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So Monday morning while reading the paper Traci of Winston-Salem N.C. was appalled at the article written on the Panthers by Scott Hamilton and the negative words he had to say about their 13-0 season. I took the time to interview Traci and she wanted Scott Hamilton a writer for the Winston-Salem journal to know that he sounds like a true hater and this is the Panthers season so have several seats. As we continued our interview she expressed that she has been a Panthers fan sense day one of them coming to Charlotte, N.C. even through the terrible seasons they have endured of disappointment and Cam Newton is her all time Favorite player. Traci feels it is the Panthers season for a championship and she truly believe's that the Panthers will go to the super bowl and win. While speaking with Traci I really could see the anger and frustration in her eyes about the negative review she woke up to on Monday morning to the point she had to contact me and ask for me to do a clap back interview for her team. Traci wanted the Panthers to know that they should keep pounding and don't allow the media that puts that negative energy out towards their success this year to stop them from what is there's. You can find the article that Scott Hamilton a writer for the WS Journal below. Thank You for reading and don't forget to Like Share Subscribe and Comment.
You Tube: Janel Cundiff Twitter: @nellymillionai1 FB: Helping Hands page and Triad Business Page Instagram: HHmanagement #SLBmovement #SupportLocalBusinessMovement Posted: Sunday, December 13, 2015 7:25 pm Written by: Scott Hamilton of WS Journal Enjoy!!!!! CHARLOTTE — This won’t last forever –– it can’t. Overwhelming wins will soon go the way of the unseasonably warm weather that had folks sporting shorts on a sunny Sunday in December. Like that little bit of July at Christmas, complete domination of the opposition is bound to disappear. It has to go away because the Carolina Panthers can’t keep this up for their own good. Too much is at stake in the long run for them to weekly pursue meaningless wins over the hapless rank and file of the NFL. The masses flowed out of Bank of America Stadium following the final home game of 2015 already bloated on all the Panthers have fed them this season –– what’s one more win over a team whose season will end in three weeks? An undefeated 13-0 start, a third straight NFC South title and a first-round bye in the upcoming playoffs. Three games remain, yet this already classifies as perhaps the greatest season –– definitely the greatest stretch –– in team history. That is, if things ended today. Much remains to be accomplished. Yet detractors have dissected everything from Carolina’s strength of schedule to its Thanksgiving Day “Color Rush” attire. The Wall Street Journal had a report last week that listed the most unwatchable teams in the NFL. Carolina, despite its undefeated record, was ninth. The piece was based on eight metrics such as shortest average pass, most fair catches, and most coaches’ challenges. Wins, apparently, weren’t part of the formula. However, if we learned anything from Sunday’s 38-0 dismantling of the Atlanta Falcons –– a team that was 5-0 at one point this season –– it’s that the Panthers indeed have the goods to win a championship. They only have microscopic holes and trying to exploit the few perceived weaknesses could ultimately be a fool’s errand by opponents. Consider the plight of the Falcons, a team that cruised to the Carolinas with its postseason future dependent upon a win in Charlotte. Neither Atlanta nor its first-year coach Dan Quinn — who was 3-0 against Carolina over the past two seasons as Seattle’s defensive coordinator –– had answers from their sorry start to their frustrating finish on Sunday. The Panthers rolled up a team-record 260 yards in the first quarter, the most by any team in the NFL this season. Their 21 points tied the most productive first quarter in team history and was the second-most they’ve ever scored in any quarter. The names of North Carolina and Clemson lingered beneath the paint in each end zone –– remnants of last week’s ACC Championship game –– yet there was no doubt who had exclusive right to that land against the Falcons. The offensive onslaught eased, though only slightly and only because it just wasn’t needed. A trip to the playoffs for the seventh time in team history looms. It won’t begin until after a trip to New York, a quick jaunt to Atlanta and a regular-season ending lunch date with Tampa Bay. Lots can happen during that stretch. That’s why quarterback Cam Newton was pulled with about a minute left in the third quarter even though he was having his way with Atlanta’s defense. It’s why coach Ron Rivera liberally substituted defensively despite his team teetering on just the sixth shutout in the 21-year history of the Panthers. Better safe than sorry, Rivera rightly reasoned. After all, a half-dozen Panthers missed snaps on Sunday due to an injury. Some were minor, such as when Newton accidentally hit his left arm with his own helmet and had to sit out a play. Others were mediocre injuries like the one tight end Greg Olsen suffered. Olsen hurt his knee and was cleared to return, but Rivera wisely chose to sit him after he was told Olsen was “fine.” Defensive back Bene Benwikere wasn’t as lucky. He broke his leg and is done for the season, leaving a hole for Rivera to fill as the playoffs near. Still the Panthers are in as good a shape as any team can expect as fall turns into winter. And that’s not something Rivera will take for granted even if the season hasn’t yet ended. He must balance health with an unexpected pursuit of perfection — let alone postseason success “Each game is big as we go forward,” Rivera said. “This one gave us at least one home game (in the playoffs) and a bye. Next week? Who knows what it’ll mean — we’ll see what happens. ... You have to keep playing football.” |
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