CHARLOTTE – They won't all be masterpieces. At times, you have to win ugly.
That's a fact of life in the NFL, and it's a situation that presented itself last Sunday for the Panthers.
A strong defensive effort allowed Carolina to remain within striking distance against the Seattle Seahawks. Offensively, the Panthers continuously sputtered. They were held to 190 total yards and converted just two third downs. The only Carolina touchdown came by way of an interception return.
"The key is that when you are not having one of those good days," offensive coordinator Rob Chudzinski said, "you find a way to win."
Instead, trailing 16-10 in the final minutes, the Panthers misfired on fourth-and-goal from the 1-yard line.
"Of all the things that didn't go well for us in that game, the guys did a nice job of putting us in position where we could win it at the end," Chudzinski said. "We just need to come through in those situations and finish it off."
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"They actually misaligned on it which made it tougher for us," Chudzinski said.

Seattle defensive end Chris Clemons lined up on the wrong side. Instead of lining up across from Panthers left tackle ![]()
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Offensive tackle ![]()
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At the snap, there was not a single down lineman across from Gross and Campbell. But on the other side, Bell and Hartsock faced three Seattle linemen (Alan Branch, Jason Jones and Clemons).
"Their defensive end (Clemons) was all the way over on the right side (of the formation)," Chudzinski explained. "And the safety (Earl Thomas) moved over after OIsen shifted, so they were heavy loaded on one side."
The play design led Newton and Olsen to roll right -- directly into a mistakenly overloaded defense.
Seattle loaded the box to limit the Carolina run game, and as a result, running backs ![]()
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"They are a physical group, great athletes and they load up the box on you," Chudzinski said. "Those things all combined. It makes it tough and that's why they are one of the best teams in the league against the run."
The Seahawks regularly brought additional bodies toward the line of scrimmage, and their physical defensive backs held up the back end, denying big plays through the air.
"Give Seattle a lot of credit, they have some really good players up front and they challenge you down the field with their secondary," Chudzinski said.

Defensive coordinator Sean McDermott is confident his defense is heading in the right direction after Sunday's performance.
"What we're focused on right now is continuing to take things to another level, to create a culture of winning defensively and bring back the tradition of playing great defense," McDermott said.
Seattle running back Marshawn Lynch – who entered Week 5 as the NFL's leading rusher – ran for just 85 yards on 21 carries, largely due to Carolina's improved tackling.
"We've got to continue to stress that, coach it, emphasize it, drill it and (the tackling) has got to continue to improve," McDermott said.
McDermott was pleased with the play of the secondary, particularly cornerbacks ![]()
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"They kept things in front of them," McDermott said. "It will be a weekly evaluation in terms of what the opponent brings to the table, who we want on the field, but both of those young men did a nice job."
The Panthers' special teams units made several key contributions versus Seattle.
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The kick coverage team created its first turnover of the season on the second-half kickoff. Linebacker ![]()