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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Jourdan Rodrigue

What does linebacker Luke Kuechly see in Panthers' defense? Everything

NASHVILLE, Tenn. _ Carolina Panthers safety Mike Adams is as wily a veteran as they come.

So when Adams shaded a Tennessee Titans receiver to the inside of the field on an outside route, the receiver hardly knew what was happening before the ball, thrown by quarterback Marcus Mariota, flew to the sideline where that receiver was supposed to be, and dribbled incomplete.

"Yeah, Mike!" screeched linebacker Luke Kuechly, running across the field to fist-bump Adams. "Yeah Mike!"

It was a testament to what Carolina's core defensive player notices as he flies around the field at middle linebacker. Adams' movement to shade in the receiver was subtle, but Kuechly saw it and wanted the safety to know he recognized what he had done.

"Well, Mike's been in the league for 15 years," Kuechly said, laughing, after practice. "He knows football. Just the little things. It's fun when you get things right. ... We're all getting on the same page, which is good."

This defense, which has been chomping at the bit to put a set of pads on someone not wearing Carolina blue, is starting to smooth out those little details that Kuechly loves to notice, starting up front.

Defensive tackle Kawann Short worked on the inside against Tennessee's first-team line defensive end Julius Peppers took the edge during pass-rush drills. Some of the drills were specifically designed to force a double team with a three-man offensive line against a two-man defensive set, and Short picked his up with ease as Peppers shook the offensive tackle for what would equate to a sack in live action.

When the two worked in tandem against a guard and starting Titans tackle Jack Conklin in another set of drills, it appeared even easier.

Tennessee's linemen are formidable, and sure, it was one set of drills. But Short and Peppers appeared to really be in sync, both on communication and recognition of the manner in which the linemen are playing them, in preparation for either a run or pass play.

"We have to be on the same page, and we communicated and it came out good," said Short after practice. "Man, you talking 100-plus sacks with Julius Peppers and Charles Johnson alone. Those guys set the foundation over here. We do everything they ask us to do, as far as what they expect. ... The whole time, we do expect to communicate."

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