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EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -- There were moments of brilliance but others of frustration. There were times when Carolina looked polished but others where the team seemed raw -- sometimes within seconds of each other.
The final minute of Monday night's 24-17 preseason-opening loss to the New York Giants encapsulated those extremes. In one breath, ![]()
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"Kind of an interesting ending," head coach John Fox said.
The wild finish was in contrast to a quiet opening act for the first-team offense, which finished with no points in three series.
Quarterback ![]()
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"As an offense, it was great to get out there and get some work," said quarterback Jake Delhomme. "We didn't start as fast as we would have liked but we did some nice things. We have a lot of work to do and a long way to go to get where we need to be."
But the first-team offense could not find the end zone, only getting as far as midfield on its third and final series.
"The first time out is always a little sloppy. I thought we played OK in spurts, but it would have been nice to put points on the board," Gross said.
The first unit left the field with a 7-0 deficit after the Giants drove 77 yards in six plays to a 19-yard Ahmad Bradshaw touchdown run after Carolina's first-team defense forced a three-and-out on its opening series of work. The score that culminated the series saw Bradshaw sprint right into the open field, breaking a pair of tackles en route to the end zone.
"We came out a little sluggish," cornerback ![]()
The biggest jolt of the first half for Carolina came from linebacker ![]()
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"They must have mis-blocked it (on the line), because we didn't have our block called," Fox said.
The Panthers' second-quarter effort was ultimately doomed by turnovers. Carolina gave away the football three times in a four-snap span, with two fumbles bracketed by a Stoney Woodson interception of a ![]()
Ware's score, which came 28 seconds before halftime, gave the Giants a 14-2 halftime advantage. But the mid-point pause seemed to revive the Panthers, who took less than three and half minutes to trim the deficit from 12 points to five.
The rapid rally began when ![]()
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The touchdown drew the Panthers within 14-9, but the score was sullied by a taunting penalty against Goodson.
"I was told by Skip (assistant head coach/running backs Jim Skipper) not to do that anymore," Goodson said.
Goodson's night, which included a pair of second-quarter fumbles, paralled his team's as a whole -- some success from which to build; some struggle from which to learn.
"He's a work in progress," said running back ![]()
There's plenty of time for that -- and for refining everything else before the Philadelphia Eagles fly into Charlotte for the regular-season opener Sept. 13.
NOTES
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• Rookie defensive end ![]()
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• After permitting a pair of first-half touchdowns, Carolina's defense settled down and began dominating in the second half, holding the New York offense to a field goal and forcing four three-and-outs in eight possessions, including one in the final minute of the game
• A pair of rookies opened the game on returns for the Panthers - Goodson on kickoffs and ![]()
• Cantwell compiled the highest passer rating among Panthers quarterbacks with a 118.2 mark, completing four-of-eight passes for 67 yards and one touchdown.
• Middle linebacker ![]()
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• Chery's touchdown catch gave him the team lead in receiving yardage for the night, with 35 yards on two catches. His fellow Louisiana-Lafayette product Delhomme made sure to retrieve the football as a souvenir.
• Six Panthers did not play: offensive lineman ![]()
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