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Cats Without Their Claws

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The only sure thing in football is that there are no sure things
- especially where  heady, self-sure prognosticators are
involved.


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653 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2006-09-21 10:12:00

Written By:     Mike Ricigliani
Copyright:      2006
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Cats Without Their Claws
Copyright © 2006 Mike Ricigliani
NFL Directory
http://www.NFLdir.com



The only sure thing in football is that there are no sure things
- especially where heady, self-sure prognosticators are involved.
The fact of the matter is I like it when so-called 'experts'
have to totally eat their own words when all of their crystal
ball gazing goes bad.

Such appears to be the case with all the starry-eyed football
buffs who proclaimed (with no real basis) that the Carolina
Panthers would be hoisting the Lombardi Trophy at season's end.
Evidently, the addition by subtraction strategy appeals to the
experts. The Panthers showed the door to DT Brentson Buckner,
LB's Will Witherspoon and Brandon Short, two Ricky's (WR Prohel
and CB Manning) as well as fading RB Stephen Davis. The only
impact players they were able to add were two middle-of-the-road
DT's in Maake Kemoeatu and Damione Lewis and the highly
overrated (not just to fantasy owners) WR Jeyshawn Johnson.

The front office is not the only area that has struggled of late,
either. With the help of their two new defensive tackles and more
disciplined approach, the Cats allowed a whopping 252 yards on
the ground */in their season opener alone/*. In that game against
the Falcons they did manage to hold Michael Vick to 140 yards
passing yards on 10 out of 22 passing - hardly an accomplishment
considering Vick's career averages. In spite of his lack of
accuracy, though, he did manage to throw for two touches and pick
up 48 yards on the ground.

Things hardly improved for the Panther's defense this Sunday
against the surprising Vikings. They allowed 522 all-purpose
yards, including a solid 19 for 31, 243 yard performance by Brad
Johnson and a 16-yard TD pass for Ryan Longwell on a field goal
fake. The run defense was better, but still allowed 140 yards on
the ground to a team that went over 100 rushing yards seven times
last season - only one of those instances was against a team that
went to the playoffs (Chicago). Last year against Carolina, the
Vikings only managed 82 yards on the ground and 171 through the
air.

What about the offense? Have they faired any better than their
counterparts on the other side of the ball? Not by a long shot.
Carolina running backs have averaged a dismal 4.0 yards per carry
over the first two games. As a team they have gained a total of
172 yards on the ground in that span. While DeAngelo Williams
didn't get any carries in week 1, he was the lone bright spot in
the running game against the Vikings, gaining 74 yards and a
touchdown on 13 carries.

Jake Delhomme and the passing attack, while steady, have been
less than spectacular. The most telling stat about the Panther's
success through the air is that they are 5/26 on third down
conversions. A 19% conversion rate just won't cut it in this
league. The return of Steve Smith from a hamstring injury should
help, but major strides are needed to improve the overall
execution of the passing game, and by extension the offense as a
whole.

Not all is doom and gloom, though. The Panthers are about to get
some major help (aside from the imminent return of Smith) from
the NFL scheduling department. Their next three games are at
Tampa Bay (another team that is off to a horrific start) and
against New Orleans and Cleveland at home. Drew Brees could
continue his impressive play of late and give them trouble, but
the other two of those match-ups seriously favor Carolina.

Even with better days on the horizon, the Panthers have a fair
few issues to iron out before the Super Bowl talk can begin
again. Over the last two years no team that has started 0-2 has
been able to advance to the playoffs. It will take equal measures
of preparation, execution and just plain luck to break that
trend. 




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Mike Ricigliani is a writer for NFL Directory - 
a directory of NFL websites: http://www.NFLdir.com


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