When it came to picking his next team https://www.carolinapanthersfanshop.com/Mike-Adams-Jersey , veteran safety Kurt Coleman apparently had options. He opted to join the Bills. So why did he do it?“I looked at the situation,” Coleman recently told , via Ryan Talbot of NewYorkUpstate.com. “I looked at the roster. I’ve been watching Buffalo and obviously the familiarity with [coach] Sean McDermott makes this transition so much smoother. I know what he wants out of me as a player. And I know what to expect out of him as a coach. And I think the great thing about this is I always feel like that every team that I try to choose as my career goes on is I want to pick a team that . . . they don’t have to be the so-called favorite pick in the media, but I want a team that has the ‘it,’ that has the chemistry https://www.carolinapanthersfanshop.com/Matt-Kalil-Jersey , that has the foundation, the nucleus to make it there. And I feel like this team really does.”Coleman picked the Panthers in 2015, at a time when McDermott served as the team’s defensive coordinator. In Coleman’s first year with the Panthers, the Panthers made it to the Super Bowl. So Coleman knows what a Super Bowl team looks like and feels like. In what many saw as a sign of disrespect, the Buccaneers handed Gerald McCoy‘s jersey number to McCoy’s replacement https://www.carolinapanthersfanshop.com/Captain-Munnerlyn-Jersey , Ndamukong Suh, only days after releasing McCoy. They ushered McCoy out the door after nine seasons, saying he “just didn’t fit” their defense.McCoy signed with the Panthers, giving him two chances to play his old team this season and however many seasons he’s in Carolina. But McCoy, proving again what a class act he is https://www.carolinapanthersfanshop.com/David-Mayo-Jersey , made it clear Tuesday that he has nothing but respect for the Bucs and appreciates the chance they gave him in drafting him in the first round in 2010.“I don’t want it to be misconstrued the respect I have for the Buccaneers organization and how much I appreciate what they’ve done for me,” McCoy said on Ian Rapoport’s podcast, via a transcript from Greg Auman from TheAthletic.com. “A lot of people think I’ve turned my back on them or disrespected them. I’ll never do that.“I’ll never say anything bad about Tampa. I’ll never say anything negative about Tampa. It doesn’t matter how much negative was said about me. It’ll never be reciprocated, because I know that organization changed my life. The time I had there was great.”