Bryce Young Is Facing A Panthers Label Fans Will Hate

As the Panthers' key player, Bryce Young faces daunting expectations, but his potential "bust" status may be more about the team's shortcomings than his own performance.

Bryce Young is once again sitting at the center of everything in Carolina, because that’s what happens when you’re the quarterback. The Panthers will rise or fall with him, and that reality tends to turn every evaluation into a referendum on the guy under center.

Bleacher Report’s Moe Moton still sees Young as the Panthers’ most likely bust candidate, even ahead of high-priced Jaelan Phillips and Xavier Legette. The logic starts with the contract situation: Moton noted that Carolina is not expected to extend Young this offseason.

He added that doesn’t mean the team never will, pointing to the Houston Texans and C.J. Stroud as a similar example.

Moton wrote, "The 24-year-old signal-caller made strides in the previous season, but the Panthers still finished 26th in total passing yards for the term."

He also argued that Young will need to prove he can be a productive, high-volume passer when the situation calls for it, then followed that with a blunt warning: "That seems unlikely because of a tough schedule."

And the schedule is no joke. After winning the NFC South while playing a third-place slate, Carolina now gets a much harder path, with the Chicago Bears, Philadelphia Eagles, Denver Broncos, and Seattle Seahawks among the opponents standing out. Moton summed it up this way: "Young could regress as he faces more division leaders this year than last season," He also pointed out that the Panthers are dealing with the league’s toughest slate of opposing defenses by DVOA.

Still, there’s a major reason to pump the brakes before pinning everything on Young. If he does stumble, the blame would have to be shared with an offense that still looks thin around him.

Tetairoa McMillan regressing or failing to improve would matter. So would Xavier Legette, Chris Brazzell, and Jimmy Horn offering little or nothing.

The Panthers have also made life harder by pouring resources into defense while leaving Young to carry the offense with limited help. Their first-round pick went to a lineman who won’t even play this year, which doesn’t exactly scream support for a young quarterback trying to take a step forward.

The broader rankings around the roster don’t help the case for Carolina’s offense, either. CBS Sports analyst Jared Dubin placed the Panthers 28th when ranking offensive groups across the league, including line, pass-catchers, running backs, and coaches.

Chuba Hubbard was ranked 27th among starting running backs, and the team doesn’t have a viable tight end. Even with the offensive line drawing a 12th-place ranking from Warren Sharp, the overall picture is still shaky.

So yes, Young is the quarterback, and that means he’ll get the blame if the offense sputters. But calling him the biggest bust candidate without accounting for the mess around him leaves out the most important part of the story.

The Panthers will go as Young goes. The problem is that he still doesn’t have much room for error.

In Other News...

Panthers Suddenly Have A Bigger Ikem Ekwonu Question Than Expected

Ikem Ekwonu had built a reputation in Carolina as the kind of left tackle a team can trust and then stop worrying about, which is no small thing for a former sixth overall pick and a Charlotte native. He played every snap across his first two seasons, then dealt with injury trouble in 2024, but his steady work and solid play still earned him a place at No. 65 on the Panthers all-time top 100 list.

Now the bigger question is how Carolina handles the edge of its offensive line while Ekwonu works his way back. The Panthers added a tackle who can press for the left tackle job in his absence, and there is at least a possibility Ekwonu could eventually slide to the right side, leaving the team with a decision that goes well beyond simply waiting for him to return. [Read more 🡒]

Jaycee Horn Looks Like A Star Until One Problem Shows Up

Jaycee Horn gave the Panthers exactly what they hoped for on the back end in 2025. After a 2024 season in which Carolina allowed the most touchdown passes in the league with Horn and Mike Jackson as the starting corners, the defense took a clear step forward and cut its passing touchdowns allowed to 20. Horn was a big part of that turnaround, earning his second Pro Bowl nod and tying his career high with five interceptions, the kind of ball production that keeps him in the conversation with the leagues better cover corners.

Still, the broader picture around Carolinas defense remains unfinished under Dave Canales. Even with Horn playing at a high level in coverage, the Panthers have continued to fight for answers up front, where pressure and sacks have been a problem throughout the tenure. Horns value is obvious, but the next step for this defense is making sure his work on the back end is matched by more disruption at the line of scrimmage. [Read more 🡒]

Panthers Get National Respect But One Bryce Young Question Lingers

Carolinas surprise run to the NFC South title last season has not translated into a huge leap in national perception. Bleacher Report slotted the Panthers 20th in its latest NFL rankings, a reminder that winning a weak division with a sub-.500 record still leaves plenty of room for doubt, even as the roster has earned a bit more respect than it had a year ago.

The bigger question now sits at quarterback, where Bryce Young remains the franchises most important variable. ESPNs Jeremy Fowler reported the Panthers are not expected to push for an extension this offseason, choosing instead to take a wait-and-see approach as Youngs future with the team continues to unfold. For a club trying to prove last season was more than a one-year spike, that kind of patience says plenty about where the organization thinks the real uncertainty still lives. [Read more 🡒]