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Cardinals 2026 NFL draft target: S Caleb Downs

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With the Cardinals out of playoff contention, our focus shifts to the offseason. So over the next few months, we are going to be taking a look at a handful of prospects leading up to the 2026 NFL draft.

With Arizona having needs at various positions, we will do our best to evaluate the players that we feel fit the team precisely.

Today, I take a look at Ohio State safety Caleb Downs.

Vitals​


Height: 6-0

Weight: 205

College Bio Page

Stats​

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Elevator pitch​


A defensive coordinator’s dream, Downs has the instincts, coverage versatility, physicality and communication skills to be a high-end starter with All-Pro upside at the next level, though he’ll need to limit the overaggression when in pursuit at times.

Strengths​


Good eyes and trusts his keys when reading the quarterback and watching route concepts play out in front of him…Processes well and can transition quickly to find and make a play on the football at the catch point…Displays good foot quickness and athleticism to carry receivers and tight ends to all areas of the field…Constantly visibly communicating with his teammates…Shows a lot of aggression and physicality when coming downhill…Good wrap-up tackler in open space…Versatile to play the deep parts of the field, in the slot, or in the box, and looks comfortable in each role…Allowed zero touchdowns on 336 coverage snaps in 2025…Special teams upside as a punt returner.

Weaknesses​


Aggressive in support, as he puts his foot in the ground and explodes downhill, which leaves him prone to overpursuit at times…Okay take-on skills, but plenty of room for improvement in this area…Limited experience as a true single-high deep safety.

Awards​

  • Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year (2025)
  • Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year (2024, 2025)
  • Unanimous All-American (2024)
  • CFP National Champion (2024)
  • SEC Freshman of the Year (2023)
  • Tatum-Woodson Award (Big Ten DB of the Year) (2024, 2025)
  • Nagurski-Woodson Award (Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year) (2025)
  • Thorpe Award, Nagurski Trophy, Bednarik Award Finalist (2024, 2025)

Red flags​


N/A

Fit likelihood​


Mid-High: While not a glaring need, like the offensive line, Jalen Thompson is set to hit the free agency market, and Budda Baker is not getting any younger. Downs would be an impact starter and a cornerstone defender for the Cardinals, with Pro Bowl potential right out the gate.

Grade​


Top-10

Highlights​

#OhioState S Caleb Downs vs. Purdue

Watch him trust his eyes, plant, and drive on the dig route over the middle to cause an INT. pic.twitter.com/lWEbV86sOW

— Jordan Reid (@Jordan_Reid) November 10, 2025
#OhioState S Caleb Downs (6-0, 205)

The ultimate equalizer. Can matchup in man and has excellent zone instincts. Plays balanced and violent on arrival. Consistent open field tackler. pic.twitter.com/MG6V9Ka8nJ

— Jordan Reid (@Jordan_Reid) May 20, 2025
Caleb Downs, the number 1 overall player in the draft if the league wants a free Hall of Famer, wrong-arming a pulling Guard in the box and making the tackle. pic.twitter.com/p5M3e0JZXN

— Max Toscano (@maxtoscano1) December 7, 2025
Caleb Downs closing speed is freakish. #NFLDraft pic.twitter.com/VW1o1oeUyK

— WBG84 (@WBG84) December 6, 2025
Ohio State’s Caleb Downs is one of my favorite college football players in a really, really long time.

Gonna be a phenomenal pro in large part due to his sensational football instincts. Case in point: 👇pic.twitter.com/CGrrSDCw1E https://t.co/ScvGT1qbM7

— Jordan Schultz (@Schultz_Report) November 23, 2025

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...cardinals-2026-nfl-draft-target-s-caleb-downs
 
Cardinals-Rams reactions: Was there anything positive from 45-17 loss?

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Happy Saturday one and all.

The Arizona Cardinals take on the Houston Texans on Sunday, but before that we need to take a look back at the debacle of the Arizona Cardinals loss to the Los Angeles Rams.

Was there anything to take away from the game that was a positive? What is happening on the offense, the defense and can the Cardinals get better with this coaching regime?

All of that and more.

Enjoy the show with the embedded player above or by subscribing to the show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or your favorite podcast platform, so you never miss a show. Make sure as well to give it a five-star rating!

We spoke about the following:

  • (1:00) Whether there was anything redeeming or positive from the game in any phase
  • (13:30) What is going on with the offense
  • (31:03) What is going on with the defense
  • (42:23) What we think about the coaches
View Link

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...s-was-there-anything-positive-from-45-17-loss
 
Arizona Cardinals once again get dominated in loss to Houston Texans

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The Arizona Cardinals have Trey McBride.

Everyone else doesn’t seem to be playing at that level, although you can show some excitement about Walter Nolen, it would just be nice to see him healthy week in and week out.

However, the Arizona Cardinals are just a bad football team with one elite player in McBride and a lot of questions.

We cannot question the effort and joy that McBride plays with, and he’s turned into a reason to put up with this product every week.

Outside of that, there’s really not much to like about this team right now.

Is it that they’ve taken on the stoic, emotionless personality of their head coach and quarterback?

It just seems like they lack joy when they’re on the field at this point.

Almost like, we are getting paid to be out here, but this is our job and we are going to act like it.

I really don’t know how else to put it.

This team doesn’t bring us any joy in watching them, and then they don’t even make games competitive.

That is not a great combination.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...again-get-dominated-in-loss-to-houston-texans
 
NFC playoffs dominated by NFC West Division clubs

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Here it is at the tail end of the 2025 NFL season, and the postseason tournament is shaping up. Teams are still in the hunt, but others fell out of contention this past weekend, such as the Kansas City Chiefs and Dallas Cowboys. Difficult to remember the last time the Chiefs were eliminated with three games remaining on the schedule.

RELATED: CARDINALS FANS ARE OUT ON THE TEAM

Several teams still have plenty to play for, such as the #1 seed, and a division crown. Such is the case in the NFC West Division. The Los Angeles Rams and Seattle Seahawks sit on top of this division, arguably the toughest in the league, with identical 11-3-0 records. The Rams hold the edge currently because they defeated the Seahawks 21-19 in Week 11 at home. The two clubs will commence their rebound game this upcoming weekend, on Thursday Night Football broadcast on Prime Video.

Seven teams from the NFC make the playoffs. The Rams currently have the #1 seed followed by the surprising Chicago Bears, Philadelphia Eagles, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Then, beginning with the Wild Card seeds, Seattle is ranked #5 followed by the San Francisco 49ers at #6, and the Green Bay Packers round out the seedings coming in at #7.

That makes three NFC West Division clubs situated into the postseason. The Seahawks are a very good team and will take all of their focus on defeating the Rams this weekend. If they do, they will take over the #1 seed in the NFC plus have the inside track on winning the division.

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The Niners (10-4-0) have been a roller coaster so far this season. They have beaten both the Rams 26-23 and Seahawks 17-13 early on the schedule, but were pummeled by Los Angeles in the rubber game 42-26. All four of their losses have been to very good ballclubs.

Any of these three clubs could win the division, and capture the division crown.

This weekend’s games proved that this division is on fire as three of four teams won their games:

Rams 41, Detroit Lions 34

Seahawks 18, Indianapolis Colts 16

49ers 37, Tennessee Titans 24

Houston Texans 40, Cardinals 20


But so far, it appears that the trio of the Rams, Seahawks, and Niners will all make the playoffs. What other division in the NFL can boast that? Anyone?

The Arizona Cardinals are the only odd man out with a 3-11-0 record.

Speaking of the 49ers, they have the best division record, sitting at 4-1-0 compared to the Rams (3-1-0) and Seahawks (2-2-0). In the NFL tiebreaker system within the division to determine who will wear the crown, the first determinant is head-to-head. Since teams play each other twice, these contests are important. The second tiebreaker is best divisional record, followed by best record in common games.

So, the “best divisional record” can make or break a season. One club can defeat another divisional foe in both games, then lose the division title just by not winning more games against the other teams.

As far as team stats, here is where all four NFC West Division teams currently sit in the league:

OFFENSE


Passing

  • #2 Rams
  • #4 Cardinals
  • #6 49ers
  • #8 Seahawks

Rushing

  • #8 Rams
  • #22 Seahawks
  • #25 49ers
  • #26 Cardinals
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DEFENSE


Passing

  • #12 Seahawks
  • #19 49ers
  • #21 Rams
  • #22 Cardinals

Rushing

  • #3 Seahawks
  • #9 Rams
  • #12 49ers
  • #22 Cardinals

It is quite possible that with the current seeding in the NFC, the NFC Championship Game could be comprised of both NFC West opponents, especially if either the Rams or Seahawks were to cement the #1 seed.

Since the NFL went to divisions with four teams contained within each division, home many times has all four teams made the playoffs? Zero.

Okay, so how about three teams making the postseason in the same year? Nine. The Cardinals were involved in the last time that occurred back in 2021.

  • 2006 NFC East: Eagles (10–6), Cowboys (9–7), Giants (8–8)
  • 2007 NFC East: Cowboys (13–3), Giants (10–6), Washington (9–7)
  • 2007 AFC South: Colts (13–3), Jaguars (11–5), Titans (10–6)
  • 2011 AFC North: Ravens (12–4), Steelers (12–4), Bengals (9–7)
  • 2013 AFC West: Broncos (13–3), Chiefs (11–5), Chargers (9–7)
  • 2014 AFC North: Steelers (11–5), Bengals (10-5-1), Ravens (10–6)
  • 2017 NFC South: Saints (11–5), Panthers (11–5), Falcons (10–6)
  • 2020 AFC North: Steelers (12–4), Ravens (11–5), Browns (11–5)
  • 2021 NFC West: Rams (12–5), Cardinals (11–6), 49ers (10–7)

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...playoffs-dominated-by-nfc-west-division-clubs
 
Arizona Cardinals defensive line coach heading back to college football after season

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The movement on the Arizona Cardinals coaching staff has begun, and it starts with one of their new hires, as Winston DeLattiboudere has decided to go back to the collegiate ranks as he will go be a defensive line coach with the Michigan State Spartans.

NEWS: #MichiganState is set to hire Arizona Cardinals DL coach Winston DeLattiboudere, sources tell us & @mzenitz.

The 27-year-old rising star had other P4 schools vying to poach him from the NFL but chose Joe Rossi – who he’s played & coached for.

READ: https://t.co/oOEMS76X0s pic.twitter.com/MuMAhfXrin

— Justin Thind (@JustinThind) December 15, 2025

The Arizona Cardinals defensive line has been underwhelming this year, but is that on DeLattiboudere?

They replaced Derrick LeBlanc after his two years of underwhelming play from the defensive line, but they were undermanned in his time as the defensive line coach.

They spent a ton of money on the defensive front this offseason, as well as their second first round draft pick, to have one of the worst producing defensive fronts in the NFL.

Again, that begs the question if that is on the coach or the scheme or the execution from the players.

The fact that DeLattiboudere is still so highly thought of and had so many potential suitors does seem like it’s not something that people are putting on him.

Good luck to Coach DeLattiboudere.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...rdinals-winston-delattiboudere-michigan-state
 
Cardinals make bold move, select franchise quarterback in latest mock draft

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There will be several key storylines surrounding the Cardinals this offseason, with one being the quarterback position and how they approach it. There is widespread speculation that Arizona may move on from Kyler Murray, potentially leaving a void to fill.

Currently with the No. 6 overall pick after their loss to the Texans, the Cardinals are in a position to take one, but they might have to move up for it to be a sure thing. That’s what Bucs Wire’s Andrew Harbaugh sees Arizona doing, trading up to the No. 1 spot with the Giants and selecting Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza.

The New York Giants will not be needing a quarterback, though they might down the road if they keep having Jaxson Dart play like a fullback. So that means that they are trading this pick to the Arizona Cardinals as they remain in quarterback purgatory with Kyler Murray’s massive contract and a willingness to move on from him. They will need someone on the cheap end of things, and you could do worse in the Heisman Trophy winner, Fernando Mendoza.

In this scenario, Arizona gives up the 6th and 38th overall picks in the 2026 NFL draft, as well as a second and fourth round pick in the 2027 NFL draft, for the 1st overall selection.

Mendoza, the 2025 Heisman Trophy winner, would bring a lot of intrigue. He is a strong-armed signal-caller, capable of making all NFL throws with excellent accuracy. Additionally, Mendoza possesses great poise, decision-making, and the ability to navigate the pocket. He led Indiana to a perfect record and a Big Ten championship in his first season there after transferring from California.

In the 2025 season, Mendoza finished with a 71.5 completion percentage with 2,980 yards and 33 touchdown passes, which ranked first in the nation.

While he has all the tools to start from Day 1, Mendoza would be able to sit behind veteran Jacoby Brissett, who is currently under contract for 2026. Brissett could serve as a valuable bridge quarterback, allowing Mendoza to transition to the NFL at an appropriate pace.

As for Murray, the best scenario for the Cardinals would be to trade him before June 1. Arizona’s dead cap hit would be $17.9 million with a cap savings of $35.3 million.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...ct-franchise-quarterback-in-latest-mock-draft
 
Arizona Cardinals place Bam Knight, Andre Baccellia on injured reserve

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The hits keep on coming for the Arizona Cardinals as they have placed two more players on injured reserve.

Today, the team announced wide receiver Andre Baccellia, who took a scary hit in the game against the Houston Texans and had to be carted off, as well as running back Zonovan “Bam” Knight are going on injured reserve.

From the team:

Signed wide receiver Jalen Brooks to the active roster from the practice squad

– Placed wide receiver Andre Baccellia and running back Zonovan Knight on injured reserve

– Signed offensive lineman Marques Cox to the practice squad

– Re-signed safety Patrick McMorris to the practice squad

– Released offensive lineman Trey Wedig from the practice squad

The signings took place today at the Dignity Health Arizona Cardinals Training Center in Tempe, AZ.

Cox (6-5, 305) is a rookie who entered the league with Denver as an undrafted free agent from Kentucky and spent time this season on the Broncos practice squad. He played 61 games (59 starts) in his collegiate career, including starting all 12 games in 2024 with the Wildcats. Cox began his college career at Northern Illinois (2018-22) before playing his final two seasons (2023-24) at Kentucky.

Cox will wear jersey #61 and McMorris will wear #35.

They also made a number of moves on their practice squad, but the two big moves were placing two more players on the IR for the season.

Let’s hope Baccellia is going to be fine, and wishing a quick recovery to Knight.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...bam-knight-andre-baccellia-on-injured-reserve
 
Should the Arizona Cardinals fire Jonathan Gannon after the season?

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Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Cardinals fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.



The Arizona Cardinals are now sitting at 3-11, with three games remaining, and are a staggering 15-33 in the Jonathan Gannon era, and his win percentage with any quarterback not named Kyler Murray is 0.1176, which is insane. 2-15 with non-Kyler quarterbacks.

So, that begs the question with the team staring down the barrel of the worst season in modern NFL history for the franchise, can you retain Jonathan Gannon for 2026?

The reality is, will Michael Bidwill pay three coaches?

The defense being bad, coaches allegedly getting ready to jump ship already, and the fact that they can’t even compete against their own division are just some of the reasons it seems like it may be time to move on, but what do you think?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...rdinals-fire-jonathan-gannon-after-the-season
 
The story of how the Bidwill family became owners of the Cardinals – Part 2

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1947 NFL Champions Chicago Cardinals: after the game

The Arizona Cardinals are a member club in the National Football League (NFL). They are actually a charter member from the league’s inception of 1920, and only one of two that still exist today. The other is the Chicago Bears, who in 1920 were originally called the “Decatur Staleys.” The Cardinals franchise back then was named the “Chicago Cardinals.”

That maiden season, the NFL had a different moniker. It was called the “American Professional Football Association,” and two years later, it was renamed the NFL.

RELATED: HOW THE BIDWILLS BECAME OWNERS PART 1

The Cardinals have been owned by the Bidwill’s since 1932. However, in the first segment, they had not yet owned the franchise. Here is the second portion of the story of how this family received ownership of the team.


PART 2​


“Blue Shirt Charley” and the Cardinals


In the summer of 1932, Charles “Blue Shirt Charley” Bidwill and his wife, Violet, hosted an informal dinner party aboard their luxurious yacht “The Ren-Mar” and cruised along Lake Michigan. In attendance was Arch Ward, sports editor of the Chicago Tribune, with his wife Helen, plus Dr. David Jones and his wife Elsa.

The Bidwills were a wealthy family in the Chicagoland area, as Charles had built up a successful law practice.

Dr. Jones owned a lot of stock in the Chicago Cubs pro baseball club and solely owned the Chicago Cardinals NFL club. But for now, it was just a casual evening on a luxury yacht, eating, drinking, and cruising the lake.

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The topic eventually got around to pro football, of which Jones was the full owner of the Cardinals, and Bidwill was a minority owner and VP of the crosstown Bears. Ward covered both clubs in the newspaper.

As drinks were flowing throughout the Ren-Mar, Jones began to complain about the unfortunate state of the game in terms of annual financial losses and how much money he was losing. He also mentioned a disdain for having to compete with the Bears, which drew well at the gate, plus annually signed some of the best college talent, and usually had winning teams.

At the time, the NFL college draft was a few years away from coming into existence,8 so blue-chip college players signed with whichever NFL team was offering the most. The better teams always had the best attendance and thus could afford to pay young talent, whereas the bad to mediocre clubs didn’t have the luxury of good gates, and subsequently signed the lower levels of talent.

Like the Cardinals.

Violet Bidwill had seen that although her husband had been involved in so many sporting venues and activities over the decades, but since joining the Bears, he had found a new love in being part of an actual team with day-to-day operations.

At that point aboard the Ren-Mar, Violet Bidwill jokingly asked Jones, “Why don’t you sell the team to Charley?” Jones’ answer was that he would sell anything he owned if the price was right. Bidwill then asked what that price was, to which Jones replied, “$50,000.” 9

Bidwill brought out $2,000 in cash right there on the yacht. There was debt on the Cardinals’ books for $45,000, and another payment of $3,000 was agreed upon to meet the grand total of $50,000.10

And suddenly, Blue Shirt Charley owned his own NFL team – the Chicago Cardinals. This was a way to keep his lifelong love of sports alive. How much cold, hard cash did it actually cost the Bidwells? $5,000.

The transaction wouldn’t be announced until the following year, allowing the businessman to get rid of his Bears stock since the NFL had restrictions on persons being invested in multiple clubs.

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Essentially, Bidwill had saved both Chicago franchises from going extinct.

During the following season, Bidwill sold his shares in the Bears but remained their Vice President and even had season tickets, which was a blatant conflict of interest that in those days but few cared.

Despite owning the Cardinals fully without any minority owners, Bidwill made it known he remained a Bears fan. He was even seen at a Bears home game while his Cardinals were playing an away game.

Bidwill was an intelligent man who knew how to make a winner in everything he was involved with. His checkbook was free-wheeling. As far as the NFL, Halas and the other owners were happy that Bidwill was now in the stable of NFL owners, which brought financial stability into the ranks, and the league no longer had to worry about the Cardinals folding.

Through the years


During this time, Bidwill purchased four Florida dog tracks and two Chicago horse racing tracks.

Eventually, as Bidwill became more involved in the management of the Cardinals, the draft came along and provided the weaker teams with some of the best college talent, and the City of Chicago began to catch on and provide better gates, as the Cardinals would replace the Bears in Bidwill’s heart.

He owned the team for 14 seasons. Bidwill had gotten through the lean years of World War II, when a large majority of all rosters were decimated by men joining the war effort. In 1944, neither the Cardinals nor the Pittsburgh Steelers had enough players, so they combined rosters and called themselves “Card-Pitt.”

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In 1946, Bidwill hired Jimmy Conzelman as the new head coach, and the franchise went from 1-9-0 to 6-5-0. Conzelman had been a college star halfback for the University of Washington.

In April of 1947, Bidwill caught pneumonia during the week, was admitted to the hospital, and died four days later.11 He was 51 years old. His wealth was estimated to be between $6 million and $10 million.

His death came just days after he had outbid the New York Yankees for University of Georgia halfback Charley Trippi, whom the Cardinals had drafted with the first overall pick. The Yankees were a new team in the upstart “All America Football Conference,” which was an NFL-rival league with eight clubs. Trippi was signed to an unheard sum of $100,000 on a four-year deal.12

Back then, the NFL was divided into two divisions. The winners of each division would play in the NFL Championship Game. With that 1947 season, the Cardinals won the Western Division by one game after they defeated the Bears in the final game 30-21 in front of 48,632 fans at Wrigley Field.

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Next up, the Cardinals (9-3-0) had the title game at Comiskey Park. The turf was like a skating rink when they met the Eastern champs, Philadelphia Eagles (8-4-0). 30,759 patrons braved the elements to see if the City of Chicago could capture yet another World title. The contest was televised on ABC television. The Cardinals had won the regular-season meeting in Philadelphia three weeks earlier by 24 points.

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The Cardinals’ players eventually wore basketball sneakers and finally got some traction as they built a 14-0 lead. The Eagles then switched from cleats to sneakers and were able to get footing. In the end, Chicago defeated Philadelphia 28-21 for the franchise’s second title.13

As much time, money, and effort that “Blue shirt Charley” put into the Cardinals, he never witnessed an NFL title for his hobby.

Before the 1947 NFL Championship season, Bidwell’s widow, Violet, now owned the Cardinals. She became the very first female owner of a professional football team.

Next up: Violet Bidwill runs the Cardinals, remarries, and the Bidwill family ownership continues strong when Stormy and Bill’s takeover begins

Notes

————————————————————————————


8 NFL Operations, “The History of the Draft”

9 John Eisenberg, “Almost Broke,” The League, Basic Books, 2018

10 The Arizona Republic, 2018

11 “Charles Bidwell, Dog Tack Owner, Dies in Chicago,” Sarasota Herald-Tribune, April 20, 1947

12 “Charley Trippi Class of 1968,” ProFootballHOF.com

13 https://www.pro-football-reference.com/boxscores/194712280crd.htm

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-family-became-owners-of-the-cardinals-part-2
 
Cardinals have a tackling problem. Gannon explains why

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Offense gets fans in the seats, but defenses win championships.

Arizona Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon is a defensive-minded. He brought over his strategies that worked well when he was the DC for the Philadelphia Eagles, who had just lost the Super Bowl. The Cardinals were in need of some defensive changes, and Arizona owner Michael J. Bidwill thought a keen defensive guy could make a difference.

RELATED: CARDINALS ONCE AGAIN GET DOMINATED IN LOSS TO TEXANS

Gannon laid out a three-year plan, of which this season is the final year. At 3-11-0, those plans have highlighted quite a few problems and issues instead of playoff tickets going on sale.

The NFL loves the offensive side of the ball. They make no bones about it, either.

Can’t land on a quarterback, can’t touch a receiver after five yards, can’t hit a player in the face, after one Mississippi can’t hit a signalcaller, can’t block a man beneath the knee, allow offensive players to go into motion, no helmet-to-helmet contact, usually allows an offensive player to shield a defender on crossing routes (called a rub), and an offensive player can place his hand on a defender’s facemask as long as he doesn’t grab it.

And tackling? Geez. Players such as Ray Nitschke, Dick Butkus, Sam Huff, and Lawrence Taylor would be shadows of themselves in today’s NFL.

It used to be that players would kill each other in practice each week to prove to their own teammates who was the toughest SOB. And what’s this? Water breaks? Don Shula is spinning in his grave.

Gannon sees that the Cardinals’ defense is a bad-tackling team.

And rightfully so.

Remember when the goal on every tackle was to center the helmet on the other player’s jersey number, square up, and drive through the player? Or take him down by placing the helmet to the side of the ballcarrier’s knee, grab both legs just below the knees, and squeeze.

Now? Athletes today grab another player’s waist and try to sling them down. Or they jump on their shoulder pads and attempt to make their own body weight collapse the one with the ball. Out of Australia’s rugby culture came the “hip-drop” tackle, which has now been abolished. That used a player’s weight against him, but twisted knees and ankles in the process.

No team can have a good defense without sound tackling.

This past weekend against the Houston Texans, the Cardinals had plenty of missed tackles. It certainly made their opponent’s YAC stats much better and kept drives alive. Arizona has allowed 40 rushes with at least five yards after first contact. This ranks #3 in the league.

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Currently, the Cardinals are ranked #11 in the NFL in missed tackles (85) in 2025. And they aren’t that far behind being in the Top-5. Safety Budda Baker leads the team in missed tackles with 11, followed by Mack Wilson (who is currently on IR) and Garrett Williams, both of whom have eight. However, Baker leads Arizona in tackles with 101 total tackles.

Gannon knows this is a team issue, and he knows part of the reason why: the NFL’s collectively bargained rules prevent defensive players from becoming better tacklers.

The coach recently shared his view on the subject:

“How the rules are set up, it’s hard to get better as a tackler being in the NFL, I’ll say that.”

Practicing how to tackle at this level has been hampered quite a bit. If the league had its way, it would ban tackling in practice sessions altogether. Lawyers rule this Earth, and they want it gone. Key players get hurt and are lost for long periods of time, which doesn’t compute to being on the field during real games.

Teams are only allowed 14 padded practices, but 11 of them have to take place during the first 11 weeks of the season. During the offseason, actual contact is prohibited.

When Coach Gannon was asked if he would be asking for different rules regarding tackling, he said:

“The rules are the rules. It’s set up how it’s set up, that’s fine. But to get better at a skill, you have to practice the skill. You practice skill, you can scale it, you can scale the tempo, you can scale how you do it, but to practice a skill, you need to practice the skill.”

Every offseason, one team or another brings up the subject of allowing more contact in practice at the owner’s meetings, especially the ability to tackle.

Gannon offered:

“A lot of people think [that if] you can’t practice it you better just acquire people that can tackle because you ain’t going to help them at all. That’s a thought process, too. To each their own. But it’s a challenge.”

Is poor tackling a product of the league placing the handcuffs on defensive coaches?

Gannon had his thoughts:

“And so it’s a conundrum I think all defensive guys face and there’s risk-reward to trying to practice it with it however you set things up. But you definitely have to be a good tackling defense to play good defense.”

The big question then looms: Why teach tackling at all at this level? Why not just draft players who have already shown they know how to tackle in college, and have had great success without any tutelage at all. If a guy can’t tackle in college, don’t grab him for this defense.

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LB Carson Schwesinger of the Cleveland Browns led the nation with 90 solo tackles for UCLA last season. Now, he is the sixth-ranked tackler in the league despite being a rookie. Another linebacker, Roquan Smith of the Baltimore Ravens, was near the top in tackles in the nation his final two years at Alabama, and is annually a top tackler in the NFL. Jordyn Brooks of the Miami Dolphins had 86 tackles as a freshman at Texas Tech and was a four-year starter with 367 total career tackles. Now, he leads the NFL.

It is true that the lack of opportunities to tackle in practice limits skill development.

Maybe re-invent the wheel. Instead of training in-house and hoping that translates to the field, maybe find guys who are already productive tacklers and plug them in instead.

If they can’t already drive a player to the turf, let them miss tackles for another team.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...s-have-a-tackling-problem-gannon-explains-why
 
With the First Pick 4.0: Another Cardinals loss

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It has been mentioned that this Arizona Cardinals roster is just a few pieces away from being a playoff contender.

Apparently, those media folks haven’t seen any actual games. “On paper” isn’t a reality.

RELATED: SHOULD THE CARDINALS FIRE GANNON AFTER THE SEASON?

Cardinals’ fans know all too well what is happening. Double-digit loss seasons don’t lie. This team is bad in so many departments. There will be plenty of fixes coming out of free agency and next April’s NFL draft, but it won’t fix all the issues.

Quarterback remains uncertain. Special teams haven’t been special all year. The offensive line is a mess. Run game without a feature back is a roller coaster. The receiver group has been great at times, then hurt. And the defense has finally given up, apparently.

At three wins, they are on the cusp of getting the first overall pick in next April’s NFL draft. Where do they sit now?

If the season were to end today, here are the standings from the bottom upwards:

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#32, Pick #1

New York Football Giants 2-12-0


Last five games: 0-5. Last game: Lost Commanders 29-21

Winnable opponents remaining: Vikings, Raiders, Cowboys

Ranking last week: 32 (unchanged)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .345

#31, Pick #2

Las Vegas Raiders 2-12-0


Last five games: 0-5. Last game: Lost Eagles 31-0

Winnable opponents remaining: Giants

Ranking last week: 31 (unchanged)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .405

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#30, Pick #3

Tennessee Titans 2-12-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Lost 49ers 37-24

Winnable opponents remaining: Saints, maybe Chiefs

Ranking last week: 30 (unchanged)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .476

#29, Pick #4

Cleveland Browns 3-11-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Lost Bears 31-3

Winnable opponents remaining: Bengals, maybe Steelers

Ranking last week: 28 (up 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .512

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#28, Pick #5

New York Jets 3-11-0


Last five games: 3-2. Last game: Beat Falcons 27-24

Winnable opponents remaining: Dolphins, Saints, maybe Jaguars

Ranking last week: 26 (up 2)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .595

#27, Pick #6

Arizona Cardinals 3-11-0


Last five games: 0-5. Last game: Lost Texans 40-20

Winnable opponents remaining: Falcons, Bengals

Ranking last week: 25 (up 2)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .476

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#26, Pick #7

New Orleans Saints 4-10-0


Last five games: 3-2. Last game: Beat Panthers 20-17

Winnable opponents remaining: Jets, Titans, Falcons

Ranking last week: 28 (down 2)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .238 (easiest)

#25, Pick #8

Washington Commanders 4-10-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Beat Giants 29-21

Winnable opponents remaining: Cowboys

Ranking last week: 27 (down 2)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .583

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...ith-the-first-pick-4-0-another-cardinals-loss
 
ESPN ranks every potential NFL head coaching opening

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Several NFL clubs have already fired their head coaches, namely the Tennessee Titans and the New York Football Giants. On Black Monday, which is the next day after the final regular season league game, it is expected that between four and six other head coaches will be left without a team.

RELATED: COACHING CANDIDATES TO REPLACE JONATHAN GANNON

ESPN football analyst Bill Barnwell recently posted his list of the most desirable NFL head coaching openings, provided these teams do indeed fire their head coaches, that is.

Are the Arizona Cardinals on that list? Right now, there is a nest of questions about where this roster is heading and its future.

Because the franchise sits at 3-11-0, the most obvious move would be to fire head coach Jonathan Gannon. After all, this is year three of the three-year plan, and the team has gone backwards instead of upwardly mobile with a playoff berth. Instead, every other NFC West Division club is postseason-bound, leaving the Cardinals to fend for crumbs at the bottom of the division.

Will Gannon be given the boot? The consensus among fans is yes.

Gannon is a bright football mind and would land somewhere else in a coordinator position rather quickly. He is well-respected around the league and has done a good job as a defensive coordinator, which seems to be his forte.

Barnwell looked at which teams will most likely can their head coach, then he ranked them the most desirable rosters for new head coaching prospects.

Here is the list:


#1 Cincinnati Bengals

This is because of QB Joe Burrow and his receiver crew, including Ja’Marr Chase

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#2 Arizona Cardinals


Projected 2026 cap space: 17th most ($39.2 million)
Projected 2026 draft capital: sixth most

Barnwell points out that the Cardinals are a much better team than their 3-11-0 record. They are 2-7 in games decided by seven points or fewer. He also points out all of the games in which they had the lead or were tied, and then fell apart, blew leads, and lost key ballgames.

Do these facts mean Gannon will keep his job? Barnwell says no. That is part of the head coach’s job to keep things in perspective. Remember when the Cardinals were down by 14 points to the Seattle Seahawks and came back to tie them? But then allowed the Seahawks to win with 28 seconds remaining. Excused, or inexcusable?

The defense has collapsed, which is in Gannon’s wheelhouse. He is a defensive mind, and yet all of these losses were the result of defensive failures very late in games. This Cardinals defense is dead last in points allowed per possession (2.9) across the current six-game losing streak. In a season during which the defense was supposed to take a major step forward, it’s falling behind.

Regarding the Arizona job, Barnwell had this opinion:

“I’d still argue that there’s a fair amount to like in Arizona. The Cardinals do have plenty of promising talent on defense, where Josh Sweat has been excellent and young players like Walter Nolen, Will Johnson, and Garrett Williams have had moments where they’ve looked to be potential standouts. Trey McBride has been spectacular, and though Marv Harrison and Paris Johnson haven’t necessarily lived up to their draft position, they should settle in as above-average starters at key positions. GM Monti Ossenfort has done a good job of adding draft capital, and though there’s work to be done on the interior of the offensive line and at linebacker, there’s unquestionably young talent.”

The looming issue with the Cardinals is the QB position. Do they make a trade to send Kyler Murray away, or keep him and let Jacoby Brissett have an open competition in training camp next summer? Having the loser as a backup is a good problem to have. Or does Arizona take a high draft pick and secure a young buck to groom?

Barnwell does mention the issue for the Cardinals in the league’s toughest division:

“The other issue is the division. The Cardinals are stuck in a juggernaut of an NFC West, where the 49ers, Rams, and Seahawks all have 10 or more wins under potential Coach of the Year candidates. If you’re a coach with options, the idea of ending up in, say, the NFC South might be a lot more appealing than an NFC West division where going 3-3 might feel wildly successful in any given season.”

But this fact shouldn’t be a deterrent. Look at the Chicago Bears. They have been the bottom of their division for years, with the likes of the Green Bay Packers in the Aaron Rodgers days, plus the emergence of the Detroit Lions the past few seasons, and the Minnesota Vikings. Now, Chicago sits on top of the division despite its division foes all being good teams.

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The NFL is designed for teams like Arizona to flop one year, then ascend and take over the division the following season with the right signings in free agency and smart draft choices. It can – and does – happen rapidly in this league.

Barnwell concluded:

“If the Cardinals nail the coach and get their quarterback situation right this offseason, they might have the ability to make that same sort of leap in 2026.”

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The rest of Barnwell’s list:


#3 Cleveland Browns

#4 Tennessee Titans

#5 New York Football Giants

#6 Atlanta Falcons

#7 Miami Dolphins

#8 Las Vegas Raiders

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...nks-every-potential-nfl-head-coaching-opening
 
College Football Playoffs prospects to know: Oklahoma vs. Alabama

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The Arizona Cardinals should be paying attention to this one, as the Oklahoma Sooners host the Alabama Crimson Tide in the opening of the College Football Playoffs.

First, everything you need to know.

Date: Friday, December 19, 2025
Time: 6:00 p.m. AT
Location: Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium — Norman, OK
National TV: ABC/ESPN (Channel 15 locally)
National online streaming: ESPN+
TV announcers: Chris Fowler (play-by-play) Kirk Herbstreit (analyst) Holly Rowe & Laura Rutledge (sideline)
Betting line: Oklahoma Sooners -1.5 per FanDuel Sportsbook

Players to watch:

  • Ty Simpson, QB – Alabama
  • Kadyn Proctor, OL – Alabama
  • Germie Bernard, WR – Alabama
  • R Mason Thomas, OLB – Oklahoma
  • Bray Hubbard, S – Alabama
  • L.T. Overton, DT – Alabama
  • Deontae Lawson, LB – Alabama
  • Domani Jackson, CB – Alabama
  • Peyton Bowen, S – Oklahoma

This will be a battle, and while Alabama has the overwhelming majority of NFL Draft talent, Oklahoma seems to be so well coached and prepared, especially on defense.

This should be a fun one.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...w-oklahoma-vs-alabama-ty-simpson-mason-thomas
 
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