
Sometimes draft boards falling in certain ways lead teams to make best-player-available picks, thus leaving some need areas after taking a player at a fairly well-stocked position. Although the Panthers were regularly mocked tight end Kenyon Sadiq at No. 19, the team was focused on filling a position that appeared fortified.
The Panthers ended up with Georgia tackle Monroe Freeling at No. 19, after the Jets chose Sadiq 16th overall. Carolina does not appear to have pivoted after New York’s Sadiq pick, with ESPN.com’s Jeremy Fowler tabbing the NFC South team as having a “tackle or bust” first-round mindset.
The team was interested in Kadyn Proctor and Caleb Lomu as well, Fowler adds, but it clearly valued Freeling higher than the latter. Lomu went off the board to the Patriots at No. 28, being the last of nine first-round O-linemen chosen in this draft. We had heard a run on O-linemen was likely around the middle of the first round, though the Panthers’ participation proved interesting.
Our Adam La Rose covered this issue in his most recent PFR mailbag, but the Panthers now have a crowded tackle group. The team returns longtime RT Taylor Moton and has LT Ikem Ekwonu on a fifth-year option. Although Ekwonu is not expected to be available to start the season, the team signed Rasheed Walker to a one-year deal worth just $4MM. Jauan Jennings‘ situation notwithstanding, Walker’s market underwhelmed to the greatest degree during this year’s free agency period.
Walker had worked as a three-year Packers starter at left tackle, rising from a seventh-round pedigree. High on most free agent rankings lists (including ours), the David Bakhtiari replacement started 48 games from 2023-25 and loomed as the Panthers’ clear-cut Ekwonu stopgap piece. The 25-year-old blocker, however, was arrested on a gun-related charge in January. A potential suspension certainly could have impacted his market, and he may need to try again in 2027. The Freeling pick certainly points to Walker, as Adam noted, being a one-year Panther.
The Freeling selection could make Walker a trade chip as well. All of Freeling’s Bulldogs starts came at left tackle, separating him from most of the top tackles in this year’s class (as Spencer Fano, Francis Mauigoa and Blake Miller primarily played RT in college). Daniel Jeremiah’s NFL.com big board ranked Freeling 22nd in this class, slotting Proctor 24th and Lomu 30th. Miami chose Proctor at No. 12, narrowing Carolina’s focus at the position.
Carolina’s Freeling pick also signals Ekwonu may be on the move as a 2027 free agent. Stopping the Panthers’ yearslong carousel at left tackle as the No. 6 overall pick in 2022, Ekwonu expressed interest in an extension last year. In December, a report indicated a 2026 extension for the NC State product would be a Panther priority. Unfortunately for the previously durable blocker, a patellar tendon tear sustained in the wild-card round represents bad timing. Ekwonu, 25, will likely need to display good form coming off the major knee injury. And the Panthers will be developing a cheaper option while he does so.
It could be possible for the Panthers to retain both Ekwonu and Freeling beyond 2026. Moton is entering an age-32 season, and no guaranteed money remains on the 10th-year RT’s deal beyond this year. Freeling being a long-term RT option, with Ekwonu eventually returning to the blind side, may be a path the team considers. For now, though, the Panthers have an interesting setup at tackle. While Walker and Moton figure to start the season at those spots, Carolina’s 2027 configuration figures to look different.
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