Luke Fortner isn’t losing sleep over Bryce Young’s height.
That’s the message from the Carolina Panthers’ new center, who is settling into Charlotte after spending the first four seasons of his NFL career with the Jacksonville Jaguars and New Orleans Saints. Fortner, a former third-round pick, signed a one-year deal with the reigning NFC South champs this past spring, and one of his first tasks is getting synced up with Young.
The quarterback-center pairing looks a little different than what Fortner had before. He spent time snapping to Trevor Lawrence, listed at 6-foot-6, and Tyler Shough, listed at 6-foot-5.
Young comes in at 5-foot-10. Still, Fortner said the difference doesn’t really change the job.
"There's really not much," Fortner said of the difference, via Hill. "The only thing is Trevor might be able to catch a snap that's a little higher than Bryce, but put it where it's supposed to be, you don't have to. I mean, there's no world in which it's not my fault on that one."
Fortner’s timing in Carolina comes with some momentum behind him. According to Pro Football Focus, he posted the best season of his pro career in 2025, earning personal highs in overall offense (66.5), pass blocking (72.5) and run blocking (65.3).
That experience could matter right away in a center battle that includes rookie Sam Hecht, a fifth-round pick in the 2026 draft. The winner will be the first to replace Cade Mays, who served as Young’s primary center over the last two seasons.
And if spring work is any indication, Fortner feels good about where things are headed.
"It feels a lot better because you get to experience this time of year and these OTAs in the spring with Bryce," Fornter stated. "So, I'm really excited about the way it's feeling."
In Other News...
Steve Gleasons Message To Chris Johnson Will Hit Saints Fans Hard
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Gleason also pointed back to the work being done through his foundation, which has long focused on supporting people living with ALS and their families. For Johnson, the path ahead is still unfolding, and the disease has already progressed far enough that everyday tasks are becoming harder. In a sport built on toughness, the message from Gleason lands with extra force: the fight is bigger than football, and nobody going through it should have to face it alone. [Read more 🡒]
5 Saints Veterans Enter Camp With Everything To Prove
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Ruizs standing looks less secure after the front office used a draft pick on Jeremiah Wright, a sign that nothing is guaranteed at his spot. Granderson is also trying to justify a deal that has not yet been matched by the kind of production the Saints need, while Yiadom faces a numbers game in a secondary where younger and cheaper options are pushing hard. Godchaux still gives New Orleans a proven presence against the run, but the competition behind him is real, which is exactly why this camp feels like a referendum on how much margin these veterans still have. [Read more 🡒]
Saints Still Have One Big Quarterback Decision Behind Tyler Shough
Tyler Shough is set to open the 2026 season as the Saints starter, but the quarterback room is still carrying one important question behind him. Spencer Rattler and Zach Wilson are both on the roster, giving New Orleans two different kinds of insurance as it sorts out the depth chart and tries to settle the position beyond the top spot.
Rattler remains under contract for two more seasons, which gives him a longer runway in the building, while Wilson is on a one-year deal and arrives with the kind of pedigree that still invites a closer look. The Saints have not yet locked in who will sit behind Shough, and for a team trying to stabilize the position, the backup job could end up mattering almost as much as the starters seat. [Read more 🡒]
