Arizona Cardinals embarrassed at home in loss to San Francisco 49ers

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It was a historic day for Jacoby Brissett, as he set and NFL record with 47 pass completions on the day.

The Arizona Cardinals almost gave up as many points as Brissett had completions in this one though, as the San Francisco 49ers took it to the Cardinals from the opening kickoff in a 41-22 Cardinals loss.

Brissett and the offense tried, but they were once again turnover prone, but more importantly penalty prone.

While they were not all on the offensive side of the ball, the Arizona Cardinals set a franchise record with 17 penalties in the game.

It is a bit disheartening, looking at the way the game not only started, but how the Cardinals couldn’t get out of their own way time and time again.

Instead, the Cardinals would turnover the football, or have a drive killing penalty.

This team is very, very poorly coached, and that is disappointing in the third season of the Jonathan Gannon era.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...rassed-at-home-in-loss-to-san-francisco-49ers
 
Arizona Cardinals open as home underdogs ahead of Jaguars matchup

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The Arizona Cardinals stink.

Outside of that, happy Monday one and all.

After another inept defensive performance and a hallow offensive output, the Arizona Cardinals sit at 3-7 and now host the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday.

The Jaguars only open as small favorites, so things are not completely off the rails yet.

According to our friends at FanDuel Sportsbook, the Arizona Cardinals are 2.5-point underdogs ahead of their matchup with the Jaguars.

Of course, the Cardinals are coming off back-to-back divisional smack downs, losing by a combined 85-44. So, to see them only a field goal underdog is actually a bit surprising and shows some respect to the team.

Meanwhile, the Jaguars rebounded and absolutely smoked the Chargers 35-6.

The hope for the Cardinals, and probably why the line is so low, is because the Jags are 2-2 on the road this year and barely beat the Raiders in overtime a couple weeks ago.

What are your thoughts?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...en-as-home-underdogs-ahead-of-jaguars-matchup
 
The good, the bad and ugly from the Cardinals’ Week 11 loss to the 49ers

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The Cardinals lost 41-22 to the 49ers on Sunday in a game defined by self-inflicted mistakes and a dud of a defensive effort, despite a high-volume offensive passing performance.

Here is the good, the bad and the ugly from Week 11.

Good​


QB Jacoby Brissett: When playing from behind the entire game, the ball is going to be aired out plenty. Brissett took advantage of his voluminous day. The veteran quarterback set an NFL record with 47 completions and set a career high in passing yards (452). Brissett also threw for two touchdowns.

WR Michael Wilson: With Marvin Harrison sidelined by appendicitis, Wilson stepped up as the top guy in the wide receiver room. He hauled in 15 receptions for 185 yards, both personal bests for the third-year wideout.

TE Trey McBride: It was just another day in the office for the McBride, who caught 10 passes for 115 yards on 11 targets.

Bad​


Penalties: The Cardinals played an undisciplined brand of football, committing 17 penalties for 130 yards, a franchise record. Those penalties stalled drives and negated big plays, including running back Bam Knight’s 60-yard touchdown that was called back due to holding. On the flipside, the 49ers committed just one penalty on the afternoon.

Turnovers: If you lose the turnover battle, there’s a good chance you’re going to lose the game. While Brissett’s day will be defined by his high number of completions and passing yards, he still threw two interceptions, one that was returned 64 yards to set up a 49ers touchdown. The other was an Elijah Higgins fumble that occurred at San Francisco’s 1-yard line.

Ugly​


Defense: The 49ers had the ball for almost ten minutes less than the Cardinals, but Arizona had no answer for San Francisco when they were on offense, which totaled 488 yards. Quarterback Brock Purdy, returning from injury, tossed three touchdown passes. Meanwhile, running back Christian McCaffrey found the end zone three times, and tight end George Kittle also added two scores. The Cardinals failed to generate pressure consistently. As a result, the 49ers exploited Arizona’s depleted secondary that was without cornerback Will Johnson.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-from-the-cardinals-week-11-loss-to-the-49ers
 
The hottest “hot seat”? Could it be the Cardinals’ Jonathan Gannon?

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The Arizona Cardinals began 2025 training camp with so much hope. They knew that the NFC West Division was going to be good, and the franchise was prepared to fight the good fight.

The Los Angeles Rams were previewed as one of the NFC’s best teams and expected to compete with the Philadelphia Eagles for conference supremacy.

RELATED: CARDINALS EMBARRASSED AT HOME BY 49ERS

Expectations were also high for the Seattle Seahawks, who had built a stiff defense. The jury was out on the San Francisco 49ers, who were really good two seasons ago, yet had issues last year. However, Robert Saleh had returned to be the defensive coordinator again, which had been their Achilles heel in 2024.

So, the Cardinals had their work cut out for them. These teams represented six games on the calendar. The season began with two wins followed by a five-game losing skid. Then, the Cardinals spanked the Dallas Cowboys on the road in Jarah’s World. Suddenly, Arizona fans began to rethink the season and have glimmers of hope.

Had the franchise turned a corner? Could they defeat division foes Seattle and San Fran in the next two weeks and make a run at this thing? Yes, they would need some help down the stretch with certain games going their way. But if this roster could string along some wins, maybe, just maybe, they could find themselves in sight of a Wild Card seed. Maybe?

But the illusion was short-lived.

Coaching matters. Just look at Denver, New England, and others. GM/coach need to go. It’s embarrassing to be surrounded by visiting fans because our owners refuse to pay for elite players/coaches.🤬 pic.twitter.com/TNrmSTle0s

— JT in the AZ 🌵🐍🦎☀️ (@thegr8juan_2) November 16, 2025

Seattle took the Cardinals to the woodshed. So did the 49ers the following week. This means Arizona would end the 2025 season 0-2 against both clubs. All games are important, but division contests are paramount to achieving victory. This year’s team failed on both accounts.

The argument was that the Cardinals had the Niners in their first matchup, then gave the game away. The storyline was that Arizona had come from behind to tie the Seahawks in their first contest, then gave the game away.

The reality ultimately became: both Seattle and San Francisco are much better ballclubs. And to add salt to the wound, the Cardinals still have to play Los Angeles twice. Ouch.

Complete embarrassment. It’s hard to believe that you guys are pro football players.

— Tom Cannon (@Hypecannon) November 17, 2025

So, now Arizona sits at 3-7-0. Every other team in the division has a winning record. They are the only club that doesn’t have a positive division record as the Cards are now 0-4. It is conceivable that all three divisional clubs could end up in the postseason.

Seven games remain. The Cardinals aren’t mathematically out – yet. But that’s just a matter of time. All of us who cover the franchise don’t want to admit all this. We all want to write about how this scenario could happen, or this set of teams would lose, how the team could recover and find their way into the promised land. But numbers don’t lie. And when your team is down 38-7 at the half against a division foe like the Seahawks, and then the following weekend behind 35-10 to another division club going into the fourth quarter, it is difficult to fudge the digits.

Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon is currently in his third season. Under his tutelage, the team went 4-13-0 in his first season of 2023, then improved to 8-9-0 last year. Under a rebuild, this means an improvement from the previous year, right? Perhaps a minimum of a 10-win season? That is how rebuilding plans operate; the roster shows improvement each season. An NFL club needs a minimum of 10 wins to qualify for a Wild Card slot.

So, where’s our 10-win season? Anyone?

Despite being a two-win ballclub, beating the Cowboys was supposed to be the turn-the-corner game. We received two blowouts instead.

Has this begun the speculation that Gannon won’t be back for a fourth season?

In his post-game press conference after the embarrassing loss to San Fran, Gannon was asked if he was now a hot-seat conversation. He responded:

“Yeah, not a controllable for me. I didn’t hire myself. I’m not gonna fire myself, so, seriously, no, I know it comes up. That’s the business we’re in.”

The business that Gannon is in is professional football. And what keeps players, coaches, and executives employed is the ability to win games. Lots of games. Any team can be 3-7-0. Any team can finish with double-digit losses.

The difficulty is to string together wins and scrape and scrap into a playoff spot. This roster has very little of that. Except for the tight end, receivers aren’t being utilized. The offensive line appears like somebody hung a sign that says “free buffet today – see the quarterback for plates” as defenders are rushing past everyone. The defense is missing critical tackles. Except for DT Calais Campbell, where is the pass rush?

The offense in the first three quarters against the 49ers? Punt, TD, missed FG, field goal, punt, interception, punt, interception, fumble. A large portion of Arizona’s scoring came late in the final period when the game was already salted away.


The Cardinals’ defense in the first three quarters? TD, TD, punt, TD, punt, FG, FG, FG, TD. How can an offense maneuver on the field when they are down by so many points before the halftime gun sounds and going into the final period?

During the presser, Gannon continued:

“If you don’t want to be in that business, we laugh, we joke, go work somewhere else. I’m going to control the controllables for myself. You know, come to work and do the best job that I can and try to get our team in position and win a game.”

Gannon is currently under a five-year deal. He was the DC for the Eagles that had just lost the Super Bowl. He turned Philadelphia into a Top-10 defense in his first year, and in his second season, the Eagles ranked #2 in the NFL while boasting two Pro Bowlers.

Before Gannon arrived, Philly was allowing 26.1 points a game. That dissolved to 20.2 points. After 10 competitions, Arizona is now allowing 25.6 points per contest.

In 2022, the Eagles netted 78 sacks, or 4.59 per game on average. The Cardinals currently rank #25 with 19 sacks, or 1.9 sacks per contest.

Since reaching the 2015 NFC Championship Game, the Cardinals have made just one playoff appearance.

So much talent on this team. Too bad our coaches are incompetent. Made the league think Kyler, Marv, and Wilson are bums because we don’t consistently use them to their strengths

— CardinalC (@AZCardinalC) November 16, 2025

Out of all the head coaching positions in the NFL with a very bad record, Gannon’s is probably now the hottest seat in the league. There was so much anticipation and expectation going into training camp that this would become a playoff season.

Arizona is a franchise that doesn’t have an issue with letting head coaches seek other employment opportunities. No coach has made it longer than six years: Jim Hanifan (1980-1985) and Ken Whisenhunt (2007-2012).

The franchise has hired some really great head coaches, such as Curly Lambeau, Don Coryell, Bud Wilkinson, Jimmy Conzelman, Gene Stallings, Buddy Ryan, Dennie Green, and Bruce Arians.

Nostalgia is a hell of a drug.

Unfortunately for the Arizona Cardinals, they're bringing up memories of the past that no one wants.

So why is anyone's job safe? Everything should be on the table.

But maybe that's just my Southwest bias. https://t.co/pUoXAVGKFy pic.twitter.com/zXDyghqOje

— Espo  (@Espo) November 17, 2025

For now, despite the chaos, it appears that Gannon will be safe to complete the season. If the Cardinals miss the postseason three out of three years under his direction, it would appear likely his time would cease in Tempe.

The decision has most likely already been made. A maintenance man was seen oiling the revolving door.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...eat-could-it-be-the-cardinals-jonathan-gannon
 
Arizona Cardinals continue to get something out of Walter Nolen

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Despite abysmal defensive performances the last two weeks, there have been a couple of positives that have come out of the losses.

One that is undeniable and something to hopefully build on and around is what we have seen from Walter Nolen.

Nolen in three games has put up fine numbers, eight tackles, four tackles for loss, three quarterback hits and one sack, but more importantly he has been a menace creating pressures from the interior.

Now, I have never been a huge proponent of pressures being an important thing. Instead, I like production, but you cannot deny the impact that consistent pressures will have on a team. The problem is you have only Nolen and Josh Sweat who produce any type of pressures consistently and they get about 50 snaps a game combined.

Yet, in Nolen’s 23 snaps, 16 of them pass rushing snaps, he gets a pressure about 20% of the time. That is near elite status and he combines that with a dominant game against the run, and you have kid, because he is only 22 years old, that looks like a future star.

Now, can they get more from the rest of the defense and show something to end the season for their defensive minded head coach?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...continue-to-get-something-out-of-walter-nolen
 
The Arizona Cardinals are getting blown out, are you confident in the direction of the team?

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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.

Fans seem to be okay getting beat week in and week out all of a sudden, not playing but one competitive or competent quarter of football in the last eight.

The anger is gone, and instead it has become… almost a, “well what are you going to do about?” type of attitude.

So, with that how are you feeling about the direction of the Arizona Cardinals?

I feel like the fact that fans seem just okay with how things are going it will show some interesting results and where fans are in this season that is unquestionably lost.

It seems like barring the final seven games going like the last two games, Jonathan Gannon will be back next year, so does that change how you feel?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...re-you-confident-in-the-direction-of-the-team
 
Cardinals Marv Harrison again ruled out

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Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Marvin Harrison has been ruled out for the second week in a row. The next contest is this Sunday, November 23, in the afternoon slot against the Jacksonville Jaguars in a home game. Harrison is still recovering from appendix surgery performed on Monday, November 10, according to Arizona head coach Jonathan Gannon in his press conference on Wednesday.

RELATED: MICHAEL WILSON THRIVES

Harrison has been the primary receiver all season and has 62 targets, 34 receptions for 525 yards, a 15.4 yards per reception average, 25 first down conversions, and has scored four touchdowns. He also has four drops, which ranks him tied for #18 in the league with eight other players.

In the meantime, Michael Wilson has been moved to WR1 on the depth chart, while Greg Dortch is now WR2. Xavier Weaver and Andre Baccellia will man the slot. The Cardinals are already without their top three running backs, so the offense’s options have dwindled rapidly.

Jacksonville is 6-4-0, and if the playoffs were to end today, they would own the #7 seed, which is the final Wild Card slot. They currently reside in second place in the AFC South Division. The Cardinals are 3-7-0 and dead last in the NFC West Division as the only team in their division with a losing record.

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In the last game, a 41-22 loss to division foe San Francisco 49ers, Wilson caught 15 balls on 18 targets for 185 yards. For the year, he has 58 targets, 38 receptions for 565 yards, a 14.9 yards per reception average, has converted 29 first downs, and has scored three touchdowns. He has zero recorded drops.

As new starting quarterback Jacobi Brissett has become comfortable looking for Wilson during action, it will only become a plus for this offense once Harrison returns. Wilson is finally getting the production that everyone knew he had. Brissett has blossomed Wilson’s talent.

Perhaps Harrison and Wilson will finally become that dynamic duo that was advertised.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...84883/cardinals-marv-harrison-again-ruled-out
 
Arizona Cardinals open practice window for Trey Benson, sign punter Matt Hack and more

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The Arizona Cardinals made a plethora of roster moves on Wednesday.

From the team:

The Arizona Cardinals Football Club today announced the following roster moves:

– Designated running back Trey Benson to return from the injured reserve list

– Signed punter Matt Haack (pronounced Hawk) to the active roster

– Re-signed linebacker Jared Bartlett to the practice squad

– Signed wide receiver Trent Sherfield Sr. and offensive lineman Trey Wedig to the practice squad

– Released wide receiver Jalen Virgil from the practice squad

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

Benson can begin practicing and the team can activate him to the 53-man roster at any time during the next 21 days or at the conclusion of the three-week period.

Haack (6-0, 205) is an eight-year NFL veteran who played collegiately at Arizona State. He is back with the Cardinals after spending time with the team during the 2023 offseason. Haack has played with the Giants (2024), Browns (2023), Colts (2022), Bills (2021) and Dolphins (2017-20) in his NFL career after entering the league with Miami as an undrafted rookie free agent in 2017. In his career, Haack has appeared in 103 games during the regular season and has 453 punts for 20,230 yards (44.7 avg.) and 169 punts inside the 20-yard line.

Sherfield (6-1, 205) returns to the Cardinals after previously playing 44 games over three seasons with the team (2018-20). He originally entered the league in 2018 with Arizona as an undrafted rookie free agent from Vanderbilt. The eight-year veteran played 10 games (three starts) with Denver this season prior to being released and had three receptions for 21 yards. In his career, Sherfield has played in 122 games (14 starts) and has 89 receptions for 1,034 yards and six touchdowns to go along with 38 special teams tackles. He has played with the Broncos (2025), Vikings (2024), Bills (2023), Dolphins (2022) and 49ers (2021) in his career.

Wedig (6-6, 319) is a rookie who entered the league with the Rams as a free agent from the University of Indiana. He started all 13 games last season at Indiana after playing 35 games (eight starts) in four seasons at Wisconsin (2020-23). Wedig started games at right tackle (18), right guard (two) and left guard (one) in his collegiate career.

Haack will wear jersey #39, Sherfield will wear #81 and Wedig will wear #65.

Welcome back to both Haack and Sherfield, and let’s hope for Trey Benson to be ready to go soon, because the Arizona Cardinals need help in their run game.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...or-trey-benson-sign-punter-matt-hack-and-more
 
ESPN has its own take on Jonathan Gannon’s “hotseat”

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Most sports fans eventually end up on ESPN’s website. It is full of information, schedules, depth charts, breaking news, and league standings, no matter which sport holds the reader’s interest.

RELATED: THE HOTTEST “HOTSEAT”

After last weekend’s NFL games, ESPN began to discuss which coaches were on the hotseat, and others that has since jumped off this distinction. NFL insiders Jeremy Fowler and Dan Graziano called their reliable sources for the latest news and buzz on key situations with an emphasis on potential coaching changes.

Among those discussed was Raheem Morris of the Atlanta Falcons, Cleveland Browns head man Kevin Stefanski, Zac Taylor of the Cincinnati Bengals, Mike McDaniels of the Miami Dolphins, the New York Jets’ Aaron Glenn, and possibly Pete Carroll in his first season with the Las Vegas Raiders.

And obviously, Arizona Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon’s name also came up.

Fowler gave his thoughts:

“Arizona’s Jonathan Gannon is also on the radar of people in the league who track such things, though opinions are split on whether Cardinals owner Michael Bidwill will take action. The Cardinals are clearly the odd team out in a loaded NFC West. Bidwill can’t be thrilled with that reality. But the notion of paying Gannon and Kyler Murray big money to go away (Murray has nearly $40 million in 2026 guarantees on the books) can’t be enticing, either. Gannon is 15-29 in the middle of Year 3, but he also hasn’t been able to hand-pick a young quarterback to groom.”

The Cardinals currently stand at 3-7-0 and in last place in the NFC West Division. In fact, they are the only club in the division without a winning record.

What is unusual about Fowler’s analysis is the line where Gannon “hasn’t been able to hand-pick a young quarterback to groom.” Gannon is a defensive mind. He inherited Murray, which on the surface would seem to be ideal, instead of a detriment. Gannon isn’t going to “groom” any quarterback, much less a newbie to the league. The fact that Murray was already a seasoned veteran with Pro Bowl hardware should have been seen as a huge plus.

If and when Gannon does draft a young quarterback, he will simply pass him off to Petzing for development.

Now, if Murray’s skillset has diminished since Gannon took over the franchise, that is a different matter. But having a veteran at QB should have been one less thing to work on for Gannon.

Next up, Graziano has his own analysis:

“The sense I get on that one is that Cardinals’ ownership seems likely to stick with Gannon and GM Monti Ossenfort and let them pick that QB. (They inherited Murray.) The way Jacoby Brissett is performing in Drew Petzing’s offense gives the team reason to believe the structure is relatively sound and that more reliable QB play could unlock some things. Of course, as well as Brissett is playing, the Cardinals have still lost seven of their past eight games, and sometimes the record gets bad enough that the team feels it has to make a change.”

Okay, all of that makes sense. The thought process may be that Brissett will become the bridge quarterback, as Arizona will bring in a new guy through the NFL draft. Then again, the Cardinals just might extend Brissett and make him their franchise QB and use their high picks on getting the offensive line in good shape in order to better protect a 32-year-old signalcaller.

"I didn't hire myself. I'm not going to fire myself.”

Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon when the topic of potentially being on the hot seat came up ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/wIdEjHrCEb

— Tyler Drake (@Tdrake4sports) November 17, 2025

Would any Cardinals fan cry foul if Arizona took an offensive tackle followed by an offensive guard in the draft? Yes, there are plenty of holes on this roster, but the O-Line needs more than Band-Aids and to infuse some young blue-chippers.

Whatever the case may be about the Cardinals’ QB room, it is clear that Gannon has seven games remaining this season to display that he can deliver.

Remember: this is Year 3 of the three-year plan. Gannon is 15-29-0 overall.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-has-its-own-take-on-jonathan-gannons-hotseat
 
Genealogy of American Football: The Center Position

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Things happen every game in the game of American Football that we don’t even think about.

Like, how did the goalposts go from an “H” to the way they are constructed now? Where did hash marks come from? Why is it four downs to make 10 yards? How did the “quarterback” get its name? What exactly does the position “safety” imply? Why is it called a “touchdown”? Where did the moniker “coach” originate? How come the end zone is not part of the field of play, yet points are scored in this area?

RELATED: HJALTE FROHOLDT TOP-10 CENTER PICK

Things just evolve when it is a brand-new game. American Football began as a new sport, with new rules and borrowing lots of details from other sports. American Football came from the sport of rugby. Rugby evolved from the sport of soccer, which has always been called “football” and still is.

When rugby began, it took some of the techniques, terminology, rules, field elements, equipment, and player standards from soccer and customized the game into something new and different, yet very familiar to its father sport.

Then, when American Football was first invented, the exact same thing happened. That game was a carbon copy of rugby except for some changes. It used terminology and aspects from both sports. Things such as punt, interception, tackle, kickoff, halftime, goal line, goal post, cross bar, among others, are all soccer terms.

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But unlike rugby, American Football sets up a line of scrimmage, with a set number of “downs”1 to make so much yardage, then a new set of downs is achieved, and so on. The sport gave one team possession even if it failed on the previous down.

American Football has 11 men on the field because soccer does. American Football keeps the official time on the wrist of a referee on the field because soccer does. American Football has a kickoff to start the game and after every score, because soccer does. Up until 1950, American Football only allowed three substitutes per game because that was what soccer did.

Even positions that players are called have evolved from both soccer and rugby.

Soccer has positions labeled fullback and halfback. Rugby uses centre, flanker, halfback, and fullback. All have been used in American Football at some point.

In today’s game, each offensive play begins with the snap from the center. He hikes the ball between his legs to the quarterback, and then the play begins.

A few discrepancies with this position


For one, the word “center” does not appear in the NFL rules handbook. That is what we all call the position, but the league does not. It never has. The “center” is what the position is called in college football, because he is located in the center of the line.2

In the NFL, this position is labeled “the snapper.” That explains why, on a PAT or field goal attempt, out trots “the long snapper” to hike the ball back to the place holder. Same position on the field, just a more advanced role in his job description.

Actually, the “snapper” and the “long snapper” can be the same guy. In the NFL, it is typically two different players; however, in college and at the high school level, the center often doubles as the long snapper.

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Each play in American Football begins the same way. The snapper or the long snapper hikes the ball back to a player in the backfield. But the snapper’s action has a name. Everyone refers to this as a “snap,” or a “hike,” or a “snapback,” but it is officially called “a backwards pass.”3

The very first action on every play in American Football is a pass, which is a soccer term that means one player gets the ball to another. Now, there are many variations of the snapper’s backwards pass.

The snapper may hand, throw, or even roll the ball to the other player. The snap must be a quick and continuous movement of the ball by one or both hands of the snapper, and the ball must leave the snapper’s hands.

One odd rule regards the snapper. He is the only player who is allowed to be clearly on the line of scrimmage.4 All other players must be behind the line of scrimmage and considered “onside” when the ball is put in play.

We are all used to seeing the snapper hike the ball between his legs. That is the norm. And what is meant by “the norm” is that there are numerous other methods in which this first pass can be accomplished to get the play in motion. But the ball does not have to be put into play by first going through the snapper’s legs.5 Snapping the ball between the legs of the snapper is just one of many methods.

The original name for the snapper was “the snap-back.” The first method the snap-back used was to roll the ball backwards with his hand to a player6 called “the quarter-back” who was stationed a quarter of the way back into the backfield towards the halfway back, or halfback, and the back situated fully back, or fullback.

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Defenders would sometimes push the snap-back, who would inadvertently kick the ball and cause a disruption of the exchange. So, the next method was for the snap-back to kick the ball backwards to the quarter. That action was called “heeling” and was developed from the sport of rugby.

The snapper would stand over the ball, with the football lying on the ground side-to-side instead of point-to-point. The snapper then placed one foot in front of the ball, then with his heel, he kicked or pushed the ball backwards.7 At the time, this position was often referred to by players as “the heeler.”

Back in the day, the ball used was still a rugby ball, so it was shaped like a watermelon and close to being round. With a heeling pass, the ball would roll really well as if it were completely round. However, since those early days, the football has been reshaped four times to make it more aerodynamic, rather than easier to roll. The shape is officially called a “prolate spheroid.”8 So, a heeling pass today isn’t feasible because the rolling action would not be smooth, but instead become unpredictable.

Plus, as soon as the snapper pushed the football backwards, a savvy defender could shove the snapper in an attempt to have him bump the ball during the backwards roll and cause a fumble or disruption of the ball’s path. To counteract this, two players were stationed on each side of the center to “guard” the center’s heeling action towards a successful path to the quarterback. Early formations often had the guards turned at 45-degree angles, facing the center to help protect him.9 Today, this is why these same two players are called “offensive guards.”

The second method of the snapper’s pass is the “sidewinder.” In this motion, the snapper lifts the ball to one side or the other of his body, then hands the football to the quarterback. This was a standard practice at one time, but the problem was that a savvy defensive lineman could anticipate the snap, then reach out and slap the ball out of the center’s hand during the exchange, thus causing a fumble.

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The third technique from the snapper is an actual overhand pass. The center stands up with the ball, then turns his body sideways and tosses a spiral pass to whomever, like a quarterback would do, as long as the pass is in a backwards motion.

The fourth fashion is the traditional between-the-legs snap utilized by every team at every level. But it wasn’t always used.

The Father of the game of American Football is Walter Camp. He made up rules and regulations to change the game of rugby into this new sport. He instituted downs, possession, a line to gain another set of downs, and came up with new terms such as touchdown plus a scoring protocol.

Both soccer and rugby were free-flowing games in which one team was on offense until it lost control of the ball—starting play from a controlled scrimmage with one team maintaining possession of the ball allowed for the development of structured alignments and planned plays.

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But at first, Camp’s new game used one of the three methods listed above for the play to get going from the snapper to the quarterback. Camp wasn’t satisfied because defenders usually disrupted the exchange. The main problem was that routinely the football was unprotected, coming from the snapper’s hand to the quarterback.

Camp just happened to be in Toronto. He attended a Canadian rules football game against Saskatchewan. The center for both teams snapped the ball between his legs. This completely protected the ball from being swatted away by a defender and was safely handled by the quarterback as each play began uninterrupted.

With this “ah-hah” moment, Camp brought this process back to his American version game, and it has been the technique used by snappers since 1891.10

However, all four methods are still legal, and at times, are used in trick plays because the defense has never seen the ball snapped any other way except between the center’s legs.

Trick plays using the snapper


The “Fumblerooski”11 is a famous trick play. It begins as the snapper sends the pass to the quarterback, like normal, who begins the play under center. Then the quarterback touches the ball, which then lies on the ground motionless behind the offensive guard’s leg, who just stands still. As every player runs in one direction, acting like they have possession, the guard waits for one Mississippi, then reaches down for the ball and takes off in the opposite direction.

In the stat line, it is ruled a fumble, with a fumble recovery by the guard, and usually followed by a touchdown.

Another trick play based on the snapper’s action is called “Wrong Ball.” It works on the youth level, and sometimes in high school. The entire premise of this play is to confuse the defense.

First, the quarterback is under center. As he gets ready to receive the snap, he looks over the center’s shoulder down at the football and then faces his coach and yells out, “Coach, they are using the wrong ball!” The coach then screams back, “Let me see it!” The center then hands the ball to the quarterback using the sidewinder motion, which is to pick up the ball and hand it over in a sideways motion.

As soon as the center picks up the ball, it is live, but the defense has never seen the sidewinder snap, and so relaxes out of their stance. Next, the quarterback casually walks toward the sideline toward his coach, parallel to the line of scrimmage, while holding the ball up in the air. Again, the defense does nothing. The center’s unconventional snap has confused them into thinking the play has not begun because the first pass did not come from underneath the center’s legs.

Banter occurs between the coach and quarterback as the player walks nonchalantly. As soon as the quarterback gets close to the sidelines, the coach instructs, “Go.” The athlete streaks down the sideline uncontested.

Extra duties


The long snapper has added value. This is a player who must toss a pass looking upside down and backwards. And there are conditions. For one, the pass must be a spiral like the ones the quarterback throws. Except this spiral isn’t tossed overhand, but accomplished with a spinning motion instead. Secondly, the backwards pass must be sent to a specific spot. Some punters like the ball to their hip, whereas others prefer it at chest level.

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The pass to the place holder during a PAT attempt or a field goal is seven yards deep at most levels, and eight yards at the NFL echelon. For a pass to the punter, it is 15 yards deep. Again, with a spiral pass to a specific spot, upside down and backwards, without skipping off the turf.

The snapper in football is invaluable. As the level of competition increases, the center has new job duties other than to hike the ball between his legs to begin each play. His new roles include recognizing stunts and blitzes, and calling plays along the offensive line.

His job is to get the play’s first pass safely to the quarterback, then either block for the runner or set up in pass protection. Every single play, the snapper is engaged with a defender. Core strength and physical conditioning come into play during each game.

Because the long snapper is vulnerable to injury, and also the fact that the rules makers want field goals and PATs to be successful, certain rules now exist that the defensive unit cannot contact the long snapper until one second after the snap.12

There are two qualities that every center has: Intelligence, and they are the most organized person on the entire roster. Their vehicle is always clean, their home is never a mess, and everything has its place. These traits are in their DNA.

The game of American Football begins with the center, um, snap-back, oops….snapper.

Notes:

_____________________________________________________________________________

1. Tony Collins, “The Walter Camp Myth and the Origins of American Football,” Squarespace.com, June 16, 2015

2. Bob Sproule, “That Game of Football,” Coffin Corner, Volume 4, 1982

3. NFL Rule Book, Football Operations, Rule 8, Section 7, Article 1: “Backward Pass”

4. NFL Rule Book, Football Operations, Rule 7, Section 5, Article 1 (d): “Ball in play, dead ball, scrimmage”

5. NFL Rule Book, Football Operations, Rule 7, Section 6, Article 3 (b): “Restrictions for Snapper”

6. Walter Camp, Walter Camp’s Book of College Sports, The Century Company, 1900, Chapter 5, “Foot-ball in America”

7. Football Archaeology, “It’s a snap: The line of scrimmage,” April 3, 2018

8. NFL Rule Book, Football Operations, Rule 2, Section 1: “The Ball”

9. Bob Sproule, “Snap Back vs. Scrimmage,” Coffin Corner, March 1984

10. Mark Gelbart, “The Evolution of Soccer to Rugby to Football,” Georgia Before People, 2014

11. Fred Bierman, “What Ever Happened to the Fumblerooski?”, New York Times, December 15, 2009

12. NCAA Football Rule Book, Rule 9, Article 14: “Conduct of Players”

——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

Barry Shuck is a member of the Professional Football Researchers Association

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...logy-of-american-football-the-center-position
 
Arizona Cardinals place Jonah Williams on injured reserve

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The Arizona Cardinals did not get much out of Jonah Williams in his tenure as they have placed the veteran offensive lineman on injured reserve.

The Cardinals got 15 games out Williams total through his two years.

The team has also elevated running back Jermar Jefferson to the active roster.

From the team:

The Arizona Cardinals Football Club today announced that the team has signed running back Jermar Jefferson to the active roster from the practice squad and has signed running back Sincere McCormick to the practice squad. The signing took place today at the Dignity Health Arizona Cardinals Training Center in Tempe, AZ.

In addition, the team has placed offensive lineman Jonah Williams on injured reserve.

McCormick (5-8, 204) played five games with the Raiders last season and had 39 carries for 183 yards and six receptions for 29 yards. He originally entered the NFL in 2022 with the Raiders as an undrafted rookie free agent from the University of Texas-San Antonio. The 25-year old McCormick was on the 49ers practice squad earlier this season and also spent time on the Raiders practice squad in his first three years in the league (2022-24). While at UTSA, McCormick appeared in 37 games and had 724 carries for 3,939 yards and 34 touchdowns to go along with 66 receptions for 509 yards and one touchdown.

McCormick will wear jersey #37

Good luck to Jonah Williams in whatever is next.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-on-injured-reserve-activate-jermar-jefferson
 
Jaguars have five players ruled out vs. Cardinals

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The Arizona Cardinals have their work cut out for them this weekend in the Sunday afternoon game against a good Jacksonville Jaguars club. The Jags are 6-4-0 and are sitting in second place in the AFC South Division, and currently own the #7 seed in the playoff picture.

RELATED: CARDINALS OPEN AS HOME UNDERDOGS AGAINST JAGUARS

The Jaguars have had injury problems as of late. This will affect their game versus Arizona as several key players have already been ruled out.

The biggest name is DE Travon Walker, who was the franchise’s #1 draft pick in 2022.

Also out on the defense is backup SAM LB Yasier Abdullah, who is sidelined with a finger issue. CB Jarrian Jones (Quad) and nickel Jourdan Lewis (neck) are questionable but expected to play.

Wednesday Injury Report pic.twitter.com/nnfEyTQa8n

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) November 19, 2025

For the offensive side of the ball, RT Anton Harrison is still nursing a knee injury. WR1 Brian Thomas has an ankle problem, and TE Hunter Long has not fully recovered from a hip issue. Backup TE Brenton Strange could return this week from a hip injury.

Except for Abdullah, the remaining four players are starters.

Walker has 20 total tackles and 2.5 sacks this year. Harrison has started nine games this season, while Thomas, who made the Pro Bowl last year in his rookie season, has 60 targets, 30 receptions for 420 yards, and has scored one TD. Long has 12 catches for 85 yards and two scores as a blocking tight end.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...uars-have-five-players-ruled-out-vs-cardinals
 
Cardinals-49ers reactions, Michael Wilson’s big game, Jacoby Brissett, defensive takeaways

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Happy Saturday one and all.

The Arizona Cardinals take on the Jacksonville Jaguars at home tomorrow, but before we dive into that, let’s take a look back at last Sunday’s debacle of a game between the Cardinals and the San Francisco 49ers.

Jess and I take a look at the loss, what went wrong, and then discuss some of the positives from the game. Finally, we discuss what has been a problem all year, the defense.

It is a great hour of Cardinals talk, so sit back, relax and enjoy.

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

In this show, we discuss:

  • (1:00) Our reactions to the loss overall
  • (13:54) Michael Wilson’s monster game
  • (20:13) The play of Jacoby Brissett
  • (27:21) The problems with the defense
View Link

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...ons-fantasy-football-big-game-jacoby-brissett
 
Arizona Cardinals fans have little faith in direction of 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.



After back-to-back blowouts at the hands of the Arizona Cardinals division rivals, things are not looking great.

So, when we asked the confidence of the direction of the team this week, getting near the lowest of the season is not a surprise.

Only 11% of Arizona Cardinals fans are confident in the direction of the team.

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To be fair, it is hard to be confident when you have a defensive coach leading you and your defense is borderline awful, and the offense has not kept you competitive in three weeks.

So, when you ask what you hang your hat on as a team, the answer is…

That’s not to say we should begin calling for jobs, but it is saying that there has to be something you do well as a team.

Not get down by four touchdowns before you produce any semblance of success.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...izona-cardinals-fans-jonathan-gannon-hot-seat
 
Cardinals-Jaguars first half open thread

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It is time once again.

The morning games have shown that this late in the season, anything can happen, and playing at home and having a team that throws the ball more than any other team in the NFL against an average to below average pass defense means you should have a chance… right?

This will be an interesting one, we hope, but no matter what, it is another week of Arizona Cardinals football.

Week 12: Arizona Cardinals (3-7) vs Jacksonville Jaguars (6-4)​


Date: Sunday, November 23, 2025
Time: 2:05 p.m. AT
Location: State Farm Stadium — Glendale, AZ
National TV: CBS (Channel 5 locally)
National online streaming: NFL+, Paramount+ Streaming
TV announcers: Spero Dedes (play-by-play) Adam Archuleta (analyst) Aditi Kinkhabwala (sideline)
Radio: Arizona Sports 98.7 FM
Radio announcers: Dave Pasch (play-by-play), A.Q. Shipley (analyst) and Paul Calvisi (sideline)
Spanish Radio: Fuego Radio 106.7 FM
Spanish Radio announcers: Luis Hernandez (play-by-play) and Irving Villanueva (analyst)
Betting line: Cardinals +2.5 per FanDuel Sportsbook

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...4958/cardinals-jaguars-first-half-open-thread
 
Winners & Losers: Cardinals get turnovers and still lose

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The Arizona Cardinals needed this game in the “W” column. Unfortunately, it became another loss as the franchise were beaten 27-24 in overtime to the Jacksonville Jaguars.

RELATED: CARDINALS FALL FLAT IN OVERTIME LOSS

There has been plenty of buzz surrounding whether the coaching staff will be sent packing after this season is over with. Every team in the NFC West has a winning record, except for the Cardinals.

Each loss is agonizing, especially ones like this because Arizona had many chances to take home the win, and did not. The offense once again had problems.

So, who played well for Arizona? Who didn’t?

——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

WINNERS


QB Jacoby Brissett – Quiet first half with several good throws to WR Michael Wilson. Had a great scramble for a first down with just over four minutes left in the half without a slide. Had a wide open WR Xavier Weaver in the back of the end zone with 17 seconds left in the first half, and overthrew him as the pass rush crushed him. At one time was in the medical tent and went back onto the field. Had a strike to Wilson with just over 13 minutes left in the game for a key first down. The third-and-eight strike to WR Greg Dortch for a 39-yard touchdown was all Brissett. Good vision seeing Weaver with 1:28 left in the game on a third-and-10. Then tossed a strike to Wilson who was down at the Jacksonville 11-yard line after gaining 31 yards. Finished going 33-49 for 317 yards, one TD, zero picks, sacked six times, had a QB rating of 92.0

S Jalen Thompson – Seems like he was everywhere the ball was. Had an assist on that long run by RB Travis Etienne in the first quarter, or else it was six points. It was his hit/sack of QB Trevor Lawrence that forced the fumble for the Walter Nolen touchdown. Thompson tackled TE Brenton Strange with less than two minutes left in the game, or else he would have scored. Led all Cardinal defenders with nine total tackles.

Do your thing Budda ‼️ pic.twitter.com/5OS5Xy9T1s

— Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) November 23, 2025

S Budda Baker – Also had nine tackles, plus an interception. He blitzed in the second quarter and was able to get to Lawrence for the sack. What a tremendous stick on Washington in the third quarter after a short gain. Forced Washington out of bounds later in the fourth quarter after a missed tackle. Then two plays later he made the diving pick with 8:39 left in the game.

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WR Michael Wilson – Is really impressing the more games he plays. Great catch for 16 yards as the first quarter was winding down to convert the first down. Converted a first down with 10:44 left in the first half with an 11-yard grab. Almost made the fingertip diving catch in the fourth quarter. Nice concentration on the 31-yard grab with 26 seconds remaining in the game. Finished with 15 targets, 10 receptions for 118 yards, an 11.8 yards per reception average, and zero TDs.

——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

LOSERS


Lack of running attack – The Cardinals just could not move the ball whatsoever on the ground. The leading ground gainer was RB Michael Carter, who had just 28 yards rushing. Bam Knight had 10 carries for a miserable 12 yards. 55 total rushing yards for a team whose ambition for the season was to ground-and-pound each opponent. 11 running plays went for a loss of yardage. Only good runs were the nine-yard scramble by Brissett in the final quarter and Carter’s 11-yard scamper up the middle early in the second quarter.

Offensive line – Could not keep out Jacksonville’s pass rush for the majority of the game. Six sacks could have been double-digit instead if not for Brissett’s escape ability. The first sack was on a third-and-six in the first quarter as Brissett was flushed out to the right flats, and the Jags only rushed three with two linebackers feeling out the process. As Brissett moved out, LB Dennis Gardeck had a clear shot at the QB and brought Brissett down. The second sack came as the first quarter was winding down, making two in the first quarter alone. Arizona had six blockers to the Jags’ four defensive linemen.

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But LDE Josh Hines-Allen bush rushed RT Kelvin Beachum, who forced Brissett to step up into the waiting arms of DT DaVon Hamilton. On a third-and-14 midway in the third quarter, the line busted, and Brissett was forced to throw it out of bounds with a 14-10 lead. Brissett was buried with 5:48 left in the third quarter by three defenders and a huge loss. As the Cardinals were trying to get into field goal range with 2:55 left in the game, the Jaguars sent five defenders. Carter did not attempt to block either of the two defenders coming off the left edge, as both RG Isaiah Adams and C Hjalte Froholdt had doubled one defender. This placed two unmarked defenders chasing Brissett, and getting the sack to force a third-and-21. First play in overtime? Smothered for a sack. Third-and-five? Harassed and flushed. Jaguars had 15 QB hits and batted away five passes.

Opportunities lost – Had three picks and a fumble recovery, yet did not dominate the game. With just over six minutes left before the half, Arizona began a drive on its own 13-yard line. Good pass completions to both TE Trey McBride and WR Michael Wilson, and the Cards had a first down at the Jaguars 18 18-yard line. Two incompletions created a fourth down at the 15. Chad Ryland then missed a 33-yard field goal right before halftime after a 16-play drive that encompassed 72 yards and used up 5:53 of clock. Defense got four turnovers and still lost the game?

CB Garrett Williams – In the first quarter, Etienne got through a hole and burst past the second level. As he was running free, Williams was ahead a few steps and had a good angle. But Etienne made a shoulder move as Williams completely missed the tackle, and 14 more yards were gained to the Cardinals’ 15-yard line. On the very next play, Jags Lawrence threw a short flare pass to Etienne in the left flats. Up ran Williams after the catch was made, only to stumble and fall over, well….nothing, as Etienne rambled into the end zone. His interception in the end zone took away Jacksonville points, but Williams’ man WR Jakobi Meyers had two steps on him as DT Calais Campbell tipped the ball, which changed the ball’s flight and ended up right in Williams’ hands instead of six points for the visiting team.

WHAT A DOT 🎯@CPW11_ | #JAXvsAZ on CBSpic.twitter.com/Bm4WWw4g7E

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) November 23, 2025

With 4:36 left in the game and nursing a 21-17 lead, Williams was guarding Washington, who just ran into the end zone and caught a perfect pass for the go-ahead touchdown. All Williams had to do was turn his head around with room to bat the ball down. Instead, he never looked back.

Special teams – Ryland’s missed field goal right before the half. With 10:55 left in the third quarter, after a good 54-yard punt by Matt Haack, Jags’ KR Parker Washington took it down the left sideline for 43 yards and finally pushed out at the 27-yard line. On the play, Haack wanted no part of the tackle.

3rd and Meyers@jkbmyrs5 | #JAXvsAZ on CBS pic.twitter.com/d5kduuVuMS

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) November 23, 2025

CB Kei’Trel Clark – After the long punt return by the Jaguars, Lawrence found a wide-open Meyers at the 10-yard line in front of Clark. On the very next play, Lawrence, under a heavy rush, flung the ball into the end zone with no defensive effort by Clark, who just calmly jogged away.

Fourth and four – Down by three points in overtime, Arizona began at its own 28. Six plays later, they were working at Jacksonville’s 42-yard line. On a third-and-four, an incomplete pass. Go for it on fourth-and-four, or attempt a 61-yard field goal? Brissett took the snap in shotgun, Dortch was open in the left flats, but with a linebacker keeping tabs on him nine yards away and seven yards shy of the first down marker.

It was always @deweywingard 🤞

📺: NFL+pic.twitter.com/DLnAXrtti7

— Jacksonville Jaguars (@Jaguars) November 24, 2025

Carter left the backfield and was wide open in the right flats, just three yards short of the line to gain, and the nearest defender about eight yards off. Instead, Brissett tossed it downfield to Weaver into double coverage. CB Christina Braswell was step-for-step with Weaver as S Andrew Wingard came over to assist and help bat the ball away. Weaver had no shot at catching the ball. McBride was open for the first down just past the marker. Wilson had the hot hand. Carter was open in the flats. Over four minutes left in overtime, so that wasn’t an issue.

——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

Birdseed – Calories don’t count on Thanksgiving​


DT Walter Nolen – Was steady in his gap responsibilities, but his fumble recovery for a touchdown will always be highlight material. How he held onto the ball, hitting the turf so hard, is a mystery. The 45-yard Travis Etienne run in the first quarter went right by Nolen.

A lengthy run of consistency for Trey McBride 🙌 pic.twitter.com/odorhVHHrY

— NFL (@NFL) November 23, 2025

TE Trey McBride – Always a steady option, no matter what down-and-distance. Had a nice grab for a first down with just over seven minutes left in Quarter 3. Nice 14-yard catch in overtime for the first down. Finished with 10 targets, nine catches for 79 yards, an 8.8 yards per reception average, and zero TDs.

RB Michael Carter – Had the 11-yard run in the second quarter and was used quite a bit in the passing game. It looked like he was going to score when he collected the short dump pass at the 13-yard line of Jacksonville and went down at the four. Grabbed the 18-yard pass with just 41 ticks left before halftime to bring the Cardinals to Jacksonville’s 36-yard line as he ducked under defender Oluokun. Was used for blocking as well on critical passing downs. Five rushes for 28 yards, and caught all three of his targets for 30 yards.

Bam tuddy alert 🚨

📺: CBS pic.twitter.com/Pty87Jy6ZK

— Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) November 23, 2025

C Jon Gaines – Lined up at fullback in the second quarter with just over seven minutes left before the half. Arizona had the ball with a second-and-goal at the two with Bam Morris in the backfield. McBride went in motion to the right as the play headed left between the tackle and tight end Pharaoh Brown, who was pulled up off the practice squad for this game. LT Paris Johnson and Brown provided the hole through which Gaines went in first, with Morris trailing with the ball. Gaines destroyed LB Foyesade Oluokun as Morris squeezed into the end zone. If you ain’t starting, be useful.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...losers-cardinals-get-turnovers-and-still-lose
 
Arizona Cardinals have peculiar cornerback rotation in Jaguars loss

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There are books that could be written about the Arizona Cardinals 2025 season.

Decisions that have been made, framing of losses, and how a 2-0 season has unfolded and trended towards being a historically bad season, even for the Arizona Cardinals.

In their 27-24 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars there are a number of things that came up that were odd.

No more than their use of their cornerback room.

With Will Johnson once again missing time, the Cardinals had Garrett Williams, Max Melton, Denzel Burke and Kei’Trel Clark at their disposal.

As the game progressed it became apparent that Burke and Clark were going to be targeted by the Jaguars, and yet the player who the Cardinals spent a 2024 second round pick on Max Melton was suspiciously missing.

Melton played 15 snaps on defense, six against the run and nine against the pass.

On the flipside, Clark was in for 24 snaps, nine against the run and 15 against the pass. That means the cornerback two in the game was rookie fifth rounder Denzel Burke.

Jonathan Gannon was asked about it in the post game presser and once again, just played it off:

Gannon said the Cardinals were just rotating their corners but PFF's initial snap count numbers show Melton clearly fell out of favor. Snap counts:

Garrett Williams, 62
Denzel Burke, 62
Kei'Trel Clark, 24
Max Melton, 15

— Theo Mackie (@theo_mackie) November 24, 2025

This is an interesting development, as Melton has been seen as a key piece to a young defensive group. Now, it seems like he is on the outside looking in in a room that needs as much help as possible.

Melton getting usurped by Clark is also not ideal in the sense that Clark is an ideal fourth or fifth cornerback, but when he is playing meaningful snaps consistently he can get exposed.

If Melton is being graded below that, he may not be long for the team. Yet, seeing rookie Denzel Burke, who we all hope is a diamond in the rough day three pick find, is what is even more concerning.

Burke could be good, but he hasn’t been great and you usually want to develop these guys slowly.

Yet, Gannon and company would rather see Burke on the field than Melton? If there is an injury concern, then it should absolutely be addressed, but if it is a performance issue, then that would be concerning for the short-term, but bad for the long-term.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-peculiar-cornerback-rotation-in-jaguars-loss
 
Arizona Cardinals open as underdogs ahead of matchup with Buccaneers

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The only thing that could change is the Tampa Bay Buccaneers may be without Baker Mayfield so things could be a little easier for the Arizona Cardinals.

That will be something interesting to watch since our friends at FanDuel Sportsbook have the Arizona Cardinals as 2.5-point underdogs on the road this coming week.

For the Cardinals, that’s not a surprise.

They have won a single game since September, and every week they seem to invent new and fun ways to lose games.

After getting boat raced on the road and then at home, they come out and have one of the more spirited defensive performances of the season, forcing four turnovers and even scoring a defensive touchdown.

Teams were 50-0 when having a 4-0 turnover advantage the last five years.

Until the Arizona Cardinals got involved.

So, what will we see this week?

That is a question most of us don’t want to answer, but are you feeling any chance the Cardinals cover?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...as-underdogs-ahead-of-matchup-with-buccaneers
 
Former Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald one step closer to HOF

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Larry Fitzgerald is regarded as one of the greatest players in Cardinals history. Selected third overall in the first round of the 2004 NFL draft, Fitz played 17 years in the league, all with one club. Point out another player in the NFL who suited up every snap for a single team.

RELATED: FITZGERALD IS CLOSING IN ON 17,000 CAREER RECIEVING YARDS

This year, he became eligible for the Pro Football Hall of Fame located in Canton, Ohio. He was projected to become a first ballot inductee, and now, he has hurdled another step and is closer to that goal.

On Monday, Fitzgerald made it to the semifinal stage in his first year of eligibility.

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The list has now been whittled to 26 athletes in what is called “modern era candidates.” The advancement was conducted by a 50-member selection committee for the Class of 2026.

Along with Fitzgerald, four others were also advanced: TE Jason Witten, RB Frank Gore, and QBs Drew Brees and Phillip Rivers. Both Fitz and Brees are considered the top candidates and assumed as the most likely to be inducted this year.

These five join the other candidates: QB Eli Manning, RB Fred Taylor, WRs Torry Holt, Steve Smith, Sr., Hines Ward, Reggie Wayne, OTs Willie Anderson, Lomas Brown, and Richmond Webb, C Steve Wisniewski, OGs Jahri Evans and Marshal Yanda, DE Robert Mathis, DTs Vince Wilfork and Kevin Williams, LBs Terrell Suggs and Luke Kuechly, CB Darren Woodson, S Rodney Harrison and Earl Thomas, and K Adam Vinatieri.

This list of 26 will be pared down to 15 in February of 2026. There will also be in consideration three seniors, one coach, and one contributor in a class that will be between four and eight new inductees. Last year, only four were selected. This is the second year of this new current format.

Fitzgerald’s 1,432 catches and 17,492 yards receiving rank #2, only behind Jerry Rice. He had 9 seasons of 1,000+ yards, tied for fourth-most ever.

For his career, Fitz played in 263 NFL games with 261 starts, 2.335 targets, 1,432 receptions, 17,492 yards, a 12.2 yards per catch average, 906 first down conversions, an average of 277 YAC per season, and scored 121 touchdowns. He also had 20 rushes for 65 yards.

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He was a main instrument in the Cardinals’ run to Super Bowl XLIII in the 27-23 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers. It was only the franchise’s fourth time in the league championship game, winning twice (1925, 1947). Fitzgerald set single-season records that postseason with 546 yards receiving and seven TD catches, including a go-ahead 64-yard score with 2:37 to play before the Steelers rallied for the win.

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Fitzgerald grew up a ball boy for the Minnesota Vikings under head coach Dennie Green. Ironically, Green was Fitzgerald’s coach as a rookie and remained with Arizona until 2006.

His NFL accolades are like a book: 11 Pro Bowls, First Team All-Pro (2008), Second Team All-Pro (2009, 2011), NFL receptions leaders (2005, 2016), NFL receiving touchdowns leader (2008, 2009), NFL 2010s All-Decade Team, NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team, 2014 Art Rooney Award, and the 2016 Walter Payton Man of the Year.

Fitzgerald’s University of Pittsburgh college honors include: Unanimous All-American, Big East Offensive Player of the Year, First Team All-Big East, NCAA receiving yards leader, NCAA receiving touchdowns leader, Biletnikoff Award, Walter Camp Award, Chic Harley Award, Paul Warfield Trophy, University of Pittsburgh jersey retired (#1), and was named First Team All-Time All-American in 2025.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...eiver-larry-fitzgerald-one-step-closer-to-hof
 
After another historic loss, are you confident in the direction of the Arizona Cardinals?

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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.

Things are not good.

A close loss to a playoff team is one thing. The Arizona Cardinals had a lot of fight, played a good Jacksonville Jaguars team close, and lost in overtime. If you get that description, it wasn’t a bad day, just a disappointing loss.

Instead, the Cardinals have another historic loss, they force four turnovers, score a touchdown on one of those turnovers, and don’t turn the ball over themselves.

And yet, they still lose, the first team to do so in a quarter century, where teams were 50-0 with a 4:0 turnover ratio. They are now 50-1.

That comes on the heels of a loss where they set a franchise records in penalties.

That comes after a loss where they were down 35-0 within 22 minutes of game time against a division rival.

These are all things that beg the question… are you confident in Jonathan Gannon and company leading the team moving forwad?

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...ent-in-the-direction-of-the-arizona-cardinals
 
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