Former Chief Tershawn Whartons Carolina Move Has Taken A Brutal Turn

Tershawn Wharton's promising move to the Carolina Panthers has hit a major setback, challenging both his career trajectory and the teams strategic plans.

Tershawn Wharton’s move from Kansas City to Carolina looked like a major payday and a fresh start. Instead, it has turned into a mess almost immediately.

Wharton left the Chiefs after five seasons and signed a three-year, $45 million deal with the Panthers. In Kansas City, he had built a reputation as an underrated piece who outperformed expectations. Chiefs fans could at least take some comfort in seeing him land a big contract elsewhere.

That hasn’t been the case in Carolina. Wharton played only five games in 2025 before a neck injury shut him down for the rest of the season.

Dean Jones of Cat Crave recently laid out how rough things have become for Wharton and why the Panthers may soon have to make a hard call. “Any hopes Wharton had of bouncing back were decimated by a neck injury that required surgery.

No timeline was given by the club for his return, though defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero hopes he'll be back at some stage during the 2026 campaign. Neck complications are tough to predict, so the Panthers must handle this with extreme caution,” Jones wrote.

“Realistically, the Panthers are not going to get much (if anything) from Wharton this season. By the time he gets back, others will have cemented their places, and it'll take time for the Missouri S&T product to get back into legitimate football shape.

That's time Carolina just doesn't have.”

The timing makes this even worse for Carolina. The Panthers shocked the league by winning the NFC South last season, then pushed the Rams to the brink in the wild card round before falling short. That kind of leap raises the stakes for every roster move, and Wharton was supposed to be part of the answer.

Instead, he may end up becoming a problem the Panthers need to solve.

Jones wrote that Wharton’s future in Carolina could already be in doubt for 2027. “[Panthers GM Dan] Morgan has a big decision to make with Wharton next year.

He counts $19.63 million against the cap in 2027, none of which is guaranteed. The Panthers can save $14.8 million by cutting him, which seems like a no-brainer unless he returns and makes a considerable impact.”

So the path forward is simple, even if the situation isn’t: if Wharton comes back, he has to produce at a high level right away. Carolina gave him a major deal expecting impact, and anything less could leave his run in Charlotte ending before it ever really gets going.

In Other News...

Tom Brady Took A Loaded Shot In A Very Chiefs Context

Tom Brady went on the Kelce brothers podcast and turned a familiar NFL gripe into a pointed one, using the stage with Travis and Jason Kelce to take aim at the leagues wideouts. In the course of talking about the frustration receivers feel when they are not getting the ball, Brady likened them to the Real Housewives of the NFL, a line that fit his larger point about how hard it can be for pass-catchers to stay committed when the touches dry up.

The comment landed with extra bite in a Chiefs context, especially coming from someone who is now a minority owner of the Raiders. Kansas City has lived through its own share of receiver drama, and Bradys broad swipe at the position only sharpened the contrast between the teams stable stars and the kind of off-field noise that has too often followed some of the leagues most talented pass-catchers. [Read more 🡒]

Chiefs Insider Pushes Back As Kelce Wedding Rumors Spiral

The swirl around Travis Kelce and Taylor Swifts wedding kept growing this week, but one of the Chiefs most visible voices stepped in to cut through the noise. Tavia Hunt, wife of Kansas City Chiefs owner Clark Hunt, publicly pushed back on the online chatter, saying the stories about long lines and food or drink problems were not true, and adding that the ceremony itself was handled smoothly with every guest seated.

Hunt also praised the vows as beautiful and took aim at the way false information can spread once a high-profile event becomes public conversation. Former NFL player Greg Olsen added his own positive account of the private, phone-free gathering, describing a relaxed atmosphere and a guest list that fit the moment, even as the rumor mill kept working overtime. [Read more 🡒]