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New target of ire emerges: It's Peppers

Tuesday, September 22, 2009
(Updated 6:51 am)

CHARLOTTE (AP) — Jake Delhomme, move over. Julius Peppers has taken your spot as scapegoat for Carolina's dismal start.

While Delhomme recovered from a two-game, 11-turnover stretch to throw for over 300 yards on Sunday in Atlanta, the defense reverted to its late-season form of 2008 to keep the Panthers winless.

There was no pass rush, poor run defense, shoddy tackling -- and another nearly invisible performance by this season's highest-paid NFL player.

A day after Carolina's 28-20 defeat, the defense had such a long film session Monday that players said there was a "halftime" break. Then Peppers — who managed two tackles and no sacks against the Falcons — left the stadium without speaking to reporters.

With a $16.7 million salary, that amounts to more than $500,000 per tackle. Through two games Peppers has one of Carolina's two sacks and the defending NFC South champions are stuck at the bottom of the division.

"I understand the criticism, not just of Julius, but our team," coach John Fox said. "As I said last week when everybody wanted to blame Jake to this week when everybody wants to blame Julius, I don't think that's the answer."

With his giant franchise-tag salary and coming off an offseason where he did everything he could to leave town, the Panthers knew Peppers would be under intense scrutiny this season.

So far, not so good.

The four-time Pro Bowl pick's sack in the season-opening 38-10 loss to Philadelphia came after the game was out of hand. The lone time he was seen near Atlanta's Matt Ryan Sunday came on an incompletion in the fourth quarter, just before Carolina's last-ditch drive ended with Delhomme throwing an interception on fourth down.

But that was Delhomme's only pick a week after throwing four and losing a fumble. Delhomme completed 25 of 41 passes for 308 yards and a touchdown. DeAngelo Williams added 79 yards rushing and a TD.

The offense did its part. The defense faltered. And now Carolina is 0-2 with a Monday night game at Dallas up next.

"We just need to get it down," injured safety Chris Harris said of new coordinator Ron Meeks' Cover-2 system. "We need to get as close to perfect with it as we possibly can — and soon — before it's too late."

Harris, who has missed the first two games with a sore knee, was optimistic he could return for the Dallas game. But Carolina has more injury headaches.

Defensive tackle Louis Leonard broke his left ankle on the final defensive play Sunday. He's out for several weeks, if not the season. Leonard, who has the only other Carolina sack this season, was acquired from Cleveland on Sept. 1 for a late-round 2010 draft pick to make up for Maake Kemoeatu's season-ending torn Achilles' tendon.

"There's no question that injuries have been problematic," Fox said. "They were through preseason and they've continued into the regular season. "

But Peppers is healthy, and the same problems that plagued Carolina when it allowed 30 or more points in five of the final seven games last season were on display at the Georgia Dome.

Ryan wasn't sacked and threw 13 straight completions at one point. The secondary's soft zone coverage gave receivers a cushion as Ryan was 21 of 27 for 220 yards and three touchdowns. Michael Turner added 105 yards rushing and another TD.

It's not the results the Panthers can accept when they're paying Peppers about 14 percent of the salary cap. But as he was a week earlier with Delhomme, Fox was in full-defense mode Monday.

"He draws some attention. They've got chips. There are protection sets to him quite a bit," Fox said of Peppers. "John Abraham is a pretty good player, and I'm not sure how many sacks he had. The difference was their team won."

Left tackle Jordan Gross did hold Abraham without a sack, part of the much improved play by the offensive line that helped Delhomme regain his poise. But it wasn't enough to overcome a pedestrian performance by Carolina's career sacks leader.

"He executed well enough for us to be in position to win," Fox insisted. "The reality is we didn't, but I don't know that it is Julius' fault."

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