Cardinals could face Rams in Australia in 2026

The NFL announced a regular-season game in Melbourne in 2026 with the Rams as the designated home team. The Cardinals could play in that game.

The NFL has announced some international games for the 2025 season. They are already making plans for the 2026 season.

The league announced Wednesday that, in 2026, a regular-season game will be played in Melbourne, Australia at Melbourne Cricket Ground, and the Los Angeles Rams will be the designated home team.

That means the Arizona Cardinals could take a trip down under and face their division rival abroad.

It wouldn’t be the first time. The Cardinals faced the Rams as a road team in London in 2017 and twice they have been the designated home team against the San Francisco 49ers in Mexico City, once in 2005 and once in 2022.

The NFL can play up to eight regular-season games internationally and, for 2025, have already announced games in Madrid, Berlin and three in London. The games in Berlin and Madrid will be the first-ever regular-season games played there.

The Miami Dolphins are the designated home team for the Madrid game, so the Cardinals will not have a chance at that game, but they could play in Berlin as a road team. The designated home team for that game are the Indianapolis Colts, one of the Cardinals’ road opponents in 2025.

The league has three games scheduled for London next season, but the Cardinals cannot play in those games. The designated home teams are the Cleveland Browns, New York Jets and Jacksonville Jaguars.

Arizona will not face Cleveland or New York in the upcoming season and, while they will play the Jaguars, that game will be a home game for the Cardinals.

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 rookie fined for illegal block vs. Rams

Rookie safety Dadrion Taylor-Demerson had his wallet lighten a bit with a fine this week.

In the Arizona Cardinals’ game last Saturday against the Los Angeles Rams, the NFL fine police continued their trend of levying monetary discipline on plays where there wasn’t a penalty called.

One player on each team was fined, but only the guilty Rams party came on a play where there was no flag.

We’ll start with the Cardinals.

Rookie safety Dadrion (Rabbit) Taylor-Demerson was hit with a fine of $5,592 for a blindside block in the second quarter on a Rams punt. There was a penalty for 15 yards on the play.

Punter Ethan Evans’ 46-yard punt went out of bounds at the Cardinals’ 30-yard line, but the penalty was on the other side of the field and a replay wasn’t shown.

The Cardinals were forced to begin that possession at the 15-yard line.

The Rams’ fine came on a fourth-quarter play on the Cardinals’ final possession that ended with the interception that bounced off tight end Trey McBride’s helmet.

On second-and-10 from the Arizona 36-yard line, quarterback Kyler Murray completed a 6-yard pass to running back Michael Carter. Rams safety Kamren Curl hit Carter high in what was deemed illegal use of the helmet even though the officials on the field did not throw a flag.

Curl was fined a hefty $22,511, which tied for the second-highest of the 35 fines from Week 17.

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.

 

Can Kyler Murray be trusted late in games?

Jess Root and Seth Cox talk Cardinals-Rams and Kyler Murray in the latest show of the podcast.

The Arizona Cardinals lost on Saturday 13-9 to the Los Angeles Rams as quarterback Kyler Murray threw two fourth-quarter interceptions. They had nearly 400 yards of offense and scored only nine points. They held the Rams to 13 points and 257 yards and still lost.

Cohost Seth Cox and I reacted to the loss in this new episode of the podcast.

And with all the talk of Murray, his play and especially his play late in games, we pose the question — can he be trusted? We look at his late-game performances.

Finally, we discuss the Cardinals’ defensive performance and what we want to see in the season finale against the 49ers.

Enjoy the show!


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Times and topics:

(1:00) Reactions to the Cardinals’ loss to the Rams

(17:52) Can we trust Kyler Murray?

(39:09) The defense and what we want to see vs. the 49ers

Cardinals QB Kyler Murray might want to forget his 2024 season stats

Needless to say, Arizona Cardinals QB Kyler Murray has had a season that he may want to forget heading into 2025.

Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray will be criticized for the performance he exhibited as a team leader the latter half of the 2024 NFL season.

In Saturday’s 13-9 loss to the Los Angeles Rams, Murray was again dismal in his decision making, tallying 15 incompletions, tossing two interceptions and only one touchdown in the game.

When assessing the top teams in the NFL, it’s noticeable that the elite teams all have a habit of avoiding turnovers and sustaining offensive drives. The Cardinals are a mid-tier in regards the with total of 20 giveaways. Murray and the Cardinals punted four times Saturday, went 6-for-13 on third down and 0-for-2 on fourth down.

Something has got to give for Murray, who has thrown seven interceptions in his last five games. Perhaps Murray can lessen the letdown by performing well in the season finale versus the San Francisco 49ers in Week 18. Needless to say, Murray has had a season that he may want to forget heading into 2025.

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 DC Nick Rallis, S Budda Baker have set the tone on defense

Arizona Cardinals DC Nick Rallis has transformed the mentality of the team defense led by Budda Baker

Arizona Cardinals defensive coordinator Nick Rallis has shown signs of excellence in 2024 and with the leadership of safety Budda Baker, his unit again played well in the 13-9 loss to the Los Angeles Rams

The Cardinals stopped the Rams on nine of their 15 third-down attempts and held their opponent to just 12 total first downs on the evening. Although Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford wasn’t sacked but he was certainly contained by Rallis, producing only 189 passing yards and no touchdown passes on the night.

Rallis forced the Rams to punt six times, allowing 74 total plays for his offensive unit to respond and take the lead. Unfortunately, Murray and offensive coordinator Drew Petzing could not sequence in the right play calls to seal the win.

The Cardinals defense has been solid led by safety Budda Baker and linebacker Kyzir White who led the team with eight tackles in the loss. Rallis and head coach Jonathan Gannon definitely have a unit to build on in their defensive unit and are likely to acquire a top defensive back in the upcoming draft to add force to their pass defense.

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.

 

Rams 13, Cardinals 9: Kyler Murray’s 2 late INTs spoil near comeback

The Cardinals lost for the fifth time in six games with a 13-9 loss to the Rams Saturday night.

The Arizona Cardinals had opportunities to knock off the Los Angeles Rams Saturday night. Falling behind 10-0 in the first half, the Cardinals controlled the ball in the second half and held the Rams to 257 total yards, Kyler Murray threw two interceptions in the end zone in the final five minutes and the Rams came away with a 13-9 win to improve to 10-6.

James Conner was hurt in the first half, Michael Carter rushed for 70 yards and Trey McBride caught 12 passes for 123 yards and his first touchdown of the season, but it was the ball he didn’t catch at the goalline, bouncing off him into cornerback Ahkello Witherspoon’s hands that kept the Cardinals from winning.

Arizona fell to 7-9 and lost for the fifth time in six games since the bye week.

Here is how it went down.

Cardinals’ 1st drive stopped short of sticks

The Cardinals forced a punt with the Rams’ first possession but started pinned deep at their own three on offense. They picked up one first down but receiver Greg Dortch ran a third-down route a yard short of the line to gain and was tackled as he caught the ball, forcing a punt.

1st quarter ends with battle of punts

The first quarter ended with a 0-0 game with the Rams having punted three times and the Cardinals twice.

McBride hits 1,000

With a five-yard reception to get the Cardinals in the red zone in the second quarter, McBride passed 1,000 receiving yards for the season, only the second tight end in franchise history to do it. The other was Hall of Famer Jackie Smith, who had 1,205 yards in 1967.

Cardinals stuffed on 4th down

Just getting into the red zone on a nice drive after Dortch caught another third-down pass one yard short of the sticks, the Cardinals went for it on fourth down, but James Conner was stuffed for no gain and the Rams took over on downs at the 14 instead of kicking a field goal.

James Conner hurt

Conner was questionable to play with a knee injury. After four carries for four yards, he left the game in the first half and was questionable to return.

Stafford almost picked off twice

Garrett Williams broke up a pass in the red zone but couldn’t haul in the interception and then Budda Baker dropped a would-be pick in the end zone.

Rams 7, Cardinals 0

Kyren Williams had a one-yard touchdown run on third-and-goal with 3:23 left in the first half, scoring the first points in the game.

The drive went 60 yards on nine plays and included two near interceptions by the Cardinals.

Rams 10, Cardinals 0

After the Cardinals had to punt the ball away inside the two-minute warning and giving the Rams the ball with 1:41 to go, Joshua Karty hit a 53-yard field goal with 27 seconds to go. Matthew Stafford had three consecutive completions to Puka Nacua, setting up the kick.

The first half ended with Murray getting sacked for the third time.

Trey McBride TD! Rams 10, Cardinals 6

McBride finally got into the end zone. On second-and-goal, Murray found McBride for a one-yard touchdown pass, McBride’s first touchdown reception of the season. The extra point, though, was blocked.

FG! Rams 10, Cardinals 9

Chad Ryland made a 28-yard field goal after the Cardinals went 80 yards in 14 plays in 7:19.

At that point, they had run 27 plays in the second half with the Rams going three-and-out.

INT nullified by penalty; player injured

Stafford’s deep pass was picked off by Jalen Thompson, but Roy Lopez was offsides, which negated the play. It came on a first-and-20 after a holding penalty, so the Rams replayed the down on first-and-15.

Garrett Williams got hurt on the play and Thompson did on the next play.

Rams 13, Cardinals 9

Max Melton broke up a third-and-goal pass in the end zone to force the Rams to kick a field goal. Karty made the kick from 25 yards out and push the lead to four points with 6:33 to go.

Murray picked off

On fourth-and-10, Murray threw to Marvin Harrison Jr., but Kamren Kinchens picked off the pass at the goalline and returned it to the 11.

Rams go three-and-out

After the pick, the Cardinals do not allow a first down, forcing a punt with 2:09 to go. They took over with 2:01 left from their own 36.

End-zone INT seals win for Rams

Ahkello Witherspoon picked off a throw to the end zone that deflected off McBride’s helmet with 42 seconds left.

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.

 

Trey McBride finally gets TD catch!

It took until Week 17, but Trey McBride finally has a touchdown reception.

It took until the third quarter of the Arizona Cardinals’ 17th game of the season, but it finally happened. Tight end Trey McBride, having a fantastic season, has a touchdown catch.

He scored on a one-yard touchdown pass from Kyler Murray with 8:31 left in the third quarter on the opening drive of the second half against the Los Angeles Rams.

Here is the play:

It wasn’t McBride’s first score of the season. He scored on a fumble recovery against the Rams in Week 2 and had a rushing touchdown in Week 9 against the Chicago Bears.

The touchdown made the score 10-6, as the ensuing extra  point was blocked by the Rams.

McBride passed 1,000 receiving yards on the season in the first half.

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.

 

James Conner hurt in 1st half vs. Rams

Conner left the game against the Rams in the first half with a knee injury after four carries for four yards.

This post has been updated to include new information. 

Arizona Cardinals running back James Conner entered Week 17 less than 100%. He had a knee injury that limited him in practice all week and ended his day last Sunday in the third quarter.

After four carries in the first half for only four yards, he exited the game with the same knee injury.

It was announced he was questionable to return.

He did not return to the 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.

 

Trey McBride reaches huge milestone!

Trey McBride reaches 1,000 receiving yards vs. the Rams, the second Cardinals TE to ever do it.

Arizona Cardinals tight end Trey McBride is now a 1,000-yard receiver. He reached the milestone in the second quarter of the Cardinals’ Week 17 game against the Los Angeles Rams with his third catch of the game.

With his three first receptions of the game, he totaled 46 yards, giving him 1,004 on the season.

The only other Cardinals tight end to have 1,000 receiving yards in a season was Hall of Famer Jackie Smith had 1,205 in 1967, the only season he reached that.

At that point, McBride had 95 receptions, already a franchise single-season record for the position, breaking the record he set last season with 81 receptions.

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.

 

 

Rams inactives: RT Rob Havenstein out vs. Cardinals

The Cardinals will face a backup right tackle when they take on the Rams in Week 17.

The Los Angeles Rams had a short injury report entering their Week 17 game against the Arizona Cardinals. Only one player, starting right tackle Rob Havenstein, was listed. He was questionable to play with a shoulder injury he suffered in practice this past week.

He will not play against the Cardinals. Havenstein was among the Rams’ inactive players, released 90 minutes before kickoff of the Saturday night matchup.

Week 17 Rams inactive list

  • QB Stetson Bennett
  • WR Tyler Johnson
  • RB Cody Schrader
  • OL Dylan McMahon
  • OL Rob Havenstein

Joe Noteboom replaces Havenstein in the lineup.

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.