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Details of Carolina Panthers' inexplicable RB split were even worse than it looked

The Panthers can try, but a backfield split might not be ideal.
Oct 19, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Carolina Panthers running back Chuba Hubbard (30) runs with the ball in the second quarter against the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images
Oct 19, 2025; East Rutherford, New Jersey, USA; Carolina Panthers running back Chuba Hubbard (30) runs with the ball in the second quarter against the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

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The Carolina Panthers got Chuba Hubbard healthy again on Sunday, which meant they needed to figure out how to balance the returning starter (Hubbard) and the red-hot backup (Rico Dowdle). They ended up basically alternating drives and giving each one roughly the same amount of touches.

This was always the most likely outcome, as the Dave Canales-led Panthers don't always make the right personnel choices. Now, with one game of data from the RB split, it's even more clear that Hubbard shouldn't be the starter right now.

Panthers should learn from RB split data in Jets win

Rico Dowdl
Carolina Panthers running back Rico Dowdle (5) runs the ball as New York Jets linebacker Jamien Sherwood (44) attempts a tackle during a game at MetLife Stadium, Oct 19, 2025, East Rutherford, NJ, USA. | Yannick Peterhans / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

In the ugly win over the New York Jets, the Carolina Panthers had Chuba Hubbard on the field 54% of the time, with Rico Dowdle getting 46% of the offensive snaps. What they did with those snaps is night and day.

Even with a 26-yard catch-and-run, which might've been a touchdown had Hubbard not sprinted past all three of his waiting blockers in the open field, Hubbard's numbers on the day were middling. One could chalk 55 yards on 14 carries and two catches to rust and a solid Jets defense, but Dowdle had no such issues.

He got 17 carries and had one catch, but he got 96 yards with those touches. He averaged 5.3 yards per touch. Hubbard, on the other hand, was a dismal 3.43 per touch. It was so clear that Dowdle is the better running back right now.

Fortunately, while Hubbard outsnapped Dowdle, Dowdle got more touches. That's got to continue until Hubbard shows any semblance of his 2024 form, but this should also result in more snaps for Dowdle.

He's better right now at virtually everything, so the Panthers need him on the field more. It's totally fair to want to get your formerly injured running back who was so good touches, and the Panthers should definitely continue to use both, but Dowdle just has to get more involved than Hubbard.

That was true after Weeks 5 and 6, but it's even more evident now that we've seen what a backfield split looks like.

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Zach Roberts
ZACH ROBERTS

Zachary Roberts is a journalist with a wide variety of experience covering basketball, golf, entertainment, video games, music, football, baseball, and hockey. He currently covers Charlotte sports teams and has been featured on Sportskeeda, Yardbarker, MSN, and On SI.