Category: Video

  • One Panther Rewind: Cam’s 15th Career Game-Winning Drive Stuns Vikings

    One Panther Rewind: Cam’s 15th Career Game-Winning Drive Stuns Vikings

    In one of the most competitive games of the 2017 NFL season, the Carolina Panthers upset the Minnesota Vikings in Charlotte, 31-24.

    The Vikings, who entered the game an NFC-best 10-2, rallied late in the fourth quarter from a two possession deficit to tie the game. In this video—the difference in the game emerges—a remarkable run in space by Cam Newton followed by running back Jonathan Stewart’s third touchdown of the game, a career high.

  • One Panther Flashback: The night when the lights (and Mike Smith) went out in Georgia

    One Panther Flashback: The night when the lights (and Mike Smith) went out in Georgia

    December 28, 2014: The Atlanta Falcons played host to the surging Carolina Panthers in a most unfathomable wildcard play-in game.

    The NFC South was a train wreck all season, littered by a litany of poor coaching, key injuries, and woeful defensive efficiency. Circuitous would best describe the collective journey.

    Impressively, the sudden release of legendary wide receiver Steve Smith coupled with the highly disruptive demise and departure of defensive end Greg Hardy didn’t stop Carolina from a 2-0 start. By banging out wins at Tampa and at home against the Lions, Ron Rivera—the reigning AP NFL coach of the year—was now 13-2 over his last 15 games, and it appeared the men of Mint Street had weathered yet another storm.

    The good vibes soon dissolved with a home blowout loss in prime time against the Steelers followed by an unrewarding 38-38 tie in Cincinnati. This ignited a two month stretch of winless football in which Carolina posted a reckless -10 turnover differential.

    It got ugly. So very ugly. Road massacres at Green Bay, Philadelphia and Minnesota. A gloomy November afternoon carousel of missed opportunities versus Atlanta. A third prime time embarrassment at the hands of New Orleans.

    Yet somehow, someway, the stars (and other bad teams) decided to align. A post-Thanksgiving rally thrust one of the worst mid-season teams of 2014 back into the postseason hunt. A malnourished division opened a promising door for the hungry Panthers: run the table in December with an ounce of help from a revolving door of new friends was their only clear path to the playoffs.

    The first of three battles in the team’s revised mission plan was a success: a powerful road win delivered with malice over New Orleans, inclusive of a fairly intense bench clearing beef. The victory laid to rest a troubling losing streak while igniting a fire under an entire team’s ass.

    Circumstances be damned, many said. Nothing would get in the way from here on out.

    Nothing.

    What followed was startling news: Newton flipped his truck near Bank of America Stadium, an accident from which he remarkably escaped with moderate but manageable trauma. A blessing that his life was spared, with the hope that his career would continue to thrive.

    In comes Derek Anderson, efficiently managing the offense while leading Carolina to a crucial win and the season sweep of Tampa. With tremendous fanfare, Cam returned two weeks later against a stout Cleveland defense, scoring a touchdown on the ground and scoring endless points with 70,000 grateful fans.

    Three weeks, one accident, three wins. No problem.

    This chain of events set the stage for the perfect storm – an elimination game against the Atlanta Falcons to wrap-up a fascinating regular season

    A great pass defense starts with a great pass rush, and this led to a refreshing development in Carolina’s NFCS-clinching win: contributions from their oft-maligned safeties.

    Carolina’s defensive front was relentless, collecting a half-dozen sacks and 12 hits on Matt Ryan.

    Panthers defensive end Charles Johnson leveling one of the team’s 12 quarterback knockdowns on Matt Ryan.

    In a season of few impact plays, safety Roman Harper picked-off Ryan in the second quarter, riding a wall of blockers 31 yards down the sideline, crashing into the pylon with a sea of teammates for his first defensive touchdown in 7 years. Also—turn your attention to the road grading blocking exhibition presented by Luke Kuechly. He’s a football player.

    Carolina safety Roman Harper played the best game of his 2014 season, registering six tackles and a defensive touchdown.

    A few notables:

    • Of Atlanta’s 11 offensive drives, only one started in Carolina territory.
    • Three of these drives finished with negative yardage.
    • Matt Ryan took 19 snaps in the final quarter, zero from the red zone.
    • 84% of Atlanta’s total offensive snaps were a product of three turnover-shortened drives.

    Rivera simply owned Atlanta coach Mike Smith like a dog, forcing three Falcons turnovers for a net gain of 17 points.

    Falcons coach Mike Smith was fired moments after the 34-3 home loss to Carolina.

    Harper’s score set off a blaze of timely takeaways. In only his second start in place of an injured AJ Klein, linebacker Adarius Glanton got in on the act, flying to the ball to force a Devin Hester fumble—both impressive feats—setting up another Carolina score.

    In only his second career start, linebacker Adarius Glanton maintained proper technique off this Matt Ryan play fake, well-positioned to attack Falcons speedster Devon Hester at a proper angle. The forced fumble was returned 32 yards by fellow linebacker Thomas Davis to set up another Carolina touchdown.

    One final flash play from lightning quick safety Tre Boston put the lights out in Georgia that night. The 84-yard interception return was the perfect crescendo to Carolina’s improbable NFC South championship.

    Boston Marathon: safety Tre Boston’s lengthy pick-six registered as the fourth longest interception return in franchise history.

    Final: Carolina 34, Atlanta 3.

    Panthers coach Ron Rivera spreading a little holiday cheer.

    Rivera finally got his Gatorade bath. The team’s most trusted veterans executed the perfect splash, as CBS captured a breathtaking wave of black and blue–scores of loyal Panthers fans spreading a touch of Carolina class onto Atlanta’s field of shattered dreams.

    Never forget this stat: 18 consecutive regular season wins. This is an NFC record—a premium blend from two very different seasons.

    This was the story behind a quartet of regular season wins that made that slice of Carolina Panthers history possible.

  • One Panther Flashback: Luke’s Lone Star Feast

    One Panther Flashback: Luke’s Lone Star Feast

    Let’s take a little trip, friends.

    Our choice for today’s One Panther Place flashback: Dallas. Thanksgiving Day, 2015.

    Hungry for another road win, Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly harvested a Tony Romo interception, returning the errant pass 32 yards for a touchdown.

    See for yourself:

    A cornucopia of piping-hot execution was served up for the entire Panthers family—a delightful 33-14 holiday win, propelling Carolina to a franchise best 11-0 start.

    Check back soon for a deeper dive into what made this play work with the first installment of “Check That Tape”, a film review session that makes sense of it all.

  • One Panther Legend: In the clutch, Chad Cota authors a coda of his own

    One Panther Legend: In the clutch, Chad Cota authors a coda of his own

    It was a brisk Sunday morning in uptown Charlotte, the quintessential piedmont sky showering rays of hope on the scores of primeval Panthers fans en route to Ericsson Stadium. Dec. 22, 1996–For all the hype these connective storylines delivered, the game would come down to the hands of an unsung seventh-round backup safety.


    Such is football.

    One final test: grinding out an 8th consecutive win at home against their proverbial identical twins from Pittsburgh. Dom Capers. Bill Cowher. Kevin Greene. The 3-4 zone blitz. A plethora of parallels which served to encourage a closely contested fight to the final bell.

    The Steelers entered the game with no mathematical opportunity to improve their playoff positioning. One day prior, Patriots head coach Bill Parcells led his eventual conference champs to a comeback win over his previous employer in the Meadowlands.

    New England’s heroics relegated Cowher’s reigning conference champs to an economy-class seat en route to the dreaded Wildcard Weekend–a place from which a mere four teams over the modern era ascended to a Super Bowl appearance.

    Cowher assured his players and the media: every effort would be made to win in Carolina. Pittsburgh was loaded with defensive talent, most notably pass specialist Chad Brown, who served as their leading sack artist and arguably most vocal leader.

    Pittsburgh’s exotic 3-4 zone blitz scheme dropped opposing quarterbacks 51 times in 1996, a +30 differential to sacks allowed from opponents on their own quarterbacks.

    Offensively, the Steelers ran with interior power as much as any team that season. Coordinator Chan Gailey relied heavily on newly-acquired power back Jerome Bettis for over 1400 yards in 1996. Journeyman quarterback Mike Tomczak replaced Jim Miller in the lineup after the opening game of the season, winning 7 of his first 8 starts.

    At any rate, the NFL has always ostensibly rewarded teams who play their best football at the right time, and Tomczak simply wasn’t. The veteran inexplicably tossed a six-pack of interceptions over his prior three starts in which the offense averaged 16 points per game. The Steelers flew into Charlotte losers of two of their last three.

    Fully aware of Pittsburgh’s desire to clean up these lingering issues before the playoffs, Carolina took the opening kickoff poised to make a statement.

    Second-year quarterback Kerry Collins led the Panthers on a 10-play, 52-yard march to set up the game’s opening score—a deft 12-yard lob over the reach of three defenders en route to the sure-handed Wesley Walls. The all-pro tight end’s 10th touchdown of the season put the Panthers on the board at 7-0.

    Collins was a clean 6-for-7 on the drive, connecting with four different receivers with nary a hint of pressure from the pocket.

    That seventh-rounder we mentioned at the top? His name was Chad Cota.

    While generally viewed by the oft-remiss national media as a pedestrian afterthought on a great defense, close observers of Carolina’s season were keenly aware of Cota’s emerging penchant for making big plays in big moments.

    A week prior against Baltimore, Cota knifed in front of Vinny Testaverde on their opening series to clutch his 4th interception of the season. The Panthers turned in their sixth consecutive win, 26-17.

    Meanwhile, following the Collins-to-Walls opening score, Pittsburgh and Carolina traded a pair of punts, the last of which put the Steelers in possession at their own 20-yard line. The drive abruptly ended as Tomczak was bull-rushed into his own end zone by linebackers Kevin Greene and Lamar Lathon. The self-proclaimed menacing duo of “Salt & Pepper” forced an intentional grounding infraction, resulting in a safety and a 9-0 Carolina lead.

    Against the ropes, Pittsburgh laid a haymaker of their own to stun the Carolina crowd—forcing and recovering two consecutive Panthers fumbles, the second of which squirted from the reliable hands of fullback Howard Griffith inside his own 5-yard line. Tomczak capitalized, connecting with wide receiver Andre Hastings for the Steelers’ opening touchdown.

    Trailing 9-7 on the road, Pittsburgh’s notorious special teams unit opted for a surprise onside call. As was the case 10 months prior in Super Bowl XXX, Norm Johnson’s oblong knuckleball was successfully recovered by the Steelers.

    Sensing a momentum shift, Cowher made the switch to quarterback / receiver Kordell Stewart, who entered the game with 17 NFL pass attempts to his name. The team later hinted the change was made to keep their veteran starter healthy for the playoffs, while banking on the man they called “Slash” to mitigate Carolina’s speed rush.

    Cowher’s plan appeared to fall flat minutes later as Stewart’s first pass attempt was picked off by Panthers cornerback Toi Cook. Call it blissful ignorance, or call it steely resolve—the young signal-caller wasn’t the slightest bit rattled.

    Following another Carolina punt, the resilient Stewart dazzled his brothers in gold by high-gearing a determined 80-yard sprint past a sea of pursuant Panthers. The longest offensive play of the Steelers’ season capped off 14 unanswered points in less than three minutes.

    The call from Gailey was both basic and brilliant: a 22-personnel bootleg with a well-sold play fake. This generated a wider, deeper pocket from which Stewart could (1) find an intermediate target or (2) survey an optimal avenue for a positive-yardage scramble. In choosing to run, the former Colorado star was able to utilize his uncommon gift of acceleration against, (thanks to Gailey’s 2TE/2BACK set call) a less-athletic group of back-seven defenders.

    Carolina suddenly trailed 14-9 at halftime. To quote the great John Fox, they “saw the deepest and the highest” in a 30 minute span.

    In the third quarter, the Panthers settled in defensively with improved gap integrity up front, limiting Stewart’s open space threat. Carolina held the Steelers without a first down for the quarter, as Collins and the offense methodically engineered three scoring drives. Each were capped off by a trio of John Kasay field goals. The Panthers led at the end of the third quarter, 18-14.

    This score would not budge, as all scoring departed early to beat the traffic over the final 15 minutes. Carolina struggled to generate a ground game and twice punted. Making his impact felt through deeds, not words, Panthers defensive captain Sam Mills and his band of brothers continued to punish Stewart relentlessly. A game now clearly stuck in an offensive stalemate, physicality and toughness took center stage.

    Though the Steelers turned the ball over twice on downs in the fourth quarter, Cowher’s dynamic defense kept the pressure on the young and immobile Collins while crowding the box and stifling the run.

    Trailing by four with 3:29 to play and 40 yards from pay dirt, the second-year quarterback was afforded one last opportunity to spoil Carolina’s season-long aspirations of a division title.

    Pittsburgh took to the air as Stewart confidently threaded completions to three different receivers, pushing the Panthers to the brink inside their own 5-yard line with under one minute to in regulation. Right on crunch-time cue, two unsung Panthers made an elite pair of situational defensive plays.

    On second-and-goal from the Carolina 6-yard line, Stewart took a shotgun snap and found daylight off left guard. Panthers lineman Shawn King, one of the many role players employed by defensive coordinator Vic Fangio, kept his team’s NFC West title hopes alive by shedding a block and making the effort-tackle of his life. It may not look like much, but it was a textbook piece of defensive line play.

    The rest? You know the rest.

    Third down. Stewart deep drop, threads the needle to Hastings.

    It’s a touchdown.

    But don’t tell that to the seventh-rounder. He’s busy battling on the turf, knowing full well he may never again encounter a point-blank opportunity to literally pull greatness from the jaws of defeat.

    The legendary voice of Bill Rosinski kept us all in suspense

    “WHAT IS IT??”

    It’s an interception. It’s a win. It’s the NFC West Title

    And Rosinski goes wild. And the crowd goes wild. And the players and coaches, they go wild.

    By wrestling away a win from the iconic Pittsburgh Steelers, Chad Cota forever earned his place in Panthers lore: the underdog player who never quit on his underdog band of brothers in black and blue. Cota seized his moment, becoming the latest benefactor of an infinitely special memory forever etched into the hearts of Carolinians and beyond.

    This is what One Panther Place is all about.

    Sure, it’s about analysis. And transactions, and watching film.

    But it’s also about reflection. Appreciation. Storytelling.

    And being there to chronicle these very moments. It’s my why.

    Cota’s timely play on the ball clinched the first of Carolina’s six divisional titles, propelling the second-year franchise to within one game of Super Bowl XXXI.