, he had to re-live it the following day in the film room.

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The Panthers like to run similar goal line concepts, like this Cam Newton touchdown pass in week 8 of 2013. The Panthers are on the 2 yard line, in a 2 TE 2 RB set. They motion full back Richie Brockel to the strong side of the formation, where they have dual tight ends Greg Olsen and Ben Hartsock lined up.

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They will run a run fake to Mike Tolbert to the strong side, sending Richie Brockel out to the right flat, and keeping the entire Tampa defense pursuing to that side. Greg Olsen, the inside tight end, will leak out the the left side and find open space. Hartsock will do the same but position himself behind the linebackers who are stepping up in their run responsibility.

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As Newton and Tolbert sell the run, the linebackers are frozen in their run-stop priority,allowing Olsen and Hartsock to get by unnoticed.

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At this point Newton just has his choice between his two wide open tight ends. The Panthers have significantly upgraded their pass-catching tight ends this offseason, acquiring Ed Dickson from Baltimore and developing former basketball star Brandon Williams. After seeing the success the Ravens had in multiple tight end sets, this will surely be a matchup they will try to exploit Sunday night against the Steelers.

Panthers Tame Lions, Host Steelers on SNF

panthers1

(Via Panthers.com)

(Written by Austin Stallings)

Six days after dismantling the New York Giants on Monday Night Football, the Detroit Lions were faced with an entirely different animal in the Carolina Panthers. Coming off a decisive victory in which they posted 35 points, the explosive Detroit attack only managed to score once in Charlotte – against a defense that learned it would be

playing without one of it’s stars just 90 minutes before kickoff. Carolina’s depth on the defensive line proved to be valuable as the unit showed that it can be dominant even without Pro Bowl defensive end Greg Hardy, who was deactivated before the game. The Panthers’ front seven kept quarterback Matthew Stafford on the run, getting to him often and tallying 4 sacks. Defensive end Mario Addison, who saw added playing time in Hardy’s absence, more than doubled his sack total from last season with 2.5.

panthers2

(Via Panthers.com)

The Panthers secondary also stepped up, holding a receiving weapon referred to as ‘Megatron’ to 83 yards, and no scores. He snagged a would-be touchdown catch late in the second quarter, but wasn’t able to hold on as safety Roman Harper closely trailed, keeping the Lions scoreless in the first half. He was also targeted on a deep pass in the fourth – Passes that often end up putting defensive backs on Megatron posters – but a tip by Thomas Decoud led to a Melvin White interception, helping seal the victory for the Panthers. While no member of the rebuilt secondary matches up physically to Calvin Johnson, the unit did an exceptional job of limiting the best receiver in football to a relatively quiet afternoon.

Offensively, Cam Newton and the Panthers were able to overcome a slow start, which gave the Lions most of the possession in the first quarter. In his first start of the season, coming off ankle surgery and a rib injury, Newton managed to move the ball enough for 2 Gano field goals and a halftime lead. After Detroit battled back to take the lead at 7-6, the offense really began to hit it’s stride. Newton responded with a 72-yard drive that was capped off by a precisely-threaded touchdown pass to Jason Avant. He later drove the team down to the 1-yard line with a diving effort to the pylon, resulting in Jonathan Stewart’s first touchdown run since 2012. (Pro-Football Reference).

panthers3

(Via Panthers.com)

              Newton finished the game 22-of-34 for 281 yards and a touchdown, but his most important stat of the day was his zero turnovers. Facing a relentless front seven, he was frequently flushed from the pocket, sacked 5 times, and hit many more – but was able to maintain his composure and protect the football, earning him a passer rating of 100.2. That is the mark of a maturing quarterback, one who has learned how to manage a game just as well as he can define it with highlight-reel plays. Carolina’s +3 turnover ratio proved to be the difference in the 24-7 win, and the young quarterback continues to prove his leadership ability.

 

Looking Ahead:

The Panthers, who are off to their first 2-0 start in the Rivera-Newton era, will now host the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday Night Football. The Steelers were unimpressive in their Thursday night game in Baltimore, falling 26-6 to their division rivals. But they’ve had the advantage of an extended week, a live-film session of the Panthers-Lions game, and the championship experience of Mike Tomlin and Ben Roethlisberger. Like Detroit, they too will face the best defense they’ve seen thus far – regardless of Greg Hardy’s status, which remains unknown. They will also have to stop a physical Carolina ground game, which is something the Steelers have struggled with in their first 2 weeks.

The Carolina secondary will face a different kind of test this week in wide receiver Antonio Brown, who threatens with his speed and elusiveness rather than mega-size. Brown is one of the best in the league after the catch, and is also a special teams weapon at punt returner —

(Punter Brad Nortman will be on high alert for the hurdle-kick).

Cleveland Browns v Pittsburgh Steelers

(Via Getty Images)

 

Cornerbacks Melvin White, Antoine Cason, and Bene Benwikere did well to stop the larger receivers of the Buccaneers and Lions, but will need to play fast and work together to contain Brown and second year standout Markus Wheaton.

The front seven’s gameplan for Big Ben will be similar to that of Matt Stafford’s last week. Both quarterbacks present a large frame, a rocket arm, and an ability to escape the pocket and extend plays when needed. To slow down a Roethlisberger passing attack that gashed Cleveland for 365 yards, the Panthers’ trademark pass-rushers will need to collapse the pocket and keep him from developing a rhythym. Much like with Stafford, it won’t just be about how many times he is sacked, but how often he is pressured and hit. To fill the void of inactive defensive ends Greg Hardy and Frank Alexander, the defense will need Charles Johnson to be dominant and role players like Addison and Kony Ealy to contribute. A second round draft pick, Ealy is an elite pass-rushing talent but has yet to have his breakout moment in the NFL. The Panthers boast a highly talented defensive line with unmatched depth, and will need to show it in primetime to help the secondary stay on Brown.

Offensively, the Panthers will look to emulate the success of Baltimore’s ground game as they were able to rack up 157 rushing yards against the Steelers. This is good news for dynamic duo DeAngelo Williams & Jonathan Stewart, who should see more work than they did in week 2. While Williams was inactive due to a sore quad, he should be back in the lineup Sunday and primed for a big night. The offense will be facing a key contributor to Carolina’s 2013 success in strong safety Mike Mitchell. Mitchell brings a hard-hitting approach to the game that resonates well with the Steelers culture, but has been known to give up plays through the air. Something to watch in this game will be Carolina’s use of tight ends Greg Olsen and Ed Dickson. The Ravens were able to complete 2 play-action touchdown passes to their 2nd tight end, Owen Daniels. The Panthers have made it known they want to run more 2 tight end sets this season, so this is something they may try to exploit. For an in-depth breakdown on this matchup, check out my film breakdown of Daniels’ touchdown.

 

 

The Series:

            In five regular season meetings, the Panthers are 1-4 against Pittsburgh, with their lone win coming in the franchise’s second season. This matchup will be the first season game the teams have played in the Rivera-Newton era, and the first time since reigning DPOY Luke Keuchly has anchored the Carolina defense.

 

Season Location Result
2010 Heinz Field (Pittsburgh, PA) Loss (3-27)
2006 Bank of America Stadium (Charlotte, NC) Loss (3-37)
2002 Heinz Field (Pittsburgh, PA) Loss (14-30)
1999 Three Rivers Stadium (Pittsburgh, PA) Loss (20-30)
1996 Ericsson Stadium (Charlotte, NC) Win (18-14)

 

The Football Database

 

2014-15 Charlotte Hornets Pre-Season Schedule

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(This picture is the intellectual property of HSE)

Date Opponent Site Time (ET)

Oct. 8 at Philadelphia 76ers Wells Fargo Center 7:00 p.m.

Oct. 10 vs. Washington Wizards Bon Secours Wellness Arena (Greenville, S.C.) 7:00 p.m.

Oct. 13 vs. Orlando Magic Time Warner Cable Arena 7:00 p.m.

Oct. 15 vs. Detroit Pistons Time Warner Cable Arena (Cool School Field Trip) 11:00 a.m.

Oct. 17 at Washington Wizards Verizon Center 7:00 p.m.

Oct. 19 at Chicago Bulls United Center 7:00 p.m.

Oct. 20 at Atlanta Hawks Philips Arena 7:30 p.m.

Oct. 23 vs. Indiana Pacers Time Warner Cable Arena 7:00 p.m.