The Boys On The Bubble

Isaiah Williams has been through this before, first with Baltimore in 2009 and then again with the Steelers in 2010.

The wide receiver – fighting to be one of the probable six wideouts the Cards keep, and probably the seventh on the depth chart heading into Thursday night’s preseason finale against Denver – went through training camp with those teams only to be released by the end of the preseason. He was out of football in 2009 after that, and became a member of the Cards’ practice squad last season.

Williams will learn of his 2011 fate Friday, hours after the Broncos’ game, just like 79 others will. The Cardinals need to trim 27 from the roster to reach the league-mandated 53, and while some will come back to the practice squad – Williams could land there – the business dictates that some dreams will die.

“Everyone says, ‘It’s a business’ and I understood (coming into the league) decisions that had to be made,” Williams said. “But I didn’t understand the emotions that come along with, ‘It’s a business.’
 
“By now, I really understand 53 guys have to play. For some guys it’s better than others, but everyone has a job. We’re only guaranteed the practices that we come to, so do whatever you can when you are out there. Certain guys have to play, have to stay. You put what you can on film to help prolong your career, for guys like me to hopefully end up in the right spot and maybe something breaks and you can make a career for yourself.”

Coach Ken Whisenhunt said this year is different than, for instance, his first season, when the coaching staff basically knew the roster going into the last preseason game. He acknowledged there “will be some surprises” for those on the outside looking in, but things could change in the final game.

Players have flashed enough in the last game to secure a place, Whisenhunt said, and could again Thursday against the Broncos. At the same time, “it’s not one game, it’s not one play,” Whisenhunt said. “It’s the body of work.”

The Cards have to consider their fullbacks, for instance. Rookie Anthony Sherman has potential, but holdover Reagan Maui’a has had a good camp too. It’s unlikely the Cards would devote two roster spots to a little-used position, however.

At inside linebacker, do the Cards stick with veteran backup Reggie Walker, or try to grow sixth-round pick Quan Sturdivant? Do the injuries safety Adrian Wilson and cornerback Michael Adams are recovering from force the Cards to keep an extra defensive back? Any place where the Cards choose to keep an extra player means taking from somewhere else.

“A lot of time, there are surprises,” said outside linebacker Cyril Obiozor, who is hoping to stick around after being on and off the roster multiple times last season. “People always think they know what is going to happen and then something different happens. It’s best not to even speculate. Instead of spending the energy on what could be and what might be and what might not be, it’s better to execute.”

The “final” roster never is final anyway. Players get cut and are brought back. Maui’a is a great example, getting released on final cutdown day in 2010. The Cards brought in Jerome Johnson on waivers to start the opener. When he didn’t pan out, Maui’a was back the second week and stuck around all season.

“Whatever decision has to be made has to be made, and I have to pick up from whatever the coaches decide to do,” Williams said. “That’s just the nature of the game at this point.

“I try to remind myself to have fun. It’s football, and you want to enjoy the experience no matter how long it lasts.”

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Arizona Cardinals : News

Thinking About Receivers

Fitz has always been a part of it, along with Anquan, and first Bryant Johnson and then Steve Breaston.

“When you think about Arizona,” veteran wideout Chansi Stuckey said, “you think about receivers and throwing the ball.”

Johnson and Boldin are long gone, of course. So too is Breaston. Larry Fitzgerald will be around for good, now that he’s signed his new contract, but it’s the rest of the wide receivers that people will have to get to know. Andre Roberts as a No. 2. Early Doucet as part of the supporting cast, an introduction to Stuckey, the growth of Stephen Williams and DeMarco Sampson or Isaiah Williams.
 
The men who must fill those roles think the days when the team was known for receivers isn’t over yet.

“We have plenty of talent here,” Roberts said, with a smile and small shake of the head. “When it’s all said and done, I think this team will still be known for that.”

While running back and now cornerback, thanks to the season-ending injuries sustained by Ryan Williams and Greg Toler, have shifted focus on where the Cards may want to find a new piece, it was wide receiver that dominated such talk during training camp.

The subject of free-agent Braylon Edwards came up early and often, even while coach Ken Whisenhunt continued to insist he liked what he saw in his young group of wideouts. Roberts, who struggled so much as a rookie in training camp, looked like a brand-new receiver, and Doucet was healthy.

Given the names who had left, however, Roberts admits the storylines did not surprise.

“We all expected it, other than Larry,” Roberts said. “It is what it is. We knew going into camp there was a chance for another receiver to be coming in, to be a number two. But I feel Early and I showed the coaches we have that potential, that we can make plays. They didn’t need another guy.”

The knee injury to Max Komar – he was waived-injured earlier this week – took one potential receiver out of the mix. The Cards figure to carry six receivers, and have seven to choose from. Stuckey was quiet early in camp, but as he has learned the offense he has shown flashes of what he can contribute.

Whisenhunt called Stuckey a “savvy veteran” and noted the Cards didn’t need to see as much from him because he has so much NFL work on tape already (he had a career-high 40 catches for Cleveland last season). Stuckey is happy under the radar, and his knowledge can only help the rest of the receivers in the room.

“When we first got here we were kind of in the same boat, swimming at the same time,” Stuckey said. “It’s tough. But I feel almost 100 percent comfortable now.”

Part of the receiving equation is also the addition of tight ends Todd Heap and Rob Housler as well, the Cards’ biggest receiving threats at the position in years.

“I could see reasons why there was speculation (about additions),” Doucet said. “But being part of the group … I didn’t see it as a big deal. Guys move on. Other guys get the chance to step in.”

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Arizona Cardinals : News

Drawing Three At The Corner

New defensive coordinator Ray Horton has spent most of his coaching career with the defensive backs, and he has spent a chunk of time with his new secondary imploring they understand how they are the last line of defense.

“The guys up front can miss a tackle or mess up,” cornerback Richard Marshall said, “but the guys in the back, we can’t. There is pressure to get the job done.”

The pressure got a little more intense for the cornerbacks Monday, with the news starter Greg Toler was out for the season after tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. Training camp opened with Toler and 2010 undrafted free agent A.J. Jefferson manning the starting jobs, although at the time there seemed to be a path in which No. 1 pick Patrick Peterson and veteran free-agent signee Marshall would end up with the first unit.

It became clear heading into the third preseason game that Jefferson and Toler would hold on to the job, until Toler got hurt. Whisenhunt wouldn’t say who will be starting but there is a real possibility it will end up being Peterson and Jefferson, the Cards’ pair of homegrown talents.

The Cards will continue to look at who might come available at the position, but the Jefferson-Peterson-Marshall trio will probably be the one in which the team must now rely.

“It hurts to lose G.T.,” said reserve cornerback Michael Adams, who is recovering from knee surgery. “But I still think we are pretty deep at corner.”

Whisenhunt said the Cards will continue to rotate their top three and see “how it plays out.” Jefferson caught the coaching staff’s collective eye last season, and even without an offseason to show off, he has impressed. Peterson has further to go, but as seen with his interception return for a touchdown against the Chargers, his raw talent is something to behold.

It might have been nicer to have Toler around and allow Peterson to ease into a crucial role, but that’s not available any longer.

“You get to a point where your young guys have to play, they have to step up,” Whisenhunt said. “I definitely feel good about A.J. and his progress, and Patrick, there is no question he is a talented young player. He just needs to some time. If we are playing with those two guys it’s because they have earned it, and I am OK with that.”

Peterson said “I believe I am ready” to start, but understands why the coaches are bringing him along slowly and acknowledged he is learning multiple positions, including safety in sub-packages and the return game.

Adams is expected to return soon — Adams said he still hoped to return Monday to practice and play in the opener — and has experience as the dime back.

Playing in Horton’s defense means many times corners are in man-to-man situations, trying to keep up while blitzes create pressure. Both Peterson and Jefferson ooze confidence, even while saying the right things. That can only help.

But as they improve, the rest of the defense has gained confidence in them, too. “The safeties aren’t getting on me as much as they used to, so they are trusting me to do my job,” Jefferson said with a smile and a glance over to the safeties sitting by their locker.

Marshall, meanwhile, has been a “very good pro,” Whisenhunt said, and does have 32 starts in the 32 games of 2009 and 2010.

Even with Toler’s injury, with the three options, “I don’t think there’s any panic,” Whisenhunt said.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Arizona Cardinals : News

Beating The Heat

Some Cards try to stay in the shade under the tent during practice Monday.

Wide receiver Stephen Williams had been lying on the floor before climbing up on the stool in front of his locker, saying with a smile, “We need to go back to Flagstaff.”

The Cardinals got back to practice Monday, and after coming off the field about 12:15 p.m., were feeling the heat they knew was coming after a month in the cooler temperatures of northern Arizona.

Ultimately, they are hoping it can benefit them.

“When they talk about football being mentally tough, that’s the perfect example,” Williams said. “Can you make it through practice at a high level when the heat is just pounding you and you’re getting tired?”

Quarterback Kevin Kolb acknowledged the Cards were “sweating a little” but the Texas native would rather have early-season heat than late-season cold. Generally, the players didn’t look much different than most practice days.

The Cards will go on the field about 90 minutes earlier Tuesday, but that’s in part because they are schedule to attend the annual Kickoff Luncheon at University of Phoenix Stadium. The heat isn’t going anywhere anyway, since it will be warm (although maybe not quite this warm) for at least another month.

“The first thing to go when you are dehydrated is memory, you forget your routes, things like that, so honestly, it does condition you to push through,” wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald said. “You have to find a way to persevere.”

FITZ WANTS TO GET SLIMMER

Fitzgerald flew down the field to nab his 80-yard bomb-and-run touchdown Saturday, but he insisted he isn’t as fast as he could be because he needs to lose weight. At 223 pounds, Fitzgerald wants to get to 214 or 215 pounds.

“Whiz calls me fat all the time,” Fitzgerald said. “(Strength and conditioning coach) John Lott calls me fat, so I have to get down another seven or eight pounds. At 214, I’ll be good there.”

Fitzgerald used to play around 225 pounds before Lott arrived and convinced him to slim down.

OFFENSIVE ISSUES “JUST US”

When seeing mistakes after watching film of Saturday’s game, quarterback Kevin Kolb said there “plenty on my part.” But he continues to feel fixing those things are under the Cards’ control.

“What is crazy is again, it’s just us,” Kolb said. “We are making the big play, we just have to clean it up, and it’s the same thing every week. But everyone can see the playmakers are out there.”

Kolb said he does expect to play in the preseason finale against Denver Thursday but, like every game, “they don’t tell us how much.”

INJURY UPDATE

The Cards continue to monitor the players who are out, and Whisenhunt wasn’t saying much about their status other than they were progressing. The short week for a game makes a return more difficult. Whisenhunt said he hoped rookie tight end Rob Housler (groin) would be able to play so he can continue to get some live reps. Same goes for third-string running back Alfonso Smith, who hurt his hamstring playing special teams before getting a chance to run the ball.

Quarterback John Skelton (ankle) and wide receiver DeMarco Sampson (hamstring) are also working to return.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Arizona Cardinals : News

Peterson Makes First Pick

A little while after Patrick Peterson had scored his first NFL touchdown – on a 34-yard interception return of a Philip Rivers pass – the Cardinals’ rookie cornerback found himself near the Chargers quarterback during a time out.

“Where the freak did you come from?” Rivers asked Peterson, and Peterson said yes, Rivers used the word “freak.”

Maybe that’s appropriate, because that’s the kind of talent the Cards’ No. 1 draft pick is said to have, and it flashed during Saturday night’s 34-31 loss to San Diego at University of Phoenix Stadium. Peterson had his big return and a near-breakout on a punt return (it went for 23 yards) as he grows into the game and waits for a chance to be more than a backup.

“This game is definitely different,” Peterson said. “You kind of have to spoon feed the rookies, and you appreciate what the coaches are doing. I’m not frustrated at all.”

Peterson came off his man to make the interception. Coach Ken Whisenhunt joked about it – “That was one of those, ‘Hey, what are you doi … oh, good play.’ ” – but said Peterson looks good.
 
“He’s a rookie, and they went after him a little bit in the first half,” Whisenhunt said. “He’ll learn from it. Obviously he is explosive. He will get there. He works at it and it means a lot to him.”

ON THE GROUND

Beanie Wells continues to play well, gaining 63 yards on 10 carries, and LaRod Stephens-Howling had 40 yards on six carries. The Cards didn’t get a chance to see how Alfonso Smith would work – Whisenhunt said he was suffering from a sore hamstring – so the role of the third running back remains vague.

It didn’t hurt that wide receiver Andre Roberts provided a 34-yard TD run on a reverse, helping the Cards averaged 6.7 yards a carry on the night.

“We did a better job,” Wells said. “There are still pieces of the puzzle we need to put together. … There is still a lot for me to be precise on.”

KOLB-TO-FITZ

Quarterback Kevin Kolb missed a long attempt at Larry Fitzgerald early, not getting enough air under the ball and overthrowing the receiver. It didn’t happen again. The next try was a perfect 80-yard throw for an electrifying touchdown.

“It was a no-huddle, a call at the line,” Kolb said. “We have been working on it and that is the kind of stuff we want to get to, where we can communicate things once we get up there and see what the defense is giving us. Again, we just have to keep progressing as an offense and hopefully we can put up more points.”

Said Fitzgerald, “He gave me a good signal. This was our first time and coach said he wanted to run it today and it worked to perfection.”

It won’t count in the record book because it is the preseason, but it was the longest catch of Fitzgerald’s career, topping a 78-yard score he got from Matt Leinart in New England on Dec. 21, 2008. It also would have been the longest TD in University of Phoenix Stadium history, beating the 79-yard score from Anquan Boldin Sept. 14, 2008.

INJURY REPORT

Cornerback Greg Toler suffered what he said was probably an ACL sprain in his knee. Whisenhunt said Toler will have an MRI Sunday to see the extent of the injury.

“I’m going to pray for a light sprain,” said Toler, who called it a freak accident.

Smith was out with his hamstring, while wide receiver Max Komar left the game with a knee injury. Tight end Rob Housler (groin), wide receiver DeMarco Sampson (hamstring), quarterback John Skelton (ankle), linebacker Brandon Sharpe (hamstring), safety Adrian Wilson (biceps) and cornerback Michael Adams (knee) were inactive.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers. Five Filters featured article: A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Arizona Cardinals : News

Page 1 of 26123456»1020...Last »
Your Ad Here

American Football Channel

Our Current Top 10 Draft Predictions

1 Indianapolis Colts – QB Andrew Luck

2 Washington Redskins – QB Robert Griffin III

3 Minnesota Vikings – OT Matt Kallil

4 Cleveland Browns – RB Trent Richardson

5 Tampa Bay WR Justin Blackmon

6 St Louis Rams OT Riley Reiff

7 Jacksonville Jaguars – WR Michael Floyd

8 Miami Dolphins – CB Morris Claiborne

9 Carolina Panthers- DT Fletcher Cox

10 Buffalo Bills DE Quinton Coples

Fancy A Flutter

Why Not Try Betfair The Person To Person Betting Exchange Where You Can Back Or Lay Virtually Any Result Allowing You To Be The Bookmaker If You So Choose. Betting In Play Is Also Available So You Can Take A Profit Before The Game Ends.

Why Not Have A Look?

Betfair Home - Free £25 Bet Currently Available To Get You Started

Get Adobe Flash player