Cardinals are again mixing and matching on the defensive line

With Roy Lopez out and Darius Robinson not yet ready to play, the Cardinals have to shift things around again on the defensive line.

In addition to how the Arizona Cardinals’ edge-rushing group has been affected by injuries, the defensive line has also taken some enormous hits.

It began when promising rookie Darius Robinson injured his calf in an Aug. 22 practice and has yet to get on the field.

That was followed by season-ending injuries to Justin Jones (triceps in Week 3) and then Bilal Nichols (stinger in Week 6). The Cardinals will face the Dolphins Sunday with a line consisting of rostered players L.J. Collier, Dante Stills, Naquan Jones and Khyiris Tonga because Roy Lopez (ankle) has been declared out.

Ben Stille will likely be elevated again from the practice squad and there’s a possibly that will also happen with P.J. Mustipher if they want six players available.

Despite the limited resources against the Chargers with Lopez playing only 20 snaps (30 percent) before aggravating his injury, the Cardinals often used only two D-linemen, yet limited the running backs to 52 yards on 19 carries with workhorse back J.K. Dobbins totaling only 40 on 14 attempts. Ten of Dobbins’ runs were for two yards or less.

With a possible 198 snaps available for three defensive linemen, they played only 75.8 percent of the snaps, the second-lowest of the season. In the 41-10 rout of the Rams in Week 2 when they went away from the run, the linemen played 72.4 percent of the snaps. The other five games were 91.8 (Packers), 90.3 (Commanders), 89.2 (Lions), 87.0 (49ers) and 83.9 (Bills).

Tonga is expected to have a larger role with Lopez out. Prior to Monday, Lopez’s percentage of snaps were 37, 42, 60, 71, 56 and 52. In Tonga’s six games (he was inactive against Washington), the percentages were 26, 29, 21, 30, 36 and 21. We’ll see how much that increases Sunday.

Jones has been effective since returning to the team Sept. 25, while Stille was signed to the practice squad on Oct. 3 and played his first game of the season Monday night. Each had a sack and tackle for loss against the Chargers, while Jones had two quarterback hits and Stille one.

Asked about Jones and Stille, head coach Jonathan Gannon said Tuesday. “I liked where the snap counts were for all six guys. I thought (line coach) Derrick (LeBlanc) did a really good job of kind of putting those guys in certain spots, depending on the front structures and the personnel groups, to give them a chance to make some plays in there. That’s what they did.”

Gannon expanded on Jones Friday when he noted it was a tough decision when he was released in the cut to 53 and then revealed “we had a good sit-down” after he was signed off Miami’s practice squad.

“It was, ‘You can be an impactful player for us. You can be a good player for us. Here’s a couple things you gotta get better at,’” Gannon said. “And he’s really taken it to heart and he’s shown it. And that’s why he’s playing good ball right now, so it’s a credit to him.”

Gannon was also asked if Jones could provide any intel on the Dolphins after being there for a month, and he said succinctly, “No.”

So, coach, is that overrated when it’s talked about?

“In my opinion, yeah,” he said. “Trust your eyes. Watch the tape.”

When defensive coordinator Nick Rallis was asked about Jones, Stille and Dante Stills (who was inactive against the Rams), he joked, “You named half the D-line right there” and then said, “Collectively, they played really well last night. The technique was improved from previous weeks, execution was on point both in the run game, which was critical. That team’s a very good run team. But also in pass rush. They affected the quarterback and played with a high motor.”

As for the frequent use of two-linemen sets, Rallis said, “A lot can play into that. We ultimately, whatever that plan is, want to have that ability to be multiple within a game whether that’s two d-linemen, three d-linemen, three d-linemen playing multiple front structures. Much of that can go into what is the opponent doing, what have we done, what do we feel we can do differently to provide a changeup or take away what they do well whether that’s their personnel or their scheme. What can we continue to build on so we can execute at a high level. A lot of factors there.”

There are no tricks to having players get up to speed quickly, although it certainly did help that Jones and Stille were with the Cardinals last season and in the offseason and training camp this year.

“It comes with them being pros and being ready to play,” Rallis said. “They’re prepared. Prepare like pros, put in the work to get to that point, so when their number’s called, they’re ready to go make plays. The position coaches getting everybody ready, whether it’s the start of OTAs, it’s a rookie, it’s a vet, the guy that you acquired midseason. The position coaches do a phenomenal job putting in a lot of time to try to maximize players.”

Both Rallis and Gannon talk frequently about simply executing the details and then tackling well. Gannon’s favorite word salad is “alignment, assignment and key techniques.”

As Rallis noted, “Execute the scheme, play with good technique, attack the football, 11 hats to the ball, guys getting on hamstrings, capping the ball off, attacking the football, trying to get the ball out. It ultimately comes down to that.”

Gannon concluded, “When you start game-planning (you look at) what they do, what you can do, how you think they’re going to attack, how they end up attacking, what’s their curveballs, all the different personnel groups. All those different things go into a plan. I thought that Nick and the staff did a good job of, ‘Hey, we want to take away this and this and react to these other things.’ We’re kind of pushing our chips into these couple things and make sure we’re shored up there. It kind of came to fruition, right? Ultimately, it comes down to the players executing at a high level, which our guys did.

“I really thought that that’s a good O-line and they’ve been running it well. The front played well. They won a lot of one-on-ones. They had knock-back. I was standing a couple of times on the line of scrimmage and I thought that line of scrimmage was getting knocked back. That’s the first sign of good run defense. Set edges, just build a wall and get more than one hat on the ball. I thought we did that, and we tackled well too. I thought we tackled — not to go back in the past — but thought we tackled really well versus San Francisco, not so good against Green Bay. That’s got to get shored up. I thought we tackled well, so that was good.”

And this week is another day.

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.

 

Tua Tagovailoa officially returning, will start vs. Cardinals

Tagovailoa will come off IR and start at quarterback for the Dolphins against the Cardinals, making his first start since his concussion.

Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagavailoa is officially questionable to play in Week 8 against the Arizona Cardinals, but head coach Mike McDaniel announced that Tagovailoa will be activated from injured reserve and will start on Sunday.

Tagovailos has been on injured reserve recovering from a concussion he suffered in Week 2.

There has been concern about his return to the game. His multiple concussions have been highly visible and have looked bad.

But the Dolphins released this statement about their starting quarterback’s return:

Tua Tagovailoa followed the NFL’s five-step Return to Participation Protocol, including an examination and clearance by an Independent Neurological Consultant.

Following Thursday’s practice, Tagovailoa was examined by the Independent Neurological Consultant and cleared to play in Sunday’s game.

As he has progressed through the Return to Participation Protocol, Tagovailoa has received care from top medical experts across the country.

Those experts spoke candidly with Tagovailoa about his history and not one doctor recommended he retire from the game.

Tagovailoa’s decision to return to the game following medical clearance is a decision he made with his doctors and his family.

Tagovailos has said he has been symptom-free since the day after he suffered the concussion in Week 2.

The Dolphins are 2-5 and have averaged only 10 points per game in his absence. He led the NFL in passing last season and the Dolphins were second in scoring in 2023.

His return is enough to make the Dolphins 4.5-point favorites over the Cardinals.

The Cardinals and Dolphins kick off Sunday from Hard Rock Stadium in Miami at 1 p.m. ET.

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 QB Kyler Murray needs to be mistake-free vs. Dolphins

Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray will have his hands full attacking the Miami Dolphins’ pass defense in Week 8.

Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray will need to beware of the Miami Dolphins’ pass defense at Hard Rock Stadium Sunday.

Defensive backs Jalen Ramsey and Jordan Poyer have done due diligence, keeping the Dolphins’ defense intact despite the injury to quarterback Tua Tagivoloa and defensive back Xavien Howard. Amongst NFL teams, the Dolphins actually rank No. 1 in opponent pass yards allowed per game.

However, the Dolphins haven’t been nearly as strong versus the run. The Tennessee Titans had a time of possession of 34:22 versus the Dolphins in week seven and rushed the ball for 142 yards.

With this, the Cardinals cannot fall into the thrill of trying to pass the ball at high volumes versus the Dolphins defense. With Tagovailoa back in the lineup, it is expected that the Dolphins will be just as effective as they were before his concussion.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DBftiTpSpAG/

To counter the Dolphins’ attack, the Cardinals may sequence in some run-option and give increased touches to running back James Conner. Sustaining offensive drives will be key on the road for the Cardinals and they cannot get off to a slow start if they want to win this game.

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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Beware another blowout loss with Tua Tagovailoa’s return to lineup for Dolphins

The Cardinals have been wildly inconsistent and the Miami offense could see a return of its explosiveness with the return of Tua Tagovailoa.

The Arizona Cardinals sit at 3-4 entering Week 8 and will take on the 2-4 Miami Dolphins on the road Sunday at 1 p.m. ET. On the surface, considering the Dolphins have been terrible this season, Cardinals fans might feel confident that Arizona can finally win consecutive games and even their record at 4-4.

However, this game is also ripe for another blowout loss.

The Cardinals were demolished 42-14 by the Washington Commanders after what many considered a moral victory in a 20-13 loss to the Detroit Lions and holding them scoreless in the second half.

After beating the San Francisco 49ers on the road, they followed that up by allowing Jordan Love to throw four touchdown passes in a 34-13 loss to the Green Bay Packers.

Now the Cardinals are coming off a 17-15 last-second win over the Los Angeles Chargers and face Miami.

The Dolphins have been dreadful offensively, averaging only 10 points per game over their last five games.

But Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa is coming back, which means a potential return of explosiveness to the passing game.

Miami has explosive runners in Raheem Mostert, De’Von Achane and rookie Jaylen Wright. They have arguably the scariest receiver in the league to face in Tyreek Hill and also Jaylen Waddle.

The Cardinals, the game against the Chargers aside, have been bad at stopping the run and aren’t great at stopping the pass either.

This Dolphins team was second in the league in scoring last season and wasn’t able to get in rhythm early this season, as Tagovailoa suffered a concussion in Week 2 and has not played since then.

The Cardinals lack a pass rush and could be shorthanded in the secondary as Sean Murphy-Bunting might miss the game with a neck injury.

Tagovailoa’s return, the Dolphins’ explosive offensive pieces, the Cardinals’ defensive shortcomings and their overall inconsistencies make it a dangerous game for another big loss.

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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Can Xavier Thomas step up in the wake of Dennis Gardeck’s knee injury?

The Cardinals must shake things up again with the latest season-ending injury to a defender.

The hits keep coming for the Arizona Cardinals, a team that now has three wins this season after not reaching that total until Week 13 against the Steelers last season.

Outside linebacker Dennis Gardeck is the latest player headed to injured reserve after suffering a torn ACL in Monday night’s win over the Chargers.

Gardeck is the second player lost for the year after the start of the season whose current contract expires in March. The other was right guard Will Hernandez. There’s never a good time for a season-ending injury, but it’s worse when it creates uncertainty in the offseason.

On defense, Gardeck joins defensive linemen Justin Jones and Bilal Nichols, who also are done for the year with injuries that occurred after the start of the season.

“It’s a part of the game, but it’s tough to swallow at times,” head coach Jonathan Gannon said earlier this week. “Obviously we know what he puts into the game and to his craft at being a pro and the teammate that he is. That’s going to hurt.

“It really doesn’t matter if it’s one or however many guys. Anybody that’s on your team, you feel terrible for.”

Said defensive coordinator Nick Rallis on Tuesday, “Great player. It always hurts to lose a guy like that; an impact player. He’s a huge leader for us. You lose multiple things with that. You lose the player, you lose the guy to a degree. He’s around, so he still leads, but he is a resilient guy. I talked to him today and last night about what he does on the field doesn’t define what makes him great. It’s who he is what makes him great.

“He’s going to attack what he has to do going forward the same way that he attacked playing, the way he attacks everything in life. That’s why he’s had the success that he’s had. It hurts and I know he’s probably hurt, but he’s got a positive attitude right now and he’ll be good.”

Promising outside linebacker BJ Ojulari suffered a torn ACL early in training camp, so now this becomes another hill to climb for the team’s pass rush.

Entering a short week after Monday night’s game, Gannon said, “We’re going to figure out the plan for the best way to play Miami. It’ll look a little different, I’m sure, this week. We’re in the stages of that right now, but guys will step up and they’ll be ready to go.”

After noting what Gardeck does well, Rallis also expressed confidence in the rest of the unit. Of course, that’s what coaches have to say. You’ll never hear a coach say after an injury, “We’re in trouble. No way can anyone else replace him.”

Rallis did say of Gardeck, “He plays a lot of roles for us. As a rusher, as a cover guy. Sneaky run defender despite his size. So guys have got to step up and be able to go out there and make plays; those plays that he was making for us. We really feel good about that entire room being able to step in and guys have to be able to go out there and execute at a high level and fill that role.”

There will likely be increased snaps for Jesse Luketa and Julian Okwara and perhaps rookie Xavier Thomas who has been off the radar screen this month.

“I want multiple guys out there. I think it’s best when you’re rushing fresh, I think it’s best when you’re playing the run fresh,” Rallis said.

Thomas could be the wild card. He experienced growing pains after being selected in the fifth round of the draft, but started to flash during training camp and preseason games. At one point, Rallis said, “He’s really started to rip lately, which he’s got a skillset to do so. That’s one thing I really loved about him coming out. It’s like you could see the speed with this guy off the edge and he’s shown that he’s gotta continue to improve with everything.

“Really hone in on those pass-rush skills, his cover drops in the run game, so I wanna see the complete game. I wanna see a continual progression of improving in every aspect of his game.”

That improvement clearly didn’t happen.

After playing 29 and 40 percent of the snaps in the first two games of the season, that number dropped to 19 and 10 in the next two weeks, which was followed by the last three games on the inactive list.

Now, asked if he envisions a big opportunity for Thomas, Gannon said, “I do. You’ve seen a couple of guys this year get some opportunities and maximize some opportunities. Roles change with production. That’s one of the things that goes into your role is production.”

Concluded Rallis, “He’s very good with his execution and the time he puts in to study. I want him to continue to go out there and improve those practice reps and when his number’s called, he’s going to be ready to roll and he’s got to go out there and make plays just like everybody else and execute at a high level.”

Consider that challenge made.

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-Dolphins Week 8 preview with Dolphins Wire

Dolphins Wire managing editor Adam Stites joins Jess Root on the podcast to preview Cardinals-Dolphins.

The Arizona Cardinals will face the Miami Dolphins Sunday in Week 8 on the road. It is a team the Cardinals rarely face. The Dolphins could look vastly different than they have over the last month, as quarterback Tua Tagovailoa returns after missing the last six weeks with a concussion.

To find out more about the Dolphins, Dolphins Wire managing editor Adam Stites joined for a new edition of the podcast.

We discussed Tua’s return, the Dolphins’ start of the season, and more. We previewed the matchup of the Cardinals and Dolphins and made our picks and predictions for the game.

Enjoy the show!


Enjoy the show with the embedded player above or by subscribing to the show on Apple PodcastsSpotifyYouTube or your favorite podcast platform, so you never miss a show. Make sure as well to give it a five-star rating!


Times and topics:

(1:00) Tua Tagovailoa and the Dolphins’ season so far

(21:00) Cardinals-Dolphins keys, matchup preview

(34:29) Picks and predictions

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It’s a quick turnaround for Cardinals after Monday night success

The Cardinals play a 1 p.m. ET game against the Dolphins after the late Monday night game against the Chargers.

After the high of the Arizona Cardinals’ Monday night win over the L.A. Chargers came the lightning-quick reality that this will be a short week of preparation for Sunday’s 10 am Arizona body-clock game in Miami against the Dolphins.

Following the game on Monday, head coach Jonathan Gannon emphasized the tempo of practice last week after losing 34-13 to the Packers the previous Sunday.

“It was highly competitive,” Gannon said. “Thursday reminded me of like: I know OTAs not in pads, but an OTA/training camp practice going against each other. It got chippy, honestly. Guys were a touch frustrated, but trying to sharpen their sword. You have to practice the right way, and it was violent and physical. Then Friday was kind of the same and our focus was there on Saturday. The mock game (Sunday) was really good. We had a walk-through this morning because it was a night game. I was in with the offense. They were on point. There were no blunders. Those guys were locked in.

“I knew we were going to play well. I knew it was going to be a good game versus a good team, but I think the main thing is you just have to control your day, and just keep stacking good days. Our behavior is right, but now we have to keep it going. It has to translate because we’re good enough where it can translate. I know that.”

Quarterback Kyler Murray was asked about Gannon’s comments and he said, “It was definitely a competitive practice. It felt like a camp practice. I’m not saying every practice is laid back, but the juices were flowing and guys were flying around. It was a little chippy. It was a lot of competition and competitive, so yeah it was a good week. I think we had a great week and we have to go do it again.”

So it was that Gannon was asked Wednesday after a Monday game how that might translate in a short week and with travel to Miami on Friday.

He said, “Today’s a little different because we’re only 48 hours removed on a shorter week so it’s a little bit different structure today. We’ll get our work done. I feel good about it. Tomorrow and Thursday will be fast.”

Wednesday was a walk-through with players wearing T-shirt jerseys and tennis shoes. Practice Friday will end not long before the team plane takes off for south Florida.

For the other coaches, there is also the challenge of a very compact game-planning process.

Asked how much work was done on the Dolphins the previous week, offensive coordinator Drew Petzing said, “A lot of that for me as a play-caller was actually done at the beginning of last week. Once I get into Charger mode, I can’t go back and forth, but the position coaches get going with this is when I need things done and this is what I need to have done and they did a great job of getting that done on their time during the week.”

One of those assistants is pass game specialist Spencer Whipple. A large part of his job every week is having prep work done on the next team and having it ready when game-planning begins.

How important is Whipple for Petzing?

He said Tuesday, “I could speak hours in terms of his value to me and to our staff and to what we do as an organization. He does an unbelievable job with it. On a short week, it’s gonna be that much more important because he’s one of the first people I sit down with when we put the previous game to bed and it’s for him to say who are we playing, where do they line up, who are their key players, what do they play like?

“Give me the basic structure of the defense. I’m gonna ask a lot of questions of him. He’ll have tape to watch that goes along with what we’re talking about and that switches my mindset that I’ll go, ‘OK, here’s who we are playing against, here’s where we need to go.’ So I can’t say enough about him and the role that he has.”

Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa ‘looks like Tua’ in return to practice

Things are trending well for the Dolphins’ starting quarterback as Miami is set to face the Cardinals in Week 8.

The Arizona Cardinals’ next opponent in Week 8 are the Miami Dolphins on the road, a team that is 2-4 and that has been nothing short of awful offensively.

But things could change as quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, who has not played in the last six weeks because of a concussion, is practicing again and “things continue to trend toward being cleared and returning to the starting lineup Sunday against the Cardinals,” according to NFL Media’s Tom Pelissero, appearing on “Good Morning Football.”

“What I was told was in practice, Tua looks like Tua,” he said. “He is ripping it all over the field. He is hitting bombs to Tyreek Hill.”

Tagovailoa suffered concussion in Week 2. He is in the final steps of being cleared from league concussion protocol.

In his absence, the Dolphins have averaged 10.0 points per game offensively, which is absurd for a team that features running back Raheem Mostert and receivers Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle.

In 2023, the Dolphins averaged 29.2 points per game, No. 2 in the NFL.

Suddenly, this game that looked like it could be a pretty easy win for Arizona could become very challenging if Tagovailoa is even approaching his 2023 form.

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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Only local Cardinals, Dolphins fans will see Week 8 matchup

Where else outside of Arizona and Miami can people see the Cardinals and Dolphins play?

The Arizona Cardinals’ next game is Sunday in Week 8 on the road against the Miami Dolphins. The game kicks off at 1 p.m. or 10 a.m. Arizona time and will air on FOX.

The Cardinals’ last three games have had good television coverage. This game will not.

According to 506 Sports, the Cardinals-Dolphins game will air only in the two teams’ local home markets.

506 Sports

The above graphic shows FOX’s TV coverage. The coverage for Cardinals-Dolphins is represented by the teal areas, which is in Arizona and the Miami area in Florida.

The Cardinals’ Week 7 game against the Chargers was a national broadcast. Their games against the 49ers and Packers in Weeks 5 and 6 got large coverage, although that was more because of the nationwide interest in the Niners and Packers.

Of course, anyone subscribing to NFL Sunday Ticket can watch any game. But if you live outside the local home TV markets of the Cardinals and Dolphins, you won’t be able to see the game without the subscription.

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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PODCAST: 2024 Cardinals opponent preview – What did the Dolphins do this offseason?

Jess Root is joined by Dolphins Wire managing editor Adam Stites to discuss the Dolphins’ 2023 season, their offseason and expectations in 2024.

We have another 2024 Arizona Cardinals opponent preview show for you to listen to from the podcast. Continuing with the 14 shows in 14 days about the Cardinals’ 2024 opponents, we are on show No. 7, which is about the Miami Dolphins, whom the Cardinals play on the road in Week 8.

I had Dolphins Wire managing editor Adam Stites join me and we discussed the Dolphins’ 2023 season, what moves they made in the offseason and what is expected from them in 2024.

Have a listen and enjoy the show!


Enjoy the show with the embedded player above or by subscribing to the show on Apple PodcastsSpotifyYouTube or your favorite podcast platform, so you never miss a show. Make sure as well to give it a five-star rating!


Time and topics:

(1:00) The Dolphins’ 2023 season

(8:01) The Dolphins’ offseason moves in free agency and the draft

(19:14) Expectations for the Dolphins in 2024

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