SPARTANBURG, S.C.: When the
Carolina Panthers opened training camp last year,
rookie Jon Beason skipped workouts in a contract
dispute, safety Chris Harris played for the
Chicago Bears and Damione Lewis was a backup
defensive tackle.
When the team took the field for Tuesday's workout, the
three players were clearly the leaders at their
position, barking instructions, encouraging teammates
and leading drills.
After the retirement of veterans Mike Minter, Mike
Rucker and Dan Morgan in the past 12 months, Beason,
Harris and Lewis have become the face of Carolina's
new-look, young defense.
"We're the most vocal guys, but the defense is really
new," Beason said Tuesday. "There are a lot of new
faces. I think we enjoy each other, we trust each other
and we know we could be as good as we want to. I think
everyone has taken that challenge."
The 23-year-old Beason overcame missing the first eight
days of camp last year to set a team-record 160
tackles. Moving to middle linebacker after Morgan's
season-ending Achilles' tendon injury, he quickly
earned the respect of his teammates. His leadership
role was cemented late in the season when coach John
Fox asked him to give the pregame speech before a game
against Dallas.
Beason responded with a stirring talk about his love
for the game and the significance of facing the
storied Cowboys.
"Since I have been in the league, and that's seven
years, he gave a speech from a player or a coach I have
never heard before," cornerback Ken Lucas said. "It's
one of those Martin Luther King Jr. type of speeches
when he got done. It had that feel. Everybody looked at
each other like man, that was a powerful speech. He
gives that type of energy. He's a natural leader."
The 30-year-old Lewis, a former first-round pick of St.
Louis, became a starter when the Panthers traded
three-time Pro Bowl pick Kris Jenkins in February.
Lewis, whose three sacks topped the dismal 2007 team,
has clearly been the most vocal on the
defensive line.
"You hear a lot more enthusiasm and guys being a lot
more energetic on the field," Lewis said. "Guys are
talking more. I think guys are relaxing."
The transformation of the defense comes after the
Panthers lost a combined 26 years of experience with
the departures of Minter, Rucker and Morgan. Beason
said it was clear they left a leadership void.
"This year I want to do my job, do it well and lead by
example," Beason said. "Hopefully, the defense
follows me."
With a much younger lineup, Fox has simplified the
defense, allowing players to act more on instinct.
"You've got to have guys step in," Fox said. "That's
the landscape in this league now. There is just more
turnover. Back a long time ago, you had guys for their
whole careers, and it's a little bit more of a junior
college-college rotation now as far as people coming
through with all of the changes in free agency.
"So it makes it a little bit more difficult. But you
need to find those guys, identify them as part of your
evaluation and develop them."
(iht.com)