Trepidation follows Panthers despite 8-2 record

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)—The Carolina Panthers have won four straight games, have
the third-best record in the NFL and have already surpassed last year’s win
total.

They’re 6-0 at home, 8-2 overall, lead the NFC South and appear in great
position to end a two-year playoff drought.

Now that that’s out of the way: What’s wrong with them?

Why have they struggled in consecutive weeks to beat Oakland and Detroit,
two of the worst teams in the NFL? Where has the passing game gone? Put out an
all-points bulletin for Steve Smith. What in the heck happened to that dominant
defense against Detroit?

And, most importantly, will they get out of this funk now that the schedule
no longer includes homecoming opponents?

Coach John Fox may have known those questions were coming Monday, but it
didn’t make him any less irritated.

“That’s how you guys look at it. You don’t play the game,” Fox said.
“They have to play the game. They’re all hard. They didn’t look at those last
two games like they were a walk in the park.”

Fox has always staunchly defended his players and Monday was no different.
He quickly heaped praise on the winless Lions, pointed out that Carolina’s
running game was dominant and Jake Delhomme rebounded from his four-interception
debacle a week earlier to be turnover-free. But the Panthers needed all of those
team-record 264 yards rushing to overcome a suspect defensive performance in a
31-22 win over the Lions (0-10)

A week earlier, the defense bailed out an anemic offense in a 17-6 win over
Oakland (2-8).

“We’ve got to play more consistently,” linebacker Na’il Diggs said. “Just
like last week we came out a little sluggish and they were able to get some
early rushing yards. In the second half we finally got a handle on it, but by
then they’ve got 80 yards rushing and you’re just trying to contain the fire at
that point.”

Rookie Kevin Smith rushed for a career-high 112 yards for the Lions, only
the second back to go over 100 against the Panthers this season. Many of his
yards came after an inordinate number of missed tackles. The secondary also
somehow allowed Detroit’s only consistent receiving threat, Calvin Johnson, to
get wide open for a 29-yard touchdown catch.

It took Jon Beason’s stop of Daunte Culpepper on a 2-point conversion try—
and a friendly decision by the officials not to call Beason for a facemask
penalty—to prevent the Lions from tying the game midway through the fourth
quarter. Charles Godfrey then intercepted Culpepper on Detroit’s next possession
to end the suspense.

“It’s ugly, but we’ll take it however we get it,” Godfrey said.

Indeed, the Panthers won despite holding the ball for less than 26 minutes.
They had the ball for less than 23 minutes in the win over the Raiders. They
have completed 17 passes in the past two games combined, with Smith, the
three-time Pro Bowl pick, held to seven catches for 68 yards.

“Two weeks ago was probably one of our poorer performances on the season. I
thought (Sunday) was much better,” Fox said of the air game after Delhomme
completed 10 of 19 passes for 98 yards and a touchdown. “But as we move
forward, I think it’s an area we need to improve. There are really not too many
phases of our team right now where I think we’ve arrived.”

There are complaints about the running game, which spearheaded Carolina’s
comeback from a 10-0 deficit Sunday. Jonathan Stewart rushed for 130 yards and a
touchdown and DeAngelo Williams added 120 yards and two scores. It was the kind
of running dominance Fox has been trying to establish since Stephen Davis led
Carolina to the Super Bowl five years ago.

That was the last time the Panthers started 8-2. That team went on to lose
its next three before reeling off six straight wins, including three in the
playoffs.

This year’s team faces a tall task to hold off Tampa Bay (7-3) and Atlanta
(6-4) in the division. The Panthers visit the Falcons on Sunday, then go to
Green Bay. They return home to face the Buccaneers and Denver, then visit the
New York Giants and New Orleans.

The combined record of those opponents: 38-22. The teams the Panthers have
played so far are a combined 42-58.

Despite the defiance over the questioning after wins, several Panthers
agreed they have to play better than in last two weeks with no sub-.500 teams
left on the schedule.

They just want everyone to notice their record, too.

“That’s the key thing,” safety Chris Harris said. “We’re not where we
want to be and we’re still 8-2.”

No Comments

Leave a reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.