Friday night wasn’t just another game for Ja’Tyre Carter — it was a testament to resilience and preparation.
When the call came that veteran Damien Lewis wouldn’t be suiting up, Ja’Tyre Carter, a name primarily familiar to those who watch practice squad battles, was thrust onto the field to fill one of football’s most challenging roles: starting guard.
He made his first start the Panthers on the same night the football world was watching former Jackson State and Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders make his pro debut.
Carter’s path to this moment was anything but flashy. The former Southern University offensive guard spent all last season grinding on the Panthers’ practice squad, battling not just opposing defenses in drills but the daily grind of staying ready, learning, and earning the trust of coaches and teammates alike.
Familiarity with the playbook and the locker room culture gave him a quiet confidence, but nothing truly prepares you for stepping into a lineup of seasoned starters on a game day.
On Wednesday, right after the joint practice, he learned that his wait was over — he was starting.
“The moment I found out, I just felt a sense of responsibility,” Carter said. “Walking into the huddle with those guys, it was easy because they made it easy for me.”
Lewis wasn’t just a teammate but a mentor on the field.
“D-Lew made it better,” Carter recalled, smiling. “He told me, ‘Just go out there and do what you do, bro.’ That meant everything. He gave me the confidence to hold it down for him. He said, ‘Put it on film — you’ve been doing it all camp; now go show it on game day.’”
Carter’s impact was felt early. Though he was close to the first sack that sent the opposing quarterback, Bryce Young, to the turf, his eyes were set on a bigger picture — fitting in flawlessly within a unit that moves as one.
“Being the new guy means a lot, you know? It’s about playing physically like them, syncing up, and moving as five guys on the same page,” Carter said. “Those veterans, man, they lifted me up—they had my back; I had theirs.”
The locker room buzzed with respect for Carter’s unyielding work ethic and demeanor. Left tackle Ikem Ekwonu, no stranger to hard-nosed football, had high praise — a compliment that resonates deeply in Carolina’s culture.
MiniCamping😎🏕️ pic.twitter.com/VfnUgCG5vM
— JaTyre Carter (@CarterJaTyre) June 12, 2025
“It’s the next-man-up mentality,” Ekwonu said. “JT’s pumped to step into this role. Every day he’s grinding to be the best. He’s a dawg — a fun guy in the locker room, but when it’s time to play, he knows how to get the job done. He’s going to dominate out there.”
For Carter, this wasn’t about making headlines or flashy plays; it was about validation. All those hours on the practice field, the quiet sacrifices, and the relentless preparation finally came to life under Friday night lights.
As his teammates rallied around him, the message was clear — the Panthers weren’t just filling a spot but welcoming a new warrior to the frontline battle.
Friday’s spotlight might have been Carter’s coming-out party, but judging by his mindset and the locker room’s embrace, this is just the start of something big.