The Panthers are heading into training camp with a few injury situations worth watching, and the biggest one may be running back Jonathon Brooks.
After back-to-back surgeries on his right knee and a full season spent recovering, the 2024 second-round pick is expected to compete for the role of top backup behind Chuba Hubbard. During the offseason program, coach Dave Canales said Brooks has been around the team and putting in the work.
"He's been in building," Panthers coach Dave Canales said during the offseason program. "He's been working out. He's been training with our guys."
That leaves Carolina hoping Brooks can bring back the kind of burst he showed at Texas while also proving he can absorb contact and stay on the field.
"I know what he looked like prior to the injury," Canales said. "That's a vision that I hope he has, too, so that we can go and attack that."
Brooks is not the only player the Panthers are monitoring. Left tackle Ikem Ekwonu, dealing with a knee issue, is not expected back until the second half of the season. And three other potential starters - wide receiver Tetairoa McMillan, inside linebacker Trevin Wallace and defensive tackle Tershawn Wharton - are also working through offseason injuries as camp approaches.
Carolina opens training camp July 22 at the practice fields behind Bank of America Stadium. The Panthers will also kick off the 2026 NFL campaign in the Hall of Fame Game on Aug. 6 as they begin defending their NFC South title.
McMillan, the NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year, took part in portions of OTAs but was limited by foot problems. Canales said the team is handling the issue carefully. McMillan, who had 70 catches for 1,014 yards and seven touchdowns, is set to enter camp as one of the Panthers’ top two receivers alongside Jalen Coker.
Wallace, meanwhile, is coming off shoulder surgery from last December and wore a non-contact red jersey during OTAs. Canales said he expects Wallace to be active for training camp. With Devin Lloyd beginning to settle into the position room, Carolina should be able to ease Wallace back into the starting role in the base 3-4 defense.
Wharton’s situation could also shape the early part of camp. If the defensive lineman starts the season on the physically unable to perform list, the Panthers could get a better look at rookie defensive lineman Lee Hunter, who was taken in the second round, and second-year lineman Cam Jackson could see more snaps as well.
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The school added another layer to the confusion by saying it never approved the event in the first place, and the NCHSAA dead period would have blocked facility use anyway. For Panthers fans, it is the kind of off-field headache that reflects poorly on everyone attached to the name, especially when the communication breakdown lands on parents who were simply trying to give their kids a football experience. [Read more 🡒]
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One possible path to easing that pressure is a veteran addition in free agency, and the fit makes sense on paper because Carolina is looking for a pass-catching tight end who can give Young a more reliable target. The appeal is easy to see after a strong run earlier in the players career, though the most recent season was far less productive, which leaves the Panthers weighing upside against the risk that the answer might not be as simple as the need. [Read more 🡒]
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John Metchie IIIs arrival gives the Panthers something more than another name in the receiver room. After signing a one-year deal, he is back alongside Bryce Young, the quarterback he once caught passes from at Alabama, and that shared history matters in a competition where timing, trust and familiarity can separate the last few roster spots.
Metchie is now in the mix with several other wideouts as Carolina sorts through its depth chart, but the connection with Young is the one edge fans will notice first. The two already know how to work together, and for a team trying to sharpen its passing game, that kind of built-in chemistry can make Metchie a player worth watching closely as camp unfolds. [Read more 🡒]
