AJ Dillon‘s journey around the NFC will continue with a trip south. The former Packers mainstay is heading to Carolina, NFL insider Jordan Schultz tweets.
The Panthers are adding Dillon on a one-year deal, giving the former second-round pick a chance to play a seventh NFL season. Dillon spent last year as an Eagles Saquon Barkley backup option but has not seen extensive work since the 2023 season — his last as the Packers’ Aaron Jones complementary piece.
Although Dillon re-signed at a low rate to stay with the Packers in 2024, an IR placement without a return designation that August sidelined him for the season. Dillon, 28 in May, totaled only 12 carries for 60 yards last season. On one hand, the bruising back should be fresh after 12 carries in two years; on the other, he has been relatively off the radar for a while.
Carolina lost Rico Dowdle in free agency; the 2025 1,000-yard rusher joined the Steelers on a two-year, $12.25MM deal. The team demoted Chuba Hubbard to give Dowdle more work last season, but the homegrown talent is still signed through 2028 on his $8.3MM-per-year deal. The Panthers also have 2024 second-round pick Jonathon Brooks, but he has suffered two ACL tears since 2023 and missed all of last season. Trevor Etienne, a 2025 fourth-rounder, should factor in more prominently post-Dowdle.
Best remembered as a key between-the-tackles/short-yardage presence (and tormentor of Jones fantasy GMs), Dillon totaled 2,246 rushing yards from 2021-23. He averaged 4.3 and 4.1 yards per carry in 2021 and ’22, respectively, serving as a key presence for the Packers’ first post-Davante Adams offense in the latter season. In 2023, however, Dillon slogged to just a 3.4-yard average.
The Boston College product played for just $1.34MM in Philadelphia last year and collected $2.74MM on Green Bay’s IR two years ago. This deal likely will not ensure Dillon makes the Panthers’ 53-man roster, but the team does have some veteran insurance behind Hubbard. Dillon’s roster spot could be contingent on where Brooks’ recovery ends up, but at the very least, the power back is an experienced player on a team lacking much of that in its backfield beyond Hubbard.
