CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- From his
vantage point on the sideline in the middle of
last season, Jake Delhomme examined the Carolina
Panthers' defense.
It didn't take the injured quarterback long to come to
a conclusion.
"We needed a leader on defense," Delhomme said. "Jon
Beason had to be that leader."
A rookie who missed the first eight days of training
camp in a contract holdout, Beason might have seemed
like an unlikely candidate to be a leader. He opened
the season at outside linebacker and slid into the
middle in early October after Dan Morgan suffered yet
another injury that ended yet another season.
"At that point, I was just going along and trying to
feel my way," Beason said. "I was just trying to learn
the defense and, because I was a rookie, I didn't want
to step on anybody's toes."
It was about that time when Delhomme, who went down
with an elbow injury in Week 3, threw the leadership
job at Beason's feet. Carolina's offense was about to
crumble without Delhomme, but the quarterback wasn't
going to let the defense do the same.
Veteran defensive end Mike Rucker had plenty of respect
in the locker room, but his career was coming to an
end. Supremely talented defensive end Julius Peppers
was anointed a leader by owner Jerry Richardson before
last season, but he's one of the most shy and quiet
players in the NFL, and his personality will prevent
him from ever being a vocal leader.
That's why Delhomme stepped in and pulled Beason aside.
"I told him several times, and I think other people
did, too, 'Jon, you have to be the leader. Don't worry
about being a rookie. This is your defense,'" Delhomme
said. "Julius is Julius. He's a quiet guy, and there's
nothing wrong with that. But Jon is just a natural-born
leader all the way around."
Beason, Delhomme and the rest of the Panthers can't
pinpoint the exact moment Beason became the leader of
the defense, but everyone agrees it happened. That
emergence helped save Carolina's season from complete
disaster as the offense struggled mightily with Vinny
Testaverde, David Carr and undrafted rookie Matt Moore
trying fruitlessly to fill Delhomme's shoes.
Beason and the defense kept the team respectable and
carried the Panthers to a 7-9 finish. Along the way,
Beason produced a franchise-record 160 tackles and led
or tied for the team lead in tackles in 13 games.
"When you consider the fact Jon missed a big chunk of
camp and started the season on the outside, that makes
it even more incredible what he did last year," coach
John Fox said. "He's been through it once now and he's
been through this entire offseason working in the
middle, so we're expecting more big things from him."
So is everyone else.
"Beason's going to be a Pro Bowler very soon," another
NFC head coach said. "The guy has all the tools. He and
[San Francisco's] Patrick Willis [another 2007
first-round pick] are going to be the next dominant
linebackers."
Beason might be the rising star in the NFC South, and
he must be a central figure if the Panthers are going
to get back to the kind of hard-nosed, dominant defense
they played earlier in Fox's tenure.
"I don't mind being a leader," Beason said. "In fact, I
kind of like it. I think I lead by example more than
anything. But I don't mind getting in a guy's face if
he needs to step up, and I'll feel more comfortable
doing that this year."
That's what the Panthers want -- and need. In Beason,
whom they took with the 25th pick in last year's draft,
they believe they have a leader. They also believe they
have a very complete linebacker. Beason is a
sideline-to-sideline player against the run and also
can drop into pass coverage when needed.
The Panthers always believed they had that kind of
linebacker in Morgan, a first-round pick in 2001, but
chronic injuries prevented Morgan from ever playing a
full season and reaching his potential.
In Beason, though, the Panthers believe they have a
linebacker who is as good as Morgan could have been if
he had stayed healthy. It's kind of ironic because
Beason and Morgan both went to the University of Miami
and Beason points to Morgan as his mentor.
"Dan became my friend when he came back to Miami to
work out before my sophomore year," Beason said. "When
I came here, there was no jealousy from Dan. He showed
me the ropes from the first day."
Little did Morgan know Beason would take his place
before long. Morgan went down with an injury in the
third game last season, and Beason slid into the middle
in Week 5.
"When Dan got hurt, he still talked me through
everything with the defense," Beason said.
Beason played so well that it made the decision easier
for the Panthers to cut ties with Morgan after last
season. He signed with New Orleans but then elected to
retire in May.
"Dan's still one of my best friends," Beason said.
"I've called him several times during training camp
just to ask questions. It's a bond that all the Miami
linebackers have."
The bond with Morgan has helped get Beason this far.
But the bond he started building with the rest of the
defense last year is why he'll be counted on even more
as a team leader this season.
Several teammates said Beason has been even more vocal
and forceful this training camp, and the rest of the
defense is following his lead.
"Jon's a great football player and a fiery, excitable
kind of guy," Delhomme said. "Every team needs a few
guys like that. Jon's going to put a hit on running
backs from other teams when he tackles them. But he
also puts a hit on his own teammates. If you make a
good play, you've got to look out for Jon because he's
going to come up and jump on you because that's the
kind of guy he is."
(espn.com)