The Carolina Panthers are approaching a franchise-defining decision with Bryce Young. With the former No. 1 pick eligible for both a contract extension and his 5th-year option, the debate around his value has become one of the most polarizing discussions in the NFL.
The path forward, however, should be simple:
Pick up the fifth-year option. Delay the long-term commitment. Treat Bryce Young like a bridge quarterback until he proves he’s more than a streaky performer.
Why the Panthers Should Pick Up His Fifth-Year Option
The Cost Is Reasonable, and the Upside Is Still Real
Dan Graziano reported that Bryce Young’s fifth-year option will come in around $26.5 million. For a starting quarterback, that number is not only manageable, but it’s also a bargain. It gives Carolina two more years of affordable control without committing to a contract that reshapes the franchise.
With a young roster, no long-term financial restrictions, and no clear upgrade available on the market, the Panthers can easily absorb the cost. The option buys time, allows for flexibility, and keeps the franchise from being forced into a massive extension before Young proves he deserves one.
There Is Genuine Belief in the Building
This isn’t blind optimism. Inside the organization, the belief in Young’s talent and makeup is strong:
- Teammates consistently praise his leadership, command, and work ethic.
- Coaches point to his resilience and steady growth.
- Dave Canales has shown increasing trust, giving Young control in high-leverage moments.
- The offense has become aggressive again. Taking deep shots, converting critical fourth downs, and putting the ball in Young’s hands during potential game-winning drives.
There is enough hope to continue developing him and enough flashes of high-level play to justify another year of evaluation.
There’s Hope to Keep Him: But Not Yet Enough to Pay Him
Picking up the option strikes the perfect balance: It rewards progress without over-committing.
Bryce Young has shown enough to continue investment. He just has not shown enough to justify $50+ million per year.
The option allows Carolina to evaluate whether Young’s peaks can finally become the norm without sacrificing their roster flexibility or giving him leverage he hasn’t earned.
The post The Panthers Should Treat Bryce Young as a Bridge QB Before a Big Payday appeared first on Last Word on NFL.
