The Carolina Panthers completed their 2026 coaching roster with three external hires—Darrell Bevell, Carl Smith, and Dwayne Stukes—and two internal promotions into positions that did not exist on the 2025 staff. The moves close a multi-week assembly period following head coach Dave Canales' second offseason with the franchise, which posted a 5-12 record in his debut year.
Bevell arrives as offensive coordinator, his sixth coordinator stop across sixteen NFL seasons. He last held play-calling duties with the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2021, where Trevor Lawrence threw 12 interceptions against 12 touchdowns as a rookie. Before that, Bevell coordinated Seattle's Super Bowl XLVIII offense and Detroit's highest-scoring attack in franchise history in 2011. Carolina's offense ranked 28th in points per game in 2025, and Bevell's track record with young quarterbacks—Russell Wilson, Matthew Stafford—fits the timeline for second-year starter Bryce Young, whose $37.7 million guaranteed contract runs through 2027. Smith joins as quarterbacks coach after three decades coaching the position, most recently with Seattle through 2023. Stukes takes over special teams coordination, his fourth coordinator role after stints with the Chargers, Bears, and Titans.
The hirings indicate two strategic pivots. First, Carolina is installing a veteran offensive infrastructure around Young after a 2025 season in which the franchise cycled through interim play-callers when offensive coordinator Thomas Brown departed mid-year to Cleveland. Bevell and Smith worked together in Seattle from 2011 to 2017, a continuity pairing that suggests the Panthers are prioritizing scheme stability over innovation. That matters for a quarterback whose completion percentage dropped 4.2 points from college to his rookie year, and whose sophomore campaign showed marginal improvement under inconsistent coaching. Second, the Stukes hire follows a special teams unit that ranked 31st in opponent return average and allowed two blocked punts in 2025. The Panthers spent $8.3 million in 2025 cap space on long snapper, punter, and kicker combined, and that investment requires coordinator competence to justify.
The two internal promotions—not detailed in the source material but confirmed as newly created roles—likely address position-group gaps that emerged during the 2025 season. Carolina's defensive line coach and linebackers coach both departed after the season, and the franchise has historically underpaid assistant salaries relative to division rivals. The Falcons, for comparison, reportedly allocated $14 million to their full coaching budget in 2025, while Carolina's budget sat closer to $11 million. Internal promotions cost less than external poaching, which frees capital for Bevell's likely $2.5 million to $3 million annual salary—standard for a coordinator with his résumé.
Sponsor and broadcast partners will watch whether the offensive overhaul translates to watchable football. The Panthers drew an average of 2.1 million television viewers per game in 2025, third-lowest in the NFC, and local broadcast partner Bally Sports South has flagged soft ad sell-through for 2026 inventory during early conversations with the sales team. A competent offense changes commercial pricing. The franchise is also nearing the halfway point of a ten-year, $75 million stadium naming-rights deal with Bank of America, which includes performance escalators tied to playoff appearances. Carolina has missed the playoffs for six consecutive seasons, and the escalators remain untriggered.
Watch for offensive line investment in the 2026 draft, which opens in 73 days. Bevell's offenses have historically required above-average pass protection—his Seattle units ranked top-10 in sack rate four times—but Carolina allowed 58 sacks in 2025, fourth-most in the league. If the Panthers draft a tackle in the first round, the Bevell hire carries weight. If they don't, he inherits the same structural problem that sank the previous coordinator.
The Panthers open 2026 training camp in 142 days, and Bevell will have roughly 90 days of offseason programming to install his system before the first preseason snap. That timeline is tight for a quarterback who has now worked under three offensive coordinators in two professional seasons.
The takeaway
Carolina bets on veteran coordinator continuity for Bryce Young after a chaotic 2025, with offensive scheme stability now the primary asset.
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