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Winners and Losers from the Arizona Cardinals win over the Carolina Panthers

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It didn’t need to be that hard for the Arizona Cardinals.

They took a 27-3 lead with under 10 minutes to go in the third quarter and then it just…

Yet, they are 2-0 on the season and it’s better to try and fix things after a win than a loss.

Let’s take a look at some of the winners and losers from the game.

Winners –​


The Win Column – They’re 2-0.

Losers –​


Coaching staff – 27-3 lead and you allow a Bryce Young offense to have drives of 76 yards, 88 yards and 76 yards? You had him in a blender in the first half with relentless pressure, disguised blitzes and fronts and he and the Carolina Panthers offense looked lost. Then it all went away.

The Cardinals offense had only one three and out in the second half, their final drive of the game (not including kneel downs). Even after a terrible interception from Kyler Murray, there were just over 10 minutes left in the game and the Panthers had to go 88 yards. And you couldn’t even get them into a third down situation? 14 plays, they had one third down until they were in the red zone. That’s either piss poor coaching or piss poor execution.

Injuries – This was a rough one. We will wait for official word, but Max Melton, Garrett Williams and Will Johnson were all banged up.

Vibes – 2-0 and things are looking bleak. A win over the San Francisco 49ers will make everything feel alright, but the vibes are not immaculate.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...rdinals-week-2-win-over-the-carolina-panthers
 
Arizona Cardinals run game missing through two weeks

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After two weeks, which is an incredibly small sample size, the Arizona Cardinals offense is getting rushing yards, but those yards are based off two big plays.

On the season the Cardinals have rushed for 228 yards, averaging 4.7 yards per carry.

Yet, Trey Benson and Kyler Murray have a 52 yard and 30 yard gain respectively, and the rest of the running game is bad.

228 rushing yards and 82 are on two plays, meaning the rush offense has 146 yards on 47 attempts (taking the two long runs out). That is 3.1 yards per carry.

The running games bulk numbers are fine. They are 12th in yards and 10th in yards per attempt. But again, the bulk of those numbers come strictly from those two long runs.

The offensive line has struggled in Justin Frye’s first two games, and the interior offensive line has been especially a problem.

Not only are they struggling to get push in the run game, they also are committing penalties too much. Isaiah Adams was flagged two times yesterday, while Hjalte Froholdt has two in two games. That means your interior offensive line has seven flags in two games.

It has not been the start to the season the Cardinals have wanted, or expected offensively, and much of that can be tied to a run game that lacks the ability to move the ball consistently.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...ng-through-two-weeks-james-conner-trey-benson
 
The good news for the Cardinals? A 2-0 record. The bad news? Can’t put teams away

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The Arizona Cardinals are keeping up with the elite teams in the NFC West Division: the Los Angeles Rams and San Francisco 49ers. All three clubs have won both games and are in a three-way tie for the division.

RELATED: WINNERS AND LOSERS FROM THE PANTHERS WIN


The Cardinals must be feeling pretty good about themselves. They took care of the New Orleans Saints in Week 1, and then hung on to defeat the Carolina Panthers in the second game.

Emphasis on “hung on.”

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Arizona was dominating the Panthers and built a 27-3 lead halfway through three quarters. Then suddenly, the wheels didn’t just come off, they exploded as the Cardinals barely won 27-22. What happened to the lead? How did this come about, and what can be done to stop this from happening again?

This isn’t just a one-off. Against the Saints, the Cardinals had a 20-10 lead with about nine minutes left in Quarter 3. They hung on to win that contest 20-13. Again, they had to fight to preserve the win.

It is concerning that both sides of the ball struggled late in the game against Carolina.

During the post-game presser with Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon, he stated regarding the lack of ability to put teams away:

“I’m proud of them because they showed resilience, because it turned quickly. But ultimately won enough plays to win the game there.”
That was Drew’s best drive of the season

— Jay (@AZSPORTSGUY94) September 14, 2025

The Cardinals had already scored all the points they were going to, so the winning plays were already gone and over with. Carolina outscored Arizona 19-7 in the second half. The opening drive in the second half saved the game with the nine-play drive that went 71 yards and concluded with a two-yard James Conner run for a 27-3 lead.

defense stood up pic.twitter.com/jt5Qhk2NfS

— Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) September 15, 2025

From that point on, the offense could not move whatsoever. The other drives in the second half resulted in an interception, a punt, and the victory formation for one play.

Gannon continued:

“I obviously have to do a much better job at making our guys, all three phases, understand how to close games out. That’s two in a row now. When we have a chance to put away games, we have to put them away.”

What was lucky for the Cards is that the third quarter was only two drives: the aforementioned Conner TD drive, and then the Panthers took almost eight minutes off the clock with 14 plays that resulted in a four-yard TD pass to WR Hunter Renfrow. Only three plays remained until the final quarter began. Both long drives only gave Carolina the final quarter to attempt to make up the large difference on the scoreboard.

The issue was, the team did not finish. Gannon noted:

“When you get up like that, defensively, you’re trying to make them earn every yard. Then they went on two long drives and scored touchdowns. Within those drives, we have to do a better job of getting off a little bit better and work to keep points off the board ultimately. The turning point for me was we never got that key stop and allowed our offense to get out there and put the game away. It’s not the players – they played their butts off.”
6️⃣ makin' things happen ‼️ pic.twitter.com/YPDd3H1K9g

— Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) September 14, 2025

All well and good, and a 24-point lead that dissolved pretty quickly is certainly something to be concerned with. And it has happened twice now. In two games.

One issue in the Carolina game was that after the big lead was established, the defense began to give way too much area away from the Panthers’ receivers, even as much as 12 to 15 yards off their man. Why? Quick, short passes then became the norm as they marched down the field without many contested throws.

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The Saints had an opportunity to pull off the upset towards the end of the game and had more first downs (21) than Arizona, with seven fewer possession minutes. The issue in that game was that the offense failed to move the ball the same way they did in the second quarter, where they scored two touchdowns on successive drives.

In the third quarter, the offense bogged down and summoned K Chad Ryland, who kicked a 50-yard field goal to make it 20-10 Cardinals. But from there, the offense could not finish drives as this group finished the game by going punt, punt, blocked 46-yard field goal, and another punt. The final possession, Arizona could have run out the clock as they got the ball with 2:42 left in the game and should have drained the clock. But a 15-yard sack ended with a punt instead.

Meanwhile, New Orleans started their final drive down by just seven points on their own 42 with just 1:49 left in the game. Several good runs and a series of short passes later, the Saints had a first down at the 18-yard line of Arizona. But the clock showed 14 ticks remaining. Four incomplete passes finished the game.

There were chances for the Saints, but the defense stood up to the challenge. Just like against the Panthers.

“There were some bad penalties, too, that we have to clean up. The game was on the line and the defense got it done. I thought we played well enough for three quarters, and in the fourth we didn’t do a good enough job. We got to make sure we are educating our guys and putting them in situations and coaching the details.”

This Cardinals defense is playing well this year. They did their part in the Panthers game with an early fumble recovery for a touchdown, and then the interception by LB Baron Browning, all in the first quarter.

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But it seems they get tired after three quarters. Why? Because the offense isn’t staying on the field for as long in the second half.

Against the Saints in the first half, the offense had several good drives of 11and 10 plays. Whereas in the second half, there were six and five-play drives plus and a three-and-out, among others.

Defensive players rarely sub, so when an offense moves the ball and grinds off time on the clock, the defenders can sit in a shady spot, drink, and rest. Then they can hit the field with stamina.

vintage Calais‼️‼️ pic.twitter.com/bJqV5oBBaW

— Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) September 14, 2025
“Calais (Campbell), obviously, a huge play, that hit we needed it. It’s a ‘gotta have it play.’ He came up big. We just didn’t have the ball in the second half.”

The end of the Carolina game was a combination things, such as dumb late-game penalties like Denzel Burke’s which negated a sack and fumble or Josh Sweat’s roughing the passer call, an onside kick recovery that was botched that after it went off a member of Arizona’s return team, a horrible interception, and many offensive miscommunications that all contributed to keeping the Panthers in the mix instead of inserting a dagger.

The defense must find a method so they won’t become drained in the fourth quarter. More conditioning? Kinda late for that. Substitute more bodies? It may come to that. A complete defensive line rotation? An idea for sure.

Gannon concluded:

“Our job is solutions. So, we figure out the solutions.”

How can the Cardinals finish games when they build a lead?

It’s pretty simple: the offense must sustain more drives and complete the game with the football in their hands instead of hoping that the defense will come through once again.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...a-2-0-record-the-bad-news-cant-put-teams-away
 
Arizona Cardinals place Garrett Williams on injured reserve

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The fallout from the Arizona Cardinals win over the Carolina Panthers is coming out.

We were waiting and now we know that Garrett Williams is going on the injured reserve, as is defensive lineman L.J. Collier.

From the team:

The Arizona Cardinals Football Club today announced that the team has signed cornerback Darren Hall to the active roster from the practice squad and has placed defensive lineman L.J. Collier and cornerback Garrett Williamson injured reserve.

In addition, the team has signed cornerback Ekow Boye-Doe (ECK-oh / BOY-doe) and defensive lineman Zach Carter to the practice squad and has released linebacker Elliott Brown from the practice squad. The signings took place today at the Dignity Health Arizona Cardinals Training Center in Tempe, AZ.

Carter (6-4, 301) is a three-year NFL veteran who has played 45 games (16 starts) with Las Vegas (2024) and Cincinnati (2022-24) after entering the league with the Bengals as a third-round selection (95th overall) in the 2022 NFL Draft from Florida. He has 68 tackles, 2.0 sacks, three passes defensed and one forced fumble in his career. The 26-year old Carter played eight games with the Raiders last year after appearing in 37 games with the Bengals.

Boye-Doe will wear jersey #35 and Carter will wear #90.

Let’s hope to get some clarity on Williams soon, as well as updates on Max Melton and Will Johnson.

Hope it is a quick recovery for both Williams and Collier.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...arrett-williams-lj-collier-on-injured-reserve
 
Arizona Cardinals defense needs to find the pressure

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After a 2-0 start the hand wringing has been quite frequent.

Yet, for a 2-0 team, the Arizona Cardinals sure have played about six quarters of good to great football, and two quarters of football that looked like… Oh crap, we need to hang on.

Part of that is a good thing.

The Cardinals are creating separation between them and their opponents.

In their win over the New Orleans Saints they took a two score lead with nine minutes left in the third quarter, and in the win over the Carolina Panthers the Arizona Cardinals took a massive 24-point lead with just over nine minutes left in the third quarter.

In both games there was a common theme… A lack of pressure from the defense.

The Arizona Cardinals are creating pressures/hits/sack at one of the worst rates in the NFL through two games:

Cardinals team pass-rush ranks, per @FTNFantasy

Pressure percentage: 23rd
QB hit rate: 24th
Sack rate: 26th
Blitz rate: 32nd

— Kyle Odegard (@Kyle_Odegard) September 16, 2025

The Cardinals spent heavily in the offseason along the defensive line, re-signing Baron Browning, bringing in Josh Sweat, Dalvin Tomlinson and Calais Campbell in free agency, and of course drafting Walter Nolen in the first round.

Yet, through two games, in situations where it was obvious that the other team would be passing, they have been content to bring four, drop back into coverage and keep things in front of them.

While this isn’t an issue because it is preventing big plays, it has created another problem… The Cardinals cannot get off the field.

Look at the Panthers game. The Cardinals first two drives were 18 plays chewing up over 12 minutes of game time.

The Panthers countered with 28 plays chewing up nearly 13 minutes of game clock. So, while the time of possession is nearly identical, the Cardinals defense had to play 10 extra snaps. That means 10 times the defense had go again.

Yet, they were content to die a death by 1000 cuts, rather than risk giving up a big play and quick score. We can argue if that is the way to do it because we know the outcome… Wins. However, at some point as a defense you have to get off the field.

The Cardinals defense in the first two drives of the second half only were in a third down situation four times in 28 plays. The Carolina Panthers had one fourth down play in those two drives.

The Panthers were never even in a position where they felt pressure, because they were moving the ball so easily on first and second down.

Nick Rallis and Jonathan Gannon will have to change things up, especially if there are injuries to the secondary, or those nickel and dime passes will become quarters and dollars with their fourth, fifth and sixth cornerbacks getting reps.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-cardinals-defense-needs-to-find-the-pressure
 
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