Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsSaturday, July 11, 2026

Ron Rivera, Panthers agree on 3-year extension

The Carolina Panthers have locked up their head coach through the 2017 season.

Streeter Lecka

SB Nation 2014 NFL Playoff Coverage

The Carolina Panthers have signed head coach Ron Rivera to a three-year contract extension, the team announced Tuesday. This extension will keep him with the team through the 2017 season. Rivera led the Panthers to 12 wins and a playoff appearance this season.

The extension is expected to be worth between $4 million and $5 million per season, according to Joe Person of the Charlotte Observer. That is a significant raise over his original deal with the Panthers which averaged $2.8 million per season.

Rivera started this season as a potential candidate to find himself on the hot seat if the Panthers did not progress. That’s generally due to the fact that he’s a defensive-minded coach in charge of a team that wasn’t playing well on defense by any stretch of the imagination. That all changed this past season.

Carolina fielded the No. 6 passing defense in the league, allowing 214.3 passing yards per game, and the second-best rush defense, allowing just 86.9 rushing yards per game on average. The defense allowed the second-fewest yards in the regular season, and the second-fewest points scored.

That was good enough to get the Panthers 12 wins, the NFC South title (narrowly edging out the New Orleans Saints) and the No. 2 seed in the NFC. However, they fell to the San Francisco 49ers in the Divisional round of the playoffs. Still, Rivera's team showed marked improvement, after his first year saw the Panthers go 6-10 and his second year showed a narrow improvement at 7-9.

From here on out, with that defense and some potential new pieces on offense, the expectation will be playoffs for Rivera. The NFC South is a tough division to play in, so long as Drew Brees and the Saints are around. His chief task going forward will be improving the NFL's 29th-ranked pass offense led by Cam Newton.

More from SB Nation NFL

SB Nation’s complete coverage of Super Bowl XLVIII

Stupid things they’re saying about the Super Bowl

NFL mock draft: Blake Bortles is the new No. 1 pick

Nick Foles, Derrick Johnson named Pro Bowl MVPs | Weird ending

Longform: How prop bets changed the way we gamble on the Super Bowl

The sordid end of David Meggett: From All-Pro to prison

See More:

More in NFL

NFL
7 big questions ahead of NFL training camp7 big questions ahead of NFL training camp
NFL

Training camp is almost open, and we have questions.

By James Dator
From SBNationExternal Link
What’s the greatest sports comeback you’ve ever witnessed?What’s the greatest sports comeback you’ve ever witnessed?
From SBNationExternal Link
By youcinez
NFL
5 NFL coaches who are surprise hot-seat candidates in 20265 NFL coaches who are surprise hot-seat candidates in 2026
NFL

These NFL head coaches may be in trouble if they don’t live up to expectations this season

By Bill Williamson
NFL
NFL fans predict AFC division winnersNFL fans predict AFC division winners
NFL

Who will be the AFC division winners this season? NFL fans weigh in

By Mark Schofield
NFL
Rams rookie Ty Simpson opens up on challenges learning Sean McVay’s offenseRams rookie Ty Simpson opens up on challenges learning Sean McVay’s offense
NFL

Sean McVay has rookie QB Ty Simpson ‘drinking from a fire hydrant’

By Mark Schofield
NFL
Why NFL teams want super-safeties with Nick Emmanwori’s versatilityWhy NFL teams want super-safeties with Nick Emmanwori’s versatility
NFL

Caleb Downs, Dillon Thieneman, and Emmanuel McNeil-Warren are the NFL’s three new do-it-all safeties. Here’s why they’re so important to the league right now.

By Doug Farrar