//How the 'T-Mo spike' became the Panthers' touchdown celebration

How the 'T-Mo spike' became the Panthers' touchdown celebration

That mindset isn’t an accident since it’s why elite athletes even become professionals. But football players know how hard it is to score in the first place, so celebrating is essential.

“I’m pretty sure a lot of guys have been a part of games where they might not have scored a touchdown at all. So whenever you can touch the paint, it’s a reward for an entire offense, an entire team — how hard you’ve worked each drive,” quarterback Teddy Bridgewater said. “It’s refreshing to see the guys celebrate, have fun, smile, get to find out who can dance, who can’t, who can spike the ball, who can’t.”

But the Panthers aren’t really finding out who else can spike aside from Moton. He isn’t selfish about it, saying, “If anyone else gets the ball before me, they’re all more than welcome. I’ll be over there