Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cam finds stride under Turner

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Concerns over how Cam Newton might adjust to Norv Turner’s offense have ceased.

The worries have been replaced by talk of Newton being an MVP candidate again.

Newton is thriving in his first season under the 66-yearold offensive coordinato­r. The Panthers are 5-2 and picking up a head of steam on offense entering Sunday’s home game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

The eight-year quarterbac­k combined for 271 yards and three touchdowns against the NFL’s top-ranked defense over the weekend as the Panthers dominated the Baltimore Ravens 36-21. Turner used all of his weapons — and a variety of misdirecti­on plays — to keep Ravens defenders guessing instead of attacking.

Baltimore, which had 11 sacks against the Titans earlier this season, never got to Newton, and Carolina scored on four consecutiv­e possession­s to build a 24-7 halftime lead.

Afterward, Ravens Coach John Harbaugh could only tip his hat to Turner.

“He did a great job scheming us up, keeping us off balance,” Harbaugh said.

“He forced us to put certain personnel groups out there, and then he had counters for it.

He did a tremendous job.”

The misdirecti­on plays left the Ravens befuddled at times, as Newton pitched out to wide receivers, used fake handoffs to running back Christian McCaffrey to set up the passing game and a naked bootleg to score a walk-in touchdown.

Asked why defending Carolina’s misdirecti­on offense was so difficult, Ravens cornerback Jimmy Smith held up one hand and said, “Look at my hand. Now if I smack you with this [other hand], you won’t see it coming. That’s how it works.”

A big reason the Panthers were smacking the Ravens was the emergence of rookie wide receiver D.J. Moore, the team’s speedy first-round draft pick.

The Maryland product compiled 129 yards of offense in the first 2½ quarters, the beneficiar­y of the Ravens focusing their attention on stopping other playmakers such as McCaffrey, tight end Greg Olsen, wide receivers Devin Funchess and Curtis Samuel, and former 1,000-yard rusher C.J. Anderson.

Newton spread the ball around, targeting eight different receivers, leaving the Ravens unable to focus on stopping one player.

“That’s huge for us, because when you do that, it’s like, ‘OK, who are you guys going to try to lock down?’ ” Carolina Coach Ron Rivera said. “… This week [Moore] had a lot of success, and maybe next week he won’t because they’ll be trying to double up on him, and that may leave somebody else open.”

The Panthers are getting exactly what Rivera was hoping for when he made the decision to jettison long-time offensive coordinato­r Mike Shula this past offseason in favor of Turner, whom he coached under in San Diego.

Turner’s son, Scott, returned to the team as the quarterbac­ks coach, too.

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