Steve Wilks Still Feels Like Carolinas Biggest Coaching What-If

As the countdown to the 2026 season opener reaches 62 days, Cat Scratch Reader revisits the impactful career of Steve Wilks, a Charlotte native who left an indelible mark on the Carolina Panthers.

The Panthers’ 2026 season opener against the Chicago Bears is still 62 days away, but today’s spot in the countdown belongs to a coach who left a real mark in Carolina: Steve Wilks.

Wilks is a Charlotte native, and his football roots run deep in North Carolina. He played at West Charlotte High School before heading to App State, where he was a defensive back from 1987-1991. After college, he spent one season in the Arena Football League and then moved on from playing to coaching.

Like so many coaches climbing the ladder, Wilks worked his way through smaller college jobs before landing at Notre Dame in 2004 as defensive backs coach. A year later, he moved to Washington as the secondary coach, and then the NFL came calling.

His first pro coaching job came in 2006 with the Chicago Bears, where he served as a defensive backs coach. He was let go two years later, but that ended up leading him to San Diego the following season. There, he worked under defensive coordinator Ron Rivera, a connection that eventually brought him to Carolina.

When Rivera became Panthers head coach in 2011, he hired Wilks the next year as defensive backs coach. Wilks kept rising through the staff and was eventually named defensive coordinator and assistant head coach in 2017.

That stretch was a strong one for Carolina. From 2012 through 2017, the Panthers reached the playoffs four times in six seasons and posted three seasons with at least 11 wins. That run included the 2015 team that went 15-1, won the NFC, and reached the Super Bowl.

Wilks’ lone season as defensive coordinator in 2017 only added to his reputation. Carolina went 11-5, and his standing around the league kept growing.

When Wilks left for the Arizona Cardinals head coaching job in 2018, Panthers fans could only wish him well. Arizona was in the middle of a reset after moving on from Bruce Arians and quarterback Carson Palmer. The season went poorly fast: Wilks started rookie quarterback Josh Rosen, the Cardinals finished 3-13, and he was fired.

After more coaching stops, Wilks returned to Carolina in 2022 as a secondary coach under Matt Rhule. When the Panthers stumbled to a 1-4 start, Rhule was fired and Wilks was promoted to interim head coach.

What followed was one of the most encouraging stretches the franchise had in years. Carolina went 6-6 the rest of the way, even with a rotating quarterback situation that included six starts from Baker Mayfield, six from Sam Darnold, and five from PJ Walker.

That mattered because the Panthers had gone 5-12 in each of the previous three seasons from 2019-2021. Going from 1-4 to 6-6 under Wilks brought a real jolt of optimism back to the building, and players made it clear they wanted him to lose the interim label. Derrick Brown put it plainly: “If you ask anybody in this locker room, we want Steve Wilks to be our next head coach.”

Instead, owner David Tepper went in another direction and hired Frank Reich, a move that quickly fell apart. Reich went 1-10 in 2023 and was fired before finishing his first season.

It’s not hard to imagine the alternate path Panthers fans still think about: Wilks getting the job, Carolina keeping either Mayfield or Darnold, and the whole thing playing out very differently. For a coach who came close, Steve Wilks still feels like one of the biggest what-ifs in Panthers history.

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