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Cardinals lose two defenders for final two games

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The Arizona Cardinals have two games left in the 2025 NFL season. They will play those games with rookie DT Walter Nolen and CB Garrett Williams. Both players were placed on IR on Monday.

RELATED: GANNON’S PITCH AND BIG EMPTY NUMBERS ON OFFENSE

Williams suffered an Achilles injury in the first quarter of the 26-19 loss to the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday. At the time of the injury, Arizona was ahead 10-0. The Falcons were driving with 6:27 remaining in the first quarter on a third-and-four when QB Kirk Cousins threw a short pass to WR Drake London for the first down conversion. Williams was injured while attempting to make the tackle and did not return.

It is not known if Williams tore his Achilles tendon or if it is considered a partial tear.

Nolen injured his left knee in the third quarter when he assisted Zaven Collins on a tackle on a six-yard loss when Cousins found RB Tyler Allgeier in the left flats on an outlet pass. The Falcons finished that drive with a 40-yard field goal that enabled Atlanta to take a 19-16 lead.

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Right now, it is not known if Nolen will need surgery until an MRI is done on Tuesday. The rookie sat out the first seven games this year because of another knee injury and was housed on the PUP list.

Arizona head coach Jonathan Gannon stated regarding Nolen’s second knee injury:

You feel bad for the guy because I know he didn’t see this year going like it did. I know he’s got goals because he wasn’t out there, wasn’t able to achieve. But he has shown the ability to be a difference-maker on our defense and impact the game in the run and pass game and will be a huge piece of us moving forward.”

Williams sat out five games earlier this season because of a knee injury.

The Cardinals are 3-12-0 and in the middle of a seven-game losing streak. The addition of these two defenders brings Arizona’s total players on IR to 23.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...dinals-lose-two-defenders-for-final-two-games
 
Arizona Cardinals lose once again, are you confident in the direction of the franchise?

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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.



It is not necessarily quitting, but there is a mentality that begins to seep in as losses pile up.

While we can all agree that the luck of the Michael Wilson touchdown catch was something to behold, it was the catches that we would like to see made that hurt.

It was the throws we would like to see made that were missed and or intercepted that makes you wonder if they are at the point where they are just accepting it.

Think about it, Marvin Harrison Jr. has a really difficult catch that A.J. Terrell alien arms into and causes a missed catch.

Trey McBride drops a ball squeezed in between three players and takes an absolute shot for his troubles.

Jacoby Brissett throws a ball and it is errant, but Michael Wilson looks resigned to there is nothing he can do about it, while a journeyman former first round pick C.J. Henderson is hungrily making a play on the ball.

When superstars or your best players start to struggle to continue to play at their standard, that is when things become an issue.

What are your thoughts?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...u-confident-in-the-direction-of-the-franchise
 
The story of how the Bidwill family became owners of the Cardinals – Part 3

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The Arizona Cardinals are the longest tenured continuous operating pro football club in America. Only the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League have been in continuous operation longer in North America.

The Bidwill family has owned the Cardinals since 1932. Charles “Blue shirt Charley” Bidwill bought the team from Dr. David Jones, who was the second owner. A member of the Bidwill family has owned and operated the franchise ever since.

But how did the Bidwill family become owners of the franchise?

RELATED: BIDWILL OWNERS PART 1

RELATED: BIDWILL OWNERS PART 2


The first two parts are linked above. The information leading into this final part will explain quite a bit about the background of Charles Bidwill, who eventually was the VP of the Chicago Bears, his wife Violet’s ownership, the eventual takeover by Stormy and Bill Bidwill, and the Cardinals’ second NFL championship.

Here is the final part of this story.

Part 3

A new regime


Upon Charley Bidwill’s death prior to the 1947 NFL season, the club was now owned by his wife, Violet, who became the first female owner of a professional football team.

She took this seriously. Violet was of German and Irish descent, which meant she didn’t take anything from anybody. Violet wasn’t the type to be barefoot in the kitchen baking pies for her man when he got home from work. She was wealthy yet didn’t participate in Chicago’s social scene. Not a single photograph of her was ever published in the local paper in the society section.

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However, her name and likeness were a constant in the Chicago sports pages.

Now, keep in mind, she did spend money. And she was a woman. Upon her death, her estate auctioned off 1,500 pairs of shoes, 500 coats, jackets, and furs, scores of dresses, and a matching purse and hat for every dress. In all, they let out for bid 3,000 lots of sportswear.14

At first, the other NFL owners wanted her to assign a representative to take care of business at the league meetings and be given a team vote. You know, a man.

But that was not who she was. She had been around the Cardinals for a long time with Charley. Now, she did have a sensitive side. After the Cardinals won the 1947 title, she was in tears after the game, wishing her late husband had been alive to see it. She knew how much being a part of a team meant to him.

Violet was also tough. Instead of assigning the team president or outright selling the club, she decided she would take over the family businesses.15 All of them, including the dog tracks and horse racing tracks. And that also included the Cardinals.

She ran the Cardinals in a male-dominated world, attended all owners’ meetings, was placed on committees, made suggestions, voted on league matters, and kept the team going.

Officially, she is listed as the second Bidwill to own the franchise and the fourth majority owner.

Continued success and a new home


Charley and Violet were not able to conceive children, so at some point, they adopted two infant boys. They named them Charles W. Bidwell Jr., also known as “Stormy,” and his new younger brother, William Vogel “Bill” Bidwell. The two were not biological brothers. Stormy was born in 1928, while Bill was conceived three years later. Neither knew they were adopted until Violet passed away, and neither was ready to take on a position with a pro football team, as Stormy was 18 and Bill was 16 when Charley passed away.

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Coach Jim Conzelman guided the Cardinals to an 11-1-0 record in 1948, again, just one game ahead of the Bears, and defeated them in the season finale 24-21. Winning back-to-back Western Division titles placed them in a return to the NFL Championship Game, again against the 9-2-1 Eagles.

This time around, the game was hosted by the Eagles at Shibe Park in front of 28,864 fans and in a snowstorm, commonly called “The Philly Blizzard.” The game was 0-0 going into the final quarter, to which the Cardinals fumbled on their end of the field with 1:05 remaining, and the Eagles scored from five yards out to win 7-0.

Violet married Walter Wolfner in 1949, a one-time St. Louis coffee broker. She attended owners’ meetings and continued to perform league business just like the other owners, much to the chagrin of her male counterparts.

In 1951, Wolfner was named the team’s managing director, while Stormy became team President, and Bill was appointed team VP. At this juncture, Wolfner had control of the franchise.

Beginning in 1954, the Cardinals played an annual exhibition game in St. Louis called the “Cardinal Glennon Charity Game” to which the team signed a 10-year agreement.

Beginning in 1957, other wealthy men started to circulate and inquire with the NFL owners about getting an expansion club. The owners rebuffed them all and stated their 12-team entity was just fine. In 1958, one man was Texas oilman Lamar Hunt, who wished to place a team in Dallas. He was told the league had no plans for expansion, but the Cardinals might be for sale.

When Hunt met with Violet and Wolfner, they informed him they would consider selling him 20% of the Cardinals,16 but the team wasn’t going to be moved to Texas. She knew her football, and she was a shrewd businesswoman. In 1960, Hunt and seven other wealthy football minds founded the American Football League, commonly known as “AFL5.”

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That same year, the Cardinals did indeed relocate, but not to Dallas, but to St. Louis, 17 after news spread that the infant AFL would place a team in this Midwestern city. Halas then agreed to pay the Cardinals $500,000 over 10 years if they moved out of Chicago. The annual charity game and Wolfner’s business connections had set up the team to simply relocate there.

Violet passed away in 1962 from an allergic reaction to penicillin in a Miami Beach doctor’s office.

Phoenix rising


Violet Bidwill Wolfner left 90% control of the Cardinals to Stormy and Bill Bidwill.18 They would become the third and fourth Bidwell family members to own the team. Personality-wise, they were polar opposites. Wolfner was subsequently fired from his position. He would later sue, but did not win. The brothers found out about their adoptions in probate court.

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The Bidwill brothers operated the Cardinals until 1972, when Bill Bidwill bought out his brother for $6 million. Stormy Bidwill attempted to bid for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1975 but failed. He then ran Sportsman’s Race Track in Chicago before turning it over to his son in 1995.

The Cardinals played their home games at Busch Stadium from 1960-1965 and then at Busch Memorial Stadium from 1966-1987. Bill Bidwill tried for years to get the City of St. Louis to build an indoor stadium, but to no avail. The Cardinals never hired a General Manager while they played their home games in St. Louis.

Bill Bidwill decided to move the franchise to Arizona in 1988 and cemented the deal with a handshake with both local and state officials.19 The Cardinals had their choice of four cities: Jacksonville, Baltimore, Phoenix, and St. Louis.

They were christened the “Phoenix Cardinals” and promised a new $150 million stadium, which had been on hold awaiting Bidwill’s decision. One of the features was a retractable roof.

In 1994, the name was altered to the “Arizona Cardinals” to better represent the entire state in an attempt to gather fans across the entire state.

On November 3, 2025, Charles “Stormy” Bidwill, Jr., passed away at the age of 97. Bill had died on October 2, 2019, at the age of 88. Bill Bidwill had five children, one of whom is Michael J. Bidwill. He is now the Principal Owner, Chairman, and President of the Arizona Cardinals.

And the fifth Bidwill family member to own the team. Today, Forbes values the Cardinals at $5.5 billion, up from $4.3 billion in 2024.

For most of the 1930s through the 1960s, the NFL was mostly seven men and one woman: George Halas (Bears), Tim Mara (Giants), Art Rooney (Steelers), Curly Lambeau (Packers), George Preston Marshall (Redskins), Bert Bell (Eagles), and Charles and Violet Bidwill (Cardinals).

Notes

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14 Adeline Fitzgerald, “She Seldom Wore Her Many Hats,” Toledo Blade, December 2, 1963

15 Darren Urban, “Violet Bidwell’s Imprint Remains with Cardinals,” azcardinals.com, March 11, 2025

16 John Eisenberg, “Epilogue,” The League, Basic Books, 2018

17 Robert Morrison, “St. Louis Gets Pro Football Chicago Cardinals,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, March 14, 1960

18 Bob Underwood, “Remembering Violet Bidwell Wolfner,” The Big Red Zone, January 10, 2020

19 Lisa Harris, “Football Cardinals to leave St. Louis,” UPI, January 15, 1988

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-family-became-owners-of-the-cardinals-part-3
 
With the First Pick 5.0: Cardinals inch closer to the first overall pick

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Another lost season. Geez. Not the Christmas gift Arizona Cardinals fans were looking for.

Remember back in the mid-teens when Bruce Arians had the Cardinals going through winning seasons and in the playoffs for several years? Those were exciting times to be a Cardinals fan. Being a good team during the regular season, then winning entry-level playoff games, and ending up in the NFC Championship Game with an opportunity to be in that year’s Super Bowl. It truly was a magical time to be a fan of the Cardinals.

10 wins, followed by 11 victories, and then that 13-3-0 2015 season that ended with a 49-15 loss to the Carolina Panthers in the NFC Championship Game.

RELATED: MCBRIDE AND BAKER ELECTED TO 2026 PRO BOWL

And those squads weren’t the best the franchise had to offer. But they were consistently a playoff team. That was exciting for the fanbase to see their team in the postseason for several seasons in a row.

How many seasons yielded double-digit losses? 2025 represents the 31st in franchise history. 16 since being named the “Arizona Cardinals.” Add another four since relocating from St. Louis to Phoenix.

And now, Arizona has the opportunity to yet again own the first overall pick in next April’s NFL draft. Hell no, we aren’t proud of that fact. And yet, here we are again.

Can the Cardinals end up with 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 2-13-0


Last five games: 0-5. Last game: Lost Vikings 16-13

Winnable opponents remaining: Raiders, Cowboys

Ranking last week: 32 (unchanged)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .283

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#31, Pick #2

Las Vegas Raiders 2-13-0


Last five games: 0-5. Last game: Lost Texans 23-21

Winnable opponents remaining: Giants

Ranking last week: 31 (unchanged)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .267

#30, Pick #3

Cleveland Browns 3-12-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Lost Bills 23-20

Winnable opponents remaining: Bengals, maybe Steelers

Ranking last week: 29 (up 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .467

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#29, Pick #4

New York Jets 3-12-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Lost Saints 29-6

Winnable opponents remaining: none

Ranking last week: 28 (up 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .767 (highest)

#28, Pick #5

Tennessee Titans 3-12-0


Last five games: 2-3. Last game: Beat Chiefs 26-9

Winnable opponents remaining: Saints

Ranking last week: 30 (down 2)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .533

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#27, Pick #6

Arizona Cardinals 3-12-0


Last five games: 0-5. Last game: Lost Falcons 26-19

Winnable opponents remaining: Bengals

Ranking last week: 27 (unchanged)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .533

#26, Pick #7

Washington Commanders 4-11-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Lost Eagles 29-18

Winnable opponents remaining: Cowboys

Ranking last week: 25 (up 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .550

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#25, Pick #8

New Orleans Saints 5-10-0


Last five games: 3-2. Last game: Beat Jets 29-6

Winnable opponents remaining: Titans, Falcons

Ranking last week: 26 (down 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .300

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...rdinals-inch-closer-to-the-first-overall-pick
 
President Trump: Let’s rename football. Hmmm…..

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The World Cup is Earth’s finest sports tournament. Every four years, the men’s tournament is enacted, while the women also play every four years, but are sandwiched on a two-year interval. This means that every two years, a World Cup is played.

It is an important tournament because it pits countries around the globe against each other in the sport of football.

RELATED: WORLD CUP DRAW 2026 EXPLAINED

The 2026 men’s World Cup is being played in North and Central America this time around, beginning June 11.

World Cup draw 2026, explained with USMNT’s best and worst case scenarios https://t.co/jRqDORtHZN

— SB Nation (@SBNation) December 4, 2025

There are 12 groups with four clubs in each group. Teams play each other in their group with points given for wins and tie games (labeled “draws”), and zero points for a loss. At the end of the group stage, the top two clubs from each group advance.

Exhibition games, commonly called “friendlies,” have been going on since last year. These give each World Cup participant tune-up games, commonly called “matches.”

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Normally, one country will host the World Cup. This time around, three countries will host games: the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

The American host cities are Seattle, New York, San Francisco, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Boston, Atlanta, Houston, Miami, Dallas, and Philadelphia. Two Canadian cities will host contests: Vancouver and Toronto. In Mexico, Guadalajara, Monterrey, and Mexico City will showcase their cities.

All of the U.S. stadiums are NFL venues, while the Canadian arenas are CFL stadiums. The governing bodies of the game of soccer worldwide require natural grass, and the field has to be completely flat without a crown, which is a feature that many football fields install in order for the turf to drain properly.

Around the world, the sport of soccer is called “football.” Why? What is the reason?

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The answer? Soccer has always been called football. Always. It is the first. It is the game from which all of the other games that have “football” in their title were derived. “Soccer” is not that game’s real name. Its real name is football.

The word “soccer” came later.

The Romans invented soccer as a method to keep their soldiers in shape. The rules would differ from region to region, which made it difficult to host tournaments or play against other nations. Finally, as the world became less violent and countries began to take shape, the English put down on paper standardized rules they titled “Association Football.” It is what the world still follows.

Today, the worldwide organizing group that governs the sport is named the “Federation Internationale de Football Association,” commonly known as “FIFA.” It oversees competition globally, which governs all soccer leagues and laws, tournaments, and events.

Football (soccer) came first. At different intervals, other sports began to form. All of these games became an offshoot of football (soccer), with some different rules, terminology, field markings, and equipment. But they all began with football (soccer).

It’s like a man named Sam Jones who has a son who he names Joe Jones. Then, his son is named Brandon Jones. Three generations, but are all called Jones, because the grandfather had the last name of Jones.

The sport of football is only called “soccer” in North America. Everywhere else on this planet, it is called “football.” It was the first Jones.

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The rules of football played in the United States are officially called “American Football.” The rules of the game in Canada are officially called “Canadian Football.” Then there is “Gaelic Football,” “Rugby Football,” and “Arena Football.” In Australia, they have “Australian Rules Football,” “Rugby League Q,” and “Rugby Football Union.” All three are substantially different games.

The word “soccer” comes from the word “Association.”

Playing “Association Football” got shortened to playing “Assoccer” to “Soccer.”

Rugby Football became shortened to “Rugby.” American Football became shortened to “Football.” We call “American Football” simply “football” because it is the most popular form of football that exists in our area. In Latin America, the game is called “Futbol,” which is Spanish for “football.”

And now that the men’s World Cup is about to kick off, President Donald Trump got involved.

RELATED: HOW THE U.S.A. MEN’S TEAM AVOIDED A TOUGH DRAW

All of the teams are assigned to all 12 groups by a draw. This event occurred at the Kennedy Center in Washington. In attendance was FIFA president Gianni Infantino, and then three heads of state who took part in a ceremonial drawing of their respective nations into the groups.

Trump stated:

“(The World Cup)is football, there’s no question about it. We have to come up with another name for the NFL. It really doesn’t make sense when you think about it.”

Trump decided to throw out an idea that he has been toying with. Since the rest of the world calls soccer “football,” maybe North America should come up with a new name for its sport. No longer should the professional, college, high school, and recreational levels use the name “football” to describe their game. Why not just come up with a new name?

Then, the entire globe would refer to soccer as “football.” And there wouldn’t be any confusion. See how easy that is? In fact, the word “soccer” would then become obsolete.

Trump indicated that the crossover with football identities provides a conflict.

Trump: But when you look at what has happened to the football, soccer in the US. We never call it that because we have another conflict with a thing called football. But when you think about it, this is football, there is no question. We have to come up with another name for the… pic.twitter.com/oxHUm3nREA

— Acyn (@Acyn) December 5, 2025

Which may not be a bad idea.

Obviously, football (soccer) got its name because the game is played mostly with the feet and is descriptive of the sport. Just like basketball and baseball. American Football also offers kicking the ball with the foot, but only on certain plays and in certain opportunities. The majority of play is not conducted with the foot being placed on the ball like football (soccer) does. In fact, except for the placement kicker and punter, kicking the ball on the field of play is a penalty. So is punting the ball into the crowd.

And also consider that the ball used in American Football is actually spherical in shape, officially called a “prolate spheroid.” Whereas almost every other sport calls it “a ball” because it is round. So, if the ball utilized isn’t round, and if there isn’t that much kicking involved throughout the entirety of the game, maybe “foot” and “ball” are terrible choices in which to refer to this sport. Trump may be onto something.

Here are some suggestions:


“Piggly Wiggly”

This gives a nod to the beginnings of American Football, where the inside portion that held the air was a pig’s bladder, and the ball’s protective exterior was made from a pig’s hide. Today, they are either manufactured from cowhide leather, synthetic leather, or rubber with a vinyl bladder that is less susceptible to leaks.

“Kill the Man with the Ball”

Because of the way society views nationwide shootings, perhaps this should be toned down a bit, but the title is certainly correct. The job of the defense is to plant their opponents into the turf. A less offensive moniker might be, “Pop off on the fellow with the prolate spheroid.”

“Foosball”

Yeah, yeah, we know there is a bar game of the same name. But it is still funny when “The Waterboy’s” mom, Helen Boucher, says it, and it should stick.

“Gridironball”

The playing surface of any American Football game has been referred to as a gridiron. It is simply a metaphor for the field itself. The Boston Herald in 1897 coined this phrase at the annual Harvard-Yale game because from the higher seats, the field markings appeared like a stove gridiron with its painted yardage lines. It could be shortened to “Gridiron.” The word “ball” could be substituted with “Spheroid,” “Orb,” or “Globule.”

“American Football”

Why not just require all forms and levels of the game add the word “American” to all of its league, conference, divisional, and championship names? Several leagues in the past have already used it: the “World League of American Football,” “American Professional Football Association,” and the “Alliance of American Football.” The game’s originator, Walter Camp, described the game in “Walter Camp’s Book of College Sports,” circa 1900. Chapter 5 is entitled, “Foot-ball in America.” He states, “The rules governing American foot-ball are an outgrowth or development of the English Rugby foot-ball game.”

It seems more that when the sport of rugby was being played by American colleges in the Northeast, and then Camp began to tinker with rules and invented a brand-new game that we know now as American Football, Camp should have used the word “American” more as a description of his new game.

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Things in life just get shortened. A digital versatile disc is now a DVD. Mister becomes Mr. Tsp is the measurement of a teaspoon. Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation is shortened to LASER. The NCAA is actually the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

Up north, it began as “Canadians Rules Football” and remains as such. That game is very similar to American Football, and is seen as a sister sport. However, there are lots of rule changes. The fields are not comparable. Scoring is different. And terminology is not the same.

But it is still a game of downs, yards gained, touchdowns, passing, runs, blocks, and tackles.

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The reason is that the Canadian game kept a lot of its roots tied closely to rugby, whereas American Football did not. The CFL came together as a merger between two rugby leagues, and then melded into the game of American Football with its own rules, which honored their legacy sport.

And really, did anyone take Trump seriously when he said that football in North America should come up with its own name? Most likely, he was doing this tongue-in-cheek since he was around all of those football (soccer) dignitaries. In the 1980s, Trump owned his own pro football team, the New Jersey Generals, so he is very aware of what the game of football is in the United States.

Some things just get their own identity and retain it.

In North America, football will always be football. And soccer will always be that other football game.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...050/president-trump-lets-rename-football-hmmm
 
2026 Pro Bowl squads. Where is Cardinals EDGE Josh Sweat?

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Quick: What NFC pass rusher with double-digit sack numbers was the only player not voted to this year’s Pro Bowl?

If you said the Arizona Cardinals EDGE rusher Josh Sweat, you would be correct. He has 11.0 sacks and was not named to the Pro Bowl as a starter, reserve, or alternate.

RELATED: TREY MCBRIDE AND BUDDA BAKER ELECTED TO 2026 PRO BOWL

Usually, teams with losing records find themselves with very few members of the current year’s Pro Bowl and All-Pro squads, which is very true with the Cardinals, as TE Trey McBride and S Budda Baker were the lone representatives from Arizona’s lineup. Even the reserve and alternate spots are devoid of any players from the Cards.

But Sweat has had a tremendous season. His 4.0 forced fumbles this season not only lead the NFL but are also a career high. In 2021, while his Philadelphia Eagles teammates DE Brandon Graham and DT Fletcher Cox were named starters on the Pro Bowl, Sweat was voted as an alternate and was called up to play when Nick Bosa of the San Francisco 49ers became injured. So far, that has been his only taste of the coveted All-Star mention.

The Pro Bowl is no longer a game to watch, but the recognition is critical among NFL players. There are very few individual achievement awards given out each season, in addition to the MVP and Offensive and Defensive Player of the Year trophies. The Pro Bowl and All-Pro are important, especially during new contract negotiations.

And the talented pass rusher isn’t taking it lightly. Sweat vented to ESPN Arizona’s Josh Weinfuss:

“I’m upset because there are only two individual things that you can get and it’s Pro Bowl and All-Pro. And I got one taken away from me. I’m just flat out saying it was taken away from me — and it ain’t the first time.”

Sweat matched his career high from 2022 in sacks with 11.0 this year. It is his first season in Arizona after signing a four-year deal this past spring worth up to $76.4 million with $41 million guaranteed.

In addition to the sacks and forced fumbles, the remainder of his stats so far are 15 starts, 27 total tackles, 12 tackles for loss, one fumble recovery, 16 QB hits, two batted passes, 26 pressures, seven knockdowns, and eight hurries. He has played on 497 snaps, which is 50% of all defensive plays.

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Arizona’s defensive scheme is very familiar to Sweat in that head coach Jonathan Gannon was once the DC for the Eagles, as well as the Cardinals’ current DC Nick Rallis, who was the linebacker coach with Philly.

While with Philadelphia, Sweat was stationed on one side of the defense in every game, while with Arizona, he is allowed to move from side to side and play free, similar to DE Myles Garrett of the Cleveland Browns. This prevents the opposing offensive line’s gameplan to eliminate double teams and schemes designed just for him.

Currently, Sweat is ranked #9 in sacks. Garrett leads this category with 22 and is chasing the single-season record of 22.5 sacks.

In all fairness, and perhaps the best explanation for Sweat’s omission, back in the day, the Pro Bowl and All-Pro teams were voted on by the players and coaches. Now, fans vote online. And not only that, but they can vote every single day. It’s not like folks have one vote and that’s it. So, the more active teams can – and do – have a legion of people within their organization that are in the business of voting their own players in.

Basically, voters brought other players who are more familiar onto the list instead of Sweat. Which is a fallacy of the voting process. Makes zero sense.

Just imagine if the Cardinals had 30 people, no, make that 75, whose job it is to vote on their own athletes every day. Then perhaps Arizona would have six players named to the Pro Bowl, just like the San Francisco 49ers have accomplished. Food for thought for seasons to come.

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Sweat has seen firsthand the illusion that is today’s Pro Bowl:

“It’s like I don’t know what else I could have done at that point. I don’t know what else I could have done. Now previous years, maybe you could have said he didn’t have the popularity, maybe he didn’t get the fan vote.”

He wanted to have an impressive season in his first year in Arizona in order to justify the huge contract the organization gave him. And it is his feeling that he has produced in a big way. Yet, his production wasn’t noticed or acknowledged.

He continued:

“It does still signify that you’re one of the top guys in the league, regardless of how you made it,” Sweat said. “You were one of those pictures up there initially that got to be seen, and I get nothing. So, that’s why it’s important.”

Ditto. That’s why it’s important.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...owl-squads-where-is-cardinals-edge-josh-sweat
 
Budda Baker will miss Arizona Cardinals game against Bengals

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There are definitely a lot of questions that this regime needs to answer, one of which is about injuries and why they are so downplayed.

Yet, they do not control the concussion protocol, so I guess we can push that onto someone else, but the reality is we need to know more about why Budda Baker came back into the loss for the Arizona Cardinals against the Atlanta Falcons and why he is now ruled out with a concussion for the Cincinnati Bengals.

Baker joins left tackle Paris Johnson Jr. and cornerback Kei’Trel Clark for players that will miss the game against the Bengals.

Baker left the game but was cleared by the NFL’s doctor to re-enter the game, before experiencing more concussion symptoms the next few days.

This is an issue within the NFL and something that the Cardinals need to be vigilant about. There was no reason Baker should have gone back in the game. Especially in a season like this.

Now, will we see Baker again this season? Will we see Baker in a Cardinals uniform again?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...l-miss-arizona-cardinals-game-against-bengals
 
Arizona Cardinals place Paris Johnson Jr. on injured reserve

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In a season that has been nothing but disappointing, the Arizona Cardinals have another big name on the injured reserve.

The Cardinals announced today that Paris Johnson Jr. will be placed on injured reserve, with additional moves for the game on Sunday.

From the team:

Signed defensive lineman Zach Carter to the active roster from the practice squad

– Elevated cornerback Jaden Davis and wide receiver Steven Sims to the active roster from the practice squad as standard elevations

– Placed offensive lineman Paris Johnson Jr. on injured reserve

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

Carter will wear jersey #90, Davis will wear #26 and Sims will wear #80.

Not the season anyone envisioned for this franchise. PJJ was turning in another upper echelon season, but between how bad the team is and his injuries, it will get overlooked.

Of course I am sure running it back next year will work.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...als-place-paris-johnson-jr-on-injured-reserve
 
A Cardinals defender that nobody is talking about

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The Arizona Cardinals will have a lot to consider after the final game of this disastrous 2025 season. Holes everywhere, on a roster that was supposed to be a good team. And to top off the madness, this team began the season 2-0-0.

At 3-11-0, there isn’t much to celebrate. The roster will certainly look a lot different going into next season’s training camp because heads will roll. Who knows? There might be a lot of new faces in the coaching circle as well.

RELATED: MCBRIDE AND BAKER NAMED TO 2026 PRO BOWL

The Cardinals’ defense has been challenged all year. The offense at times could not finish drives, and the defense was then forced to stay on the field instead of resting up.

What is the state of this defense? What needs improvement? What positions need new blood?

One defender that isn’t getting much ink is LB Akeem Davis-Gaither. He is quietly having a very good year, yet nobody seems to be noticing. And he has been relatively healthy, which is a huge plus down the stretch in any NFL season, and received quite a few Pro Bowl votes, although not a top vote-getter.

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After 15 games starting at the WILL linebacker, Davis-Gaither has 107 total tackles. That ranks #2 on the team behind S Budda Baker (111) and #30 in the league. He is not a great pass rusher and isn’t usually the extra man sent on blitz packages. However, he excels in run support.

He learned these skills at the college level, balling out at Appalachian State, which is known for its defensive prowess and power schemes.

This is Davis-Gaither’s first year in Arizona. He chose to come to the desert and play, signing a two-year deal worth $10 million. He was a fourth-round pick of the Cincinnati Bengals in 2020 after a great Senior Bowl week.

He was a team captain in 2024 (on special teams) and played a career-high 311 special teams snaps. He also played a career-high 534 defensive snaps in all 17 games, starting seven times. He started the final six games of the season in the absence of Logan Wilson, who was injured. In three of those six starts to end the season, he had 12 or more tackles. He had an interception and four pass breakups.

Davis-Gaither was named the Sun Belt Conference Defensive Player of the Year in his senior college season and was also selected First Team All-Sun Belt his final year and Second Team All-Sun Belt in his junior campaign.

With the Bengals, he had very few starts in his first two seasons and played mainly on special teams, making tackles on kickoffs and the punt return team. In 2021, he suffered a foot injury late in the season that landed him on IR. Other than that, he has been very durable in college and at the NFL level.

Akeem Davis-Gaither snatches it! #GoApp #AppStateNFL pic.twitter.com/Ea6c4lvb29

— App State Football (@AppState_FB) November 24, 2025

But with the Cardinals, he is making up for lost time.

His playing style is aggressive. Each week, his tackling totals are near the top. So far this season, Davis-Gaither has had four games with double-digit tackles, including 11 in the last game against the Atlanta Falcons. In addition, he has tallied six additional games in which he has had seven or eight tackles. Which means he is consistent.

The defense will need some new bodies this upcoming off-season, just like the class that was inked last year. Davis-Gaither, Josh Sweat, and Calais Campbell have all been instrumental with this year’s defense and were each a great free-agent signing.

And although Sweat and Campbell get the headlines, it is Davis-Gaither who is quietly sitting in the background and grinding it out every game.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...rdinals-defender-that-nobody-is-talking-about
 
Arizona Cardinals sleepwalk to embarrassing loss to Cincinnati Bengals

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It now isn’t even fun during garbage time.

The Arizona Cardinals are an embarrassment, the NFL teams are trolling them now, as they have decided that they can attempt passes week in and week out to their offensive linemen.

And why not? The Cardinals opponents are 2 of 3 and have a touchdown and a first down. The only reason they are not perfect is because Jake Matthews dropped it.

Now, Joe Burrow didn’t even play in the fourth quarter, the Cardinals offense mustered barely over 200 yards total, against the worst ranked defense in the NFL.

They scored 14 points against a team giving up over 30 per game.

The Arizona Cardinals lost to the Cincinnati Bengals 37-14.

They again did nothing on either side of the ball that warrants bringing back anyone on this staff.

The way the effort looks from some players is concerning as well.

Are they completely checked out?

There isn’t much more to say at this point. We are onto the Rams and finishing the season up.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...lk-to-embarrassing-loss-to-cincinnati-bengals
 
Cardinals tight end Trey McBride breaks NFL record

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There are certain things in life that are just a certainty.

Marrying for love will always trump marrying for money. Change will always exist. Mankind will continue to seek the meaning of life. The love of a mother never wavers. No such thing as being too kind to others. And that last Oreo will get eaten.

RELATED: CARDINALS SLEEPWALK IN LOSS TO BENGALS

One thing was certain heading into the Arizona Cardinals’ contest against the Cincinnati Bengals: TE Trey McBride was going to break the NFL record for “the most receptions by a tight end in a single season.”

The record was 116 catches set by former Cardinal Zack Ertz in 2018 while he was playing for the Philadelphia Eagles. The fact that McBride had two games remaining on the schedule needing an even dozen catches seemed not be an issue for McBride. Going into the Bengals game, he had 109 receptions.

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The Cardinals lost 37-14 in a game in which they looked lackluster and played like crap. The team was down 30-7 early in the third quarter and did not get any better. The entire offense tallied 254 total yards as the running game had a mere 42 yards among three ballcarriers.

But McBride had his usual good game despite the losing effort. He finished with 13 targets, 10 catches for 76 yards, a 7.6 yards per reception average, and scored a single touchdown.

The completion that tied the record was just a four-yard out pattern with just over five minutes left in the game. After an incompletion, Brissett went right back to McBride and converted a five-yard completion on a second-and-10 with 4:42 left to play.

McBride’s reception log against Cincinnati:

Q2: 14:52 – 15-yards

Q2: 0:41 – 3-yards

Q3: 7:23 – 1-yard

Q3: 0:46 – 12-yards

Q4: 14:05 – 9-yards

Q4: 12:14 – 4-yards

Q4: 5:09 – 4-yards

Q4: 4:42 – 5-yards

Q4: 2:29 – 5-yards

Q4: 1:50 – 18-yards TD

Before kickoff, McBride was ranked #1 in receptions in the league, #2 in targets, #3 in touchdowns, #4 in first down conversions, #6 in total yards gained, and #25 in pass completions of 20+ yards.

Arizona was down 37-7 with 6:20 left in the game. Cincinnati punted, which pinned the Cardinals down on their own eight-yard line. A fourth-and-three with 2:54 remaining netted 15-yards to WR Michael Wilson and a first down at the Bengals’ 25-yard line.

On first down, QB Jacoby Brissett hit McBride for five yards to the 20 with 2:29 left in the contest. Brissett was then sacked, followed by a four-yard run by RB Emari Demercado on a third-and-seven at the two-minute warning.

7 ➡️ 85

📺:FOX pic.twitter.com/smNB7yfuaQ

— Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) December 28, 2025

After the official timeout, on the very first play, McBride lined up in the slot to the left. Brissett had to fend off the pass rush of DE Cedric Johnson, stepped up, and then found McBride in the end zone, who was being smothered by S Tycen Anderson.

This marks the third NFL record that McBride has set this season. Last week in the Cardinals’ 40-20 loss to the Houston Texans, McBride set two records: 1) “Most consecutive games by a tight end with five or more catches,” and 2) “First tight end in NFL history to have 100 catches or more in back-to-back seasons.”

With the first record, McBride now had 16 (now 17) consecutive games, which broke the record of 15 held by Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs in 2018. With the second record, he caught 111 passes last season and after the Texans game had 105 receptions.

Yes, the Cardinals’ late touchdown to McBride was otherwise meaningless after being taken to the woodshed in the 37-14 loss to the Bengals.

But silver linings do appear on the gloomiest days.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...nals-tight-end-trey-mcbride-breaks-nfl-record
 
Arizona Cardinals open as massive underdogs ahead of final matchup of season

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Any Given Sunday.

It’s not just a movie title, and a decent film for professional football, but it’s a true story.

Except this week. There’s no chance the Arizona Cardinals beat the Los Angeles Rams, as the Rams continue to battle for playoff positioning and the Cardinals continue to battle for a better draft pick for the second time in three seasons.

That’s why FanDuel Sportsbook has opened this week with the Arizona Cardinals as 9.5-point underdogs.

The Rams haven’t even played the Atlanta Falcons on Monday Night Football yet, in Atlanta where they are huge favorites as well.

The Cardinals are terrible, and that may be putting it lightly, and the Rams will be fighting for that fourth seed in the playoffs because that is the difference between playing with the NFC South and the Philadelphia Eagles.

What do we see next week? Do the Cardinals give up 40 again? Will that be the swan song for Jonathan Gannon and company?

This week can’t get over fast enough.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...dinals-los-angeles-rams-week-18-odds-gambling
 
Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon states his job status is “good”

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For the past four weeks, it has been mentioned on numerous media sites and Arizona Cardinals podcasts that, as the season’s end, head coach Jonathan Gannon would be relieved of his duties.

After all, after beginning the year 2-0-0, the team has gone 1-13-0 since. They had quite a few games won in the last few minutes that got away from them, lost eight contests by less than a touchdown, and have been blown out in five games, including last Sunday’s 37-14 loss to one of the league’s worst teams, the Cincinnati Bengals.

RELATED: COACHING CANDIDATES TO REPLACE GANNON

But Gannon is saying to hold the phone regarding that firing. It won’t happen to him.

The final week of the 2025 NFL schedule is this upcoming weekend. Arizona plays its final game on the road against the Los Angeles Rams, who have already secured a spot in the postseason tournament. Kickoff is the afternoon game and broadcast on FOX. The Rams won the first match 45-17 four weeks ago.

The Cardinals are currently 3-13-0 and have an eight-game losing streak. Every club in the NFC West Division has earned a playoff spot except for Arizona.

In Gannon’s Monday press conference, he was asked if he would be in the same seat for next Monday’s presser.

Every NFL game will be played by next Sunday without a final Monday Night Football contest. The day after is referred to as “Black Monday” when head coaches and GMs get fired. Already, the New York Football Giants and Tennessee Titans have terminated their head coaches. It is estimated that as many as six teams will release their head coach, and Gannon has resided on every single one of these lists.

When asked about the possibility of him still being the head coach of the Cardinals next week, Gannon stated:

“Yeah. I have confidence in myself.”

Gannon may have confidence in himself as a football coach in this league and his ability to guide grown-ass men, but what about winning? Losing 13 games is nothing if this were Major League Baseball or the NHL. However, the NFL has a 17-game season. That’s it. Why does he believe that losing 13 of 16 games so far is a confidence builder?

Are there conversations being had about making changes?

He added:

“No one’s happy. I’m not happy. The players aren’t happy. Through adversity, you have to change. I have to change, and we have to change some things. But we’ll get to that. I’ve been through years like this and am not proud of them. But they happen. You learn, and you grow.”

RELATED: CARDINALS FANS READY TO MOVE ON FROM GANNON

Gannon recognized that the media and the Cardinals fanbase have been discussing his job status for the past month. And he was asked if he had been told that he is safe for next year.

“I’m not going to get into all that. But I feel good.”

There was some speculation that the Cardinals might sit most of their starters and play their second-team players and some practice squad members against the Rams. Gannon wasn’t agreeing to that assessment:

“That locker room has a lot to play for this week. And they know that. We’ll have our best effort moving forward to go to LA. They have the Arizona Cardinal name on their back and the Arizona Cardinal name on their chest.”
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Before this season, the Cardinals were mentioned as a dark horse that would surprise everyone in the league about how good they would be. Of course, the exact opposite occurred. An 8-9-0 club from last season just fell off the face of the earth and, in all likelihood, will end the season with 14 losses.

As his players clean out their lockers and watch the playoffs on their own big screen TV sets, what message does Gannon have for them regarding going forward?

“Two weeks from now, they will be watching these playoff games, and all these emotions are going to come up. They’re not going to be good emotions. That’s how I will feel and know that’s how they will feel. So, maximize the effort to go play a game and go out a winner.”

And so now, if Gannon does survive Black Monday, what will be his look into the offseason?

“I’ll review all that when the time comes. It’s a healthy blend of being focused and a little bit of forward thinking, evaluating everything. The first change that will be made will be to look at myself.”

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...jonathan-gannon-states-his-job-status-is-good
 
As the Arizona Cardinals end a historically bad season, are you confident in the direction of the franchise?

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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 Arizona Cardinals fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.



Happy New Year’s Eve one and all.

As we head into the 2026 offseason, we know the Arizona Cardinals are one of the worst teams in the NFL.

So, heading into the final game of the season we know they are unlikely to win, but are you confident of the direction of the organization?

Jess and I talked about it, and the question becomes, who are you building around?

I think before this season the hope was it would be Walter Nolen and Will Johnson, but they’ve been banged up and ineffective.

Offensively you’ve got a a tight end who put up a historic season that didn’t do a whole lot for the win column. So he’s clearly a building block, but not necessarily the franchise player that will alter things.

Those are the questions now, are you confident in the direction of the team?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...u-confident-in-the-direction-of-the-franchise
 
5 things that happen in every NFL game we don’t even think about

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As fans, we watch a game of football in person or on the tube. We enjoy the contest, especially if our team wins.

But just about everything you see on the field wasn’t always part of the game. The game of American Football has evolved from its beginnings in the late 1800s. Rules are added constantly. Things change. Actions are altered. Rules are adopted to make the game easier to play or to assist in player safety.

American Football evolved from the game of rugby. Rugby began as a new sport that sprang up from soccer. Both rugby and American Football still have circumstances, rules, strategy, equipment, and terminology from the game of soccer.

Rugby has a kickoff because soccer has a kickoff. American Football just followed their lead. In soccer, there are punts, interceptions, tackles, offsides, halftimes, sudden death, goal lines, sidelines, changing ends of the field, the word “goal,” positions called fullbacks, halfbacks, and center, plus have 11 players that compete on the field. Sound familiar?

There are also functions during the game of American Football that we see every competition, but just don’t notice because it has always been this way.

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Would you notice if the goal posts were painted red instead of yellow? Of course, but their origins were they were painted white. What about all those lines on a football field? Every 10 yards, there is a number painted on the field to distinguish each increment of 10, which makes sense since there are four downs to make 10 yards before a new set of downs is obtained.

But why is there a line also painted every five yards, in between the 10-yard increments? Why does the game need these lines? The origins of the game were that one team was given 15 plays to go the length of the field and score. That was later changed to the offense given three plays to make five yards, and if successful, given a new set of downs. And even though the distance was later changed to 10 yards, the markings at every five-yard increment were already an institution and have remained.

What else goes on in every game that has its own story? There isn’t enough ink to cover them all, but here are five to start us off with.

Referee zebra stripes


Almost every NFL team has stripes somewhere on its uniform or helmet. It is a way to incorporate other accent colors into their look. Back before World War II, several teams used striping on the front or sleeves of their jerseys. This trend came from soccer and remains popular even today.

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The game referees wear black pants and shoes, and shirts that have vertical black and white stripes. These men are affectionately called “zebras” during a contest. In the origins of the game, all referees wore solid white apparel from their shirts and pants, with a black bow tie and black leggings, and a white British walking cap. Why the change, and when?

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The fact that the game officials wear black and white striped shirts is just something we are used to. But it wasn’t always what it is today.

The reason for the color choice and the striping is on purpose. It is designed to distinguish referees from players, and the color choice is to provide the idea of being neutral.

Similar to baseball, the home team wore white or light-colored jerseys while the visiting team was adorned with darker clothing. The problem was, the referee dressed in all-white would sometimes be confused with a teammate.

A longtime high-school and college sports official from Michigan named Lloyd Olds was working a college game in which one team was wearing all-white uniforms. Olds was a field judge in a game between Michigan State Normal College and an Arizona college played in Ypsilanti, Michigan. On one play, the quarterback threw a pass to Olds, who dropped the ball on purpose.

Olds had a friend in the sporting goods business and went to visit him at Moe’s Sports Shop in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He ordered a white button-down shirt with black fabric stripes sewn on the front, back, and sleeves, which would be appropriate no matter what color any of the teams were wearing. He began to wear these shirts during games. The NFL adopted the zebra shirt for their officials in 1941 from Olds’ original design.

Time kept on the field


Watching a soccer game, right before halftime, as the game clock is winding down, an electronic sign is raised along the sidelines with the numeral “3” on it. The entire stadium sees this and understands what the Number 3 is for. It means that three more minutes is added to the first half of play. Why?

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The game of soccer originated from Roman soldiers as a method to keep them in shape. But it was the English who wrote the rules and placed them on paper. Now, everyone plays by the same rules no matter where your team travels.

The English decided to install a method how to stop teams from wasting the game clock. Often, a team would fake an injury in the waning moments, which would squander valuable clock. Or take their time with substitutions. Over-celebration of a goal scored can cost minutes. Or any number of situations designed to keep the seconds ticking away without actually playing.

So, the referee calculates how much time-wasting and stoppage occurred and adds it back to the game clock. In the example above, it was three minutes for that first half.

The key component here is that the referee decided this. The reason? The game clock is on his wrist. It’s not on the scoreboard; the official time is located on his wristwatch.

The game of American Football uses the same method. The stadium clock at an NFL game may show how much time remains, but the actual “official time” is on a wristwatch. That responsibility was held by the field judge or umpire for the longest duration, but now it is the referee’s responsibility.

How many times has the referee turned on his microphone and asked the stadium clock keeper to add or delete time from the stadium clock?

That is because the stadium clock keeper doesn’t keep the official time. That duty is kept on the field just like in soccer today. Basically, the stadium clock is for reference only.

Two-minute warning


This portion of the game affects the game clock. It is performed in the professional ranks, such as the National Football League. Other pro leagues like Arena Football One, the Canadian Football League, and the United Football League all have this rule, although the time remaining may be different.

When the game clock winds down to two minutes to play in the second and fourth quarters in the NFL, the game is stopped, similar to a timeout. The amount of time elapsed for this stoppage is also two minutes in duration.

What is the function of this rule? The long answer is: For over half of the history of the NFL, the lack of scoreboards and the fact that the official time is kept on the field was an issue for players, coaches, and fans, and a warning was needed.

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Because soccer kept the time on the field, American Football did the same. As crowds for games became larger, patrons wanted to know how much time was left in each quarter, especially at the end of the game. The problem was that most NFL stadiums used baseball parks, which had time-of-day clocks but had no use for game clocks. Essentially, the only person in the stadium who knew how much time was left was the game official who wore the wristwatch.

After installing the clocks in NFL stadiums in the 1930s, the official game time remained with the Umpire. This meant the clock on the wall was not necessarily the correct time left in each quarter, but was used more as a “reference point” so that fans, players, and coaches could at least get an idea of where the time stood in the game.

With this system, time at the end of each quarter would often be a lot less than was assumed. Coaches had their strategies and often needed to know where the game stood in situations of punting the ball with the hope that the defense would hold and their offense would get the ball back, or keep the ball and run a play on fourth down.

The stadium clock was ruled “unofficial.”

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Even before the NFL required stadiums to install game clocks in stadiums, players and coaches would have to ask the referee how much time was left. Fans and coaches became frustrated with this process, especially the surprise at the end of the second and fourth quarters that the time wasn’t nearly as much as was expected.

The NFL added the two-minute warning in 1942. Thus, a stoppage of time would be announced with two minutes remaining in the second and fourth quarters.

Today, it is just a standard practice that occurs in every game that we don’t even think about. Is it still needed?

The answer is no, but it will not be changed or eliminated. The main reason to keep it as is because it is considered premium advertising spots. Fans are glued to the TV as the game is winding down, and the stoppage adds some broadcast tension, building to the game’s conclusion.

Hash marks


There are certain things on every football field that are standard and iconic.

The first is the bright yellow goalposts standing so erect in the end zones. Another is the yard lines that cross the field with huge numbers displaying each line’s 10-yard increments. Each end zone usually has lettering inside, as the center field stripe is adorned with a team logo.

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Finally, tick marks dot the entire length of the field with tandem markings and indicate every single yard. These are called “hash marks.” At every level, in every conference or league, whether it is indoors or outside in the elements, the playing field has hash marks.

What are these? Pretty simple. They are there to mark stuff and give the game officials an on-field location using visually measured distances.

And not just used in American Football. Ice hockey has hash marks in its face-off circles that display to the referee where a player must be before the puck is dropped.

In American Football, two sets of hash marks travel the entire length of the field. At all levels except the professional ranks, the hash marks are measured to divide the playing field into thirds. This creates a middle section, then two outer areas, which makes one side wider while the other side is smaller in width.

In the pros, the hash marks line up with the width of the goalposts, thus cutting down the distances that determine the wide and short sides.

The main purpose of the hash marks is for ball placement. When the ball carrier leaves one section and is down near a sideline, the ball is placed at the nearest hash mark where the following play will begin, making a short side and a wide side once again.

It wasn’t always that way.

In the origins of the game, wherever the ball carrier was tackled, the ball was placed right at that exact spot for the following play. If that meant several yards away from the sidelines, then the play began there. If the ball carrier went out of bounds, the referee placed the ball one yard inside the sideline, and the next play went off at that spot.

Nowadays, there are rules that state how many offensive linemen can line up along the line, and to which sides. But not back then. If the end guy was the center, then all of the other linemen lined up to one side, the ball was snapped, and off they went.

What changed?

The NFL began in 1920. There weren’t any divisions or conferences, or playoffs for that matter. Their season champion each year was the team that had the highest win percentage. In 1932, both the Portsmouth Spartans (6-1-4) and Chicago Bears (6-1-6) stood at the top of the league with different win-loss records, but tied for win percentage. Tie games were not counted in those days. They discussed naming these two clubs co-champions, but it was decided to hold a one-game playoff. Basically, it meant an extra gate since this was every team’s main revenue source.

The contest was scheduled for December 18th to be played at Wrigley Field in Chicago, the Bears’ home stadium, which held just over 41,000 for football. The Spartans’ stadium had a capacity of 8,500. The winner would be declared the 1932 NFL champs.

Days before the game, a blizzard hit Chicago. As the game date approached, it was decided to play the contest indoors at Chicago Stadium, home of the hockey Blackhawks. This meant a lot of modifications had to be made to adapt to football, and quickly.

The ice had already been removed since the circus had just left, but all of the sideboards remained. The field was covered with tanbark and smelled of elephant manure. The size was reduced to 60 yards long from goal line to goal line, by 45 yards wide. There were 10-yard end zones at each end, but the goal posts were moved from the goal line to the back of the end zone, a first.

Each time either offense crossed the 30-yard line, the ball was moved back 20 yards to allow for the shortened field. No field goals or drop kicks were allowed because of the short distances.

There was an issue with the hockey sideboards. Nobody could run out of bounds. So instead of starting the play one yard inside the sideline, Chicago founder/head coach George Halas divided the field in thirds, and then painted hash marks on both sides the length of the field. Any ball carrier who hits the sideboards, the following play would begin at the closest hash mark.

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During the 1933 off-season, the NFL owners liked several of the improvisations. They voted to move the goal posts to the back of the end zones, divided the league into two divisions, and installed a one-game playoff between the two division winners to determine the league champs they entitled the “NFL Championship Game.” This game would later be renamed the “Super Bowl.”

And, they placed hash marks on every field for ball placement.

All of these rule changes were the first that the pro league installed that were different than college football.

Jersey nameplates


Every NFL club has certain standards that every team uses.

On their helmets is an NFL logo, plus an American flag. On the front of each jersey is another NFL logo. The sidelines of each game are a uniform cop who makes sure that socks are pulled up, jerseys are tucked in, cleats and sweat bands don’t have any messages written on them, and no unauthorized sponsor logos are present.

And on the backside of each jersey above the player’s number, is a stitched nameplate with the player’s last name. It is also referred to as NOB, for “Name on back.”

It wasn’t always like that.

In the 1969 NFL Championship Game, in addition to the victor being declared the NFL champion, the winner would play in an extra game entitled the “AFL-NFL Championship Game,” which pitted the NFL champs against the AFL champions.

It was the third game in this series after the AFL and NFL had agreed to merge beginning in 1970. The following year, this game would be re-named the “Super Bowl.”

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In the “1969 NFL Championship Game” between the Cleveland Browns and the Minnesota Vikings, neither team had player nameplates on the back of their jersey. In the “1969 AFL Championship Game” that saw the Kansas City Chiefs defeat the Oakland Raiders, both rosters had jersey nameplates.

The AFL did not invent player nameplates on the back of their jerseys. But this practice began in 1960, their first season of existence. This was an attempt to show fans the number of blue-chip college players the league had signed. Of the eight charter member teams, only the Titans of New York (later renamed the Jets) and the Denver Broncos did not have NOBs originally but later included this practice.

The inventor of this trend came from pro baseball. The owner of the Chicago White Sox, Bill Veeck, had each player’s last name attached to the backside of their gray away jerseys above the numbers in 1960. The home white pinstriped jersey did not.

The AFL was always looking for things to differentiate itself from the established league. They instituted the two-point conversion, invented the sideline camera rover, had five TV cameras at games instead of three, wide-open passing offenses, and club revenue sharing.

Plus, jersey nameplates.

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In the original XFL in 1999, they allowed players to put whatever they wanted on their NOBs. Rod Smart, a running back with the Las Vegas Outlaws, had “He Hate Me” imprinted on his nameplate. Later in the season, when playing the Los Angeles Xtreme, two opposing players had nameplates that read “I Hate He” and “I Hate He Too” in their first contest and then “Still Hate He” and “Still Hate He Too” in their rematch. Smart’s game-worn jersey is on permanent display at the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

When the AFL and NFL merged in 1970, the 16 NFL teams adopted this practice. Today, we don’t even think about where this nameplate process originated. They just always have been there.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...en-in-every-nfl-game-we-dont-even-think-about
 
Marvin Harrison Jr. out for season finale

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The long year of injuries is almost over for the Arizona Cardinals but it couldn’t have finished without a couple more victims.

Kei’Trel Clark was placed on injured reserve yesterday and today the team announced that they will not have wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. for the seasons finale against the Los Angeles Rams.

Cardinals WR Marvin Harrison Jr. is out for Arizona’s regular-season finale Sunday in LA.

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) December 31, 2025

It has been a disappointing second season for the Arizona Cardinals pass catcher, but that just goes with what has been a disappointing season.

In his absence we have seen some really good things from Michael Wilson, but anytime Marv came back we saw that this offense cannot sustain two wide receivers along with their All World tight end Trey McBride.

The problem is that their offense can’t function with two high volume wide receivers, even when not using a running back hardly at all. We will see how that changes next season, as the trio of McBride, Marv and Michael should entice offensive coaches, even if there is not a quarterback.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...6270/marvin-harrison-jr-out-for-season-finale
 
With the First Pick 6.0: Another Cardinals loss gets closer

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Another loss last weekend for the Arizona Cardinals. What does that make now?

In a weird twist, one more loss this season would break a 127-year record with the only roster to lose 14 games in a single season.

RELATED: CARDINALS CAN ACHIEVE HISTORICAL STAT

Happy New Year’s for a lot of teams, mostly the clubs that have advanced to this year’s playoffs. For the Cardinals, that means cleaning out lockers and going back home and finally get to eat stuff that was off-limits all year. Pizza comes to mind. Like, getting thrown out of Cici’s all-you-can-eat pizza.

All Cardinals fans can do is wait for next year. Perhaps with a successful free agent period and striking gold in April’s NFL draft, this roster can improve and hit the remainder of the NFC West Division hard.

Double-digit losses in a season is no joke.

And now, Arizona has the opportunity to yet again own the first overall pick in next April’s NFL draft. Can the Cardinals end up with the first overall pick in next April’s NFL draft? Where do they sit now?

Four teams currently own a 3-13-0 record. For the Cardinals to improve their draft position, the following must happen:

  • Giants over Cowboys
  • Titans over Jaguars
  • Rams over Cardinals
  • Raiders over Chiefs
  • Jets over Bills

If the season were to end today, here are the standings from the bottom upwards, including a new #1:

—————————————————————————————————————————————-

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#32, Pick #1

Las Vegas Raiders 2-14-0


Last five games: 0-5. Last game: Lost Giants 34-10

Winnable opponents remaining: none

Ranking last week: 31 (up 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .375

#31, Pick #2

New York Football Giants 3-13-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Beat Raiders 34-10

Winnable opponents remaining: Cowboys

Ranking last week: 32 (down 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .469

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#30, Pick #3

New York Jets 3-13-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Lost Patriots 48-20

Winnable opponents remaining: none

Ranking last week: 29 (up 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .688

#29, Pick #4

Tennessee Titans 3-13-0


Last five games: 2-3. Last game: Lost Saints 34-26

Winnable opponents remaining: none

Ranking last week: 28 (up 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .750

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#28, Pick #5

Arizona Cardinals 3-13-0


Last five games: 0-5. Last game: Lost Bengals 37-14

Winnable opponents remaining: none

Ranking last week: 27 (up 1)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .688

#27, Pick #6

Cleveland Browns 4-12-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Beat Steelers 13-6

Winnable opponents remaining: Bengals

Ranking last week: 30 (down 3)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .250

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#26, Pick #7

Washington Commanders 4-12-0


Last five games: 1-4. Last game: Lost Cowboys 30-23

Winnable opponents remaining: none

Ranking last week: 26 (unchanged)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .688

#25, Pick #8

New Orleans Saints 6-10-0


Last five games: 4-1. Last game: Beat Titans 34-26

Winnable opponents remaining: Falcons

Ranking last week: 25 (unchanged)

Strength of Schedule remaining: .438

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Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...t-pick-6-0-another-cardinals-loss-gets-closer
 
Trey McBride wins team MVP, Paris Johnson Jr. media award for 2025 season

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The Arizona Cardinals finish things up on Sunday with a game against the Los Angeles Rams.

However, before that game, the local media voted on a couple of awards and not shocking, Trey McBride was the 2025 Arizona Cardinals Lloyd Herberg MVP Award.

From the team:

McBride was named team MVP after a record-setting season in 2025 which included his second consecutive selection to the Pro Bowl. With one game remaining this season, he has set career-highs with 119 receptions for 1,174 yards and 11 touchdowns. His 119 receptions are a new NFL single-season record for a tight end and also set a new franchise record for the most receptions in a season. He became the first tight end in NFL history with 100+ receptions in consecutive seasons (111 in 2024) and is one of three tight ends in NFL history with 100+ receptions, 1,000+ receiving yards and 10+ touchdowns in a season (Dallas Clark, Travis Kelce). McBride’s 340 career receptions are the most by a tight end in NFL history in a player’s first four seasons.

The MVP award was named after Lloyd Herberg, a former Cardinals beat writer for the Arizona Republic. Herberg covered the Cardinals from 1988, when the team moved to Arizona, until his death in May of 1994. Herberg fought a courageous battle with cancer.

Meanwhile, Paris Johnson Jr. was named the Steve Schoenfeld Good Guy Award for his cooperation and insight in dealing with the media.

From the team:

Johnson was recognized for being available, insightful and professional while communicating with reporters this season.

The good guy award is named after another former Arizona Republic writer. Steve Schoenfeld covered the Cardinals and the NFL for the Republic from 1988 to 2000. A former national president of the PFWA, Schoenfeld was tragically killed by a hit-and-run driver in October of 2000.

Congratulations to both!

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-paris-johnson-jr-media-award-for-2025-season
 
Cardinals add two players as Rams contest approaches

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NFL teams are allowed to keep 53 players on their active roster. Every club makes certain that their coffers are full at all times.

The Arizona Cardinals just added two players off waivers to get their roster back at the 53-man limit.

RELATED: CARDINALS MASSIVE UNDERDOGS AGAINST RAMS

On Thursday, the Cardinals claimed linebacker Austin Keys (6’-2”, 244 pounds) off the waiver wire from the Minnesota Vikings. Two days ago, the franchise also claimed and was awarded tight end Rivaldo Fairweather (6’-3”, 249 pounds) from the Dallas Cowboys practice squad.

Waiver wire players are awarded in reverse order of the current standings, which means Arizona has the Number 6 claim spot. Any team can claim any practice squad player at any time regardless of position, but the added player must go onto the active roster and not become a parallel move.

In corresponding moves, the Cardinals placed rookie safety Kitan Crawford on IR who is dealing with an ankle injury, and released OG Tyler Cooper from the practice squad.

Keys is an undrafted 2025 rookie who made the Vikings’ final roster after a fine career at Auburn. He has played in 11 games with zero starts with seven total tackles, one tackle for loss, one QB hit, one sack, one pressure, and zero missed tackles. He is a very good special teams player who has played on 191 ST snaps (64%). Crawford had played on 319 ST snaps, so the waiver claim makes sense.

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Fairweather is also an Auburn alum. He has only preseason NFL game experience.

The Cardinals travel to Los Angeles for their final game of the season against the Rams in the Sunday afternoon slot. The Rams have already sewn up a playoff spot.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...ls-add-two-players-as-rams-contest-approaches
 
Will Rams rest their starters against the Cardinals this weekend?

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The Arizona Cardinals are getting ready for their rubber match against the Los Angeles Rams this Sunday. With Arizona being 3-13-0, the only thing they have to play for is pride, a job interview, and avoiding being the only squad in franchise history to lose 14 games in a single season.

RELATED: CARDINALS HUGE UNDERDOGS AGAINST RAMS

For the Rams (11-5-0), the franchise has already secured a playoff spot in this year’s postseason tournament. A win over Arizona would allow the team to retain its #5 seed, whereas a loss could drop them down to the #6 seed, depending on what the San Francisco 49ers do this weekend.

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Regardless, the Rams have no chance at capturing the NFC West Division, which would have given them some home playoff games. The Seattle Seahawks and 49ers square off on Saturday evening. Los Angeles versus Arizona is the Sunday afternoon game, so the Rams will know whether they are the #5 or #6 seed by kickoff.

It would make sense to rest some starters and avoid an injury, and allow bodies to rest. The Los Angeles Chargers have captured the #6 seed in the AFC and announced they are resting players, including starting QB Justin Herbert. Other teams will follow this trend, like Buffalo Bills QB Josh Allen against the New York Jets. This is a standard practice for Week 18.

If you play fantasy football and are in the championship game this weekend, you’d better check to see if your starters are going to be inactive or will play.

LINK: WEEK 18 QUARTERBACKS WHO WILL PLAY OR SIT

Which begs the question: Will the Rams rest their starters against the Cardinals with nothing to gain?

According to LA head coach Sean McVay, that answer is “no.” Sarah Barshop of ESPN Los Angeles discussed this scenario with McVay. He stated:

“Oh, we’re playing. Yeah, they’re playing.”

Los Angeles has lost two games in a row, including the 27-24 stunner to the Atlanta Falcons on Monday Night Football. Perhaps McVay doesn’t want to see a situation with his roster entering the first round of the playoffs with a three-game losing streak.

McVay explained his motive:

“No, they were going to play anyway. We need to play. We need to play better football. So, I don’t know what the consequences are in those different types of things, but we got to play better.”

The Rams were in full control of winning the division back when they were up 30-14 in the fourth quarter against the Seahawks in Week 16. Then Seattle came roaring back and scored a two-point conversion to win 38-37 in overtime. They have now lost three of five games.

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The loss to the Seahawks in a game they had won was a heartbreaker. The subsequent loss to the Falcons was just an embarrassment. Many had penciled the Rams into the Super Bowl this year. At one time, they appeared to be the best team in the NFC and had complete control of the #1 seed. QB Matthew Stafford was being mentioned in the MVP conversation.

What Los Angeles is now looking for is a confidence boost. And they want to take it out on Arizona.

Will the Rams rest their players against the Cardinals?

They can’t afford to. Limping into the playoffs is never a good look.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...r-starters-against-the-cardinals-this-weekend
 
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