Dayton Daily News

Panthers run college-style offense with various looks

McCaffrey will be threat to Bengals as a runner and receiver.

- By Laurel Pfahler Contributi­ng Writer

While the Carolinas continue to recover from the flooding left by Hurricane Florence, the Cincinnati Bengals are preparing for a Week 3 road matchup with the Panthers.

The teams meet at 1 p.m. Sunday at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte.

Carolina (1-1) is coming off a 31-24 loss at Atlanta but will provide the Bengals (2-0) with a challenge in the form of a college-style offense that provides a lot of different looks and unique threats.

Quarterbac­k Cam Newton and running back Christian McCaffrey, the eighth overall pick in the 2017 draft, lead the NFL’s fifth-ranked rushing offense, but McCaffrey also is the team’s top receiver. Last year, he became the first rookie running back with at least 70 receptions and five receiving touchdowns. McCaffrey had 102 yards receiving at Atlanta.

“He’s a wide receiver when he’s out there,” Bengals linebacker Preston Brown said. “He had

100 yards the other night, so he’s definitely a guy we have to have one or two or three guys on because he’s going to find ways.”

The Panthers’ offensive line has been banged up early this season with Pro Bowl right guard Trai Turner missing last week’s game because of a concussion and All-Pro right tackle Daryl Williams on injured reserve because of a knee injury suffered in the opener.

Despite the changes up front, Carolina has had just two negative plays. Newton has been sacked five times and hit nine times. The Panthers average 232.0 yards passing and 134.0 yards rushing, and they lead the league in yards per carry (5.4).

Newton is a big part of that. He has 100 yards rushing, while McCaffrey adds 87 yards on the ground and C.J. Anderson has 66.

“The biggest thing is to make sure you come in sound, don’t come in happy feet, make sure you’re ready to make the tackle because you’re not sure he’s going to slide or trying to score a touchdown,” Brown said.

Defensivel­y, Carolina is led by middle linebacker and Cincinnati native Luke Kuechly, who has 19 tackles through two games, and cor- nerback Donte Jackson, who has 10 tackles, an intercepti­on and a forced fumble.

The Panthers rank eighth in scoring defense, while allowing 19.5 points per game, and they are seventh in pass defense, giving up just 205.0 yards passing per game. However, the run defense is more suscep- tible than others, ranking 25th of 32 teams while surrenderi­ng 132.0 rushing yards per game.

“It’s a good defensive front we are about to face,” Bengals offensive coordinato­r Bill Lazor said.

The Bengals and Panthers have played only five times and have split the series 2-2-1. The teams played to a 37-37 tie in the last meeting, in 2014 at Cincinnati. The Bengals are 1-2 against the Pan- thers at Carolina.

Bengals-Panthers connection­s: Panthers LB Luke Kuechly is from Cincinnati and an alumnus of St. Xavier High School . ... Bengals DE Carlos Dunlap is from North Charleston, S.C., WR A.J. Green is from Summervill­e, S.C., CB Tony McRae is from Laurinburg, N.C., and WR Auden Tate is from Irmo, S.C . ... Panthers WR Curtis Samuel played at Ohio State University.

Panthers assistant offen- sive line coach Travelle Wharton played for the Bengals in 2012 . ... Bengals special teams coordinato­r Dar- rin Simmons was on the Panthers’ coaching staff from 1999-2002, defensive line coach Jacob Burney was on the Panthers’ coaching staff from 1999-2001 and strength and conditioni­ng coach Chip Morton was on the Panthers’ coaching staff from 1995-98.

Panthers defensive line coach Brady Hoke is a Kettering native and coached at the University of Toledo from 1987-88 . ... Bengals secondary/ safeties coach Robert Living- ston is from Hendersonv­ille, N.C., and coached at Furman University in 2010 . ... Panthers linebacker­s coach Steve Russ coached at Ohio University from 2001-04, and defen- sive coordinato­r Eric Washington coached at Ohio from 2001-03 . ... Panthers running game coordinato­r John Matsko coached at Miami University from 1974-75.

AFC North outlook

■ Baltimore (1-1): The Ravens opened the season with a 49-3 win over Buffalo but suffered a 34-21 setback against the Bengals last week. They host Denver (2-0) at 1 p.m. Sunday.

■ Cleveland (0-1-1): After opening with a tie against Pittsburgh in a game the Browns came from behind and had a chance to win, they blew a lead last week and fell 21-18 against New Orleans. They look for their first win Thursday against the Jets (1-1).

■ Pittsburgh (0-1-1): The Steelers lost a high-scoring affair against Kansas City, 42-37, last week after the tie at Cleveland. They travel to Tampa Bay to play the Bucs (2-0) on Monday night. Contact this contributi­ng writer at 772-260-8826 or email laurelpfah­ler@gmail. com.

 ?? KEVIN C. COX / GETTY IMAGES ?? Panthersru­nning back Christian McCaffrey had 102 receiving yards in a 31-24 loss against the Falcons on Sunday.
KEVIN C. COX / GETTY IMAGES Panthersru­nning back Christian McCaffrey had 102 receiving yards in a 31-24 loss against the Falcons on Sunday.
 ?? SCOTT CUNNINGHAM / GETTY IMAGES ?? Panthers dual-threat quarterbac­k Cam Newton has rushed for 100 yards and a touchdown on 18 attempts this season.
SCOTT CUNNINGHAM / GETTY IMAGES Panthers dual-threat quarterbac­k Cam Newton has rushed for 100 yards and a touchdown on 18 attempts this season.

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