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What about defense? Seifert's arrival may help Panthers offensively
The Carolina Panthers, who opened camp July 26, finished fourth in the NFC West last season and were a major disappointment. Here are a few questions from Sports Illustrated's Dr. Z, followed by CNNSI.com's perspective on some of the issues facing the Panthers this season. SI's season preview will post August 24. Dr. Z wants to know: 1) Dom Capers' 3-4 zone blitz wowed 'em for a while, now George Seifert's return to the 4-3 is supposed to set our hearts aflutter. It's the old accordion deal; expand, contract, and what comes out is a lively polka. Do formations really mean that much when you've inherited the worst defense, statistically, in the NFL? 2) Do you agree with me that the defense has been a rudderless ship ever since Sam Mills retired? 3) I read that Jeff Lewis should mount a "stiff challenge" to quarterback incumbent Steve Beuerlein. Does this mean that someone doesn't really understand the meaning of the word "stiff," or that people are unaware of the fact Lewis has thrown only 19 passes in three NFL seasons? 4) End Shawn Gilbert is the only big-name player on the D-line. Unhappy with the Rams, unhappy in Washington, and I would assume unhappy in Carolina last year after a six-sack output. Yet here's a guy who earned three million bucks. My question: What does it take to make him happy?
The Panthers might make the playoffs if: New head coach George Seifert is able to install the West Coast offense successfully, and if a more mobile quarterback than first-teamer Steve Beuerlein steps up. Seifert, of 49ers Super Bowl fame, already has acquired Jeff Lewis from Denver and also signed veteran Steve Bono. He's a long shot, but Dameyune Craig, who played well in NFL Europe, could enter the picture. Pivotal games: Oct. 17th at San Francisco. Coming after an open week, this will be Carolina's first real test of the season. The Panthers' schedule ranks 20th in the league in terms of strength. New Orleans visits January 2. If the Panthers remain in the playoff hunt at this late date, this intra-divisional matchup obviously becomes a must win. On the hot seat: Running backs Tshimanga Biakabutuka and Fred Lane, and defensive end Sean Gilbert. Biakabutuka and Lane must be better receivers and blockers in Seifert's new scheme. Free-agent acquisition Gilbert struggled mightily last season and is coming off offseason rotator cuff surgery. After lobbying for a change to the 4-3 scheme, Gilbert gets his wish and will be expected to produce. Up-and-comers: Chris Terry, a draft pick out of Georgia, should contend for a starting offensive tackle job. QB Jeff Lewis, entering his fourth year in the league, could assume the starter's role.
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