The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Panthers getting heat on QBs with blitzes Carolina defense employs attacking style under Wilks.

- By Steve Reed

CHARLOTTE, N.C.— The Panthers are bringing the heat under fifirst- year coordinato­r Steve Wilks — and it’s working.

Carolina is 5-3 at the midway point of the season, due in large part to its blitzing def defensense.e. The f Panthers rank No. 2 in the league in overall defense and have held half of the eight opposing offfffffff­fffenses they’ve faced this season without a touch down. They’re secondin the league in sacks with 27.

“Steve’s personalit­y is an aggressive-style guy,” Panthers coach Ron Rivera said. The numbers attest to that. The Panthers are blitzing nearly 42.6 percent of the time this season on passing plays, which represents a dramatic 17.3 percent increase over last season under Sean McDermott, according to Pro Football Focus. McDermott left this past offseason to become the head coach of the Buffalo Bills.

The only teamin the NFL blitzing more than the Panthers is the winless Cleveland Browns (45 percent).

Wilks agrees that he has an aggressive, attacking mentality, but said the blitz scheme is based on matchups.

“At times it will be more aggressive based offff what we see on tape and other times it may bemore front coverage,” Wilks said.

“With Tom Brady there’s no real need to pressure him because you’re not going to get (to the quarterbac­k), so you have to be more cre- ative with your front coverage and what you’re trying to take away.”

It helps, of course, the Panthers reacquired free agent defensive end Julius Peppers this offseason to go along with two of the game’s best linebacker­s in Luke Kuechly and Thomas Davis. In Kuechly and Peppers, the Panthers have two potential Hall of Fame players.

The 37-year-old Peppers has responded with 7½ sacks in eight games, including two strip-sacks.

But Wilks also likes to mix his blitzes up, sometimes sending Captain Munnerlyn after the quarterbac­k on a corner blitz. Carolina’s defense has only allowed six points in thepast twoweeks.

“We’re playing good,” Kuechly said. “Steve Wilks and all those guys are doing an excellent job of game-planning and putting us in position to be successful and utilizing what we do well.

“Those coaches listen (to the players). They’re not hard-headed. They do a great job with us. They motivate us. They do a good job of making sideline correction­s and in-game adjustment­s. It’s fun to play for them.”

Peppers said the Panthers can still be better.

The Panthers limited the 49ers, Bills, Bears and Bucs offfffffff­fffenses to three points each. However, they allowed 34 points to the Saints, 30 to the Patriots, 28 to the Eagles and 24 to the Lions.

They’re a half- game behind the Saints in the NFC South entering a crucial division game Sunday at home against the Falcons.

“We feel like we’re a playoff team,” Peppers said. “We’re never going to be satisfifie­d with anything we do, but to be 5-3 right now and get the road win, get offff the two-game skid, it was big for us.”

One thing the Panthers haven’t done well on defense is create turnovers.

Carolina had only four takeaways in its fifirst seven games. But the Panthers are hoping the tide has turned after forcing a season-high three on Sunday in a 17-3 win over the Buccaneers.

“Sometimes they come, sometimes they don’t,” Kuechly said.

 ?? JEFF SINER / CHARLOTTE OBSERVER ?? Panthers defensive end Julius Peppers (90) is enjoying his return to Carolina at age 37, with 7.5 sacks in eight games. “We feel like we’re a playofffft­eam,” Peppers says of the 5-3 Panthers.
JEFF SINER / CHARLOTTE OBSERVER Panthers defensive end Julius Peppers (90) is enjoying his return to Carolina at age 37, with 7.5 sacks in eight games. “We feel like we’re a playofffft­eam,” Peppers says of the 5-3 Panthers.

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