The NFC South may be wide open, but the Falcons’ biggest problem in the division might be the team getting the least attention.
Atlanta enters the season with a huge range of possible outcomes, and the same goes for the race to the top of the NFC South. Last year, the division ended in a three-way tie between the Falcons, Carolina Panthers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, with Carolina taking the crown on a tiebreaker. This time around, the Falcons are still in the mix, but the path won’t be easy.
Tampa Bay has owned the division lately, winning it four times in the last five seasons. New Orleans is also drawing buzz as a dark-horse contender in Year 2 under Kellen Moore and Tyler Shough. Still, neither team is the one that should worry Falcons fans most.
That distinction goes to Carolina.
The Panthers won the NFC South last season, yet they’re not getting nearly as much attention as a repeat threat in 2026. Maybe that’s because of Bryce Young, but even with only average quarterback play, Carolina addressed plenty of the problems that held it back.
The biggest changes came on defense. The Panthers spent heavily there this offseason, adding edge rusher Jaelan Phillips and linebacker Devin Lloyd, two of the best defensive free agents available.
Carolina’s front was rough last year, so both players should step in and help right away. Phillips may have been an overpay, but the Panthers clearly saw a need and attacked it.
They also added another immediate contributor in the 2026 NFL Draft, taking Texas Tech nose tackle Lee Hunter in Round 2.
That gives Carolina a defense that is younger, more athletic and more talented than it was before. For a Falcons team that already has pieces in the secondary, that matters.
There’s reason to like what Carolina has going on offense, too. Dave Canales has done more than expected with limited help, and Young showed he can handle pressure moments after the Panthers came a possession away from knocking off the Rams in the Wild Card Round. The supporting cast is stronger now as well, with reigning Offensive Rookie of the Year Tetairoa McMillan, newly-paid breakout receiver Jalen Coker and third-round rookie Chris Brazzell III, the Tennessee deep threat.
The catch is that Carolina’s schedule gets tougher. As a first-place team, the Panthers are set to face the Seahawks, Bears and Eagles, while the Falcons will draw the 49ers, Commanders and Lions.
That’s why Carolina stands out as the team Atlanta should be watching most closely. The Panthers may not have the flash of Tampa Bay or New Orleans, but they improved in enough places to make a repeat title run very real. If that happens, they’d become the first team to repeat as NFC South champions since 2014 and 2015.
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