The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

McCaffrey turning heads at camp

- By Steve Reed

Christian McCaffrey remembers running around his backyard as a young boy playing tackle football, dodging his brothers while pretending to be Barry Sanders.

All of those moves have paid off for the Panthers rookie running back.

McCaffrey created quite a buzz during his first week of training camp with veteran players and coaches raving about his athleticis­m and ability to make people miss. There hasn’t been this much anticipati­on from fans over a Panthers rookie since 2011 when quarterbac­k Cam Newton was drafted No. 1 overall.

Panthers veteran running back Jonathan Stewart, who rarely heaps praise on anyone — said McCaffrey is “pretty unstoppabl­e” as a receiver coming out of the backfield.

“I can tell you now there’s not going to be anybody in this league that can cover him one-on-one,” Stewart said. “He’s a special player.”

But McCaffrey, who is no stranger to this setting — his father Ed played 12 seasons in the NFL mostly with the Denver Broncos and won three Super Bowls — seems at home on the football field and is taking the attention in stride.

“Anytime I’m on the football field, that’s my comfort zone,” McCaffrey said Tuesday. “That’s my safe place.”

He has looked plenty comfortabl­e despite missing almost all of OTAs and minicamp due to an NFL Collective Bargaining Agreement rule preventing college players from participat­ing in those practices until their school has completed its final exams. Stanford finished later than most schools.

You would never know he’s trying to make up for lost time.

McCaffrey already has shown a good grasp of the playbook and displayed what Stewart called a “deadly” first step.

Panthers three-time AllPro linebacker Luke Kuechly found out the hard way last week in practice.

While running a route over the middle, McCaffrey put one foot in the ground, then shifted in the other direction in one fluid motion, creating immediate separation to break free for a reception. Kuechly fell for the move, stumbled briefly and then franticall­y raced to try to close the gap.

Cornerback James Bradberry said he let out an “ooh ahh” when he watched it on tape.

“He got me,” Kuechly acknowledg­ed with a wide smile.

He has gotten others, too.

Added Kuechly: “He’s got shake . ... He’s very precise with his movements. He is in an out of breaks quick.”

Panthers coach Ron Rivera said McCaffrey’s first move is to set up a defender and then “where he goes from there, it’s up to him.”

It’s a move that McCaffrey said came naturally to him while playing with his three brothers in a small backyard growing up in the Denver area. There was only a little patch of grass there, making things more difficult to get around his siblings before being tackled.

“I had to find different ways to make my older brother miss,” McCaffrey said.

He said playing basketball also helped, too.

 ?? CHUCK BURTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Panthers’ Christian McCaffrey waits to return a kick during practice at the team’s training camp at Wofford College in Spartanbur­g, S.C.
CHUCK BURTON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Panthers’ Christian McCaffrey waits to return a kick during practice at the team’s training camp at Wofford College in Spartanbur­g, S.C.

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