Damione Lewis

Damione Lewis back on practice field

DamioneLewis
Panthers DT Damione Lewis has already resumed practicing after undergoing rotator cuff surgery in January.

Lewis, returning as a starter next to Maake Kemoeatu, is coming off his best season as a pro. However, he may lose some snaps this year to third-round pick Corvey Irvin. Both play the penetrating "three technique" tackle position.

(rotoworld.com)
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Lewis solid in the middle of the DL

DamioneLewis
CHARLOTTE -- The Panthers might not know who's going to be on the end of their defensive line this season, but they know who's going to be in the middle for some time.

As part of their salary cap shuffling measures Wednesday, the Panthers extended the contract of defensive tackle Damione Lewis.

On paper, he's under contract through the 2014 season, though Lewis said that was a bit of a technicality. His pending $2.5 million roster bonus was turned into a signing bonus, and his base salaries were reduced from $3.17 million this year and $4.05 million in 2010 to $2.0 million and $755,000.

The move will clear at least $2 million worth of room on the proration of his bonus over five years, and could be worth more.

"In a lot of ways, it's still the same contract," Lewis said. "I still get what was coming to me, we were just able to spread things out to help with the numbers."

It also provides a measure of security for Lewis, who'll turn 31 on Sunday. He's rehabbing from a recent shoulder surgery, saying one of the muscles in his rotator cuff was torn. He said he expected to begin lifting weights in June, and hoped to be ready to go by the start of training camp. Lewis injured the shoulder in the Dec. 21 game at New York, when the Panthers were playing without nose tackle Maake Kemoeatu. He slid over that night, and blew the shoulder while taking on a double team the much larger Kemoeatu would normally have faced.

He sat out the regular season finale at New Orleans, but came back to play two weeks later in the playoff loss to Arizona.

"Right now everything's going good," Lewis said. "From what they're saying, I should be good to go when camp starts. All I know is, as bad as it sounds, it could have been a lot worse."

(heraldonline.com)
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Damione Fighting for a Roster Spot?

DamioneLewis
PANTHERS: The Panthers just signed DT Damione Lewis to a new contract last offseason, but the team may address his deal again before free agency begins in late February, we hear. Lewis is due a $2.5 million roster bonus and has a cap figure $6.8 million for 2009. He had surgery to repair a torn rotator cuff, which is expected to keep him out until at least July, after having injured it in a Dec. 21 loss to the Giants. The Panthers want to make upgrades at defensive tackle, and Lewis should expect some competition in training camp, if he’s healthy and still with the team.

(mpnnow.com)
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Panthers starting DT Lewis out until July

DamioneLewis
Panthers DT Damione Lewis will be out until training camp at the earliest after undergoing shoulder surgery Saturday.

It's been a rough off-season for the Carolina defense, with coaches leaving, Julius Peppers wanting out, and now this. Lewis, 31, played well as a starter in the first year of a new contract, but will have to show he's healthy in camp to justify his big salary next year.

(rotoworld.com)
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Panthers Notebook: Lewis says he'll be ready to go against Cards

DamioneLewis
Defensive tackles Damione Lewis and Maake Kemoeatu went through full practice yesterday for the second day in a row and both said they will be ready for Saturday night's playoff game against the Arizona Cardinals.

Lewis missed the Panthers' 33-31 win at New Orleans in the regular-season finale because of a shoulder injury suffered the previous week in a 34-28 overtime road loss to the New York Giants. Kemoeatu missed both of those games after suffering an ankle injury in the Panthers' 30-10 win over Denver on Dec. 14.

Lewis said he couldn't have played last week had the Panthers been in one of the NFC wild-card games, but he felt better thanks to the Panthers' first-round bye.

"It feels great," Lewis said. "I'm just a little sore today, and I was a little sore after yesterday's practice, which was expected. But the strength is holding up well. My mobility is good. I'm able to lock out and do the things I was doing before I got hurt. We've got braces to keep it from getting too far out of whack, so I think it'll be good."

(hickoryrecord.com)
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Lewis expects to be back in two weeks

DamioneLewis
Panthers starting DTs Maake Kemoeatu (ankle) and Damione Lewis (shoulder) will benefit from the Panthers' first round bye and should be near full health in two weeks.

Both missed the team's regular season finale against the Saints. Kemoeatu's 6'5/350-pound frame will be crucial to the Panthers' playoff success. They'll face either the Vikings or the Eagles in the second round.

(rotoworld.com)
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A Good Fit: Lewis likes being a Panther

DamioneLewis
SPARTANBURG, S.C. - Damione Lewis got leg-whipped by an offensive lineman shortly after the Carolina Panthers started training camp, and he has been nursing a minor injury ever since.

But Lewis was back on the practice field yesterday afternoon. And regardless of how many reps he is getting these days, he's certain to be a key component on the Panthers' defensive line this season.

Lewis is slated to start at defensive tackle, filling the spot that came open when the Panthers traded Kris Jenkins to the New York Jets last spring. He won it with his play the past two seasons as a backup to Jenkins and Maake Kemoeatu.

"They have given me an opportunity, and I want to take advantage of it," Lewis said yesterday. "In this league, it's all about opportunity and being able to go through some growing pains and being able to do it on a consistent basis."

Lewis, a 6-2, 301-pounder in his eighth NFL season, shared the team lead with 3?sacks last season. In 15 games, including two as a starter, he had 32 tackles, seven quarterback hurries and one fumble recovery.

He was rewarded during the offseason with a three-year, $14-million contract.

It was the continuation of a career revival. He was the 12th pick in the 1999 NFL Draft, by the St. Louis Rams, but he never lived up to expectations with the Rams and started just 27 games in five seasons. The Rams chose not to re-sign him when his original contract expired.

He came to the Panthers as a backup in 2006, had a solid season with 30 tackles and 4?sacks in a backup role and proved to himself that he still belonged in the NFL.

"When I came here, I was just looking to do what they asked and show them I could play," Lewis said. "I knew I could play this game. I know what I went through in St. Louis, but I always knew that I could play this game. There's never been any doubt in my mind that I could play. It might be a shock to other people, but it's not a shock to me.

"It's been hard work, but I've stuck with it and continued to work. I've gotten better every minute I've played in the league, and I'm always striving to play better the next year."

Coach John Fox has had high praise for Lewis throughout offseason workouts and training camp.

"He was a guy we picked up in free agency that came in and did a good job," Fox said. "We were a little bit entrenched there with some guys we had, but we always rotate our D-line, and a good rotation is real important. He has played quite a bit for us, he just didn't jog out in the starting lineup the majority of the time.

"He's a guy who has been a starter in the league, is capable of starting, and we think he is good enough to start for us."

Lewis said he has felt comfortable from the moment he joined the Panthers.

"Everything just felt right about (the Panthers)," he said. "I liked the way the coaches dealt with players and the way the head coach interacts with players and the GM, Marty (Hurney), how he interacts with everybody. Mr. Richardson (owner Jerry Richardson) will come down to the locker room and pull guys to the side and talk to them one-on-one."

Now, the goal is to fit in and be part of a solid defense.

Jenkins' outspokenness led to friction with some teammates, and some Panthers have talked during training camp about "addition by subtraction" with the Jenkins trade. But everyone seems to get along with Lewis.

"It is what it is," Lewis said. "You know, I love Jenks. I think he's a great guy. I still talk to him. We're still good friends. He feels like he had the best thing happen to him going there, and now I want to take advantage of this opportunity.

"I'm really not looking at it like ‘Ooh, I'm a starter,' " Lewis said.

(journalnow.com)
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Lewis in comfort zone

DamioneLewis
SPARTANBURG There was a time when Damione Lewis was expected to dominate at defensive tackle in the NFL, so much so that St. Louis made him its No.1 draft pick (12th overall) out of Miami in 2001.

For whatever reason, it didn't happen. There was a broken foot that rookie year and gradually, he became a sometime starter and then an afterthought. In five seasons with the Rams, he started more than seven games just once. By the time Carolina signed him as a free agent in 2006, Lewis was just another guy, thought of by some as something of a bust. The Panthers brought him in to back up Kris Jenkins and Maake Kemoeatu.

“There's the old saying; if it doesn't kill you it makes you stronger,” Lewis said Tuesday outside the Wofford cafeteria. “My life's good; I've got a wife and kids; I'm happy. I love football, but I know I'm not going to be able to do it forever. People can say what they want to say; I've always enjoyed the game and I love the game, and that's the way I look at it.”

And if his St. Louis days weren't what he had hoped …

“Some people are going to be great; you have very few hall of famers compared to the numbers that play the game. I'm not going to worry about it.”

Lewis played better than many expected as a Panther, and now his role has increased. He's become an important cog in a defensive line hoping to reestablish its dominance. Jenkins has been traded. Defensive end Mike Rucker has retired.

Defensive end Julius Peppers is coming off his worst season.

Something had to change, and Lewis is a big part of that.

“He came in and did a good job… he played quite a bit for us,” said coach John Fox. “He's been a starter in the league, he's capable of starting and we think he's capable of starting for us.”

After collecting eight sacks in two years as a reserve, he'll line up next to Kemoeatu.

“I'm playing base (defense) and sub now, where last year I played mostly nickel (passing situations) and came in for Maake a little bit on run downs,” Lewis said. “So I'm doing a little bit of everything now.”

The key, though, might be that the defense is doing less. While no one is being specific, the coaches – with a number of new players to consider – have scaled back the playbook.

“You don't hear (complaints or confusion) on the field as much as we did last year, I think,” Lewis said. “You hear a lot more enthusiasm; guys are being a lot more energetic on the field, and talking to each other more. I think guys are relaxing.”

Lewis said that while things are generally the same for the front four, the defensive calls from the linebackers are coming in faster.

“I think (scaling back is) allowing us to play faster with less thinking from the front and from the linebackers.”

Lewis, who was given Tuesday's practice off after taking a hit to an ankle Monday, feels as if he has a new lease on life.

“In St. Louis, especially in my later years, there was a lot of unsound stuff that we were doing,” he said. “We got a lot criticism up front for it, but actually it wasn't always us. We took it with a smile and just kept going. But there were a lot of things that just weren't right with what we were doing on that defense.

“Here everything is well thought-out. I think coach (John) Fox and coach (Mike) Trgovac do a great job of putting our game plan together. Even in simplifying what we're doing, they're doing a great job with that.”

Lewis, a self-described country boy from Sulphur Springs, Tex., also feels that Carolina is a better fit for him, with everyone from owner Jerry Richardson on down interested in the players as individuals.

“I come from a real small town,” Lewis said. “Hunting and fishing, get out and do what I like to do outdoors. It's a lot easier to do it here than a lot of other places.

“Give me a bass boat and a couple of cold beers and I'm fine.”

(charlotteobserver.com)
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Beason, Harris, Lewis leading new-look Panthers' D

JonBeason
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)
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Lewis filling holes

DamioneLewis
On the Panthers defensive line, Damione Lewis is anything but a silent partner. The veteran defensive tackle with the high-octane motor stands out among the jovial but soft-spoken Maake Kemoeatu and a stoic pair of defensive ends, Julius Peppers and Tyler Brayton.

The former Miami Hurricane provides constant chatter during defensive line drills in his distinctive Texas drawl. On the first day of training camp, Lewis set the tone as the defensive line made a statement with aggressive play in one-on-one run and pass-rush drills.

Entering his eighth NFL season and third with the Panthers, Lewis is anxious to provide more than comic relief. One goal is to provide leadership to a group that has been challenged by the loss of two long-time starters this off-season, Mike Rucker and Kris Jenkins.

The obvious conclusion is that Lewis will fill the spot vacated by Jenkins, but defensive line coach Sal Sunseri begs to differ, citing that the two are completely different players.

"It wasn't Jenkins' system," Sunseri said. "It wasn't Rucker's system. He's filling a role in our system."

Sunseri added that Lewis has all the tools to step into his new role.

"He has the respect of his teammates. When you do the right things, making the right calls, people will follow."

(panther.com)
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Camp Preview: Defensive Line

DamioneLewis
Kemoeatu (6-foot-5, 345 pounds) and Damione Lewis (6-foot-2, 301 pounds) are the old faces inside absorbing a tweaked defensive scheme that allows them to attack opposing quarterbacks in a more freewheeling manner than recent years.

"I kind of look forward to the challenge, to the freedom and powers they've given us up front to be a little bit more creative," Lewis said. "I like it. I'm getting into what we're doing and the defensive calls and stuff like that, trying to see how I fit in with it, move with it and just feel it out, because it's completely different."

Kemoeatu started 13 of the Panthers' 16 games at left defensive tackle last year, while Lewis managed to lead the defensive line with 3.5 sacks in spite of starting just two games in 2007.

The adjustments up front could help Lewis -- who signed a three-year contract extension this offseason -- cement his role.

"We're doing more attacking up front. More blitzes," he said. "A lot of them are going to seem the same to our opponent, but I think it will give us an advantage, because they won't be able to read what we're doing by how we're lining up. That's basically it. It's really not too much more complicated than what we were doing last year."

(Panthers.com)
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Q&A with Damione Lewis

DamioneLewis
Q. Who was a key mentor or motivator in your life?
High school head coach James Cameron, who passed away in the spring of my junior year in high school (in Sulphur Springs, Texas).

Q. What's your favorite hobby away from football?
Fishing and hunting. I love to do both because I love the outdoors, and it gives me time to think and clear my mind.

Q. What are you afraid of?
Nothing.

Q. What television show won't you miss or always record?
“American Idol.”

Q. What's your guilty pleasure?
Food.

Q. What's your favorite vacation spot?
Any tropical setting. I love the ocean.

Q. What other position would you love to play?
Tight end.

Q. What's your ideal post-football career?
Sports analyst, because I love talking about sports.

Q. Who was your sports hero growing up?
William Perry and Walter Payton. They were awesome.

Q. What did you buy with your first NFL paycheck?
A house for my parents.

(charlotte.com)
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D. Lewis to be used as one-gap rusher

DamioneLewis
Darin Gantt, of The Herald, reporting for The Sporting News, reports Carolina Panthers DL Damione Lewis will be used as a one-gap rusher.




(fanhome.com)
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Damione Lewis is coming home to put on a free football camp, but his real goal is teach boys how to better play The Game of Life

DamioneLewis
March 30, 2008 - Damione Lewis has a philosophy about life -- "Better yourself and take someone along with you." Some young people in Hopkins County will soon get to experience that firsthand.

Local boys ages 6-14 will have a chance to meet Lewis and other NFL stars in person during the inaugural Damione Lewis Football Camp on Saturday morning, April 19, sponsored by the Hopkins County Boys and Girls Club.

At 6-feet, 2-inches and 300 pounds, Lewis is a large man. As an NFL player, he's even larger than life.

The former Sulphur Springs Wildcat gridiron standout will begin his eighth NFL season after signing a three-year contract extension in the offseason as defensive tackle for the Carolina Panthers. He was a blue chip prospect at Sulphur Springs High School in the mid 1990s and a first-round draft pick by the St. Louis Rams after starting for three years at the University of Miami.

The camp, his brainchild, is being coordinated locally by Kerry Wright.

"It's something I've been wanting to do for a long time, and I've just been waiting for the right time," said Lewis, who was back in his home town on Friday to shore up some of the details. "I've gotten to a place in my life where I'm settled and in a comfort situation where I feel like I can give back.

"The first thing I wanted to do in that process is to get something going around here. I want to help these kids get focused on life and back on track. There's so much more in their lives to look forward to than what they're dealing with today."

The camp is free -- that's right -- free, and participants don't have to be members of the Boys and Girls Club to attend. Registration forms, which need to be turned in by April 4, are at the Boys and Girls Club and Fieldhouse Sports.

By making the camp free, it will allow more youngsters to attend and be mentored by Lewis and up to a dozen other NFL players, including another former Wildcat, Caleb Miller, as well as Santana Moss, Bubba Franks, Jon Beason, Dante Rosario and perhaps Edgerrin James, Clinton Portis and Dan Morgan.

"The idea is to get as many young people out to the camp as possible so they can see people who have been successful in their careers, and to give them some hope," Wright said.

The players will teach campers fundamental instructions, proper nutrition and weight training. But the most important part will likely be the heartfelt talk they will receive on leadership, character and how to be true student-athletes on and off the field.

"I want it to go beyond football, but that's what I know -- that's what I do" Lewis said. "So it was a lot easier for me to bring that atmosphere in first and build on that.

"They need to understand that the person they are looking to was in the same position that are in, maybe worse. So it's possible for them to do what I did or go beyond and do something different."

Lewis isn't just talking about professional sports, either.

"It could be a doctor or lawyer or just a hard-working parent who provides for their family," he explained. "Find a comfort within yourself and try to better yourself. That's really the object of life -- go out and better your life and bring somebody along with you."

The Boys and Girls Club will hopefully benefit greatly from the camp, because organizers have set a goal to raise $100,000 in donations from local businesses. In return for a $2,000 donation, business owners will receive access to a private mixer and dinner with the NFL players -- not a bad bonus for contributing to something worthwhile.

Businesses that would like to participate but have not been contacted can e-mail Wright at kwright@cpiaccess.com for details.

The Boys and Girls Club, located in the old Houston Elementary School building, has about 150 members. Approximately 60 percent are from single-parent homes.

Lewis wants the money generated from the camp to buy more computers for the facility and to start and expand a tutoring and mentoring program.

"In the future, I'd like to see retired teachers in here tutoring, volleyball and basketball, just a full-service Boys and Girls Club, where they can come over here and get on-line, do their homework and be more of an area that's a positive place for them to be," he said. "I'd like to see businessmen come in and talk to them and mentor them -- that's what I'd like to see."

(ssnewstelegram.com)
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Lewis likes new schedule

The grueling practices of training camp are tough on everyone in pads, but perhaps a little more so for the big guys. Guys like Damione Lewis, the 6-foot-2, 301-pound defensive tackle who is entering his seventh season.

Thus the news that the Panthers have altered their training camp schedule this season to incorporate more night practices and fewer two-a-days was like announcing free ice cream for every kid on the block.

“I think it’s awesome,” said Lewis upon his arrival at Wofford College in Spartanburg, SC on Friday. “Obviously it’s keeping us out of the heat of the day and giving us a lot longer to recover. And I think that’s a great deal.

“The older you get, the longer it takes to recover. I think it’s going to help the veteran guys a lot. The rookies, it doesn’t matter because it’s the first time they’ve been through it anyways. So it’s going to hurt for them regardless. For us, it’s a big deal.”

Dealing with training camp is something that should get easier with time, but doesn’t necessarily. Lewis, who spent his first five camps with the St. Louis Rams and is now beginning his second with the Panthers, was asked what training camp compares to.
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Lewis gives Panthers solid backup - Defensive lineman 'feeling good' after having offseason surgery on his shoulder

Damione Lewis is a former first-round NFL draft pick.

Last season, he joined the Carolina Panthers as a backup to Maake Kemoeatu and Kris Jenkins at defensive tackle — and played well despite recurring shoulder problems.

He’s healthy again after off-season surgery, and he’s working with the first unit during the Panthers’ summer-school sessions while Jenkins stays away.

That may or may not mean anything by the time training camp rolls around next month. But until then, Lewis is feeling good about being a Panther and the Panthers are feeling good about having a proven player at the position in the case the Jenkins soap opera takes any more dramatic turns.

“Things are going pretty good for me,” Lewis said yesterday as the Panthers started the second week of voluntary workouts with Jenkins still the only veteran missing. “I’m feeling good. I’m still working through some kinks with the shoulder but it feels a helluva lot better now than it did last year at this time. So I’m feeling pretty good about things.”
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Damione Lewis Update

Very quietly, defensive tackle Damione Lewis played through some major pain last year. Lewis said he began experiencing shoulder pain during an early-October game against Cleveland but kept playing the rest of the season.

He had surgery to remove bone chips in late February and was limited to running during the minicamp. Lewis is working on regaining his strength but expects to be 100 percent for the start of training camp

(charlotte.com)
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Fan Q&A: Damione Lewis

How are the defensive dinners going, and how much is the bill? JakeThoma2
 
They’re going pretty good. We’re having a good time. The bill is averaging anywhere from $2,500-3,500. We split it three ways (defensive line, linebackers and defensive backs), and it’s almost 30 guys.
 
Has the defense ever gone to an all-you-can-eat buffet together? Aquendwato
 
No, we haven’t done that one yet. (laughs)

Who was your favorite player growing up? David, Charlotte
 
Reggie White. Emmitt Smith, Michael Irvin, Russell Maryland, Charles Haley -- pretty much the whole Cowboys team in the early 90’s. Walter Payton. Richard Dent.
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Lewis: 'Coach Davis is a Winner'

As Butch Davis takes the reins of the Tar Heel football program Monday, Inside Carolina had a lengthy conversation with one of Davis' former players -- Damione Lewis.

Damione Lewis was recruited to Miami by Butch Davis in 1995, red-shirted in 1996, and played four years for the Hurricanes - 1997-2000, earning first-team All-Big East honors as a defensive tackle. He was the 12th pick in the 2001 draft and is now in his sixth NFL season, playing for the Carolina Panthers.

Inside Carolina: How would you describe Butch Davis’ interaction with his players?

Damione Lewis: I think he’s a great player’s coach. I mean he is going have them give them everything he has to make sure they are successful. And, he’s going to work with them and just try to get the most out of them. I think they’ll love him down there. First, I think they are probably not going to like him too much because he’s going to be hard on them until he gets them playing the way he wants them to. But, it’s all out of love.
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Rams days forgettable for Panthers' Lewis - Defensive tackle happy in role as rush specialist

Had Damione Lewis been drafted a round later or in a different year, he might have had a long and prosperous career with the St. Louis Rams.

He could have been a centerpiece of the St. Louis defense on Sunday when the Rams play the Panthers at Bank of America Stadium. But bad timing, huge expectations and coaching changes pushed Lewis out of St. Louis and helped prevent him from becoming the dominant force that was expected.

Instead, Lewis is a role player for the Panthers these days and he couldn't be happier.


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Damione Lewis Update

On defensive tackle Damione Lewis: He's a guy that we picked up in free agency (from St. Louis). He came out (of college) very highly touted. Things haven't gone just like I think he had planned. He's come here and gotten a breath of fresh air. Coming in for us, he's been playing our third tackle. He's a quick guy with good pass rush skills. It's a dimension that we've needed, and we feel like he's filled that for us.

(panthers.com)
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Damione Lewis comments on Butch Davis to UNC

Defensive tackle Damione Lewis gave the University of North Carolina a big thumbs-up for hiring coach Butch Davis. "He's going to demand a lot from them," said Lewis, who played for Davis at the University of Miami. "He's going to really work them and take their work ethic to a whole new level. He's a great guy to play for. If you do what he asks, he'll take care of you."

(charlotte.com)
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Defense's Lewis quickly delivers for the Panthers

Maake Kemoeatu and Damione Lewis share the same position. Kemoeatu starts for Carolina at left defensive tackle and, when an opponent is likely to pass, Lewis replaces him.

What's the difference between the two?

"Forty or 50 pounds," says defensive end Mike Rucker.

The cool thing about the NFL is that you can be 6-foot-2, weigh 301 pounds and be the little fast guy. Lewis is second on the Panthers in sacks (he has two; Julius Peppers leads with five). And he's one of four Panthers to force a fumble.

"The difference between Maake and
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D Lew Delightful so far

In terms of girth, the Panthers biggest signing on the defensive line this past offseason was tackle Maake Kemoeatu. In terms of sacks, however, it has been Damione Lewis. Through four games, Lewis ranks fourth in the NFL with two sacks, and he has also contributed 12 tackles (two for loss), one forced fumble and two batted passes.

He looks comfortable on the field, which usually translates into discomfort for quarterbacks and offensive linemen. His inspired start has belied his first five years in St. Louis, where he never quite lived up to the potential of being the 12th overall pick in the 2001 NFL Draft. He says the approach of the Carolina coaching staff has made all the difference in the world.

dlinside
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Damione Lewis Update

Damione Lewis Carolina tackle Damione Lewis continues to make plays when he gets into the lineup. He forced a fumble and defended two passes.
(charlotte.com)
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