Watch NFL Thursday Night Football Carolina Panthers vs Tampa Bay Buccaneers 2019 NFL Week 02 online free live streaming high quality(HD) broadcast on Thursday,September 12 ,2019 at 8:20 p.m. ET. Watch NFL Carolina Panthers vs Tampa Bay Buccaneers free live stream online match on any device .You can follow to Watch NFL Carolina Panthers vs Tampa Bay Buccaneers free live streaming from here details below.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers make a quick turnaround from their opening-week loss to San Francisco, heading out to Charlotte on Wednesday for Thursday night's matchup with the Carolina Panthers. It's both the first road game and first division game for the Buccaneers under Head Coach Bruce Arians, and it's a chance to even the season record and put Carolina in an early hole in the standings.
The Panthers are also coming off a home loss to an NFC West foe, having dropped a narrow 30-27 decision to the defending conference champion L.A. Rams on Sunday. While the Bucs and 49ers played a mostly defensive struggle, with three pick-sixes combined and neither team reaching 300 yards, the Panthers found themselves in more of a shootout. With do-everything back Christian McCaffrey accounting for 209 yards and two touchdowns, the Panthers scored late to get within three but couldn't pull off an onside kick to have one last shot. Now it's the Bucs' turn to try to slow down McCaffrey and quarterback Cam Newton. Here's what you need to know to prepare for all the action in Charlotte.
GAME AND BROADCAST DETAILS
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (0-1) vs. Carolina Panthers (0-1)
Thursday, September 12, 8:20 p.m. ET
Bank of America Stadium (capacity: 73,778)
Charlotte, North Carolina
Television: NFL Network (local TV: WMOR)
TV Broadcast Team: Joe Buck (play-by-play), Troy Aikman (analyst), Erin Andrew and Kristina Pink (sideline)
Radio: 98Rock (WXTB, 97.9 FM), Flagship Station
Radio Broadcast Team: Gene Deckerhoff (play-by-play), Dave Moore (analyst), T.J. Rives (sideline)
ALL-TIME HEAD-TO-HEAD SERIES
Last year, the Buccaneers and Panthers did something they hadn't done in a decade: They split their head-to-head series.
In every season from 2009 through 2018, the team that won the first Tampa Bay-Carolina matchup of the season went on to finish the sweep later in the year. Because six of those nine sweeps belonged to Carolina, the Panthers have opened up a 23-14 edge in the all-time series, including a 12-7 edge in games played on the Panthers' home field. The two teams became division foes in 2002 when the NFC South was formed; prior to that, they had only met three times since Carolina joined the league as a 1995 expansion team, with the Bucs winning twice.
The Buccaneers and Panthers have played prime-time games against each other in the past, including one other Thursday night game on Oct. 24, 2013, which the Panthers won in Tampa, 31-13. The most recent prime-time game between the two teams was three years ago, when the Buccaneers went to Charlotte for a Monday Night Football matchup and came back with a 17-14 victory. The visitors were so thinned by injuries in that game that they dressed a third quarterback since all the inactive spots went to hurt players. Nevertheless, Jacquizz Rodgers shocked the Panthers with his first career 100-yard rushing game and Mike Evans scored on a 26-yard pass to tie the game in the second half.
The most recent meeting between the Bucs and Panthers also went well for Tampa Bay, as the Bucs took a 24-17 decision at home last Dec. 2. Safety Andrew Adams tied a team record with three interceptions off Cam Newton and Jameis Winston threw touchdown passes to Chris Godwin and Adam Humphries.
NOTABLE CONNECTIONS
· Panthers defensive tackle Gerald McCoy was drafted by the Buccaneers third overall in 2010 and he spent his first nine NFL seasons in Tampa. McCoy's six Pro Bowl appearances are tied for the third-most in franchise history and his 50.5 sacks as a Buccaneer rank fourth in team annals.
· Panthers CB Javien Elliott originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Buccaneers in 2016. He spent portions of the next three seasons on Tampa Bay's active roster, including all of 2017, and he appeared in 36 regular-season games with seven starts.
· Mark Carrier, Carolina's executive director of football staff, is the second-leading receiver in Buccaneers' history in terms of yardage, and he held the record for nearly two decades before it was surpassed last year by Mike Evans. Carrier was drafted by the Buccaneers in the third round in 1987 and he played the first six of his 12 NFL seasons in Tampa.
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers make a quick turnaround from their opening-week loss to San Francisco, heading out to Charlotte on Wednesday for Thursday night's matchup with the Carolina Panthers. It's both the first road game and first division game for the Buccaneers under Head Coach Bruce Arians, and it's a chance to even the season record and put Carolina in an early hole in the standings.
The Panthers are also coming off a home loss to an NFC West foe, having dropped a narrow 30-27 decision to the defending conference champion L.A. Rams on Sunday. While the Bucs and 49ers played a mostly defensive struggle, with three pick-sixes combined and neither team reaching 300 yards, the Panthers found themselves in more of a shootout. With do-everything back Christian McCaffrey accounting for 209 yards and two touchdowns, the Panthers scored late to get within three but couldn't pull off an onside kick to have one last shot. Now it's the Bucs' turn to try to slow down McCaffrey and quarterback Cam Newton. Here's what you need to know to prepare for all the action in Charlotte.
GAME AND BROADCAST DETAILS
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (0-1) vs. Carolina Panthers (0-1)
Thursday, September 12, 8:20 p.m. ET
Bank of America Stadium (capacity: 73,778)
Charlotte, North Carolina
Television: NFL Network (local TV: WMOR)
TV Broadcast Team: Joe Buck (play-by-play), Troy Aikman (analyst), Erin Andrew and Kristina Pink (sideline)
Radio: 98Rock (WXTB, 97.9 FM), Flagship Station
Radio Broadcast Team: Gene Deckerhoff (play-by-play), Dave Moore (analyst), T.J. Rives (sideline)
ALL-TIME HEAD-TO-HEAD SERIES
Last year, the Buccaneers and Panthers did something they hadn't done in a decade: They split their head-to-head series.
In every season from 2009 through 2018, the team that won the first Tampa Bay-Carolina matchup of the season went on to finish the sweep later in the year. Because six of those nine sweeps belonged to Carolina, the Panthers have opened up a 23-14 edge in the all-time series, including a 12-7 edge in games played on the Panthers' home field. The two teams became division foes in 2002 when the NFC South was formed; prior to that, they had only met three times since Carolina joined the league as a 1995 expansion team, with the Bucs winning twice.
The Buccaneers and Panthers have played prime-time games against each other in the past, including one other Thursday night game on Oct. 24, 2013, which the Panthers won in Tampa, 31-13. The most recent prime-time game between the two teams was three years ago, when the Buccaneers went to Charlotte for a Monday Night Football matchup and came back with a 17-14 victory. The visitors were so thinned by injuries in that game that they dressed a third quarterback since all the inactive spots went to hurt players. Nevertheless, Jacquizz Rodgers shocked the Panthers with his first career 100-yard rushing game and Mike Evans scored on a 26-yard pass to tie the game in the second half.
The most recent meeting between the Bucs and Panthers also went well for Tampa Bay, as the Bucs took a 24-17 decision at home last Dec. 2. Safety Andrew Adams tied a team record with three interceptions off Cam Newton and Jameis Winston threw touchdown passes to Chris Godwin and Adam Humphries.
NOTABLE CONNECTIONS
· Panthers defensive tackle Gerald McCoy was drafted by the Buccaneers third overall in 2010 and he spent his first nine NFL seasons in Tampa. McCoy's six Pro Bowl appearances are tied for the third-most in franchise history and his 50.5 sacks as a Buccaneer rank fourth in team annals.
· Panthers CB Javien Elliott originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Buccaneers in 2016. He spent portions of the next three seasons on Tampa Bay's active roster, including all of 2017, and he appeared in 36 regular-season games with seven starts.
· Mark Carrier, Carolina's executive director of football staff, is the second-leading receiver in Buccaneers' history in terms of yardage, and he held the record for nearly two decades before it was surpassed last year by Mike Evans. Carrier was drafted by the Buccaneers in the third round in 1987 and he played the first six of his 12 NFL seasons in Tampa.


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