Panthers’ Shaq Thompson Tears Achilles

After rehabbing a September 2023 injury to be on the field in Week 1, Shaq Thompson faces another long road to recovery. The Panthers have again lost the veteran linebacker to a season-ending injury.

Thompson sustained an Achilles tear in Week 4, NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport reports. The only Carolina starter left from Super Bowl 50, Thompson is in the final year of his contract. This is obviously a tough blow to Thompson’s value, as he is now 30 and will exit this season coming off two major injuries.

Anchoring Carolina’s defensive second level since Luke Kuechly‘s 2020 retirement, Thompson came back from a fractured fibula suffered in Week 2 of last season. That injury forced him off the field during another tumultuous Panthers season. Despite the team changing GMs and once again switching HCs, Thompson remained in its plans. He came back and started four games this season, making 35 tackles, but it is now worth wondering if this is it for the 2015 first-round pick with Carolina.

The Panthers, who played much of last season without Thompson and Jaycee Horn, have lost Derrick Brown for the year as well. The latest Thompson setback guts Ejiro Evero‘s defense, which already came into the season shorthanded at edge rusher. Resolving the Brian Burns matter by selling low (via trade to the Giants), the Panthers have D.J. Wonnum on their reserve/PUP list. Jadeveon Clowney has one sack in four games, with no Panther entering Week 5 with more than 1.5.

Sacks are not Thompson’s department, but the off-ball ‘backer has provided consistency and leadership during much of his Carolina tenure. Initially a wingman alongside stalwarts Kuechly and Thomas Davis on that Carolina Super Bowl team as a rookie, the Dave Gettleman-era draftee earned a lucrative extension before Kuechly’s retirement. Thompson played on that deal until accepting a pay cut in 2023. The Panthers restructured that contract this offseason, creating $3MM in cap space. If Thompson is not re-signed by the start of the 2025 league year, the team will incur $3.18MM in dead money.

A 1-15 2001 season aside, this has been the worst stretch in team history. Thompson has missed much of this 3-18 run but has been onboard throughout David Tepper‘s ownership tenure. Thompson had teamed with Frankie Luvu in recent years, but he defected to Washington in free agency. The Panthers added ex-Evero Broncos charge Josey Jewell as a starter in March, and they will need to find another regular. The team used a third-round pick on Trevin Wallace this year and used its No. 1 waiver priority to claim Jon Rhattigan late last month. Claudin Cherelus, a former waiver claim, rounds out Carolina’s ILB group.

Thompson’s 752 career tackles rank fourth in Panthers history — behind Davis, Kuechly and safety Mike Minter — and his 112 starts sit seventh in franchise history among defenders. Barring a low-cost contract to return, Thompson will remain in that spot for the foreseeable future, as the Panthers do not have much for longevity on their defense. Whether it is with Carolina or another franchise, Thompson will aim to play again. He said Monday (via Instagram) retirement is not on the table.

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