Cardinals’ Marvin Harrison Jr. missing in action Sunday

A look at Harrison’s quiet NFL debut against the Bills.

After all the hype and all the words written and spoken, it wasn’t supposed to go like this.

Yes, it would have been too much to expect Marvin Harrison Jr. to go off and have a boatload of receptions and yards.

But, one catch for four yards on three targets? Seriously?

That included one apparent miscommunication on the first target where quarterback Kyler Murray clearly was expecting Harrison to do something different than what he did on a back-shoulder attempt.

“It was our first time playing together,” Murray said. “No confidence lost in Marv.”

Then, there was a drop on the second target that would have been good for 10-plus yards. And then the one reception on the next play. That came in the second quarter on a play that began with 8:19 remaining in the half.

After that? Nada. Not another target.

Head coach Jonathan Gannon said, “I saw a lot of cloud (coverage) to him. So they obviously were trying to take him away. But we had a bunch of guys catch balls, so that’s how our offense is gonna be built. The ball should go where it should go depending on the coverage.”

Murray mirrored that explanation after first claiming, “I wouldn’t say they were taking him away.”

He then said, “I think as a quarterback, you’re going through your reads and sometimes the ball goes elsewhere. It’s not my job. Obviously, I have a sensitive feel for guys when they don’t get the ball, when they are getting the ball, but I’ll leave that up to (offensive coordinator) Drew (Petzing). He always tells me don’t worry about that stuff. Just keep playing your game and get the ball where the ball’s supposed to go.”

Where the ball went Sunday was 13 targets to wide receivers (8-56), 11 to tight ends (7-42) and seven to running backs (6-64).

The four longest receptions were 24 yards to running back Emari Demercado, 22 to running back James Conner and 14 and 12 to Dortch. That’s 72 yards. Murray’s other 17 completions totaled 90 yards (5.3 yards per play).

But, back to the Murray-Harris connection, or lack thereof. That was the case on what appeared to be an obvious miss of a wide-open Harrison downfield on a second-and-6 play with 1:10 remaining in the game from the Buffalo 39-yard line. The play did result in a first down on a 7-yard completion to wide receiver Greg Dortch.

Reality is that a freeze-frame in a moment in time doesn’t provide perspective. We don’t know when Harrison came free or where exactly a scrambling Murray was when that happened.

Acknowledging that he didn’t see Harrison, Murray said, “When you play football, there is a lot of stuff moving around, moving fast. You don’t see everything.”

What Murray did see was what he thought should have been penalties on two passes to Dortch in the final possession. One was a second-and-10 quick pass to Dortch going left to right where he was clearly contacted and then on the final play on fourth-and-7 that was a deep throw to Dortch at the 2-yard line where he looked to be hit and his left arm held.

Asked about the final attempt, Murray said, “I feel like the play before it could’ve been flagged. Didn’t get it. Next play, obviously 50-50. I understand how the game goes. They’re probably not going to give us the benefit of the doubt on that, so it is what it is.”

What it is another loss, albeit against one of the league’s top teams, but making them 8-27 in the last 35 games.

How did other rookie receivers do in Week 1?

Week 1 had other high-drafted receivers from this year make an impact and others not so much. Here are players that were first- or second-round picks with round and overall selection in parentheses:

Malik Nabers, Giants (1/6): 6 gargets, 5-66; 25 long

Rome Odunze, Bears (1/9): 4 targets, 1-11

Brian Thomas Jr., Jaguars (1/23): 4 targets, 4-47; 18 long, 14-yard touchdown

Xavier Worthy, Chiefs (1/28): 3 targets, 2-47; 35-yard touchdown and 21-yard rushing play for a touchdown

Ricky Pearsall, 49ers (1/31): On reserve/non-football injury list

Xavier Legette, Panthers (1/32): 7 targets, 4-35; 18 long

Keon Coleman, Bills (2/33): 5 targets, 4-51; 28 long

Ladd McConkey, Chargers (2/34): 7 targets, 5-39; 11 long , 10-yard touchdown

Ja’Lynn Polk, Patriots (2-37): 1 target, 1-6

Adonai Mitchell, Colts (2/52): 5 targets, 1-2

All told, those nine receivers combined for 42 targets, 27 receptions and 304 yards.

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.

 

Bills 34, Cardinals 28: 4 takeaways from defense, special teams for Arizona

What did we see from the defense and special teams against the Bills?

The Arizona Cardinals had allowed only three points for most of the first half in Sunday’s game against the Bills, but the game turned after they took a 17-3 lead with 2:40 remaining.

Despite a possession that had three false starts but also included a questionable roughing the passer penalty on linebacker Zaven Collins, the Bills scored on a Josh Allen touchdown run with 19 seconds remaining and then outscored the Cardinals 24-11 in the final two quarters en route to a 34-28 loss.

Following are takeaways from the defense and special teams.

Some believe Allen is overrated

Really? That’s hard to fathom. All Allen did was pass (two) and throw (two) for four touchdowns, while rushing for 39 yards on nine attempts and completing 18-of-23 passes for 232 yards and a 137.7 passer rating.

He did cough up the ball up a strip-sack by defensive lineman Roy Lopez, but usually escaped pressure and his 6-yard scoring run gave the Bills a 31-20 lead in the fourth quarter.

Good and bad from two TD drives in 17:49

There were good plays in the Bills possessions that tied the game at 17. However, the two drives at the end of the first half and start of the second totaled 135 yards on 17 plays and took only 7:49 off the clock.

Safety Jalen Thompson had a tackle to keep Allen from scoring on the first one, but he ran for a touchdown on the next play. Safety Budda Baker made a great read and dropped running back James Cook for a 2-yard loss in the second one and linebacker Mack Wilson Sr. batted down an Allen pass to force a third-and-10.

However, Allen hit wide receiver Mack Hollins for an 11-yard touchdown pass on the next play.

On the first drive, rookie cornerback Max Melton hit wide receiver Khalil Shakir on a completion but failed to even try to wrap him up and Shakir got about an extra 10 yards.

In the second drive, linebacker Owen Pappoe had a chance to sack Allen, but missed and the play resulted in a 25-yard pass to Cook.

Tackling downfield

Stopping the run was an Achilles heel for the Cardinals last season and it was again Sunday at times. Linebacker Kyzir White (11 tackles, 5 solo), Baker (10/4), Wilson (9/8) and Collins (9/5) totaled 39 tackles (22 solo), but too many were after productive runs. They each did have one tackle for loss.

Cook (19-71), rookie Ray Davis (3-13) and Ty Johnson (2-7) combined for 91 yards on 24 carries. Including Allen’s 39, the Bills rushed for 130 yards.

Special teams a mixed bag

The highlight was obviously the 96-yard kickoff return by running back DeeJay Dallas that kept the Cardinals in the game after they had fallen behind 31-20 in the fourth quarter. That came on the part of the field where the wind affected kicks and kept them from reaching the end zone.

In the first quarter, Bills cornerback Brandon Codrington returned a kickoff 53 yards to the Cardinals 45-yard line, but the Allen sack/fumble occurred four plays later.

Punter Blake Gillikin inexplicably had a 28-yard punt with the wind at his back that gave Buffalo the ball at Arizona’s 42-yard line with 4:30 remaining in the game. The defense did come up big and stopped the Bills from potentially taking a two-score lead after they reached the 21. Wilson and Thompson stopped Cook for one yard on second-and 3 and that was followed by White dropping Allen for a 1-yard loss on third-and 2.

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.

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Cardinals have 2 injuries of note in loss to Bills

Right tackle Jonah Williams suffered a right knee injury and cornerback Max Melton was evaluated for a concussion.

The Arizona Cardinals lost on Sunday to the Buffalo Bills 34-28 and came out of it with two injuries of note.

One was right tackle Jonah Williams and the other was rookie cornerback Max Melton.

Williams injured his right knee in the second quarter just before the Cardinals kicked a 29-yard field goal to take a 10-0 lead and had to be helped off the field.

He was initially ruled questionable to return and then downgraded to out.

After the game, ESPN’s Josh Weinfuss noted he had a brace on his right knee, and head coach Jonathan Gannon didn’t have any updates beyond the knowledge he injured his knee.

Gannon also said that Melton was being evaluated for a concussion but had no more information beyond that. Unless he is immediately cleared, he will enter league concussion protocol.

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.

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4 offensive takeaways for the Cardinals in 34-28 loss to Bills

A look at what we learned about the Cardinals on offense in their loss to the Bills.

The Arizona Cardinals lost their first game of the season, a 34-28 loss to the Buffalo Bills. They started hot, fell behind and had a chance to win at the end of the game.

They had 270 total yards of offense and rushed for 124 but it the offense was both good and bad Sunday afternoon.

Let’s have a look at what we could take away from the game on offense for the Cardinals.

A tale of two halves

The Cardinals were great in the first half on offense. They did more or less anything they wanted to do, gaining 190 total yards, possessing the ball over 20 minutes and having three scoring drives of at least 10 plays and five minutes. They were 5-for-7 on third down.

In the second half, it was not the same.

They gained only another 80 yards for the rest of the game. They went 2-for-6 on third down in the second half. They had a turnover and two three-and-outs.

They possessed the ball for only 10:24 of the second half. After doubling up time of possession in the first half, they lost time of possession for the game.

Not much running room for James Conner

The Cardinals had 124 rushing yards but Murray was the leading rusher with 57 yards.

Conner was held in check. He finished the game with 16 carries for 50 yards. Twenty of those yards came on one play, which means he had 30 yards on the other 15 carries. Buffalo did a great job at limiting his impact.

Marvin Harrison’s debut was a dud

Harrison finished the game with only one catch for four yards. He had a drop but was targeted only three times. Buffalo bracketed him but he was not a focus in the game plan.

https://twitter.com/Bobables/status/1832872554631184605

Fans will remember this play when Harrison was wide open and would have scored an easy touchdown, but pressure forced Murray to not be able to make that throw.

Questionable calls late in game

Offensive coordinator Drew Petzing was a genius in the first half. In the second, he was questioned. He called consecutive run plays on second and third downs with James Conner in the red zone. He called a run to Conner in the final drive on third-and-10 before the final throw that fell incomplete to Greg Dortch.

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.

 

Josh Allen’s 4 total TDs over come Cardinals big start as Bills win 34-28

Allen had two touchdown passes and two rushing touchdowns as the Bills came back from down 17-3 to beat the Cardinals 34-28.

The Arizona Cardinals dominated offensively early and took advantage of the Buffalo Bills’ mistakes on offense to take a 17-3 lead Sunday afternoon at Highmark Stadium. However, Bills quarterback Josh Allen was too much for the Arizona defense. He threw two touchdown passes and rushed for another pair as the Bills rallied from 14 points down to win 34-28.

Allen was 18-for-23 passing for 232 yards and two scores and ran the ball nine times for 39 yards and two touchdowns.

After 190 first-half yards on offense, Cardinals only gained 70 the rest of the way, but got a 96-yard kickoff return for a touchdown from DeeJay Dallas to pull within three points.

In the end, the Cardinals had one more opportunity but could not convert and they fell to 0-1 to start the season.

Here is how it went down.

Cardinals 7, Bills 0

The Cardinals opened on offense and got a touchdown to open the 2024 season. It was the James Conner show early as he either ran the ball or caught a pass for the first six plays. He had six carries for 10 yards and two receptions for 31, and the Cardinals went 70 yards in 7:13. Kyler Murray threw a five-yard touchdown pass to Michael Wilson. They were aided by a personal foul late hit penalty on Buffalo when Murray scrambled once. It was a questionable call that gave the Cardinals a first-and-goal.

Bills cornerback Taron Johnson injured his arm and was questionable to return.

STRIP SACK! Cardinals take it away

The Bills moved down the field after a big 53-yard kickoff return and got into the red zone. But Roy Lopez got the Cardinals’ first sack of the year, knocking the ball out and Justin Jones recovered at the 29.

Cardinals 10, Bills 0

Following the takeaway, the Cardinals went 60 yards in 10 plays and got a 29-yard field goal from Matt Prater. Running back Emari Demercado had a 24-yard catch in the drive.

Before the field goal, right tackle Jonah Williams was injured and had to be helped off the field. He was ruled questionable to return.

Cardinals 10, Bills 3

Tyler Bass hit a 37-yard field goal to get the Bills on the board. Again, they moved the ball effortlessly until they made a mistake in the red zone. On third-and-goal from the four, Allen ran for a touchdown, but right guard Cyrus O’Torrence was flagged for a facemask penalty, making it third-and-goal from the 19. Allen ran again and was stopped for no gain and they settled on a field goal.

James Conner TD! Cardinals 17, Bills 3

The Cardinals scored for the third straight drive, going 71 yards in 13 plays. Greg Dortch had a big third-down catch and tight end Trey McBride had a pair of receptions. Conner, who was on the sideline for most of the drive, capped the drive with a three-yard touchdown run to put them up two touchdowns.

Cardinals 17, Bills 10

The Bills might have saved their game. Aided by a questionable roughing the passer penalty on Zaven Collins that would have been a sack were it not for the flag, Josh Allen made things happen. He ran seven yards for a touchdown.

Bills 17, Cardinals 17

The Bills received the second-half kickoff and started at the 40 because of a kickoff violation, as Matt Prater’s boot did not reach the landing area.

To cap a 10-play drive, Allen threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Mack Hollins to tie the score.

Cardinals turn it over

After the Bills scored, the Cardinals went three-and-out but forced a Buffalo punt. But after the punt, Greg Rousseau beat replacement right tackle Kelvin Beachum and knocked the ball out of Murray’s hand as he attempted to make a throw for s strip sack, his third of the game. Dorian Williams recovered the fumble at the Arizona 21.

Bills 24, Cardinals 17

After the fumble, Khalil Shakir scored on an 11-yard touchdown catch from Allen just five plays after the takeaway. Momentum had turned in the game.

Bills 24, Cardinals 20

After Murray’s 29-yard run and Conner’s 20-yard run, the Cardinals couldn’t pick up a first down after getting to red zone and picked up three points on Prater’s 31-yard field goal.

Bills 31, Cardinals 20

Josh Allen rushed for his second touchdown of the game, this time from six yards out, after a 28-yard pass to rookie Keon Coleman.

DeeJay Dallas kickoff return for TD! Bills 31, Cardinals 28

Dallas had the first huge play in the new kickoff rule and returned it 96 yards for a touchdown. The last time the Cardinals had a kickoff return for a touchdown was David Johnson in Week 2 in 2015.

James Conner ran in the two-point conversion.

Bills 34, Cardinals 28

The Bills got a 39-yard field goal after Dallas’ touchdown return to give the Bills a six-point lead with under two minutes to go.

Could Murray put together a game-winning drive for Arizona?

Greg Dortch can’t haul in 4th-down pass

On fourth down, Murray the ball down the field to Dortch. With a lot of contact, Dortch couldn’t haul in the pass and the Cardinals’ final shot at getting a win ended as a turnover on downs.

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.-3

 

WATCH: DeeJay Dallas takes kickoff 96 yards to the house!

The return and two-point conversion pulled the Cardinals within three points.

The new kickoff rule yielded mixed results for the Arizona Cardinals on Sunday. They were penalized once for not getting the ball into the landing zone and also gave up a big return.

But free agent pickup DeeJay Dallas showed why the Cardinals gave him a three-year contract.

After the Bills took a 31-20 lead in the fourth quarter, Dallas took the ensuing kickoff 96 yards for the touchdown.

It was the first kickoff return for a touchdown since David Johnson did in Week 2 in 2015.

The Cardinals scored the two-point conversion to make it a three-point game.

Check out the play:

 

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.

 

 

WATCH: Marvin Harrison’s 1st career catch

It was only a four-yard catch. It should be the first of many.

The Arizona Cardinals led the Buffalo Bills 17-10 at the end of the first half in Week 1. One player expected to make an impact was No. 4 overall pick Marvin Harrison Jr., a wide receiver.

He didn’t do much but did have his first NFL reception, a four-yard catch, the only catch he had in the half.

Check it out.

 

It came after he dropped an on-target throw.

It was only four yards but it should be the first of what are scores of catches for the Cardinals this year and in his career.

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’ offense shines in 1st half of game vs. Bills

The held the ball more than 20 minutes of the half, had 190 yards of offense and scored on their first three possessions.

The Arizona Cardinals believed they would have a great offense in 2024. After one half of play, it has held true.

They continued doing against the Buffalo Bills what they did late last season when quarterback Kyler Murray was healthy.

In the first half against the Bills, leading 17-10, they amassed 190 yards of offense, went 5-for-7 on third down and scored on their first three possessions.

Murray led the team with 28 rushing yards and was 16-for-19 passes for 131 yards and a touchdown.

They led time of possession 20:06 to 9:54.

Each of their scoring drives was at least 10 plays and more than five minutes. Their two touchdown drives were longer than seven minutes.

There was still another half to play, but so far the 2024 offense has been great.

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 inactives: WR Xavier Weaver out; TE Tip Reiman, S Joey Blount to play

The Cardinals released their inactive list 90 minutes before kickoff.

The Arizona Cardinals released their inactive list for their season opener on the road against the Buffalo Bills. The only player who will miss the game with an injury is rookie receiver Xavier Weaver, already ruled out with an oblique injury on Friday’s final injury report.

The two players listed as questionable to play, tight end Tip Reiman (ankle) and safety Joey Blount (back), were set to suit up as they were not deactivated.

These are the players the Cardinals deactivated:

Arizona Cardinals Week 1 inactives

  • CB/S Darren Hall
  • LB Jesse Luketa
  • OL Jon Gaines III
  • TE Travis Vokolek
  • WR Xavier Weaver

The three active backup offensive linemen will be tackle Kelvin Beachum, guard Isaiah Adams and center/guard Trystan Colon.

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.

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Cardinals at Bills: How to watch, stream, listen to Week 1 matchup

All the info you need to watch, stream or listen to the Cardinals play the Bills on Sunday.

The Arizona Cardinals open the season against the Buffalo Bills on the road. They are underdogs in the game.

It is Kyler Murray vs. Josh Allen.

The last time the two teams played, there were two touchdowns scored in the final 40 seconds of the game to take the lead, only the Cardinals’ touchdown was the game-winning score, a 43-yard touchdown pass from Murray to DeAndre Hopkins with two seconds remaining, now forever known as the “Hail Murray.”

The two receivers who scored the two final touchdowns, Stefon Diggs and Hopkins, are no longer on either team.

It will be the NFL debut for Cardinals rookie receiver Marvin Harrison Jr.

Can the Cardinals pull off the upset to start the year?

If you plan on watching, streaming or listening to the game, here is the information you need to know.

Cardinals at Bills game information

What: Arizona Cardinals at Buffalo Bills, Week 1

Where: Highmark Stadium, Orchard Park, NY

When: Sunday, Sept. 8, 1 p.m. ET (10 a.m. Arizona time)

Cardinals at Bills TV info, coverage map

The game will air on CBS. Tom McCarthy, Jay Feely and Ross Tucker will call the game from the booth, while Tiffany Blackmon will report fro the sideline.

The game will air regionally, per the TV coverage maps from 506 Sports in te teal areas in the below graphic.

506 Sports

The local home areas for the Cardinals and Bills, as will as much of Oklahoma, where Murray played collegiately, will see the game.

Streaming options for Cardinals at Bills

You can stream the game on Fubo TV (try for free).

[afflinkbutton text=”Watch Cardinals vs. Bills on Fubo” link=”https://www.fubo.tv/welcome/leagues/191277?irad=356362&irmp=1205322&subId1=SMG&subId2=NFLWires&subId3=2024″]

How to listen to Cardinals at Bills on the radio

The Cardinals’ home broadcast will be on Arizona Sports 98.7 FM. Their radio crew of Dave Pasch and Ron Wolfley will call the game, while Paul Calvisi will report from the sideline.

The Cardinals’ Spanish broadcast will be on FUEGO 106.7 FM with Luis Hernandez and Irving Villanueva calling the game.

The Bills’ local radio broadcast will be on WGR Radio 550. Chris Brown and Eric Wood call the game, while Sal Capaccio reports from the sideline.

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.

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