Kurt Warner Blasts Short Leash for QBs Demands 3-Year Window for ‘Terrible’ Bryce Young

Kurt Warner blasts the NFL's short leash for quarterbacks and demands a three-year window for stars like Bryce Young to develop.

The leash on young quarterbacks? Kurt Warner isn’t buying it. In a league obsessed with instant results, Warner is pushing back hard, calling for patience in a position that rarely develops overnight. His stance hits different in 2026, with young quarterbacks getting labeled way too early.


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Kurt Warner’s Take on Bryce Young Proves Why NFL Teams Need Patience

And the timing couldn’t be better. With Bryce Young flipping his narrative after a rocky start, Warner’s take feels less like nostalgia and more like a reality check the NFL might need right now.

Speaking on “The Ross Tucker Podcast,” Warner made it clear that evaluating quarterbacks after one or two seasons just doesn’t cut it. He pointed to recent cases like C.J. Stroud and Jayden Daniels to highlight how quickly narratives can swing. Development isn’t linear, and early success or failure can be misleading.

“When a quarterback comes into the NFL, I want to give them three years to tell me who they are. We look at guys like CJ Stroud… great rookie year, then a step back. Jayden Daniels, same thing, tremendous early, then adversity hits. Give me that third year to figure it out. Bryce Young was terrible his first year… now he looks like a legit starter.”

That perspective lands hard when you look at Young’s arc. The Carolina Panthers took heat after trading a haul, including DJ Moore and multiple picks, to move up for the No. 1 selection in the 2023 NFL Draft.

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Through his first two seasons, Young’s metrics ranked near the bottom, including a 34th-place finish in PFSN’s QBi as a rookie.

But 2025 flipped the script. Young led the Panthers to a share of the NFC South’s best record at 8-9 and a playoff berth. His numbers were 3,011 yards, 23 TDs, 11 INTs, and a 63.6% completion rate. They weren’t elite, but they showed real growth. More importantly, they backed Warner’s core argument: patience pays.

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That belief is shared inside the building. During a postseason press conference, GM Dan Morgan doubled down on Young as the franchise cornerstone, pointing to his flashes of greatness and leadership. A fifth-year option pick-up has already been formally announced.

Now the interesting part: price. Young hasn’t hit top-tier production yet, which could give the Panthers leverage for a team-friendly deal. But if his trajectory holds, that window closes fast.

Meanwhile, the Panthers added insurance. As reported by ESPN insider Adam Schefter on March 9, 2026, the Panthers signed Kenny Pickett to a one-year deal worth up to $7.5 million, with $4 million guaranteed. Pickett brings starting experience but slots clearly as a backup behind Young.

It all circles back to Warner’s point. Quarterbacks aren’t finished products in Year 1 or even Year 2. And if Bryce Young’s turnaround is any indication, writing them off early might be the league’s biggest mistake.

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