NEW ORLEANS — It started about as poorly as it could have.
And it didn't necessarily get any better as the day went along.
The Panthers opened the season with a disappointing 47-10 loss to the Saints on the road, and the theme of the day was established in the opening minutes.
After the Saints put a 59-yard touchdown pass on the board in the first three minutes (on an apparent miscommunication between cornerback Jaycee Horn and Jordan Fuller), Bryce Young followed with an interception on his first pass of the season.
The Saints proceeded to score on all six of their first-half drives, and the Panthers didn't cross midfield until the final minute of the second quarter, allowing them to tack a field goal on as time expired.
Young also opened the second half with an interception on his first drive.
Young finished 13-of-30 for 161 yards and the two interceptions, and was sacked four times. His 32.8 passer rating is the lowest of his career. Backup Andy Dalton came in for the final two minutes.
The 37-point margin of defeat was the fourth-worst in franchise history, trailing just the 52-9 loss at Oakland in 2000, a 41-0 home loss to Atlanta in 2002, and a 51-13 loss at San Francisco in 2019.
Even things that seemed like good ideas unraveled, such as Jonathan Mingo's nifty end-around run ending with a fumble.
Things improved slightly in the second half, with Young scoring his first career rushing touchdown in the third quarter. Even that took some effort, as the ball came out after he crossed the plane, and it was originally ruled a fumble at the 1 before it was changed to a score on review.
— The offensive struggles were apparent, but the news wasn't any better on the other side of the ball.
The Saints scored on their first nine possessions (five touchdowns and four field goals), meaning there were no punts until the final five minutes of the game.
Saints quarterback Derek Carr was a clean 19-of-23 for 200 yards and three touchdowns, and the Saints ran for 180 yards. Carr was only sacked once, by Eku Leotain the first half.
They also got a punt blocked in the fourth quarter, adding insult to injury.
— The first game was a forgettable one for a couple of members of the rookie class.
Tight end Ja'Tavion Sanders, who started because of injuries to veterans Tommy Tremble and Ian Thomas, was called for a holding penalty which negated a promising drive.
Miles Sanders had popped out on a third-and-1 from the 50 for a 14-yard gain, which would have been their deepest incursion into Saints territory to that point. But the rookie tight end's penalty took that off the board, and Young was promptly sacked on the next play.
Third-round linebacker Trevin Wallace was called for holding on a kickoff, forcing them to start a drive at the 15. An incomplete pass, a scramble, and a sack later, they punted, which led to a 47-yard return by Rashid Shaheed and a touchdown pass on the very next play.
It was that kind of day.
View all the action from the Panthers' game in Week 1 against the New Orleans Saints.