Kolb Comfortable As Cardinal

FLAGSTAFF – It was just 7-on-7 in what will eventually be a forgotten practice in the middle of training camp.

Yet maybe it could have meant a little bit more, as new quarterback Kevin Kolb’s pass found Larry Fitzgerald it the back of the end zone, where Fitzgerald snagged it one-handed despite the blanket coverage of rookie cornerback Patrick Peterson.

As Fitzgerald came down with the ball, Kolb turned and, subtly, gave a little fist pump, the first mini-victory of his Cardinals’ career.

Twenty-four players finally got on the field Thursday, having waited for the collective bargaining agreement to be ratified and their contracts to kick in and allowed them on the field. No one garnered more attention than Kolb.

Admitting he was worried in the morning with CBA uncertainty because “I built myself up to be out here today,” Kolb sounded satisfied, given that it was a first practice, yet understanding what lies ahead.

“I learned a lot,” Kolb said. “Where’s the notepad?”

Kolb mentioned the difficulty about dealing with the foreign language of the playbook, interesting since coach Ken Whisenhunt earlier had said that was the most important thing he was looking for from his quarterback in the first practice – the ability to cleaning take the playcall and get in and out of the huddle with it.

“If he can recite the play smoothly and get in and out of the huddle, you know he has an understanding of what he is saying,” Whisenhunt said. “Obviously he has to perform once he does that, but if you have a player who is struggling to get the play called in the huddle, you know he is struggling with the terminology and the concept. … If you are struggling just to make a call, then it hampers your ability to process the things you need to make the play successful.”

That wasn’t an issue Thursday.

“I’m just amazed,” center Lyle Sendlein said. “Our plays have a lot of verbiage to it, a lot. I don’t think he screwed up calling one. That’s half the battle.”

“I’ll blame one of my (screwed-up) cadences on him, and I’ll do that right away because he makes more money than me,” guard Daryn Colledge said. “I thought he did a good job. But I think he’ll say, just like us, he’s got a long way to go too.”

Kolb did say that a couple of times. What he was most pleased with was what he called “instinctive plays” – for instance, the play-action touchdown pass to tight end Jeff King during the live goal-line session – because that was a part of his game he felt would show rust.

Kolb didn’t look too rusty however, and his connections with Fitzgerald and No. 2-wideout-for-now Andre Roberts showed an early chemistry.

Fitzgerald certainly didn’t sound worried that Kolb wouldn’t be able to make up for the lost offseason. Calling him “a student of the game,” Fitzgerald said Kolb “drives me nuts” in meetings asking questions but admitted that’s the kind of quarterback he wants leading the team.

“You can see the fire in his eyes when he breaks the huddle,” Fitzgerald said. “He’s passionate, and when you look at his eyes, you can tell he really wants it. We will all follow his lead.”

The Cards’ offense did flash a few times, with running backs Beanie Wells and Ryan Williams (who looked good with the second unit on goal line) and the introduction of tight end Todd Heap to the mix.

Heap said Kolb had a good grasp on the offense. “It’s only something we can improve on.”

That’s the ultimate message coming from Thursday’s work. Improvement has to come, and a few completions at a practice certainly don’t guarantee victories or success.

“I know we have a lot of work to do. To be as good as I think we need to be, as good as we want to be, we have a long way to go,” Kolb said.

“But,” he added, “it’s a starting point.”

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

Kolb Comfortable As Cardinal

FLAGSTAFF – It was just 7-on-7 in what will eventually be a forgotten practice in the middle of training camp.

Yet maybe it could have meant a little bit more, as new quarterback Kevin Kolb’s pass found Larry Fitzgerald it the back of the end zone, where Fitzgerald snagged it one-handed despite the blanket coverage of rookie cornerback Patrick Peterson.

As Fitzgerald came down with the ball, Kolb turned and, subtly, gave a little fist pump, the first mini-victory of his Cardinals’ career.

Twenty-four players finally got on the field Thursday, having waited for the collective bargaining agreement to be ratified and their contracts to kick in and allowed them on the field. No one garnered more attention than Kolb.

Admitting he was worried in the morning with CBA uncertainty because “I built myself up to be out here today,” Kolb sounded satisfied, given that it was a first practice, yet understanding what lies ahead.

“I learned a lot,” Kolb said. “Where’s the notepad?”

Kolb mentioned the difficulty about dealing with the foreign language of the playbook, interesting since coach Ken Whisenhunt earlier had said that was the most important thing he was looking for from his quarterback in the first practice – the ability to cleaning take the playcall and get in and out of the huddle with it.

“If he can recite the play smoothly and get in and out of the huddle, you know he has an understanding of what he is saying,” Whisenhunt said. “Obviously he has to perform once he does that, but if you have a player who is struggling to get the play called in the huddle, you know he is struggling with the terminology and the concept. … If you are struggling just to make a call, then it hampers your ability to process the things you need to make the play successful.”

That wasn’t an issue Thursday.

“I’m just amazed,” center Lyle Sendlein said. “Our plays have a lot of verbiage to it, a lot. I don’t think he screwed up calling one. That’s half the battle.”

“I’ll blame one of my (screwed-up) cadences on him, and I’ll do that right away because he makes more money than me,” guard Daryn Colledge said. “I thought he did a good job. But I think he’ll say, just like us, he’s got a long way to go too.”

Kolb did say that a couple of times. What he was most pleased with was what he called “instinctive plays” – for instance, the play-action touchdown pass to tight end Jeff King during the live goal-line session – because that was a part of his game he felt would show rust.

Kolb didn’t look too rusty however, and his connections with Fitzgerald and No. 2-wideout-for-now Andre Roberts showed an early chemistry.

Fitzgerald certainly didn’t sound worried that Kolb wouldn’t be able to make up for the lost offseason. Calling him “a student of the game,” Fitzgerald said Kolb “drives me nuts” in meetings asking questions but admitted that’s the kind of quarterback he wants leading the team.

“You can see the fire in his eyes when he breaks the huddle,” Fitzgerald said. “He’s passionate, and when you look at his eyes, you can tell he really wants it. We will all follow his lead.”

The Cards’ offense did flash a few times, with running backs Beanie Wells and Ryan Williams (who looked good with the second unit on goal line) and the introduction of tight end Todd Heap to the mix.

Heap said Kolb had a good grasp on the offense. “It’s only something we can improve on.”

That’s the ultimate message coming from Thursday’s work. Improvement has to come, and a few completions at a practice certainly don’t guarantee victories or success.

“I know we have a lot of work to do. To be as good as I think we need to be, as good as we want to be, we have a long way to go,” Kolb said.

“But,” he added, “it’s a starting point.”

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

Kolb Comfortable As Cardinal

FLAGSTAFF – It was just 7-on-7 in what will eventually be a forgotten practice in the middle of training camp.

Yet maybe it could have meant a little bit more, as new quarterback Kevin Kolb’s pass found Larry Fitzgerald it the back of the end zone, where Fitzgerald snagged it one-handed despite the blanket coverage of rookie cornerback Patrick Peterson.

As Fitzgerald came down with the ball, Kolb turned and, subtly, gave a little fist pump, the first mini-victory of his Cardinals’ career.

Twenty-four players finally got on the field Thursday, having waited for the collective bargaining agreement to be ratified and their contracts to kick in and allowed them on the field. No one garnered more attention than Kolb.

Admitting he was worried in the morning with CBA uncertainty because “I built myself up to be out here today,” Kolb sounded satisfied, given that it was a first practice, yet understanding what lies ahead.

“I learned a lot,” Kolb said. “Where’s the notepad?”

Kolb mentioned the difficulty about dealing with the foreign language of the playbook, interesting since coach Ken Whisenhunt earlier had said that was the most important thing he was looking for from his quarterback in the first practice – the ability to cleaning take the playcall and get in and out of the huddle with it.

“If he can recite the play smoothly and get in and out of the huddle, you know he has an understanding of what he is saying,” Whisenhunt said. “Obviously he has to perform once he does that, but if you have a player who is struggling to get the play called in the huddle, you know he is struggling with the terminology and the concept. … If you are struggling just to make a call, then it hampers your ability to process the things you need to make the play successful.”

That wasn’t an issue Thursday.

“I’m just amazed,” center Lyle Sendlein said. “Our plays have a lot of verbiage to it, a lot. I don’t think he screwed up calling one. That’s half the battle.”

“I’ll blame one of my (screwed-up) cadences on him, and I’ll do that right away because he makes more money than me,” guard Daryn Colledge said. “I thought he did a good job. But I think he’ll say, just like us, he’s got a long way to go too.”

Kolb did say that a couple of times. What he was most pleased with was what he called “instinctive plays” – for instance, the play-action touchdown pass to tight end Jeff King during the live goal-line session – because that was a part of his game he felt would show rust.

Kolb didn’t look too rusty however, and his connections with Fitzgerald and No. 2-wideout-for-now Andre Roberts showed an early chemistry.

Fitzgerald certainly didn’t sound worried that Kolb wouldn’t be able to make up for the lost offseason. Calling him “a student of the game,” Fitzgerald said Kolb “drives me nuts” in meetings asking questions but admitted that’s the kind of quarterback he wants leading the team.

“You can see the fire in his eyes when he breaks the huddle,” Fitzgerald said. “He’s passionate, and when you look at his eyes, you can tell he really wants it. We will all follow his lead.”

The Cards’ offense did flash a few times, with running backs Beanie Wells and Ryan Williams (who looked good with the second unit on goal line) and the introduction of tight end Todd Heap to the mix.

Heap said Kolb had a good grasp on the offense. “It’s only something we can improve on.”

That’s the ultimate message coming from Thursday’s work. Improvement has to come, and a few completions at a practice certainly don’t guarantee victories or success.

“I know we have a lot of work to do. To be as good as I think we need to be, as good as we want to be, we have a long way to go,” Kolb said.

“But,” he added, “it’s a starting point.”

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

Kolb Comfortable As Cardinal

FLAGSTAFF – It was just 7-on-7 in what will eventually be a forgotten practice in the middle of training camp.

Yet maybe it could have meant a little bit more, as new quarterback Kevin Kolb’s pass found Larry Fitzgerald it the back of the end zone, where Fitzgerald snagged it one-handed despite the blanket coverage of rookie cornerback Patrick Peterson.

As Fitzgerald came down with the ball, Kolb turned and, subtly, gave a little fist pump, the first mini-victory of his Cardinals’ career.

Twenty-four players finally got on the field Thursday, having waited for the collective bargaining agreement to be ratified and their contracts to kick in and allowed them on the field. No one garnered more attention than Kolb.

Admitting he was worried in the morning with CBA uncertainty because “I built myself up to be out here today,” Kolb sounded satisfied, given that it was a first practice, yet understanding what lies ahead.

“I learned a lot,” Kolb said. “Where’s the notepad?”

Kolb mentioned the difficulty about dealing with the foreign language of the playbook, interesting since coach Ken Whisenhunt earlier had said that was the most important thing he was looking for from his quarterback in the first practice – the ability to cleaning take the playcall and get in and out of the huddle with it.

“If he can recite the play smoothly and get in and out of the huddle, you know he has an understanding of what he is saying,” Whisenhunt said. “Obviously he has to perform once he does that, but if you have a player who is struggling to get the play called in the huddle, you know he is struggling with the terminology and the concept. … If you are struggling just to make a call, then it hampers your ability to process the things you need to make the play successful.”

That wasn’t an issue Thursday.

“I’m just amazed,” center Lyle Sendlein said. “Our plays have a lot of verbiage to it, a lot. I don’t think he screwed up calling one. That’s half the battle.”

“I’ll blame one of my (screwed-up) cadences on him, and I’ll do that right away because he makes more money than me,” guard Daryn Colledge said. “I thought he did a good job. But I think he’ll say, just like us, he’s got a long way to go too.”

Kolb did say that a couple of times. What he was most pleased with was what he called “instinctive plays” – for instance, the play-action touchdown pass to tight end Jeff King during the live goal-line session – because that was a part of his game he felt would show rust.

Kolb didn’t look too rusty however, and his connections with Fitzgerald and No. 2-wideout-for-now Andre Roberts showed an early chemistry.

Fitzgerald certainly didn’t sound worried that Kolb wouldn’t be able to make up for the lost offseason. Calling him “a student of the game,” Fitzgerald said Kolb “drives me nuts” in meetings asking questions but admitted that’s the kind of quarterback he wants leading the team.

“You can see the fire in his eyes when he breaks the huddle,” Fitzgerald said. “He’s passionate, and when you look at his eyes, you can tell he really wants it. We will all follow his lead.”

The Cards’ offense did flash a few times, with running backs Beanie Wells and Ryan Williams (who looked good with the second unit on goal line) and the introduction of tight end Todd Heap to the mix.

Heap said Kolb had a good grasp on the offense. “It’s only something we can improve on.”

That’s the ultimate message coming from Thursday’s work. Improvement has to come, and a few completions at a practice certainly don’t guarantee victories or success.

“I know we have a lot of work to do. To be as good as I think we need to be, as good as we want to be, we have a long way to go,” Kolb said.

“But,” he added, “it’s a starting point.”

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

Holliday Arrives

FLAGSTAFF – Vonnie Holliday once again wasn’t sure he wanted to be a Cardinal.

Twice the veteran defensive end had free-agent near-misses in Arizona before choosing to go elsewhere. When he was traded earlier this week from the Redskins to the Cards in the deal for running back Tim Hightower, he had to think about it.

Holliday stressed it was no reflection on the Cards. But at 35, suddenly being asked to play in a fourth different city in four seasons gave him pause.

“It was just about the 14th year in the league and having a family back East and them not moving out with me,” Holliday said. “Just from a logistics standpoint, there was some concern there. Whether or not I wanted to put my family through that, do it one more year or just hang it up.”

Holliday decided to come. Part of the reason was what the Cardinals were building. “You talk about the pieces of the puzzle, there is no doubt the situation here is better (than Washington),” Holliday said.

Coach Ken Whisenhunt likes the idea of having a veteran who can slide into the defensive line rotation. The Cards had done workups on Holliday the past couple of years, since Holliday has been a free agent the previous two seasons.

Losing Alan Branch to free agency, the Cards wanted to get somebody to fill that role. “Alan was so big, it actually took two guys – Vonnie and Nick (Eason),” Whisenhunt quipped.

Holliday embraces the idea of helping the younger players and being part of the rotation. Despite his advanced age, he is a player that is has still be solid in a reserve role.

Just because he decided to become a Cardinal doesn’t mean he lost all of his misgivings, however.

“I flew into Phoenix and felt like I walked into an oven,” Holliday said with a smile. “I thought, ‘What have I gotten myself into.’ ”

DOUCET’S HOPE


Wide receiver Early Doucet said he is looking for a “fresh start,” and that is underscored with the decision to switch from the No. 80 he had worn since he was a rookie to No. 85 in this, his fourth NFL season.

No longer is Doucet the heir apparent to Anquan Boldin, or even a favorite to slide into Steve Breaston’s role as the Cards’ No. 2 receiver. Injuries have plagued him since he arrived in the league. He has played only 26 of 48 possible games, and a hernia sidelined him last year. He had surgery in February to correct the problem and acknowledged the lockout actually worked in his favor by giving him time to recover.

“It was unfortunate the last few years with the injuries,” Doucet said. “It’s not like I was a slacker, it was just unfortunate. It was what I was dealt. I have no regrets but I am ready for a big year start to finish.”

Whisenhunt has repeatedly said he hasn’t lost faith in what Doucet can do. It is difficult to forget about the big playoff game he had against Green Bay in the 2009 season (six catches for 77 yards and two touchdowns), one of the reasons the Cards were comfortable trading Boldin last offseason.

But, having signed a one-year tender for 2011, Doucet likely is getting his last chance in Arizona to make an impact and, in turn, create a reason for the Cards to keep him long-term.
 
“I’m just looking for a healthy football season,” he said.

CBA ALMOST FINISHED


Reports have the finishing touches being put on the new collective bargaining agreement, meaning the players who have been forced to sit because they had new contracts will be able to return to the field for Thursday’s practice as expected.

The Cardinals have 24 players right now sitting out because of the rule, including potential starters QB Kevin Kolb, CB Richard Marshall, LB Joey Porter, C Lyle Sendlein, G Daryn College, G Deuce Lutui, TE Todd Heap, TE Jeff King and LB Stewart Bradley.

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 10 of 26« First...«8910111213»20...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