Jesse Luketa leads Cardinals in PFF grade in 2nd preseason game

Luketa finished with a 93.2 total grade for the game from PFF.

The Arizona Cardinals lost their 2nd preseason game of the year on Saturday 21-13 on the road to the Indianapolis Colts. But, as stated many times, the preseason is more about individual performances than the outcome of games.

One way to get perspective about how an individual performs is a game grade, something that Pro Football Focus.

While our eyes told us who some of the studs of the game were on Saturday, PFF released the top five players in overall grades from the game.

Taylor-Demerson had an interception, Thomas was arguably the player of the game and Hall made some plays for the second straight game.

Luketa’s grade is a surprise, not that anyone though the played poorly.

Luketa played 21 defensive snaps and another eight on special teams. he finished with four total tackles and he was seen creating pressure that didn’t result in any stats.

Does a grade so high make him a lock for the roster? You have to consider the context of when he was playing.

He is in a competitive outside linebacker room.

Stille’s grade probably comes as a surprise, too, as his name was not called much. He finished with three tackles, a tackle for loss and a quarterback hit in 32 defensive snaps.

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Cardinals release veteran OL Dennis Daley a week ahead of roster cutdown

Daley played in only three games last season and wasn’t expected to make the roster.

The Arizona Cardinals must trim their offseason roster down to 53 players by next Tuesday. They announced a move on Monday. Reported earlier in the day by NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the team announced that offensive lineman Dennis Daley was released.

As a vested veteran, he immediately becomes a free agent and does not have to clear waivers.

Daley was unlikely to make the team and gets released a week before hundreds of players hit waivers and perhaps can find a team this week.

Head coach Jonathan Gannon had positive words for Daley, confirming the decision to release him before the team announced the move.

“I appreciate all his hard work,” he said. “He’s a warrior, man. He’s been fun to be around for the last year and a half.”

Daley signed a two-year, $3.2 million contract last offseason. He played in only three games last season, starting the year on injured reserve. He started one game at left guard, one of four players to start there last season. He has 37 career starts at guard and tackle.

His release comes just days after his false start penalty ended the Cardinals’ 21-13 preseason loss to the Indianapolis Colts.

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Updated Cardinals 53-man roster projections after 2 preseason games

With two preseason games in the books, let’s see what the final roster could look like next week.

The Arizona Cardinals have completed two preseason games and are a little more than a week away from having to cutdown the roster down to 53 players. Several spots on the roster are very much up for grabs.

Based on two preseason games, there haven’t been many changes, but here are the latest 53-man roster projections for the Cardinals.

Quarterback

  • Kyler Murray
  • Clayton Tune

Tune has clearly outplayed Desmond Ridder in the preseason. Neither Tune nor Ridder has been great in camp, but Ridder looks like an odd man out.

Running back

  • James Conner
  • Trey Benson
  • Emari Demercado
  • DeeJay Dallas

Michael Carter becomes a tough cut. There’s no good way to keep five backs on the roster.

Wide receiver

  • Marvin Harrison Jr.
  • Michael Wilson
  • Greg Dortch
  • Zay Jones
  • Xavier Weaver
  • Chris Moore

Weaver seems to have a spot on the roster if they keep six receivers. But the spot up for grabs to me is either Moore or Zach Pascal.

Tight end

  • Trey McBride
  • Elijah Higgins
  • Tip Reiman

If there is a fourth they keep, it will likely Blake Whiteheart because he plays a lot on special teams. But for now, only three fit on the roster.

Offensive line

  • Paris Johnson Jr.
  • Evan Brown
  • Hjalte Froholdt
  • Will Hernandez
  • Jonah Williams
  • Kelvin Beachum
  • Isaiah Adams
  • Jon Gaines
  • Elijah Wilkinson

This group hasn’t changed. Christian Jones isn’t ready and wouldn’t beat out Beachum. Trystan Colon has a shot.

Defensive line

  • Justin Jones
  • Roy Lopez
  • Bilal Nichols
  • Darius Robinson
  • L.J. Collier
  • Dante Stills

This group hasn’t changed. Khyiris Tonga makes it only if they keep seven, which I don’t think they do, especially since Cameron Thomas can line up inside.

Outside linebacker

  • Zaven Collins
  • Dennis Gardeck
  • Cameron Thomas
  • Xavier Thomas
  • Victor Dimukeje

Cameron Thomas showed up in the preseason game, cementing his spot on the roster, while Dimukeje is a core special team player, even more than Jesse Luketa.

Inside linebacker

  • Kyzir White
  • Mack Wilson
  • Krys Barnes
  • Owen Pappoe
  • Markus Bailey

The only real question is who gets the last spot for special teams. Bailey is the most experienced there.

Cornerback

  • Sean Murphy-Bunting
  • Garrett Williams
  • Starling Thomas
  • Max Melton
  • Elijah Jones
  • Kei’Trel Clark

As it has been for the last two weeks, Jonathan Gannon will not find it easy to keep fewer than six corners. Bobby Price factors in for special teams.

Safety

  • Budda Baker
  • Jalen Thompson
  • Dadrion Taylor-Demerson
  • Darren Hall

Hall has been great. He played a little on special teams. Joey Blount is a better player on special teams and Andre Chachere is the more experienced player as safety depth. But Hall is the guy for now.

Specialists

  • Matt Prater
  • Blake Gillikin
  • Aaron Brewer

Brewer still gets the edge over joe Shimko.

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Cardinals’ defensive, ST snap counts, observations vs. Colts

Check out how the Cardinals divided up 72 defensive snaps against the Colts.

In the Arizona Cardinals’ 21-13 preseason loss to the Indianapolis Colts Saturday night, there were 30 players that participated in at least one of the 72 defensive snaps and 53 that played at least one of the 24 special-teams snaps.

Showing an example of who played a lot after two days of practice with the Colts, look closely at those at each position led the unit in snaps.

The first number after each name is snaps and the second is the percentage. Players in bold were starters.

Defensive linemen

Phil Hoskins 35/49, Naquan Jones 35/49, Ben Stille 32/44, Myles Murphy 30/42, Khyiris Tonga 15/21, L.J. Collier 12/17, Dante Stills 9/12

Did not play: Justin Jones, Roy Lopez, Bilal Nichols, Darius Robinson

The four that didn’t play will be a large part of the rotation when the regular season starts. Lopez and the rookie Robinson played against the Saints. Asked about Robinson not playing, head coach Jonathan Gannon said, “I just like where he is at. He got a lot of work the last two days. I like where he is at. I felt like he needed to not play.”

Collier will also be in the rotation and in his productive 12 snaps had a sack and quarterback hit, and three tackles (two solo) with one for loss. The leading tacklers were Naquan Jones with four (two solo) and Stille with three solo with onje for loss and a quarterback hit.

Linebackers

ILB Tyreek Maddox-Williams 43/60, OLB Tyreke Smith 42/58, ILB Trevor Nowaske 35/49, OLB Victor Dimukeje 32/44, ILB Markus Bailey 31/43, OLB Cam Thomas 29/40, OLB Xavier Thomas 26/36, OLB Jesse Luketa 21/29, ILB Owen Pappoe 15/21, ILB Krys Barnes 8/11

Did not play: OLB Zaven Collins, OLB Dennis Gardeck, ILB Kyzir White, ILB Mack Wilson Sr.

The Thomases led the stat sheet as Cameron had two sacks plus two quarterback hits to go with four tackles (three solo) and a tackle for loss. Xavier had a sack in his second consecutive game for 12 yards, two quarterback hits, two tackles with the solo stop being for loss.

Xavier, who acknowledged being nervous on his first snap the week before, said, “Today I pretty much knew what to expect and things like that. It’s always good to get more comfortable.”

Said Cameron, “I definitely got more opportunities to put on display what I’ve got. I believe I did a pretty good job (and) maximized those opportunities.”

Luketa, Bailey and Maddox-Williams each had four tackles (two solo), while Nowaske and Smith had three tackles with former having one solo.

Defensive backs

CB Darren Hall 51/71, S Verone McKinley III 46/64, CB Bobby Price 27/38, CB Max Melton 26/36, S Dadrion (Rabbit) Taylor-Demerson 26/36, CB Michael Ojemudia 26/36, CB Kei’Trel Clark 22/31, CB Jaden Davis 21/29, CB Divaad Wilson 20/28, S Joey Blount 20/28, CB Elijah Jones 19/26, S Andre Chachere 11/15, CB Starling Thomas V 12/17

Did not play: S Budda Baker, CB Delonte Hood, CB Sean Murphy-Bunting, S Jalen Thompson, CB Garrett Williams

Taylor-Demerson had an interception and a pass defensed plus two solo tackles.

He said, “It was real special. I was telling JT (Jalen Thompson) and Budda (Baker) all day today I was going to get one. Then literally told my two best friends I was feeling one. I told my agent I was getting one. Put it in my head all day. The play finally came and I caught it. I was cool. It was like electric going through my body when I caught it. I didn’t know what to do.”

Hall and Jones each had five tackles (four solo) with Jones notching one for loss. Hall had two passes defensed. Wilson and Price had four tackles (three solo), while McKinley had four with one solo.

Clark had two tackles and a forced fumble that was recovered by Dante Stills. Of Clark, Gannon said, “I thought he looked violent, physical. He had a couple good coverages in there – forced the fumble. He looked good in there. He played two spots today, so that was good to see.”

Special teams

CB Bobby Price 14/58, S Joey Blount 13/54, LB Markus Bailey 12/50, LB Victor Dimukeje 12/50, TE Blake Whiteheart 11/46, KR DeeJay Dallas 10/42, LB Trevor Nowaske 10/42, P Blake Gillikin 9/38, LB Owen Pappoe 9/38, LB Jesse Luketa 8/33, TE Tip Reiman 7/29, LB Cam Thomas 7/29, LB Tyreek Maddox-Williams 7/29, CB Elijah Jones 7/29, K Matt Prater 6/25, LS Joe Shimko 6/25, RB Tony Jones Jr. 6/25, CB Darren Hall 6/25, CB Divaad Wilson 6/25, LB Krys Barnes 5/21, DL Phil Hoskins 5/21, DL Ben Stille 5/21, S Dadrion (Rabbit) Taylor Demerson 5/21, WR Daniel Arias 4/17, CB Max Melton 4/17, S Verone McKinley III 4/17, CB Michael Ojemudia 4/17, LS Aaron Brewer 3/13, G Jon Gaines II 3/13, T Christian Jones 3/13, G Isaiah Adams 3/13, T Jackson Barton 3/13, T Austen Pleasants 3/13, WR Andre Baccellia 3/13, WR Chris Moore 3/13, TE Bernhard Seikovits 3/13, DL Naquan Jones 3/13, LB Xavier Thomas 3/13, CB Kei’Trel Clark 3/13, CB Jaden Davis 3/13, WR/KR Xavier 2/8, RB/KR Emari Demercado 2/8, G Marquis Hayes Jr. 2/8, T Elijah Wilkinson 2/8, WR Dan Chisena 2/8, WR Zach Pascal 2/8, TE Travis Vokolek 2/8, S Andre Chachere 2/8, LB Tyreke Smith 2/8, DL Myles Murphy 2/8, C/G Keith Ismael 1/4, WR Tejhaun Palmer 1/4, CB Starling Thomas V 1/4

Gillikin had punts of 62 and 64 yards, an average of 51.7 on six punts with a net of 44.8. Weaver had a 37-yard kickoff return and Dallas one for 38 that was shortened because of a Dimukeje penalty. Dallas also had a 16-yard punt return negated by a Price penalty. A Prater low kickoff landed short of the landing zone from the goal line to the 20, putting the ball at the 40 for the Colts.

On kick coverage, Nowaske had two tackles, while Taylor-Demerson, Pascal and Baccelia had one. In addition to Prater, Dimukeje and Price, Melton was guilty of a penalty on a return.

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Cardinals’ offensive snap counts and observations against Colts

Check out how the Cardinals split up their 53 offensive snaps on Saturday against the Colts.

In the Arizona Cardinals’ 21-13 preseason loss to the Indianapolis Colts Saturday, there were 28 players that participated in at least one of the 53 offensive snaps.

The first number after each name is snaps and the second is the percentage. Players in bold were starters.

Quarterbacks

Clayton Tune 34/64, Desmond Ridder 19/36

Did not play: Kyler Murray

Similar to the first week, Tune had the edge on Ridder, this time as the starter. Despite being pressured (three sacks), he completed 8-of-10 passes for 79 yards and a 99.6 passer rating. He scored the team’s only touchdown of the game on a 12-yard run late in the half.

Ridder was 6-of-10 for 71 yards and an 81.7 rating.

Head coach Jonathan Gannon characterized Tune’s play as “pretty good. I liked how he finished the half. He made some plays with his arm and his legs.”

Asked to judge his performance, Tune said, “I thought I played well, but obviously, there’s no perfect game. So, there’s always things that you’ve got to clean up. Want to take less sacks, get the ball out quickly, but there’s always stuff to build on.”

He added, “I’ve been playing more on time, playing quicker, getting through my reads, seeing the defense and just being decisive.”

Running backs

Emari Demercado 20/38, Trey Benson 15/28, Michael Carter 9/17, Tony Jones Jr. 9/17

Did not play: James Conner, DeeJay Dallas (played only on special teams), Hassan Hall

Benson ran well with 43 yards on nine attempts and lost more yardage because of penalties. Carter had an 8-yard run and 15-yard reception.

Wide receivers

Andre Baccellia 34/64, Chris Moore 32/60, Zach Pascal 29/55, Xavier Weaver 21/40, Tejhaun Palmer 19/36, Daniel Arias 3/6

Did not play: Daylen Baldwin, Dan Chisena (played only on special teams), Greg Dortch, Marvin Harrison Jr., Zay Jones, Michael Wilson

Baccellia had the most targets with four and caught two for 27 yards. Weaver also had 27 yards on two receptions. Pascal was 2-for-18, while Moore had a catch for 16 yards and Palmer for 15.

Tight ends

Blake Whiteheart 23/43, Travis Vokolek 22/42, Tip Reiman 21/40, Bernhard Seikovits 8/15

Did not play: Elijah Higgins, Trey McBride

Seikovits had two catches for 14 yards, while Vokolek had one for six and Reiman one for three.

Offensive linemen

T Christian Jones 40/75, RG Jon Gaines II (38/72), LG Isaiah Adams 36/68, C Trystan Colon 34/64, RT Elijah Wilkinson 34/64, T Jackson Barton 30/57, G Marquis Hayes Jr. 24/45, C Keith Ismael 9/17, LT Kelvin Beachum 7/13, T Austen Pleasants 6/11, G Dennis Daley 6/11

Did not play: G/C Evan Brown, C Hjalte Froholdt, G Will Hernandez, T Paris Johnson Jr., T Jonah Williams

Gaines had a scare when he left the game with a finger injury and was said to be questionable to return, but came back. Jones had a brutal first half with four holding penalties, one that was declined. The three assessed came on consecutive plays in the second quarter. He continued playing and was penalty-free in the second half.

Johnson and others were seen talking to Jones on the sideline, to which Gannon said, “It matters to all these guys. They want to see their buddies do well. And when that happens, for whatever reason, you’ve got to make sure that you reset yourself and get back to playing fundamentally sound and have a quick memory and go out there and execute. I thought he did that for the most part in the second half.

“He actually reset at halftime and did a good job when he came back out of it. I was enthused about what he did in the second half. I was proud of him.”

Asked about talking to Jones, Tune said, “Yeah, just tell him to settle down. He’s played football before. This isn’t the first time he’s been in this situation. I’m sure he’s had holding calls called on him before. So, he knows how to handle it. You’ve just kind of got to settle him down a little bit.”

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Some Cardinals duds in their 21-13 preseason loss to Colts

Three players stood out as duds in the Cardinals’ loss to the Colts.

The Arizona Cardinals lost their preseason game on Saturday 21-13 to the Indianapolis Colts. They had a halftime lead and then allowed two second-half touchdowns.

There were some good performances from a few players, earning them stud stats for the game.

A few players were underwhelming and can be classified as duds from the game.

There were three in particular.

QB Desmond Ridder

He was disappointing for the second straight week. He finished the game 6-for-10 passing for 71 yards. However, three of those completions and 32 of those yards came in the final seconds of the game when the Colts were simply protecting deep down the field.

He led the Cardinals to a field goal in the first possession of the second half but then had two straight three-and-outs.

Second-year QB Clayton Tune looked much better.

OL Christian Jones

Jones struggled in the first half. He had three consecutive holding penalties at one point and then was flagged for a fourth that was declined. He bounced back, something that head coach Jonathan Gannon was glad to see, but that was rough.

OL Dennis Daley

Daley bungled the final play. The Cardinals had only 27 seconds to try and score a touchdown and two-point conversion to tie the game. After three completions to get them in at least within Hail Mary range, the Cardinals lined up to spike the ball to stop the clock because they had no timeouts with only five seconds remaining.

Receiver Xavier Weaver did his part running the ball after his catch to the line of scrimmage and everyone lined up quickly, but Daley flinched, getting called for a false start that, because they had not timeouts, led to a 10-second runoff of the clock, which meant the game was over.

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These 28 Cardinals did not play in the preseason game vs. Colts

The Cardinals held out all their starters, a handful of non-starters and guys who have barely been with the team.

The Arizona Cardinals lost their second preseason game 21-13 Saturday night to the Indianapolis Colts. They played without a lot of players.

In all, 28 Cardinals players did not play, either because they are starter, expected key contributors or because they have barely been with the team.

These were the players who sat out Saturday night.

  • QB Kyler Murray
  • RB James Conner
  • RB Hassan Hall
  • WR Marvin Harrison Jr.
  • WR Michael Wilson
  • WR Greg Dortch
  • WR Zay Jones
  • WR Daylen Baldwin
  • TE Trey McBride
  • TE Elijah Higgins
  • OL Paris Johnson
  • OL Evan Brown
  • OL Hjalte Froholdt
  • OL Will Hernandez
  • OL Jonah Williams
  • DL Justin Jones
  • DL Bilal Nichols
  • DL Darius Robinson
  • DL Roy Lopez
  • ILB Mack Wilson
  • ILB Kyzir White
  • OLB Zaven Collins
  • OLB Dennis Gardeck
  • CB Sean Murphy-Bunting
  • CB Garrett Williams
  • CB Delonte Hood
  • S Budda Baker
  • S Jalen Thompson

Hall, Hood and Baldwin have all been signed in the last two weeks.

Robinson, Higgins and Jones won’t technically be starters but are clear parts of the offensive and defensive rotation. Their roles are secured.

With the preseason finale next Sunday, expect the same sort of participation, only that Hall, Hood and Baldwin might play, depending on who else has secured their role.

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Cameron Thomas leads Cardinals’ studs in 21-13 preseason loss to Colts

Cameron Thomas had two sacks against the Colts. See who else reached stud status in the Cardinals’ loss to the Colts.

The Arizona Cardinals lost their preseason matchup to the Indianapolis Colts Saturday night 21-13 on the road. However, as we know that preseason final scores don’t mean much, we want to look at individual player performances.

The Cardinals had a few players stand out with their performances. Who were the studs for the Cardinals in their loss?

OLB Cameron Thomas

This was badly needed. The former third-round needed to show some production, and he did. He was clearly the Cardinals’ player of the game. He finished with four tackles, one for loss, two quarterback hits and two sacks. He was in the backfield consistently.

The Cardinals have needed someone to step up to show that he deserves to be in the playing rotation. Thomas did just that.

RB Trey Benson

Benson got some extended action and showed flashes of the big-play back he can be behind starter James Conner. He led the team with 43 rushing yards on nine attempts. That included a 19-yard run. He also had a 20-yard run that didn’t count because it was negated by a holding penalty.

OLB Xavier Thomas

Thomas had a sack for the second game in a row and had two quarterback hits.

P Blake Gillikin

Gillikin had one bad punt early in the game but then boomed two punts that went over 60 yards and were downed inside the 10. He had four of his six punts downed inside the 20 and averaged 51.7 yards per punt.

WR Xavier Weaver

Not only did he have two catches for 27 yards, including one very fine snag near the sideline, getting both feet down, he also had a 37-yard kick return. That is added to the 30-yard return he had last week.

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4 offensive takeaways in Cardinals’ 21-13 preseason loss to Colts

A look at what we learned from the Cardinals’ offense in their loss to the Colts.

The Arizona Cardinals lost their second preseason game on Saturday 21-13 on the road to the Indianapolis Colts. They fell behind early, took the lead before halftime and then allowed two second-half touchdowns.

As an offense, they had only 232 yards and 13 first downs, going 4-for-12 on third down.

With the game over, let’s have a look at what we can take away from the game with their offensive performance.

Clayton Tune better again than Desmond Ridder

Tune got the start against the Colts and that fact alone suggests that the competition between both players to be Kyler Murray’s backup is fairly close. Ridder started the preseason opener, playing the first half, and the roles were reversed on Sunday.

Tune led the Cardinals to 142 of their 232 yards in the half he played. He led them to eight of their 13 first downs.

He completed 8-of-10 passes for 79 yards and rushed for a touchdown. His throws were more on target and he overcame three sacks.

Ridder passed for 71 yards on 6-of-10 attempts, but three of those completions came in the final drive when they had only 27 seconds to get down the field and the Colts were playing deep to protect the end zone.

In the second half with Ridder, they had a field goal on their first drive, went three-and-out on their next two drives and then had three plays before time ran out. He led the Cardinals to only 58 yards before the final drive.

So many penalties

The Cardinals were penalized 11 times and had others offset and declined. Three consecutive holding penalties by rookie tackle Christian Jones basically cost them a touchdown in the first half as the second came when rookie Trey Benson had a 20-yard run to the two-yard line that would have given them first-and-goal.

A false start penalty ended the game. With five seconds left and Ridder trying to spike the ball to give the Cardinals one more shot to score a touchdown and tie the game, Dennis Daley flinched and, with no timeouts left, the 10-second runoff led time to expire.

Offensive linemen moved around

The preseason requires this some and, with no starters playing, the Cardinals had guys playing multiple positions.

Jon Gaines started at right guard and moved to center. Elijah Wilkinson started the game at right tackle and moved to right guard. Rookie Christian Jones replaced Kelvin Beachum at left tackle and then moved to right tackle.

Running game still worked

Benson rushed for 43 yards on nine carries (and it should have been at least 63 yards on 10 attempts). As a team, they averaged 4.7 yards per carry on the ground.

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Colts 21, Cardinals 13: Pass rush improved, but too many penalties

The Cardinals had 11 penalties and allowed two second-half touchdowns in a 21-13 loss to the Colts.

The Arizona Cardinals dropped to 0-2 in the preseason on Saturday night as they fell 21-13 to the Indianapolis Colts at Lucas Oil Stadium.

They allowed two second-half touchdowns after taking the lead just before halftime.

They improved in their pass rush but were penalized 11 times and flagged other times when they were declined or offset.

Clayton Tune scored the Cardinals’ only touchdown of the game.

Here is how it went down.

Clayton Tune gets the start

Before the game started, it was announced on television that Tune would get the start with Desmond Ridder likely to play the second half.

Jon Gaines in starting O-line

The Cardinals had a starting offensive line of Kelvin Beachum at left tackle, Isaiah Adams at left guard, Trystan Colon at center, Jon Gaines at right guard and Elijah Wilkinson at right tackle.

Gaines was playing in a game for the first time since he tore his ACL in last year’s preseason finale.

Colts 7, Cardinals 0

After a bad punt, Sam Ehlinger threw a 27-yard pass to get in scoring position. Ehlinger scrambled for 10 yards and Tyler Goodson ran eight yards for the touchdown.

Ball out!

After the Cardinals had to punt again, the defense got a turnover. Kei’Trel forced Anthony Gould to fumble after a catch and Dante Stills recovered it, giving the offense the ball at the Indy 45.

Colts 7, Cardinals 3

The Cardinals turned the takeaway into points, but it was an ugly drive. Rookie tackle Christian Jones was flagged on three straight plays for holding. One of them negated a 20-yard run to the two-yard line by rookie running back Trey Benson. They ended up with 2nd-and-33. They settled on a 40-yard field goal to get on the board.

Rabbit interception!

After Blake Gillikin had a 64-yard punt, pinning the Colts inside the 10, the Cardinals forced another turnover. Rookie safety Dadrion Taylor-Demerson picked off a pass and gave the offense the ball at the Indianapolis 41 with 1:44 left in the first half.

Clayton Tune tuddy! Cardinals 10, Colts 7

Tune gave the Cardinals the lead before halftime, showing off his athleticism, running 12 yards for the score.

Colts 14, Cardinals 10

Indy opened the second half with a 10-play. 75-yard drive that ended with a six-yard touchdown run by Zavier Scott.

Colts 14, Cardinals 13

Desmond Ridder entered the game at quarterback and led the Cardinals to some points. Michael Carter had a third-down conversion catch but also failed to catch a third-down pass inside the 10, leading to a 27-yard field goal by Matt Prater to pull within a point.

Colts 21, Cardinals 13

Going for it on fourth-and-goal, quarterback Jason Bean ran one yard for a touchdown for the first play of the fourth quarter. It capped a nine-play, 66-yard drive.

Colts missed FG

The Cardinals went three-and-out and then the Colts were aided by a personal foul penalty on third down. But on a play when quarterback Kedon Slovis should have been sacked (Victor Dimukeje couldn’t hold on) and should have been intercepted (Darren Hall couldn’t hold on to the ball), Matt Gay missed a 53-yard field goal wide left, giving the Cardinals the ball at the 43.

Another missed FG

The offense went three-and-out and the Colts had a chance to seal a victory, but Gay missed a 44-yard field goal with 27 seconds left, giving the Cardinals at least a shot to perhaps tie the game.

Penalty ends game, Cardinals lose

After three completions, Dennis Daley had a false start with five seconds remaining in the game. Since the Cardinals had no timeouts remaining, time expired with the required 10-second runoff. The Cardinals lost 21-13.

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