The Stephen Hill Hype Train Gets a Big Boost

Bill VothNews16 Comments

Screen Shot 2015-05-28 at 5.33.58 PM

It was one day in May, two months before training camp and 107 days until the season opener. But for what it’s worth, Stephen Hill was the best receiver on the field Thursday as the Carolina Panthers wrapped up their first week of offseason practices.

With No. 1 wideout Kelvin Benjamin nursing a strained hamstring, and second-round pick Devin Funchess in Los Angeles at the NFLPA Rookie Premiere, Hill took advantage of the extra reps. And he wasn’t the only one.

Second-year receiver Corey Brown, who proclaimed he’s faster despite adding some bulk this offseason, took turns with Hill burning a short-handed secondary.

“I thought they did a nice job,” head coach Ron Rivera said. “It just turned out today — the day you guys got a chance to watch — one of the things that we were doing as far as installation is concerned, was working on our deep routes.”

The week’s first two practice sessions were closed to the media, but you don’t have to see to believe Carolina’s receiving corps is deeper than it was last year.

Benjamin is the unquestioned top guy, and the hope is Funchess will earn the No. 2 spot eventually this summer. Brown is coming off a productive first season, veteran Jerricho Cotchery should have one more year left in him, and the Panthers re-added Ted Ginn and signed former Packer Jarrett Boykin. But Hill offers the most intrigue.

During individual drills, he had a drop and also heard an earful from receivers’ coach Ricky Proehl after running an imprecise route. But later, during seven-on-seven’s and 11-on-11’s, Hill sped past the defense three separate times to haul in long completions.

“We know he’s got the great speed and size and willingness to go out and do it, and today was a really good day for him,” Rivera said.IMG_2528

After the 2012 second-round pick flamed out with the Jets, Hill landed on Carolina’s practice squad last September. Plenty of fans boarded his hype train, but it never left the station. Each week, the Panthers could have brought him up to the active roster. They never did. Each week, 31 other teams could have signed him off the practice squad. They never did.

“It was a stressful time at first when it happened, but other than that I took it as a positive note. Learning how to be a complete receiver was my biggest focus,” Hill said.

“I took a step back to hopefully take 10 steps forward.”

Again, this was just one day in May. Hill isn’t yet a Pro Bowler, Brown isn’t the next DeSean Jackson and Ginn isn’t suddenly younger than 30. But this one day offered a glimpse of what a faster and deeper Panthers receiving corps could possibly do.

“It takes a lot of pressure off of Kelvin. It takes a lot of pressure off of [tight end] Greg [Olsen]. It takes a lot of pressure off of the running game,” Rivera said. “Couple that with Corey Brown — and Stephen Hill had a real big day — if we can put that kind of speed out there with those other types of receivers we’ve got, it’s going to add to what we want to do offensively.”


SHARE THIS POST
Share this post










Submit
  • http://carolinacatchronicles.com Joey Riollano

    This could be a breakout year for this offense. Cam finally has some weapons and the team has what it has lacked most on offense for years, speed. The offensive line is the big question mark? If marginally better than last years O-line, we will be in good shape. I can’t wait for this season to begin.

  • MrP

    Also the addition of lee ward could significantly help as he seems like a powerful blocking full back

    • Panthers/Truth

      FB Lee Ward (5’11 1/2″, 246) is a blocking only FB, with no speed (4.97-40, 1.69-10), and no chance to make the roster, and only a slim chance to make the Practice Squad. Tolbert seems locked in as the starting FB, so he would have to win the backup FB job from Brockel, who also is the 4th TE, and maybe pass TE Kevin Green (6’2 7/8″, 247, 4.44-40, 1.56-10) as well, so Ward has no chance to make the 53 man roster, unless the position is ravaged by injuries.

      • MrP

        Well he might as well pack his bags and leave town since you deem him as having no chance. In fact , the panthers should never have invited him and are wasting their time on such a bench pressing and pancaking machine.

        • Flig Saduky

          IMO it’ll depend on whether Lee Ward can do anything other than block. IMO he’s an elite run blocking FB prospect who plays with phenomenal leverage and power.

          But ….if that’s his only dimension, it’s going to be tough for him to make the active roster this year because anytime opponents see him on the field, they’re going to know what the Panthers are doing.

      • Anthony Dunn

        Don’t agree Tolbert is a lock. He’s not even a fullback.

        • Flig Saduky

          Personally think both Tolbert and Cotchery might be surprise cuts. It’s early though.

      • criolle

        I thought they waived Green. Did they resign him?
        This time of year, rosters are pretty fluid.
        http://fantasynews.cbssports.com/fantasyfootball/update/25202827/panthers-bring-in-cb-jocquel-skinner-dump-te-kevin-greene

  • John Ledo

    Jets fan here…this guy is impressive during practice…but in real games, he loses focus and drops easy passes. His route running is subpar. Hope he does well for the Panthers but don’t buy into all the hype, yet.

    • Nathan Shane Long

      You do realize when Hill was in New York they had Sanchez and Tebow at QB no receiver could have success with that

      • MrP

        I think what john means is that he dropped easy passes. If it’s an easy pass to catch , it wouldn’t have mattered if it was thrown by mother Teresa or Peyton manning or Sanchez. An easy catch is or should be made regardless

        • Anthony Dunn

          Kelvin Benjamin drops easy passes.

          • MrP

            I’m going to have to get on kelvin’s case for that

  • Wil Iam

    Hill sucks

    • criolle

      Hill definitely “stunk up” the stadium in New York. It also wasn’t be best place for a 20 year old rookie.
      The point of bringing him into Carolina was to see how he would respond to coaching (and, yes, better quarterbacking). The Panthers have done a LOT of this “talent mining” since 2011.
      It’s what I’ve been calling “The Riv-ERA Doctrine”. R/R LIKES to bring in under-coached talent. He ENJOYS seeing what his staff can do with raw material. He’s definitely NOT afraid to let his coaching staff do their jobs.
      Gettleman has been “salting” that talent with some select veterans he sifts from rosters around the league. I believe the combination is building the Panthers for the future.
      Let’s see how it works for Hill this season. We should know by the second preseason game.

  • Flig Saduky

    His biggest issue as a receiver IMO is that he plays very small for a big guy and doesn’t play with a lot of physicality. if this has changed, even more than anything technical like route running or releases from the line. Hill’s a phenomenal athlete and this shows on tape, so even if the refinement’s not there, he can get away with a lot simply because he’s so physically gifted. The physicality is the main thing. If that’s resolved IMO, he has a chance to be the dimension that Martavis Bryant added to Pittsburgh, which would complement KB and Funchess perfectly.

    Whether Hill’s become a more physical player would be the most useful thing to check out IMO and report on. Great piece.