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
 
Former Cardinals great Larry Fitzgerald advances as a finalist for HOF

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382.

That is how many members are inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame located in Canton, Ohio. Being enshrined is the pinnacle of every player who puts on a jersey and laces up their cleats.

Former Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald just got one step closer to adding his name to that number.

RELATED: FITZGERALD HEADLINES 2026 HOF NOMINEES

On Tuesday, Fitz was voted as one of the 15 finalists for the class of 2026. He is one of four players who are eligible for the first time this year: Drew Brees, Frank Gore, Jason Witten, and Fitzgerald.

The 15 finalists include four players who advanced to the final 7 stage last year and have received an automatic spot. These four are Willie Anderson, Torry Holt, Luke Kuechly, and Adam Vinatieri. Rounding out the finalists this year are Marshal Yanda, Terrell Suggs, Reggie Wayne, Jahri Evans, Eli Manning, Darren Woodson, and Kevin Williams.

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This 2026 class can include five modern-era players. Five other candidates have already been placed on the ballot: Roger Craig, L.C. Greenwood, Ken Anderson, plus coach finalist Bill Belichick and contributor finalist owner Robert Kraft.

From here, the 15 finalists will be pared down to seven, and then up to five candidates will be voted in. The 2026 class will be announced the week leading up to this year’s Super Bowl on February 5, 2026, during the NFL Honors Show. To be considered for the final spots, players must receive a minimum of 80% of the final votes.

The Arizona Cardinals selected Fitzgerald with the third pick in the 2004 NFL draft after a sterling career at the University of Pittsburgh. The San Diego Chargers selected QB Eli Manning first overall, followed by OT Robert Gallery, taken with the second overall pick by the Oakland Raiders.

While in college, Fitz was named the Big East Offensive Player of the Year, First Team All-American, First Team All-Big East, NCAA receiving yards leader, NCAA receiving touchdowns leader, and won four awards, including the Biletnikoff Award for the nation’s best receiver.

For his 17-year NFL career, which was remarkably achieved while playing for a single club, Fitzgerald had 261 starts and played in 263 games, 2,335 targets, 1,432 receptions, 17,492 yards, a 12.2 average yards per reception, 121 touchdowns, plus 20 rushes for 68 yards with an additional five scores.

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Fitzgerald was named to the Pro Bowl 11 times, named First Team and Second Team All-Pro three years, was the NFL receptions leader twice, the NFL receiving touchdowns leader twice, named the Walter Payton Man of the Year in 2016, won the Art Rooney Award (2004), voted to the NFL 2010s All-Decade Team, plus the NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team.

Only Hall of Famer Jerry Rice has more receptions (1,549) and yards (22,895) than Fitzgerald.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...rry-fitzgerald-advances-as-a-finalist-for-hof
 
‘Black Monday’ is days away. Will the Cardinals be involved?

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The 2025 NFL season is about to close another chapter with the final weekend of games in the regular season this weekend. The Arizona Cardinals travel to Los Angeles to play the Rams.

The following day is referred to as “Black Monday.” This is the day that NFL owners fire their head coaches and general managers. Already, the New York Football Giants and Tennessee Titans have given their head coaches the ax. It has been reported that as many as six clubs will let their head man go on Monday.

RELATED: GANNON STATES HIS STATUS IS “GOOD”

For many fans, Black Monday is a day of relief and an opportunity to right the ship with a change at head coach and/or GM. Double-digit losses in any season is no fun. Fans spend a lot of money on a team that plays poorly week after week, and fans are exhausted.

Does the franchise need a few pieces here and there, or a complete rebuild?

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Jonathan Gannon arrived in 2023 after a successful stint with the Philadelphia Eagles. The Eagles had just lost the Super Bowl, but Gannon’s defense had played a spectacular game. He was viewed as yet another young buck with immense talent who could lead the Cardinals to the promised land.

He offered a three-year plan. The first season, Arizona went 4-13-0, followed by 8-9-0. Very typical for a rebuild strategy. The first year, very little works, but good improvement in Year 2. This means by the third season, fans and the media should expect at least a 10-win season, and most likely, a playoff berth.

What occurred instead was the exact opposite. The third season under Gannon has reverted to the first year he took over. The Cardinals are now 3-13-0 and have the opportunity to become the very first roster in the 127-year history of the franchise to lose 14 games in a single season.

Fans of Gannon have pointed out the numerous games the team had won in the waning minutes of games, only to have victory snatched away. Others mentioned that this year’s team has lost eight games by seven points or less.

Not to mention the franchise mercifully got off to a 2-0 start and currently has a full team listed on IR (25 to be exact). Among the wounded are the starting running back and his backup, the starting punter, the starting QB, starting LT, RT, and RG, the team’s leading tackler, both backup tight ends, and two contributing receivers.

Now, after three seasons in charge and with the franchise heading into its latest “most important offseason,” are the winds of change about to blow through Tempe once again?

The only one who has complete knowledge of what is going through the mind of owner Michael Bidwill is Michael Bidwill. And he has not stopped the rumors stacked on top of innuendos and tied up with “senses” about what will happen come Monday morning, especially as it relates to Gannon.

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And what about GM Monti Ossenfort? Is he safe? Or will it be another member of the organization that hasn’t lived up to expectations? After all, he arrived the same year as Gannon. He handles contracts and the arrival of players, so certainly he is a main contributor to the three-year plan, right?

Look at his track record of drafting players. The verdict is still out on WR Marv Harrison, who is looking more and more like a WR2 instead of a Hall of Famer. OG Isaiah Adams is a bust. DE Xavier Thomas is already cut. OT Paris Johnson hurt, so is DT Walter Nolen and RB Trey Benson. B.J. Ojulari has done very little as has OG Jon Gaines.

And his free agent signings? DT Dalvin Tomlinson was let go from the Cleveland Browns while still under contract for lack of production, which has been his story since landing in Arizona. OT Kelvin Beachum is a liability, and what happened to the two-year deal with WR Zach Pascal? QB Josh Dobbs looked like the Messiah for a spell, then fell off the earth.

LB Markus Bailey? Three-year deals to DE Bilal Nichols and Justin Jones, CB Sean Murphy-Bunting, LB Mack Jones, and RB Deejay Dallas. Any of these blue-chip signings come through? WR Simi Fehoko? LB Mykal Walker? OL Jake Curhan?

During the free agency period, Ossenfort’s greatest free agent signings include DT Calais Campbell, WR Greg Dortch, LBs Josh Sweat and Akeem Davis-Gathier, C Hjalte Froholdt, and QB Jacoby Brissett.

So, what do Cardinals fans and the media that cover them think will happen?

———————————————————————————

Theo Mackie – azcentral.com


Regarding Gannon:

“Ultimately, that decision will not be Gannon’s to make. It will fall on Bidwill and Ossenfort, neither of whom has been made available to reporters since September. Some of the factors weighing on their minds will be obvious. The Cardinals are 15-35 under Gannon. If they lose to the Rams in Week 18, his win percentage will be the worst of any Cardinals coach with multiple seasons at the helm in the Super Bowl era. Other factors are less self-evident. The veterans here know how bad seasons can look. Finger-pointing. A lack of effort. Low energy practices.”

Regarding Ossenfort:

“Ossenfort, who arrived in the same offseason as Gannon, also needs to look at his own roster construction. In three years, he has not acquired a single Pro Bowler, whether through the draft, free agency, or otherwise. His most concerning work came in the 2024 draft, when he held 12 draft picks. Of those, only one — fourth-round safety Dadrion Taylor-Demerson — has outperformed his draft day expectation. Is the issue Ossenfort’s talent evaluation? Or is it the player development capabilities of the coaching staff, which Gannon was primarily responsible for hiring?”

—————————————————————————

Josh Weinfuss – ESPN Arizona


Regarding Gannon:

“The initial diagnosis of how and why this season went off the rails will produce the obvious reasons, starting with injuries, including the starting quarterback, the top two running backs, two of the top four tight ends, both starting offensive tackles, and the 2025 first-round pick. Then there’s the defense, which gave up 40 points three times in a five-game stretch, followed by 37 two weeks later. The Cardinals regressed in 2025 after steady growth from four wins in coach Jonathan Gannon’s first season in 2023 to eight in Year 2. Publicly, Gannon has fallen on the sword. Yet, little that Arizona did led to wins this season. And the quarterback situation. To draft or not to draft a quarterback, keep Kyler Murray or run with Jacoby Brissett? If Bidwill fires Gannon, who has two years left on his contract, then the new coach will want to pick his own quarterback.”

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Regarding Ossenfort:

“With an 83% chance of keeping a top-five pick, according to the ESPN Football Power Index, the Cardinals will be in a prime position to draft one of the top three signal-callers. Who, though, in reality, will still be on the board when they go on the clock is the biggest question. There are a lot of layers to why the Cardinals’ process hasn’t translated to wins. It’ll be in conjunction with what Arizona does with the rest of the quarterback room as well as hinge on whether Bidwill decides to make changes at head coach and general manager — or both. if Bidwill fired both Gannon and Ossenfort, then there’s an outside chance the new regime may decide it can run it back with Murray.”

———————————————————————————–

Johnny Venerable – gophnx.com


Regarding Gannon:

“Gannon has never watched game film with Michael Bidwell after games. He has more clout and respect than any other head coach. Bidwill is cognizant of Gannon’s perception around the NFL. This is my train of thought: Do I believe this is a done deal? I do not. Do I believe the Cardinals plan to keep Gannon? Correct. However, last week and the results of this week, Bidwill, as the owner, is starting to think, what is the fanbase saying? What is the direction? What’s the player buy-in? We are only taking this at face value. There’s an outcry. Will fans start to cancel season tickets in droves? All of that culminates in the fact that we won’t have an answer until Monday.”

Here’s the full comment from Albert Breer : https://t.co/USboyj88Nv pic.twitter.com/Vhkc7vvVlP

— K1SinceDay1 (@KSzn2021) December 9, 2025

Albert Breer – Sports Illustrated


Regarding Gannon:

“I certainly don’t think he’s safe right now. I don’t know what the owner’s going to do, but it does feel to me that some level of change is coming. You can’t expect to lose (10 out of 11) and expect that to go unchecked. I think there’s going to be a significant change after the year, regardless. They’ve got a decision to make at quarterback; they’ve got a team with some really good young talent on it. But is there enough based on the amount of draft capital they’ve had the last couple of years? I think there are a lot of fair questions to ask about the future of that team.”

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

Mark Harris – Heavy.com


Regarding Gannon:

“Unmitigated disaster” could work better for the 3-13 Cardinals. And despite all the negativity, Arizona head coach Jonathan Gannon is not worried about his future in the desert. No NFL head coach is going to come out and say that he expects to be fired, but Gannon seemed more self-assured than one would expect a coach in his position to be. It’s one thing to lose to the Bengals, but to only score 14 points against Cincinnati’s awful defense? A fire-able offense. Gannon now has a 15-35 record as head coach of Arizona. That is a .300 winning percentage. It does not take a mathematician or a football savant to know that is a very bad record. In Gannon’s defense, a 4-13 first year is not horrible considering he was taking over a bad program with a bad roster. It seems odd that Jonathan Gannon is so confident that he will be back in Arizona for 2026. Maybe he knows something we don’t.”

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David Brandt – WKYC.com


Regarding Gannon:

“A dreadful season for the Arizona Cardinals is mercifully nearing its end. Now one question hovers over the franchise: Will coach Jonathan Gannon keep his job and be back for a fourth season? Cardinals owner Michael Bidwill is a relatively quiet but constant presence around the team, and he has given little clue about what he wants to do. Arizona started the season 2-0, but has since dropped 13 of 14 in a brutal freefall. On the positive side, Gannon still appears to have the support of the locker room. As for the negatives, there are plenty. The Cardinals have had multiple embarrassing moments and performances during this year’s freefall, which are quickly erasing good memories from the first two seasons. Gannon’s record as Arizona’s coach has fallen to 15-35 in three seasons — 20 games under .500.”

———————————————————————————–

Ben Garcia – The Ben Garcia Show


Regarding Gannon:

“Now’s the time to fire Jonathan Gannon. He has earned the right to be fired. All of the goodwill he had is gone. I feel personally hoodwinked, bamboozled, run amok by Gannon because I fell for leadership. I fell for the things he did in Philly. He was the only defensive coordinator ever to have four pass rushers with 10+ sacks. He came in and did originally change the culture. The players gave him an A+ on his NFLPA report card. I fell for it. But he looks way over his skis. And the defending of Drew Petzing from the get-go, and then watching him muster up 14 points against the Cincinnati Bengals, one being a garbage-time score. That’s no longer a Petzing thing – that’s a you issue. You defended him, combined with the defense. Ill-prepared, not ready to play, disinterested. That should be it for Jonathan Gannon.”

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So, with the team in the basement twice in three years of the NFC West Division under Gannon, that leaves ownership to decide who to go forward with.

If Gannon is let go, he will continue his trek of being a guy who is a rising coordinator in this league. That, he does well.

Everyone in Arizona expected great things from this roster this year. Instead, the other three clubs in the division all have postseason invitations. The Cardinals ended up with double-digit losses instead. Needless to say, Cardinals fans are frustrated with the results.

In the end, the vote to keep Gannon and/or Ossenfort will be 1-0. Nobody knows for certain what Bidwill is thinking. The good news is we are only a few days away from an end to all the speculation about the future employment of Gannon and Ossenfort.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...y-is-days-away-will-the-cardinals-be-involved
 
Cardinals-Rams Week 18 preview, picks, predictions; Should Jonathan Gannon be fired?

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The Arizona Cardinals will take on the Los Angeles Rams today in a game the Rams fully need to win.

A win gives them the fifth seed in the NFC playoff race, and will allow them a slightly easier first round route taking on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, before they get to the meat of the NFC Playoffs against one of the top teams.

So, what do Jess and I think?

Well, a lot.

We start by looking at the Rams and some matchups to watch, before taking a walk down the Jonathan Gannon lane.

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 episode, we discussed the following:

  • (1:00) The Rams’ 2025 season
  • (20:08) Keys and matchups to watch in the game vs. the Rams
  • (34:12) Picks and predictions for Cardinals-Rams, top prop bets
  • (48:51) What should happen with Jonathan Gannon

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...s-predictions-should-jonathan-gannon-be-fired
 
Arizona Cardinals 2026 opponents: Home, away matchups confirmed

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The Arizona Cardinals finished last place in the NFC West once again, and they finished 0-6 in the division, meaning they will have a last place schedule, but who knows what that means.

We know their opponents, we know they have nine home opponents, but they may be out of the country for one of those, and we know they have their scheduled matchups with the NFC East and AFC West.

Let’s take a look at the Arizona Cardinals 2026 opponents and their home and away schedule as of now.

Arizona Cardinals 2026 opponents​


Philadelphia Eagles, Washington Commanders, Denver Broncos, Las Vegas Raiders, Detroit Lions, New York jets, Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers, Seattle Seahawks, Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, Kansas City Chiefs Los Angeles Chargers, New Orleans Saints.

Arizona Cardinals 2026 home game schedule​

  • Los Angeles Rams
  • San Francisco 49ers
  • Seattle Seahawks
  • Philadelphia Eagles
  • Washington Commanders
  • Denver Broncos
  • Las Vegas Raiders
  • Detroit Lions
  • New York Jets

Arizona Cardinals 2026 away game schedule​

  • Dallas Cowboys
  • New York Giants
  • Kansas City Chiefs
  • Los Angeles Chargers
  • New Orleans Saints
  • Rams
  • 49ers
  • Seahawks

The ones we were waiting on were the Lions, Jets and Saints. The Lions being the last place team in the NFC North was not something anyone had on the bingo card, and we will see what happens with the Jets coaching situation, much like the Cardinals.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...pponents-nfl-2026-nfc-west-home-away-matchups
 
Arizona Cardinals fire Jonathan Gannon per reports

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The Arizona Cardinals have fired head coach Jonathan Gannon per multiple reports from Ian Rapoport and Adam Schefter:

The #AZCardinals are firing coach Jonathan Gannon, sources say.

Endless losses to finish an injury-riddled season spelled the end of Gannon, who should be a top-tier defensive coordinator candidate now. pic.twitter.com/HSI29PENNs

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) January 5, 2026
Sources: Cardinals fired head coach Jonathan Gannon.

Arizona closed this season with nine straight losses, ultimately costing Gannon his job.

Cardinals GM Monti Ossenfort will spearhead the search for a new head coach. pic.twitter.com/WGE9Cx9jEU

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) January 5, 2026

Gannon has been a question for the final part of the season as the Arizona Cardinals lost nine straight games, and was 15-36 overall. More troubling, Gannon was a paltry 2-19 when a quarterback not named Kyler Murray started a game.

Gannon is among the worst coaches in NFL history in terms of win percentage, finishing his first stint as a head coach with a 0.294 win percentage. That, coupled with a defense that never improved over his three seasons, as a defensive focused head coach is why this was going to happen.

Over the nine game losing streak, the Cardinals allowed 35.2 points per game, including four games over 40 points, including 40+ points in at least one game each to division rivals.

The Cardinals will be among a large group of teams needing a head coach, and the last several coaching cycles the Cardinals have been last in hiring.

We will see what happens next.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/n...na-cardinals-fire-jonathan-gannon-per-reports
 
Would a defensive-minded head coach fit the Cardinals?

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Well, it wasn’t like it wasn’t expected. The Cardinals set a franchise record for the most losses in a season with 14 by getting thumped by the Los Angeles Rams 37-20 in a game that the Rams had nothing to gain by winning.

Today, on “Black Monday,” Gannon was fired. He finished his tenure in Tempe with a 15-36-0 record in just three seasons.

RELATED: CARDINALS FIRE JONATHAN GANNON

Gannon is respected in NFL circles, and it should not take him long to find a coordinator job with another club. Or, he just might slide into another head coaching position.

Numerous media outlets have projected that between four and six head coaches will lose their positions today on “Black Monday.”

Before the end of this season, the New York Football Giants and Tennessee Titans fired their head man, and the Atlanta Falcons did not wait until Black Monday to ax head coach Raheem Morris hours after they won their final game 19-17 over the New Orleans Saints. On Monday, the Cleveland Browns gave the ax to head coach Kevin Stefanski, while the Las Vegas Raiders could not wait for Pete Carroll to turn that franchise around.

The decision to let Gannon walk probably wasn’t an easy one for owner Michael Bidwill. After all, the team has 25 players on IR, of which several were starters, including their leading tackler. One has to wonder what this team could have accomplished if they had been able to place all their best players on the field at the same time. But in his three years with the Cardinals, the team never even sniffed the playoffs.

The NFL is a results league, and losing 13 games in 2023 and 14 this year were just too much to ignore. The quarterback issue was always in flux. The offensive line played horrible.

And now, with the firing of Gannon, the Cardinals must find a new head coach. Keep in mind, because Gannon has been released of his duties, this means his entire coaching staff is now unemployed. The new coach can retain any of the former coaches, but usually, he has his own guys to bring in that he is used to working with. Plus, any of these former Cards assistant coaches will be working to gain interviews with other clubs to ensure they have employment in 2026.

The defense has become the one area that has the fewest issues. This is due to Gannon’s experience leading a defense. Perhaps the new guy should retain the importance of the defense, and perhaps Bidwill will continue with a defensive-minded coach to run this ballclub. Then simply hire a stud offensive coordinator to run that side of the ball.

Some defensive coaches for the Cardinals to keep in mind in their head coaching search:

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Jesse Minter


Age: 42

DC Los Angeles Chargers


Minter has taken this defense to new heights. His concept is a bit unorthodox in that he has a conceptually-driven system using the 3-4 base, which would change quite a bit of schemes with the current Cardinals set-up.

He often plays a five-man front, which allows the defense to wall the perimeter of the box with fast EDGE rushers, and a continued use of the nickel. Minter also uses a lot of stunts.

The main ingredient of Minter’s defense is a prominent safety. Fortunately for the Cardinals, S Budda Baker was just named to the Pro Bowl. The Chargers play both Wide Zone and Inside Zone extremely well, holding opponents to below-average results on horizontal runs. Minter is forcing opponents to turn into power run teams.

Minter was the driving force behind Michigan’s defense when they defeated Ohio State four years in a row.

Where does the Chargers’ defense sit this year?

  • Passing: #4
  • Rushing: #8
  • NFL ranking overall: #5

His defenses are known for employing two-high safety shells and aim to stop the run on early downs in order to force third-and-long situations. He will design schemes to counter his opponent’s strengths.

Minter and his wife, Rachelle, have three children.

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Aden Durde


Age 46

DC Seattle Seahawks


This Seahawks defense is a scary group.

Durde came to the NFL via the International Player Pathway program, as the British linebacker played in NFL Europe and ended up as the head of football development at NFLUK from 2015 to 2018. Atlanta Falcons head coach Dan Quinn hired him as their new defensive quality control coach, which made him the first-ever British full-time coach in NFL history.

He then had a stint with the Dallas Cowboys before going to Seattle in 2024, where his defense in his first year ranked #14.

Where does the Seahawks defense sit this year?



  • Passing: #12
  • Rushing: #3
  • NFL ranking overall: #6

Durde is a rising head coaching candidate whose defense emphasizes a strong defensive line that will collapse the pocket, a unit focused on consistent effort, stopping the run, and the use of versatile defensive backs.

If the Browns have a serious interest in Durde, they could face challenges balancing Seattle’s postseason preparation with his managing outside interest in key staff members.

Durde and his wife, Kate, have two sons.

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Brian Flores


Age 44

DC Minnesota Vikings


Flores has been an NFL head coach before with the Miami Dolphins from 2019-2021. He transformed their defense into a league power while he was there.

Flores has a reputation for being one of the league’s top defensive minds and has been interviewed several times in the past two years. He has been rumored to be the top candidate for the Raiders’ head coaching vacancy.

From a coaching standpoint, Flores fits with the widespread trend of finding a coach who is the exact opposite of Gannon. Flores is no-nonsense and Belichickian. And Flores has ties to Brian Daboll, who could fit nicely at offensive coordinator.

Where does the Vikings defense sit this year?

  • Passing: #2
  • Rushing: #21
  • NFL ranking overall: #3

His defense uses a 3-4 base. He uses a lot of three-safety looks with a single linebacker with three true defensive linemen whose job is to rush the passer. He will also engage a lot of 4-2-5 and even some 4-1-6 on occasion.

Flores loves to put four outside linebackers on the line on third downs. Often he will align a normal secondary structure behind it, whether standard nickel or big. Logistically, it means a lot of rotation. 15 Vikings players have played more than 33% of available defensive snaps.

Flores and his wife, Jennifer, have three children.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...defensive-minded-head-coach-fit-the-cardinals
 
ESPN reveals its NFL All-Rookie Team. How many Cardinals made the list?

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ESPN is one of the nation’s leading sports sites. We all log on at some point to catch up on our European soccer teams, what dates are the college football playoffs, if Caitlin Clark is healthy enough to begin play in the WNBA, and which NASCAR driver is the points leader.

RELATED: CARDINALS 2026 MOCK DRAFT

Here at ROTB, we cover the Arizona Cardinals. And believe us when we say that is plenty to talk about. This year, all the talk was about QB Kyler Murray, and then shifted to TE Trey McBride and the single-season receptions record.

This 2025 season has not gone as it was drawn up for the Cardinals back in the summer, and training camp was in full bloom. There was anticipation and excitement. Now, there is aggravation and disappointment as Arizona now has double-digit losses when a playoff scenario was expected.

But there are some shiny spots dotted on the outer perimeter of the clouds, commonly called “silver linings.”

McBride leads that list, with DE Josh Sweat and DT Calais Campbell coming in second. Murray just might be the franchise’s signalcaller going forward, and then again, he might not. That could become Jacoby Brissett again. The receiver room has been a roller coaster. The safety room has flourished. In fact, the entire defensive backfield has been excellent.

And then there are some rookies who should be commended and placed directly in the spotlight.

It just so happens that ESPN’s Ben Solak has compiled a list for their site’s 2025 NFL All-Rookie Team, highlighting the best first-year players at their position. And yes, there are multiple Arizona players recognized.

LINK: FULL LIST ESPN ALL-ROOKIE TEAM

Drum roll please.

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Defensive Tackle


Second Team: Walter Nolen – Cardinals


“Several defensive tackles played more snaps and had flashier plays than Nolen (such as the Steelers’ Derrick Harmon, Dolphins’ Kenneth Grant, Chargers’ Jamaree Caldwell and Dolphins’ Jordan Phillips). But Nolen’s limited film is so good and so disruptive that I have to give him the nod over the field. A healthy sophomore season from Nolen could lead to eye-popping tackle-for-loss and pressure numbers given how naturally he won as a penetrator as a rookie.“
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Linebacker

Second Team: Cody Simon – Cardinals​


“Simon is a bit of a “best of the rest” nod. He has been up and down when thrust into the starting lineup because of injuries ahead of him on the depth chart, but the rest of the field has been a lot more down than up. The Bengals, who are starting two rookie linebackers, would do anything to have a player like Simon in their building right now.“
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Cornerback

First Team: Will Johnson – Cardinals


“Johnson’s advanced metrics aren’t great, and he has gotten cooked by some top receivers, but that’s the reality of playing corner in the NFL. The body of work on film is still quite good. Johnson is an impressively fluid mover at his length and would benefit from a scheme that allows him to play closer to the line of scrimmage when tasked with man-coverage responsibilities. Johnson needs to stay healthy, but I’m willing to bet on his physical profile on a healthier defense for seasons to come.“
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Second Team: Denzel Burke – Cardinals


“Burke has provided the ball production for the Cardinals’ rookie cornerback duo, with three interceptions and 11 passes defensed on 52 targets. His ballhawk rate of 21.2% is 11th among all corners this season, rookie or otherwise, per NFL Next Gen Stats. Some of Burke’s ball production has been fortuitous, and he did give up a 20-yard completion to an offensive lineman this week. But even with the warts in run support and issues tackling in space, Burke’s production at the catch point is too valuable to ignore.“

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...-rookie-team-how-many-cardinals-made-the-list
 
Cardinals 1st HC search interview: Request meeting with defensive mind

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The Arizona Cardinals are fresh off the firing of head coach Jonathan Gannon after a historic 14-loss season. During training camp, the team was projected to be a sneaky good roster that would make the playoffs. Black Monday has come and gone, and although there may be a team or two that will still ax their head guy, it appears that this year in the NFL, only six teams will be looking to replace their head coach.

Which is troubling for a team like Arizona. If the league has 8-9 clubs looking for a new head coach, it allows more competition for the better coordinators. As it is now, the struggle will be fierce focused on a select few.

RELATED: CARDINALS FIRE GANNON

The process now is to gather information on which coaches the franchise would prefer to hire as their head man, and then work with their agent in order to schedule an interview. For the Cardinals, they didn’t wait very long. They now have an interview set up with Denver Broncos DC Vance Joseph, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

Broncos defensive coordinator Vance Joseph is expected to interview this week for the Raiders, Cardinals, Giants and Titans head coaching vacancies, per sources. pic.twitter.com/W7Ij89Lu3c

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) January 6, 2026

The Broncos have the #1 seed in the AFC, so there is some free space for Joseph to interview. He will interview with Arizona either Thursday or Friday via Zoom, according to 9News.com.

The thought process to bring in a talent such as Joseph is that the defensive side of the ball can become elite if given some effort here and there. The ingredients are mostly in place, with free agency and the April NFL draft two key components to help elevate this group.

Joseph is an elite coordinator. He has already been an NFL head coach while with the Broncos in 2017-2018, and then slid right back into the DC role where he shines. He was the Cardinals’ DC from 2019-2022. His defense has been amazing the last two seasons.

This year, the Broncos’ defense is ranked #2 overall, allowing just 278.2 yards per contest. That breaks down to #7 in pass coverage and #2 against the run. LB Alex Singleton finished the regular season ranked #13 in total tackles with 135.

Last year, Denver ranked #7 in total defense. A trademark of a Joseph defense was the #3 rushing defense.

His scheme is an aggressive system. Joseph’s defensive backs play something called a “match” principle, where his DBs cover one side of the route, which gives them leverage and limits the open areas for quarterbacks to throw to. Joseph will double down on blitz packages and often operates in five-man fronts. He also likes to use quite a few stunts with a focus on getting teams short gains on first downs.

Beyond the Blitz: Unpacking the Broncos' Hybrid Defensive Evolution Under  Vance Joseph in 2024


Denver blitzed at a tremendous rate and creates a lot of sack opportunities.

Joseph wants to control the run output, and with his personnel, he has accomplished this. The Cardinals should be able to continue this trend with their current defensive personnel. This forces opponents into a predictable passing attack which creates mismatches for the offensive line since the defensive front is now knowing that their offense has ditched the run.

He also expects his front seven to create havoc and disrupt the offense. He wants aggressive rush schemes that will cause some confusion and uses different players in different positions, like two-high safeties.

The Broncos went from 8-9-0 to 10-7-0 last year to 14-3-0 this season. Joseph had a lot to do with that transformation.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...interview-request-meeting-with-defensive-mind
 
Get to know 5 offensive-minded head coaching candidates for the Cardinals

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The Arizona Cardinals decided that losing 14 games in a season and 36 games in three years was enough. So, head coach Jonathan Gannon was a victim of Black Monday.

And now comes the daunting task of finding the new guy.

What will be his scheme? An offensive guy or a defensive guru? Coming to work from being a coordinator, or having been a head coach before? Does he run a 3-4 or a 4-3 base? How has his side of the ball performed this past year? What challenges will he see if hired? What will the new guy do with the QB situation?

Here at ROTB, we have already offered up three defensive-minded coaching prospects at the link below with their credentials, production, and qualifications.

RELATED: WOULD A DEFENSIVE-MINDED COACH FIT?

But now, we at ROTB want to introduce you to five offensive guys. However, this isn’t a list of candidates that we are recommending or not recommending. We haven’t set up a dartboard just yet in the break room to decide who we are suggesting. Yet. But bring some beers and hang out, and we might have a winning applicant before too long.

This is simply a list to introduce you, the reader, to who these guys are, what their strengths and weaknesses are, what schemes they would implement for the offense, and, of course, whether they are QB rescuers.

In-person interviews can’t begin until January 19, so all meetings with NFL clubs must be done virtually. The Cardinals have a short window to interview both any coach from Seattle or Denver this week due to their first-round byes.

Just a brief capsule of each to get you familiar with these guys in case the Cardinals decide to go offensive-minded for head coach. Keep in mind this list isn’t comprehensive, where we wish we had book rights. Focus on “capsule.” And maybe, “12-pack” or to save a run, “suitcase.”

In no particular order:

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Klayton Adams

Age: 42

OC Dallas Cowboys


Adams wants one thing from his offense: violence. Not only does he want a balanced attack, but requires physicality.

He looks for players who will hit and have an aggressive mindset with an emphasis on the offensive line. If this means getting rid of some players, then so be it. Adams also concentrates on player development, which fits right in with the Cardinals’ young roster with a full draft upcoming. Hiring Adams would be a reunion as he was the offensive line coach for Arizona from 2023-2024.

Now, he does promote a run-first offensive attack. OC Drew Petzing had the exact same philosophy and never got what he wanted. Of course, losing his two starting running backs and three starting offensive linemen put a damper on this strategy. Adams aims to make their core concepts look different and be difficult to defend.

His offensive line must be able to move and pull consistently and be able to control the line of scrimmage with a focus on traditional run-blocking schemes. Basically, he brings grit to the offense.

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Mike LaFleur

Age: 38

OC Los Angeles Rams


When you interview LaFleur, you are interested in doing what the Rams are doing offensively as well as the San Francisco 49ers. That’s because LaFleur is a disciple of Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan. Basically, the Cardinals going forward would operate exactly like these two division foes.

His philosophy calls for a QB-centric system that uses various formations, play-action, outside zone runs, and motion. The reason is for players to be able to leverage clarity over complex schemes. LaFleur loves jet sweeps, stretch plays, and condensed sets.

LaFleur is a child of the West Coast offense and will design plays to match his quarterback’s strengths in order to create simple reads and high-percentage short passes. He prefers controlled drives that eat up clock and will tailor his schemes to match his roster.

A strong rushing attack is paramount.

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Klint Kubiak

Age: 38

OC Seattle Seahawks


Kubiak is an up-and-coming coordinator with a track record of developing QBs and running productive offenses. With Seattle earning the #1 seed and getting a weekend off, Kubiak can interview this week.

Kubiak could easily step out on his own and is considered one of the top offensive candidates this cycle. The plum to this hire would be to retain Schwartz, and it wouldn’t hurt to reach out to offensive line coach Bill Callahan about returning to the Browns.

The thing to notice about Kubiak’s offense is that he places the quarterback in a position to succeed. He is respected in the league for his creativity and is influenced by his father’s pedigree in the understanding of West Coast principles and the ability to adapt as the game rolls along.

His offensive scheme is similar to Shanahan’s in that it is play-action, heavy pre-snap shifts and motion, blocking is wide zone, uses 12-personnel quite a bit, with a mix of shotgun and taking snaps under center, designed to keep the quarterback moving. But it also requires athletic offensive linemen who are physical and can adjust.

Basically, Kubiak’s offense systematically attacks defenses by creating leverage and exploiting space. His quarterback play relies on quick decisions and some ability to scramble if needed, with some designed runs and rollouts. Kubiak is another student of the Shanahan scheme.

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Mike McCarthy


Age: 62


No affiliate


This is a coach who will have plenty of fans shouting his name to be hired, and just as many supporters who will say hell no. One thing is for certain: McCarthy has plenty of head coaching experience. His pro coaching career totals 174-112-2 with one Super Bowl ring.

His attack is a variation of the West Coast offense. He requires short, quick passes and will stretch a defense horizontally, which is designed to open up deep shots. Some call his offense conservative.

McCarthy’s offense will flood zones and man coverage with quick routes to keep defenses off balance. In order for the quarterback to have easier reads, he implements triangle reads and a blend of run and passing downs. He also uses quick passes to gain consistent yardage.

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Joe Brady


Age: 36


OC Buffalo Bills


The Bills feature a balanced attack and, of course, have a very good quarterback to run it. That makes Brady look good. But Brady knows offense and how to correct situations.

He tends to use heavy personnel packages to gain a physical advantage.

This may mean the offensive line might need to go through some changes, and either select some new guys early in the draft, make a trade or two, or be busy participants in free agency with a focus on the line. One of Brady’s traits is the use of motion to be able to confuse defenses with different formations.

He is adept at creating mismatches where the offense can run the ball when the defense will use fewer bodies in the box with receiver spreads. Brady also likes quick-read plays and uses his tight ends and slot receiver quite a bit. Currently, the Bills are the #1 rushing team in the league.

Source: https://www.revengeofthebirds.com/a...ed-head-coaching-candidates-for-the-cardinals
 
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