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Panthers LB Diggs remains a starter with Beason holding out

SPARTANBURG, S.C. -- Na'il Diggs feels as though he's
contending with the supernatural as he seeks to keep his starting
job with the Carolina Panthers.

First-round pick Jon Beason was expected to take Diggs' spot at
outside linebacker. But with Beason unsigned and holding out, Diggs
worked with the first team for the second straight day Sunday.

"It's a ghost. Right now, that's what it is. I'm really
competing against a ghost," Diggs said. "What I've got to do is
keep making plays on the field, because when the ghost becomes a
reality, then it'll be a real person."

That doesn't mean the eight-year veteran is enjoying Beason's
disappearing act.

"Part of me has to look at it as competition, of course, but
another part of me says a part of the family's not here," Diggs
said. "I do wish he was here getting the experience and learning
with us, so he could be just as ready as we all are."

There was little change in Beason's status Sunday. His agent,
Michael Huyghue, said in an e-mail that talks were still at a
standstill, with the main stumbling block being the structure of
the contract. Huyghue said Beason has been working out on his own
to stay in shape.

The longer Beason is out, the better chance Diggs has of keeping
his job and erasing memories of last season, when he failed to make
the impact Carolina had hoped after signing him away from Green
Bay.

Diggs, who once started 62 straight games for the Packers,
sprained his knee in the third preseason game. It was a major
concern because Diggs sprained the medial collateral ligaments in
each knee on separate occasions a year earlier, limiting him to
nine games.

Coach John Fox said Sunday the Panthers considered cutting Diggs
before the final roster was selected.

"It was a tough call at the cut-down date because he wasn't
even going to be ready until the regular season started rolling,"
Fox said.

Diggs made the team and was inactive for the season-opening loss
to Atlanta. He returned in Week 2 and eventually moved into the
starting lineup. He finished with 68 tackles -- 55 fewer than his
best season in Green Bay -- and made few memorable plays.

Diggs said his knees feel fine now and he's more comfortable
entering his second season with the Panthers.

"I'm a lot better mentally as far as coming in and knowing the
scheme, knowing players, coaches, knowing where I need to be,"
Diggs said. "It's always easier the second time around."

Fox won't discuss Beason's holdout, but a lengthy absence would
put the rookie well behind in learning the system.

"I hardly remember my rookie year," the 29-year-old Diggs
joked. "But I know that it was pretty tough just being there every
day. Not being there and not getting to know my guys that I'm going
to go to battle with, the learning material itself, I would imagine
it would set me back."

Diggs acknowledged feeling concerned when Carolina took Beason
with the 25th pick. Still, he believes he'll get a chance to keep
his starting job and has vowed to ignore analysts who say he's
simply a placeholder until the rookie arrives.

"If you read what everybody tells you, you're just going to
crush yourself, your whole self-meaning and confidence and
everything else," Diggs said. "I don't listen to anything or read
anything."