Ex-Cardinals center A.Q. Shipley breaks down what makes Aaron Donald a nightmare to block

Aaron Donald is the last person a guard or center wants to see lining up across from him. Just ask former Cardinals center A.Q. Shipley.

A.Q. Shipley was the Cardinals starting center for three years in 2016, 2017 and 2019. He and Arizona had to face Aaron Donald and the Rams twice a year in those three seasons, so he got a good taste of what it’s like trying to block the three-time Defensive Player of the Year.

Unsurprisingly, Shipley called Donald an absolute “nightmare matchup” while talking about Aaron on the “Pat McAfee Show” this week. And when he had an upcoming matchup with Donald, game planning for No. 99 was his sole focus.

“If you had my wife on this show, she would tell you what the Saturday before playing Aaron Donald was like,” he said. “I mean, if you walked in the room and talk about positive, it was, ‘Get the (expletive) out of the room.’ I need to sit here and just focus right now. I need to figure out how to stop this Freakazoid for the next 60 minutes tomorrow.”

In Shipley’s opinion, what makes Donald so difficult to block is not just the fact that he’s “strong as an ox,” or that he has great leverage, quickness and athleticism, but it’s his footwork – and the simple fact that his feet are always moving.

“He’s one of the few people that if you really break down defensive linemen when they do their move to work an edge, they always kind of stop their feet and then get going again,” Shipley added. “He’s the only guy I’ve ever seen that when he starts working edges, his feet are still moving forward. So it’s a completely different animal when you watch him.”

Below is the full video of Shipley’s comments on Donald, which does contain explicit language.

Bucs reconfigure their OL after getting stumped by Saints pass rush

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers had to shuffle their offensive line after the New Orleans Saints defense pressured Tom Brady in a blowout in Week 9

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The Tampa Bay Buccaneers knew they were in for an unfavorable matchup against the New Orleans Saints defensive line, but they didn’t expect it to be quite that bad. With starting left guard Ali Marpet sidelined by a concussion, they turned to veteran backup Joe Haeg, signed as a priority free agent early this year.

It didn’t go their way. Haeg was dinged with 7 quarterback pressures allowed in one game against New Orleans; for perspective, Marpet allowed 7 pressures in the entire season going into the game. With the starter out another week, Tampa Bay had to get creative to field what they hoped would be a competent offense.

Haeg exited the lineup as quickly as he’d entered it for this week’s game with the Carolina Panthers. To replace him, they moved center Ryan Jensen out of position, slotting him in at left guard. And backup A.Q. Shipley was called up to replace Jensen at center.

We’ll see if the shakeup pays off. The Buccaneers must win this game with the Panthers to remain relevant in the NFC playoffs race; if they fall behind in the crowded standings, they could end up on the outside looking in. Three different NFC West teams are competing for playoff seeds, as are the Chicago Bears (who own a tiebreaker over Tampa Bay). That blowout Saints win continues to look better and better.

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