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It will go to a player who has been criticized for not playing hard on every down and disappearing for large stretches. Yet Hurney insists the Panthers have no worries that Peppers will not give his all despite his public pleas to play elsewhere.
"You go by actions. Julius has been the same guy for seven years, the same valuable, important player to us," Hurney said. "We haven't seen a change in that.
"He's a very competitive, prideful person that has always through his actions said that he likes being a Carolina Panther, he likes his teammates, and there's no reason to see a change in that. That's not a concern at all."
Peppers' contract has taken up so much salary-cap space that the Panthers did not sign one free agent from another team this offseason. They also cut several veterans and didn't have enough room to re-sign veteran long-snapper Jason Kyle.
"We've been carrying this number all season, so it doesn't change," Hurney said.
The 6-foot-7 freakishly athletic Peppers, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2002 draft, had a career-high 14 1/2 sacks last season as Carolina went 12-4. That came after a miserable 2007 season when he was held to 2 1/2 sacks and the Panthers failed to reach the playoffs.
After missing all offseason workouts, he'll have to catch up on new defensive coordinator Ron Meeks' system, designed to take advantage of Peppers' speed and athleticism. Coach John Fox said earlier this month that Peppers will catch up quickly.
"Obviously we're excited," Hurney said. "and I think Julius is excited."
[Associated Press;
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