Just for poops and grins during an otherwise boring lunch, I decided to test my commercial playlist to see what trends there might be regarding drum panning across the spectrum of rock and over it's history.
I loaded a playlist of about 400 random songs from the 60s to the 00s into Winamp and let it's shuffle playback function randomly select 25 representative songs. My only interaction was to ignore or bypass old '60s songs in mono or obviously mixed (or remastered) into faux stereo or over-simplified LCR stereo, as well as bypass obviously other-genre stuff such as big band jazz or hardcore blues or the like. The rest I left to the computer to randomly auto-select. This is not purely scientific by any means, but I think one can see that there's a fairly wide variety of music styles and times represented here.
What surprised even me was just how little drum panning at all is represented here. By far the majority of samples have everything in the rhythm section just panned center mono. Many of the rest have something custom going on (to more or less of a degree), with just a couple actually using a natural-ish stereo perspective of any type.
I'm not saying that this is my recommendation, by any means (when has anyone here known me to advocate copying commercial trends?

) Just an interesting sample of what is out there is all I'm offering up, that all.
Here's the list and short descriptions of the drum panning schemes used:
Rick Holmstrom - I'm Gone: Center mono
Primal Scream - Rocks: Cemter mono
Jake Shimabukuro - Grandma's Groove: Center mono
David Mead - World of a King: Snare (intro): Hard right / Snare (verse 1): Center / Toms (body): hard L/R delay / Everything (end of song): Center mono
Taj Mahal & Ry Cooder - Dust My Broom: Center mono
Tommy James & The Shondells - Draggin' the Line: Center mono
Southside Johnny - I Don't Wanna Go Home: Center mono
Clash - Pressure Drop: Snare & hat: center mono / Toms stereo left but reversed
Buddy Guy & Paul Rogers - Some Kind of Wownderful: Center mono
Jethro Tull - Bouree: Center mono/slight (~5°) spread on cymbals?
Sarah McLaghlan - Dear God: Center/mono
Smithereens - In A Lonely Place: Center/mono
The Staple Singers - I'll Take You There: Center/mono
Warren Zevon - the Envoy: Center/mono
Joe Jackson - the Harder They Come: Snare & hat & rack tom:drummer perspective / floor tom: full left
U2 & BB King - When Love Comes To Town: Audience distant perspective
Dobie Gray - Drift Away: Snare: center on verses, hard L/R stereo delay on choruses / Hat: audience slight right / Toms: dynamic panning
Marshal Tucker Band - Can't You See: Center mono
Love and Rockets - I'm So Alive: Center mono
INXS - Devil Inside: W-I-D-E audience perspective w/automated effects
J. Geiles Band - Whammer Jammer: Center mono w/occasional narrow tom spread
Sly and the Family Stone - Everyday People: Full right mono
Buckwheat Zydeco - Buck's Hot Rod: Center mono
Rickie Lee Jones - Dannys All-Star Joint: Center Mono
John Hiatt - Memphis In The Meantime: Snare/hat/rack: Center mono / Floor tom: Hard left
G.