Carolina Panthers rookie running back Jonathon Brooks will make his debut this week against the Kansas City Chiefs, head coach Dave Canales said Monday.
Brooks, 21, was selected in the second round of the 2024 NFL Draft. At 46th overall, the former University of Texas standout was the first running back off the board.
Brooks has been rehabbing from surgery last November to repair a torn ACL. The Panthers activated him from the non-football injury list last month and moved him to the active roster on Nov. 6.
Brooks will join the backfield with Chuba Hubbard, who ranks fourth in the NFL with 818 rushing yards. Canales said Miles Sanders (ankle) is not expected to play when the Panthers (3-7) return from their bye week to host the Chiefs (9-1).
Bryce Young will remain the quarterback after winning consecutive starts before the bye against the New Orleans Saints and New York Giants.
“This is about the continued progress, Bryce looking more and more confident,” Canales said Monday. “Just an aggressiveness to his play … and of course the end result, winning.
“He continues to do things to put us in a position to put him back out there and continue to build on that.”
Brooks rushed for 1,139 yards and 10 touchdowns in 11 games for the Longhorns in 2023 before his knee injury.
–Field Level Media
The Dallas Cowboys officially placed quarterback Dak Prescott on injured reserve and elevated cornerback Josh Butler to the active roster ahead of Monday night’s game against the Houston Texans. Prescott…
Miami Heat star Jimmy Butler has been cleared to return for Monday night’s game against the Philadelphia 76ers, however Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Terry Rozier have been ruled out. Butler,…
Pictures and video point to a clear penalty on the Packers’ game-deciding blocked field goal on Sunday, Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus said the day after Green Bay escaped…
Jimmy Butler set to return for Heat; Terry Rozier out
Matt Eberflus, Bears cry foul to NFL on game-deciding FG block
Report: Bengals CB DJ Turner II has fractured clavicle
Kentucky, Purdue storm into top 10; Kansas remains No. 1