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Panthers aren't the first sub-.500 team in the playoffs, and history isn't against them

Carolina Panthers play against the Arizona Cardinals during the Wild Card playoff round at Bank of America Stadium on Saturday, January 3, 2015, in Charlotte, NC.
Carolina Panthers play against the Arizona Cardinals during the Wild Card playoff round at Bank of America Stadium on Saturday, January 3, 2015, in Charlotte, NC.

CHARLOTTE — The Panthers don't have anything to apologize for, after making the playoffs with a sub-.500 record.

Nor do they have anything to dread.

The Panthers became the fifth team since the 1982 strike-shortened playoffs to make the postseason with a record most people might scoff at. But that's all in the past, now.

"It's just a great feeling to be able to bring that back here, to Carolina, to Charlotte, and to share that feeling of that first championship," Panthers head coach Dave Canales said of their NFC South title the hard way. "And now the mentality shifts, it's 1-0 with a chance to win the world championship."

That's not just a coach saying what he has to say; that's historical precedent.

Of those four prior teams to make the playoffs with losing records, two of them won in the first round, and they're very familiar to people here. (Two 4-5 teams, the Browns and Lions, made the playoffs in a strike-shortened 1982 season, when 16 of the league's 28 teams went to the playoffs.)

Previous sub-.500 teams in playoffs, since 1983

Team Regular season First-round result
2010 Seattle 7-9 Beat 5-seed New Orleans, 41-36
2014 Carolina 7-8-1 Beat 5-seed Arizona, 27-16
2020 Washington 7-9 Lost to 5-seed Tampa Bay 31-23
2022 Tampa Bay 8-9 Lost to 5-seed Dallas, 31-14

Canales was on the 2010 Seahawks staff when they won the NFC West with a 7-9 record.

That earned them a home game against the fifth-seeded Saints, who were 11-5 that season. All the Seahawks did that day was shake the earth. Marshawn Lynch's 67-yard, tackle-destroying touchdown run had the Seattle fans so lathered up that seismographs picked up the vibrations, and the "Beastquake" was born.

Seattle Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch (24) arrives in the end zone with a 31-yard touchdown during the fourth quarter of an NFC divisional playoff NFL football game against the New Orleans Saints in Seattle, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2014. (AP Photo/John Froschauer)

Canales, of course, recalled Seahawks backup quarterback Charlie Whitehurst winning the regular-season finale for an injured Matt Hasselbeck to get them there.

"So Charlie stepped in, and it was defense run game and Charlie being efficient that day, that really got it done for us — you know, it's team football and that's your opportunity to win," Canales said. "But what I remember most is, even at 7-9, which we were that year, we won the division, and we got a home game, which gave us the crowd. . . .

"You know, that was the New Orleans Saints, the defending Super Bowl champs from the year before in 2009, and, of course, I can't forget the Beastquake and really the crowd just going nuts on this amazing run, breaking nine or 10 tackles all the way.

"I was in the box at the time, we're all yelling so much the stadium was actually swaying a little bit. The whole building was moving, and I popped up on my feet and was yelling so loud when I sat back down after the touchdown, I almost fainted. It was just like I had all the blood had rushed to my head, but just an amazing memory, an electric moment, and I'm really excited to create some memories and moments here in Bank of America Stadium."

Carolina Panthers play against the Arizona Cardinals during the Wild Card playoff round at Bank of America Stadium on Saturday, January 3, 2015, in Charlotte, NC.

For the 2014 Panthers, their mad dash to the playoffs came out of a 3-8-1 start, but they won their final four games to head into the playoffs a no-apologies 7-8-1.

Veteran long snapper JJ Jansen doesn't necessarily believe in momentum, but he said that hot streak was both indicative of a team that would go 15-1 the next season and a belief they created along the way.

He's the only player left from that team, and the only one who has won a playoff game as a Panther, as they beat the Cardinals 27-16 in the wild card game.

"I just think that there was this feeling of we're on a roll, we're hot," long snapper JJ Jansen said. "The division was ours for the taking, and we'd already beaten two of the division teams. And so it kind of felt like you were on this roll.

"And there is something nice about being the chaser in this environment, because you feel like you're the ascending team, not the team collapsing in front of everyone."

Carolina Panthers play against the Arizona Cardinals during the Wild Card playoff round at Bank of America Stadium on Saturday, January 3, 2015, in Charlotte, NC.

The Cardinals were 11-5 entering that game, but not at full strength. Injuries to quarterback Carson Palmer and backup Drew Stanton left them starting Ryan Lindley in that game.

Jonathan Stewart ran for 123 yards and a touchdown that day, and Cam Newton threw a pair of second-half touchdowns to Fozzy Whitaker and Mike Tolbert to advance them to the divisional round (where they'd lose to Canales and the Seahawks, the top seed in the NFC that year).

That's a long way of saying, getting into the playoffs is the point, and as Canales noted, your record doesn't matter once you get there.

Now that you're in the postseason, the only thing that matters is the thing in front of you.

View photos of action between the Panthers and Rams through the years.

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