Jaycee Horn’s 2025 season gave the Panthers exactly what they hoped for in one area and a glaring problem in another.
The Carolina cornerback was one of the league’s biggest ballhawks, and that showed up in a major way when SI.com’s Eva Geitheim, along with Karl Rasmussen and Mike Kadlick, ranked the NFL’s top 10 cornerbacks this week. Horn landed at No. 5, behind Broncos star Patrick Surtain II, who topped the list after a season that earned him NFL Defensive Player of the Year honors.
Horn’s interception total jumped to five in 2025, matching what he had produced across his first four NFL seasons combined. That helped push him into his second Pro Bowl and cemented his status as one of the more dangerous corners in the league when quarterbacks tested him deep.
“It was tough sledding for quarterbacks targeting Horn deep in 2025,” explained Geitheim. “According to Next Gen Stats, Horn was targeted six times on deep passes during the year, and picked off five of those attempts…Just don’t count on Horn for stout tackling. He missed 14 tackles in 2025 and registered a 27.5 percent missed tackle rate, the highest rate in the league by over six percent.”
That split tells the story. Horn was a nightmare on the back end, but the tackling numbers were rough enough to stand out in a hurry.
The Panthers’ defense as a whole took a step forward in 2025, cutting the number of touchdown passes allowed from 35 in 2024 to 20. That was a major improvement after a season in which Carolina gave up the most touchdown passes in the league.
Horn and Mike Jackson were the starting cornerbacks in 2024, and Jackson, acquired in a trade from Seattle, finished second on the team with two interceptions. Horn earned his first Pro Bowl nod that year despite the ugly team numbers, while the pair combined for 30 passes defensed.
Geitheim also pointed to two of Carolina’s biggest offseason additions, edge rusher Jaelan Phillips and Pro Bowl linebacker Devin Lloyd, who also intercepted five passes in 2025. Still, the Panthers finished with the lowest quarterback pressure rate in the NFL last season, according to Next Gen Stats.
That’s the part that keeps hanging over this defense. In Dave Canales’s two seasons as head coach, Carolina has played 35 games, produced 63 sacks and allowed 58 touchdown passes. For Horn, Jackson and the rest of the secondary, a dependable pass rush would change the whole picture.
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