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You’ve seen the replay dozens of times by now—and gawked at the freeze frames, too. For about a week, the image of Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Julio Jones skying high above Carolina Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly was cycled through every highlight reel on the planet, and plastered all over the Internet.

Almost immediately, basketball-speak was applied to football, with Jones “posterizing” Kuechly on that 70-yard touchdown reception in Week 16. His catch was an unbelievable display of athleticism, and it deserved every one of your 29 viewings. But something was lost amid the initial buzz.

On one end of the play was Jones, who’s undisputedly among the NFL’s premier wideouts after leading the league in receiving yards during the 2015 regular season (1,871 yards on 136 catches).

On the other end was Kuechly, whose versatility is nearly unmatched at his position. But he’s still a linebacker, and any linebacker assigned to Jones should quickly find himself eating dirt.

Which is why the poster Jones created tells only a partial story. It doesn’t show that the linebacker in question stayed with the league’s best receiver while 52 yards downfield in coverage.

That shouldn’t happen, as it breaks every conventional rule we have about blatant mismatches. But there was Kuechly, sprinting to the far reaches of the field and leaping to make sure Jones could only beat him with a spectacular fingertip grab.

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Kuechly laughs at your definition of normal for a linebacker.

No such thing exists in his universe, because the line between what he can do and what most others can only drool over is a growing divide. At the age of just 24, he’s anchoring a defense one win away from the Super Bowl, and the Panthers have been dependent on his unique mix of tenacity and football intelligence to get there.

A shining example of Carolina's reliance on Kuechly can be found in what he did during the divisional round. Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson may have eventually located his comfort zone in the second half while leading three touchdown drives. But he didn’t do it against Kuechly, whose sense for space shut down the middle of the field.

Wilson had a passer rating of just 20.8 on his five throws in Kuechly’s direction, according to Pro Football Focus. That includes a critical pass breakup as the Seahawks marched downfield trailing by 10 points with just over two minutes left in the fourth quarter.

Kuechly’s swat perfectly illustrates how dynamic he’s become. Often he essentially sheds the title of linebacker—at least in the traditional sense—and functions as another safety.

His instincts are that advanced, and his ability to cover ground fast is, too. Consider where Kuechly found himself as Wilson released his throw destined for wide receiver Doug Baldwin’s hands.

If you had only the moment below frozen in time to work with, the assumption would be easy: Wilson completed the pass, and Baldwin then either scored, or put his team just outside of the red zone with still over two minutes remaining.

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Baldwin’s 1,007 receiving yards from the slot led all wideouts during the regular season, per PFF. He’s rather skilled in the open field, then, and is the sort of shifty character who should make a linebacker’s head do at least three full spins.

What followed surprised no one. Baldwin created separation quickly after cutting off his route and breaking toward the sideline. He was a full two strides ahead of Kuechly and had leaked behind him, giving Wilson a buffer to clear all danger with his lofted throw.

The next frame would usually show that easy completion. Instead it shows what happens when Kuechly’s closing speed kicks in, and the switch is flipped on his forward accelerators.

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Kuechly had no business being near that ball. He had no business breaking up what could have been a drive-altering completion. And he had no business closing the gap Baldwin created. He’s a linebacker, remember, and staying with the likes of Baldwin and Jones isn’t supposed to be possible.

But he’s also a linebacker who ran the 40-yard dash in 4.58 seconds during the 2012 scouting combine, which was the second-fastest result at his position. Disruptions like the one against Baldwin are common because of Kuechly's rare top-end speed.

Being disruptive is what Kuechly does best. That’s why the team will lean on him even more during the NFC Championship. A sixth-ranked Panthers defense throughout the regular season will try to neutralize the Arizona Cardinals’ vast collection of offensive threats.

The Cardinals had two receivers with 1,000-plus yards during the regular season (Larry Fitzgerald and John Brown), and a third who wasn’t far behind (Michael Floyd at 849 yards). Then there’s running back David Johnson, who collected 457 yards as an effective pass-catcher out of the backfield even while starting just five games.

So Carolina will need every available resource functioning at full capacity, especially after injuries to cornerbacks Bene Benwikere and Charles Tillman.

They’ll need an inside linebacker who finished 2015 with a passer rating allowed in coverage of 57.8 when the league average among linebackers was 102.5, per PFF.

2015 top passer ratings allowed among inside linebackers Linebacker Passer rating Luke Kuechly 57.8 Karlos Dansby 65.3 Derrick Johnson 68.1 Brandon Marshall 81.1 Preston Brown 86.0 Source: Pro Football Focus

Kuechly also led his position with 10 passes defensed, and his 11 career regular-season interceptions since he was drafted ninth overall in 2012 leads all inside linebackers over that four-year period, according to Pro Football Reference.

It feels like he’s everywhere, all the time. New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees knows the feeling well.

“He is extremely intelligent,” Brees said in his weekly press conference prior to a Week 13 meeting with Kuechly, via comments distributed by the Saints. “You see him getting guys lined up all over the place, at his position or in the secondary and along the front. He is so active.”

“There is no doubt that Kuechly is a huge part of that defense.”

The greatest evidence of Kuechly’s versatility and impact? I’ve made it this far while barely touching on his hovering presence as a run defender. He’s also a pillar in that regard and has already recorded three seasons with 150-plus tackles. More importantly, the three-time All-Pro finished second in 2015 with a run-stop on 14 percent of his defensive snaps, per PFF.

But Kuechly’s grill-rattling ways as a run defender can oddly be an afterthought at times. We expect him to quickly diagnose and dismantle runs, because he’s raised his own bar for exceptional performance that high.

What we don’t expect still is for a linebacker to be trailing Jones or closing ground fast on Baldwin deep downfield. And we’re still in awe when the same linebacker who’s stuffing those runs drifts 20-plus yards up the seam, then leaps to snatch a ball from Dallas Cowboys tight end Jason Witten.

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"His football IQ is tremendous, man," Panthers wide receiver Jerricho Cotchery said following the divisional round, per ESPN.com’s David Newton. "It's just crazy. He's always in position to make the play."

Kuechly sets himself apart with the entire package he offers, from mentally reading plays to physically reacting to them. He’s more than a linebacker, or a defender who can be placed in one box, with one label.

He’s a professional play-eraser who’s one win away from being featured under football’s brightest spotlight.