Jonathan Gannon grew as a coach during his years with the Colts

Gannon: ““It was really my first main position job and had good really good players, was around a lot of good coaches.”

Like most head coaches in the NFL, Jonathan Gannon had a winding path to where he is now although it didn’t take a long time. It included three seasons coaching defensive backs in Indianapolis, where the Arizona Cardinals have two joint practices against the Colts prior to Saturday’s preseason game.

The 41-year-old Gannon began his NFL coaching journey as a defensive quality control coach with the Atlanta Falcons in 2007, but found himself without a job after the Bobby Petrino disaster that season.

He landed as a college scout with the St. Louis Rams in 2009 before being a pro scout in 2010 and 2011. The Rams changed head coaches and general managers after the 2011 season, and Gannon was looking for work again.

What followed were two seasons as a defensive quality control coach with the Tennessee Titans, four with the Minnesota Vikings as assistant defensive backs coach and then the three-season stint with the Colts (2018-2020) as defensive backs coach before becoming the Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator in 2021.

Back in Indianapolis Wednesday, Gannon reflected on his years with the Colts where Frank Reich was the head coach and current Chicago Bears head coach Matt Eberflus was the defensive coordinator.

“Awesome. Awesome,” Gannon said. “It was really my first main position job and had good really good players, was around a lot of good coaches. City’s awesome. (Owner) Mr. (Jim) Irsay and his whole family took really good care of my family. And it was just a really cool experience. (General manager) Chris Ballard is as good as they come. It’s good to see everybody right now.”

Most important is what he learned there.

“A lot, a lot,” Gannon said. “I was just talking to the staff today (about) different ways of doing things. That was all new to me at the time and it really opened my mind under Coach Eberflus. Different style and took a lot with me honestly. You learn from everybody as you go, but really expanded my mind.”

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

LOOK: Photos from Cardinals’ first joint practice with Colts

Check out some of the images from Wednesday’s joint practice the Cardinals had with the Colts.

The Arizona Cardinals held the first of two joint practices against the Indianapolis Colts on Wednesday in Indianapolis. It gave them the opportunity to get competitive practice reps against someone else other than their own teammates.

They practice with and against each other again on Thursday before they play a preseason tilt at Lucas Oil Stadium on Saturday.

In Wednesday’s practice, photographers got a few shots of the Cardinals in action. Check them out below.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

Marvin Harrison Jr. returns to where his father forged a Hall of Fame career

Harrison’s first joint practice is against the team for whom his father had a Hall of Fame career.

August has been a good month for the Harrison family.

Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver Marvin Harrison Sr. was born on Aug. 25, 1972, and began a 13-season career with the Indianapolis Colts 24 years later after being the 19th overall pick in the 1996 draft.

Six years later, Marvin Jr. was born on Aug. 11, only two weeks shy of Marvin Sr.’s 30th birthday.

Now, the circle is complete as “junior” was selected with the fourth selection in this year’s draft by the Arizona Cardinals and this week will practice for two days and play against Marvin Sr.’s former team.

“It is kind of crazy,” Marvin Jr. said prior to Wednesday’s practice. “The first joint practice against the Colts. Who would’ve thought that? It’s definitely really special and I’m glad to be here and get to work.”

Adding a nice touch Wednesday was former Colts and Cardinals running back Edgerrin James visiting practice. James (yes, the fourth overall choice in the 1999 draft and whose birthday is Aug. 1) played seven seasons with the Colts from 1999-2005, then three for the Cardinals before ending his Hall of Fame career with the Seattle Seahawks in 2009. Harrison Sr. was also present.

Head coach Jonathan Gannon said Wednesday, “For a rookie, he’s a pro’s pro. He tries to get better every day. He keeps his head down and handles his business. He’s excited to play (here) for the reasons that you would think.”

Gannon lauded how “consistent his day-to-day is. Normally, first-year guys, you kinda help them along with that, of consistency and self-awareness and he doesn’t need much help with those things. Obviously, on the field that takes care of itself, but I’m more impressed with him off the field, how he goes about his business. It’s been really cool to watch.”

That can be traced to how Harrison has said his father taught him “how to be professional.”

Harrison is hopeful of playing more than the three snaps he had against the Saints Saturday. He has never played in Lucas Oil Stadium, but was present in Nov. 2011 when his father was inducted into the team’s Ring of Honor.

Smiling often during his media session, Harrison said, “My dream was always to do this. I always thought I’d be here. I made it at this point, with my own path. I just want to work hard and see where it takes me.”

But what about all the Colts apparel he built up over the years?

It was “a lot,” he said, but added, “I outgrew all of it.”

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

Preseason Game 1 takeaways, rookie performances, studs and duds

A look back at the Cardinals’ first preseason game with Jess Root and Seth Cox on the podcast.

After the Arizona Cardinals’ preseason opener, a 16-14 loss to the New Orleans Saints, Seth Cox and I recorded a new episode of the podcast.

We looked back at the Cardinals’ game against the Saints.

We first look at the quarterback battle to back up Kyler Murray between Desmond Ridder and Clayton Tune. Tune clearly won the game battle, but I am not convinced that the decision has already been mostly made, as in they are competing, but it will take a lot for Tune to surpass him.

We look at the rookies’ performances. Darius Robinson, Xavier Thomes, Dadrion Taylor-Demerson and Xavier Weaver had good performances. Isaiah Adams, Elijah Jones and Tejhaun Palmer had struggles.

We talked about the other studs and duds from the game and looked ahead at the Cardinals’ week against the Indianapolis Colts with joint practices and preseason matchup.

Enjoy the show!


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Rookies DL Darius Robinson ‘1000%’ could be a starter as a rookie for Cardinals

There are is more than one way for Robinson to be a starter as a rookie.

Defensive lineman Darius Robinson is the lesser known first-round pick of the Arizona Cardinals. Selected late in the round after the Cardinals selected receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. fourth overall, he doesn’t have the expectations heaped upon him that Harrison does.

Harrison is expected to start, be a 1,000-yard receiver as a rookie and perhaps compete for NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year.

Robinson enters a defensive line room where starting might be hard. The Cardinals signed veterans Justin Jones and Bilal Nichols in the offseason and nose tackle Roy Lopez seems to have secured a spot in the starting lineup in that role.

But Robinson is doing well. In the Cardinals’ preseason opener against the New Orleans Saints, Robinson had a “couple of violent run clips there,” said head coach Jonathan Gannon.

There are things he needs to clean up, Gannon noted, but added, “he’s tough to block if he does the right things.”

But he is doing well enough that a starting role is not only not out of the question, he “1000%” has a chance to start.

However, it is important to remember that “starting” doesn’t necessarily mean much. Remember how linebacker Isaiah Simmons “started” the first four games of his NFL career in 2020 but played a total of 44 snaps over those four games?

Starting doesn’t matter if it is only good for show.

What matters is whether or not he has a key part of the rotation.

What might be the easiest way for him to be a “starter?”

Because he is able to play on the defensive interior and on the edge, and because the Cardinals have a bit of an uncertain void about a starting job at outside linebacker with BJ Ojulari’s season-ending injury, it would be easy to have him “start” on the edge opposite Zaven Collins with Jones, Nichols and Lopez starting on the interior.

With Ojulari’s injury, Robinson will certainly be asked to play the edge in some packages.

It is his “physical skillset, the size, the length and then the juice that he has” that allows him the positional versatility.

It doesn’t really matter if he is on the field for the first snap of the game, which technically makes him a starter.

Though with that comment by Gannon, keep an eye out on the possibility of Robinson being in the starting lineup but still having a complementary role.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

Cardinals set for 2 days of joint practices with Colts

Jonathan Gannon: “It’s gonna be a good two days of work.”

The Arizona Cardinals contingent departed Tuesday for two days of joint practices with the Indianapolis Colts that will be followed by the second preseason game for both teams on Saturday.

The Cardinals are one of 20 NFL teams participating in joint practices this week, a number that was scheduled to be 22 until the 49ers called off their work with the Saints because of a large number of injuries.

Head coach Jonathan Gannon is confident the work will be good thanks in part to his relationship with Colts head coach Shane Steichen, who was the offensive coordinator with the Eagles when Gannon was the defensive coordinator.

Asked Monday if there is a different approach when there are practices against another team, Gannon said, “They’re going to practice the exact same way they’ve been practicing. That’s how Shane and I are going to do it. Just got off the phone with him this morning. It’s gonna be a good two days of work.”

Gannon said what he hopes is accomplished in this practice setting is “a little uptick. I like where our mode of play was in the (New Orleans) game, but the things that we need to get better and uptick is technique against different people. And I would say execution of just schematic things within each group.”

He expanded on the technique angle by saying, “It’s not technique going against Cards vs. Cards; now it’s technique going against somebody that maybe they haven’t studied like they would going into a game. There’s going to be different guys coming in and out of the lineup on both sides that like all of a sudden, I’m running a route against (cornerback) Kenny Moore and then I’m running a route the next play vs. somebody different.

“That wouldn’t be like a game. I want to see technique show up against different opponents. I think that’s a good barometer for where we’re at. Can we do what we’re coached to do consistently?”

Gannon said how he decides to divvy up playing time on Saturday will “depend on what happens Wednesday and Thursday.”

However, he also acknowledged the players might approach things a tad differently than normal.

“You should see the practice faces.” He said, “Like it’s going to be a souped-up two days,” a term he used a couple more times.

“Players right now are prepping for, ‘Hey, we’re going to Indy for two very intense, hard, long practices that are both gonna be souped-up.’ That’s what you normally say when you talk about a car, a souped-up car.”

Thanks for that, coach.

He concluded, “There’s gonna be a mock game and we’re gonna play. That’s their mind-frame as they’re getting on the plane.”

The practices are late in the day from 6-8 pm Wednesday and 6-7:20 Thursday Eastern time.

When asked if there will be any team building around town, Gannon said, “They’ll team-build naturally being in that hotel for a good amount of time. We have night practices and I’m not gonna wear them out before they’re gonna go out on the field, meeting wise and stuff. Let ‘em sleep in, have some meetings, get ‘em off their feet, give ‘em a couple hours and then go practice.”

On the normal day before a game, there will be a mock game, meetings and time off in the afternoon.

Gannon likes the time away with players spending a lot of time together.

“We’re gonna fill the time not off site to do anything,” he said. “We have some things in the hotel that they are very competitive about against each other. They like to connect and hang out with their teammates, go out to dinner.

“One of the positives about going somewhere is they get to hang out with each other. They value that time, too.”

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

Cardinals sign WR, RB before joint practices with Colts

They announced the addition of RB Hassan Hall and WR Daylen Baldwin.

The Arizona Cardinals made a pair of roster moves on Tuesday. After working out seven players before heading to Indianapolis, they signed two players — a wide receiver and a running back.

They announced the addition of receiver Daylen Baldwin and running back Hassan Hall.

Baldwin is a 6-foot-2, 212-pound receiver who has bounced around the league since entering as a rookie free agent in 2022, spending time with the Cleveland Browns, Atlanta Falcons and Minnesota Vikings. He has two career receptions.

Hall spent a week on Arizona’s practice squad last year. He is 5-foot-10 and 196 pounds and spent the 2023 preseason with Cleveland after entering the league with the Browns as an undrafted rookie free agent. Afer his stint with the Cardinals, he also spent time with the Giants and Chiefs.

They had one roster spot open after releasing linebacker Marquise Haynes last week. To make room for both players, they released receiver Jeff Smith.

The addition of a running back suggests perhaps there is an injury they are dealing with. James Conner and Emari Demercado both sat out last week’s preseason game. Demercado got hurt last week.

We will see if any of the other running backs misses time this week in practice.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

Cardinals defensive, special teams depth chart for preseason game 2 vs. Colts

A look at the depth chart on defense and special teams as the Cardinals prepare for the Colts.

The Arizona Cardinals will face the Indianapolis Colts in their second preseason contest this Saturday and will hold a pair of joint practices this week.

Before heading to Indy, the Cardinals released their second depth chart of the preseason.

Despite the play of players on the defensive side of the ball in practice and in the preseason opener, there were exactly zero changes to the depth chart.

But if you don’t remember, here is the defensive depth chart for preseason week 2.

Defensive line

Left defensive tackle

  • Bilal Nichols
  • Darius Robinson
  • Ben Stille
  • Myles Murphy

Nose tackle

  • Roy Lopez
  • L.J. Collier
  • Khyiris Tonga
  • Phil Hoskins

Right defensive tackle

  • Justin Jones
  • Dante Stills
  • Naquan Jones

Outside linebacker

Strong side

  • Zaven Collins
  • Victor Dimukeje
  • Cameron Thomas
  • Tyreke Smith

Weak side

  • Dennis Gardeck
  • Jesse Luketa
  • Xavier Thomas

Inside linebacker

MIKE

  • Kyzir White
  • Krys Barnes
  • Markus Bailey
  • Trevor Nowaske

Other position

  • Mack Wilson
  • Owen Pappoe
  • Tyreek Maddox-Williams

Cornerback

One side

  • Starling Thomas
  • Max Melton
  • Bobby Price
  • Michael Ojemudia

Other side

  • Sean Murphy-Bunting
  • Kei’Trel Clark
  • Elijah Jones
  • Delonte Hood

Slot

  • Garrett Williams
  • Divaad Wilson
  • Jaden Davis

Safety

Strong safety

  • Budda Baker
  • Andre Chachere
  • Joey Blount

Free safety

  • Jalen Thompson
  • Dadrion Taylor-Demerson
  • Verone McKinley
  • Darren Hall

Specialists

Kicker

  • Matt Prater

Punter/holder

  • Blake Gillikin

Long snapper

  • Aaron Brewer
  • Joe Shimko

Kick returner

  • Greg Dortch of DeeJay Dallas
  • Emari Demercado
  • Chris Moore

Punter returner

  • Greg Dortch or DeeJay Dallas
  • Xavier Weaver

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

Cardinals offensive depth chart for preseason Game 2 vs. Colts

See if there were any changes over last week’s depth chart.

The Arizona Cardinals prepare for their second preseason game when they face the Indianapolis Colts on the road. In preparations for the matchup, they released their unofficial depth chart.

There were no changes.

But if you do not remember what last week’s looked like, below is the offensive depth chart for this week.

Quarterback

  • Kyler Murray
  • Desmond Ridder
  • Clayton Tune

Despite Tune’s play on Saturday, he did not move past Ridder.

Running back

  • James Conner
  • Trey Benson
  • Emari Demercado
  • DeeJay Dallas
  • Michael Carter
  • Tony Jones

Conner and Demercado were the only ones not to get any action in the preseason opener.

Wide receiver

‘X’ receiver

  • Marvin Harrison Jr.
  • Chris Moore
  • Dan Chisena
  • Jeff Smith

‘Z’ receiver

  • Michael Wilson
  • Zach Pascal
  • Tejhaun Palmer
  • Daniel Arias

Slot receiver

  • Greg Dortch
  • Zay Jones
  • Andre Baccellia
  • Xavier Weaver

Again, nothing has changed here.

Tight end

  • Trey McBride
  • Elijah Higgins
  • Tip Reiman
  • Travis Vokolek
  • Blake Whiteheart
  • Bernhard Seikovits

McBride didn’t play and Higgins played a little early on. The top three seem locked in. The question is who will end up being No. 4.

Offensive line

Left tackle

  • Paris Johnson
  • Kelvin Beachum
  • Christian Jones
  • Jackson Barton

Left guard

  • Evan Brown
  • Isaiah Adams
  • Austen Pleasants

Center

  • Hjalte Froholdt
  • Jon Gaines
  • Keith Ismael

Right guard

  • Will Hernandez
  • Trystan Colon
  • Marqui Hayes

Right tackle

  • Jonah Williams
  • Elijah Wilkinson
  • Dennis Daley

None of the starters played last week and neither did Gaines.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

 

Cardinals getting healthy as they head to Indianapolis

They didn’t have anybody come out injured on Saturday and have guys getting back to health.

The Arizona Cardinals appear to be in a good place with their health.

According to head coach Jonathan Gannon after their preseason-opening 16-14 loss to the New Orleans Saints, no player was ruled out during the game because of an injury. Receiver Chris Moore was seen going to the locker room with a trainer but he later returned.

On Monday, Gannon said, “we’re actually getting healthy as go the Midwest.”

A few players were nursing injuries before the preseason opener, missing practices. That included defensive lineman Justin Jones, cornerbacks Garrett Williams and Max Melton and running back Emari Demercado. None of them played on Saturday against the Saints. Offensive lineman Jon Gaines, coming back from a torn ACL, has practiced but did not play. Receiver Zay Jones and center Hjalte Froholdt had been injured but returned to practice last week, although neither played.

The Cardinals head to Indy and will practice Tuesday and Wednesday with the Colts and will play their second preseason game on Saturday.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.