The conversation about who owns Charlotte sports just shifted, and Bryce Young suddenly sits in the center of it.
With the Hornets trading LaMelo Ball to the Minnesota Timberwolves, the city lost the player who had been the most obvious face of that franchise for six seasons. Ball, the former No. 3 overall pick in the 2020 NBA Draft, delivered plenty of memorable moments in Charlotte, including helping push the Hornets to the playoffs this past season. But once that trade was done, the spotlight opened up.
Scott Fowler of The Charlotte Observer pointed to Young as the name that now belongs at the front of the line for Charlotte sports. In his view, Young may not bring the flash that Cam Newton or LaMelo Ball did, but his value is hard to miss.
"Bryce will never be as glitzy as Cam [Newton] or LaMelo. But he did direct the Panthers to the playoffs last season, the first time since 2017 they had made it. He’s become an extremely clutch player, leading game-winning drives in six of Carolina’s eight wins last season."
That kind of season changes the conversation fast. Young is only 24, and he’s not going anywhere anytime soon.
He’s a former Heisman Trophy winner and the No. 1 overall pick, and he is under contract through the 2027 season. Fowler noted it would be a surprise if the Panthers didn’t keep him beyond that.
Of course, being a quarterback and being taken first overall comes with the full weight of the city. Young has already lived through that pressure early in his career, including getting benched before winning his starting job back.
He helped get Carolina to the playoffs by winning the NFC South a year ago, and while his season was solid, questions still hang over his long-term future. The 2026 season looms as a key one for him, even with the fifth-year option picked up. If he proves he’s the guy for the long haul, then the title of face of Charlotte sports may be his to keep.
In Other News...
Panthers Camp Has Turned Bryce Youngs Backup Job Into A Real Fight
Training camp has turned the backup quarterback job behind Bryce Young into one of the more interesting spots on the Panthers roster, with three names in the mix and very different paths to this point. Kenny Pickett arrives as the former first-round pick and the most established of the group, while Haynes King is trying to turn camp reps into a real foothold after entering the league undrafted. Will Grier is back in the conversation too, giving Carolina a familiar face in a competition that now has at least a little intrigue.
Pickett still looks like the safest bet to handle the No. 2 role, but the Panthers have more going on than just that pecking order. Kings development gives the team a useful wild card, and Grier is hanging around as the long-shot option in a room that could get squeezed once roster decisions start tightening elsewhere. Even if the backup spot seems to have a clear front-runner, there is still enough movement here to keep the quarterback picture worth watching through the rest of camp. [Read more 🡒]
Panthers Fans Wont Love What This Says About Monroe Freeling
Monroe Freeling arrived in Carolina with first-round expectations, but the early picture around the rookie tackle is more about patience than immediate impact. The Panthers have had him working at both tackle spots, giving him a chance to learn the full scope of the position as he settles in and adjusts to the speed of the pro game.
For now, the bigger takeaway is that Freeling looks like a long-term investment rather than a quick fix. Carolina sees him as a developmental piece who could grow into either tackle job down the line, especially with the current starters moving toward future contract decisions, but that also means fans hoping for an instant fix may need to wait. [Read more 🡒]
49ers May Have A Tough QB Decision Before The Deadline
The quarterback picture in San Francisco is crowded enough that a move before the deadline is easy to imagine, even with Brock Purdy entrenched and Mac Jones sitting in a murkier spot. Jones is entering the final year of his contract, and that alone makes him one of the more watchable names on the roster if the 49ers decide to listen and a team sees a chance to get him out of the building sooner rather than later.
For Carolina, the interest is obvious enough to keep in mind whenever the Panthers' quarterback conversation comes up. If they decide Bryce Young is not the long-term answer, Jones profiles as the kind of passer a club could try to build around instead of simply patching the position for a season, which is why this is the sort of situation worth tracking as the deadline gets closer. [Read more 🡒]
