39 days till the Cardinals’ season opener against the Bills

It’s been a while since a player with No. 39 made a real impact. You have to go all the way back to Johnny Johnson from 1990-1992.

We are now under 40 days until the start of the Arizona Cardinals’ 2024 season. They have a day off in training camp today (Wednesday) and have their first preseason game in 10 days.

They are 40 days away from their season opener in Week 1 on the road against the Buffalo Bills.

No. 39 on the roster currently is rookie cornerback Jaden Davis, drafted in the seventh round this year. He has not yet made an impact and is a longshot to make the team.

It has been a long time since a player wearing No. 39 made a seasonable impact. Cornerback Jace Whittaker stuck around for parts of three seasons from 2020-2022 but was mostly on the practice squad. James Sanders played one season for the Cardinals in 2012, mostly on special teams.

The last impactful No. 39 might be Johnny Johnson, who was with the Cardinals from 1990-1992. He was drafted in the seventh round and rushed for 926 yards as a rookie, making the Pro Bowl. Were it not for Emmitt Smith being a rookie, Johnson might have been Offensive Rookie of the Year.

He rushed for over 2,300 yards in three seasons for the Cardinals before he was traded to the New York Jets along with the fourth pick in the 1993 draft to move up to No. 3, which they used to draft running back Garrison Hearst.

Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

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4 facts to remember about the Texans’ practice squad

The Houston Texans completed their practice squad. Here are four facts to keep an eye on.

The Houston Texans completed their practice squad Wednesday. While the bulk of the Texans’ construction centers around the 53-man roster, assembling a practice squad that can supplement the needs of the main roster is also key.

Khalil Davis

DT

6-1

308

27

3

Nebraska

Austin Deculus

T

6-5

321

24

2

LSU

Cobi Francis

CB

5-11

193

24

2

Memphis

Ali Gaye

DE

6-6

265

25

R

LSU

Brandon Hill

S

5-11

195

22

R

Pittsburgh

Johnny Johnson III

WR

6-1

199

24

1

Oregon

Dalton Keene

TE

6-4

251

24

2

Virginia Tech

Jimmy Morrissey

C

6-3

303

25

3

Pittsburgh

Adedayo Odeleye*

DE

6-5

271

25

1

Loughborough (U.K.)

Steven Sims

WR

5-10

176

26

4

Kansas

Garret Wallow

LB

6-2

230

24

3

TCU

Ty Zentner

P

6-2

199

25

R

Kansas State

Derek Rivers

DE

6-5

250

29

7

Youngstown State

Michael Deiter

C-G

6-6

315

26

5

Wisconsin

Dieter Eiselen

G

6-4

320

27

2

Yale

Lance McCutcheon

WR

6-3

202

24

2

Montana State

Here are four facts to keep in mind regarding the formation of the Texans’ practice squad.

Texans elevate WR Johnny Johnson from practice squad to active roster

The Houston Texans elevated receiver Johnny Johnson to the active roster ahead of their Week 18 tilt with the Indianapolis Colts.

The Houston Texans made one standard elevation from the practice squad to their active roster ahead of their Week 18 encounter with the Indianapolis Colts Sunday at 12:00 p.m. Central Time at Lucas Oil Stadium.

The Texans elevated former Oregon wideout Johnny Johnson to the active roster.

Johnson was an undrafted free agent. The 6-1, 199-pound receiver has been with the Texans since rookie minicamp.

Houston has an opening for a receiver on their game day roster as wideout Phillip Dorsett was ruled out on Friday with a hamstring injury that got worse throughout the week.

A loss would keep the Texans (2-13-1) on pace to secure the No. 1 overall pick in the 2023 NFL draft.

ProDucks Reactions: All the best buzz from Oregon Ducks in Week 1 of NFL preseason

There were a lot of Pro Ducks in action during Week 1 of the NFL preseason. Here are all of the highlights and buzz you need to see.

While many Oregon fans have been focused on fall camp taking place in Eugene and the Ducks’ first scrimmage at Autzen Stadium, a whole host of pro Ducks saw some action at the NFL level in the first week of the preseason.

While a handful of veteran Ducks and established starters did not see the field, as is customary in the preseason, we saw a lot of former Oregon players get onto the gridiron and go to work, trying to earn a roster spot and move their way up the depth chart.

So how did things go, and what is the buzz like after the weekend? Here’s a look at some of the best highlights and social media reactions for the pro Ducks in the league:

The Oregon Ducks don’t have a clear-cut WR1, and it’s becoming clear they don’t need one

Four games into the season, the Ducks are yet to identify a leading WR. Fans may see that as a problem, but Oregon is using it as an advantage.

The 2021 season for the Oregon Ducks was initially billed as something that we hadn’t ever seen before in Eugene.

For once, it was going to be the wide receivers that took center stage and proved that Oregon was more than just a school for running backs.

That’s a tough narrative to shake, especially when names like Jonathan Stewart, LaMichael James, Royce Freeman, Kenjon Barner, and Reuben Droughns have all had their say. Even the current backfield of CJ Verdell and Travis Dye would likely tell you otherwise. Nonetheless, a new class of receivers like Troy Franklin and Dont’e Thornton declared in Fall Camp that they wanted to set out and make Oregon known as a wide receiver’s school, and with the help of veteran returners Johnny Johnson III, Jaylon Redd, Mycah Pittman, and Devon Williams, the sentiment that Oregon was going to dominate the passing attack seemed extremely possible.

So now, four weeks into the season, why are we left wondering how good this receiving corp really is, and who the leading man is at the position?

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We don’t have an answer to that question, but it’s hard to find an example of something that is more clear-cut in portraying something that fans care about, and coaches ignore. If I were to try and offer some solace to any Duck fan who is currently troubled about the fact that Oregon doesn’t have a leading receiver at the 1/3 mark in the season, a quote from Brad Pitt in Moneyball quickly comes to mind.

“It’s a problem that you think we need to explain ourselves. Don’t. To anyone.”

Earlier this week, Mario Cristobal was asked about the receiver room at Oregon, and if he could assess where the group was at since they had not exactly found a WR1 thus far. His answer was telling and to the point.

“I think you evaluate every opportunity you have to go win a football game and doing whatever you can to win that game,” Cristobal said. “I think storylines created around anything other than doing whatever is best to win a game from a strategical standpoint is all secondary. We always try to spread the ball around as much as we can because that is effective in helping you win a game. And if you win you really come out of there not having or not trying to have any regrets, you just assess how you can do it better. And that’s really our process. There’s not much focus on creating storylines or anything of that nature. Everything we try to do is for the players for the program and to win the game.”

In coach-speak translation, Cristobal doesn’t give a rat’s you-know-what if one player separates himself from the pack, as long as the group is productive.

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And so far, the WR room has done well in limited work this season. Johnny Johnson III currently leads the team with 10 catches for 148 yards and 1 TD through four games, and freshman Kris Hutson is second on the team with 5 catches for 87 yards. Two other receivers on the team — Jaylon Redd and Dont’e Thornton — have a touchdown each, and a handful of other players have multiple catches on the season.

It may not be the days of old where you have one WR leading the team by a large margin, but the depth doesn’t call for that. So while Dillon Mitchell may have grabbed 75 targets for over 1,000 yards and 10 TD in 2018, while the next highest receiver had just 38 catches, we are unlikely to see that any time soon again in Oregon.


A potential issue that does come up, however, is an unrequited desire for catches. If you have 6-7 receivers vying for catches, all of whom are talented and capable of being a true threat on the offense continually getting overlooked, some unrest can start to develop. There are only so many targets to go around, and in a run-centric offense like the Ducks’ deploy, some mouths are going to be left empty.

“Right now I think we’ve got a hungry group of dogs in our receiver room,” Redd said on Wednesday. “We all have to have a mindset and we kind of emphasize in this mindset that even though we have such a good group of guys, that every limited rep that we get we gotta make the most of it. We got to take that one rep like that’s gonna be the only rep I get all game. So right now we’ve just got to keep our heads up at the same time. Everybody wants the ball, but you can’t be selfish and win games, and that’s gonna help us at the end of the day.”

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There is always going to be competition within position groups, and a coach should want nothing less. We talked earlier this week about the friendly rivalry between Verone McKinley III and Bennett Williams, which has led to them being two of the top interception-getters in the nation.

Fighting over targets is encouraged. What is not, however, is getting down and unfocused when they don’t come your way.

“Whenever there is a pass play called, you should run 100%,” Redd said. “Your best route, give it your all like it’s your last rep that you have all game or all season. That’s how you’ve got to take it, literally like a pitbull that’s never been let off the leash.”


For Anthony Brown, too many mouths to feed is not a bad problem to have. It’s not something he’s unfamiliar with, either. In Brown’s two full seasons with Boston College, it was common to look at the receivers and find the top three options all finish the year within 10-12 catches of one another, often led by Tommy Sweeney, Kobay White, and Jeff Smith.

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So when he came to Oregon and saw the wide array of talent that he was going to be playing with, it had to be enticing.

I asked Brown on Wednesday how great of a feeling it was knowing that any time he dropped back to pass, there was so much talent around him that he could lean on. The Ducks’ QB, who has never been a man of many words, put it simply.

“It’s a blessing, to say the least.”

So while fans may want to look at the Oregon depth chart and be able to pick out a guy that they feel confident will explode each and every week, hauling in six catches for 90-plus yards and a touchdown, don’t get your hopes up.

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The Ducks’ depth allows them to be versatile, and their ability to spread the ball around keeps a defense honest and true, forcing them to defend every pass-catcher on the field.

It may not be flashy or sell jerseys in the end, but it’s effective and productive.

It’s a ‘problem’ that Mario Cristobal doesn’t feel that he needs to explain to anyone. And he isn’t.

Instead, he’s letting the winning do the talking.

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Ducks Depth Chart Preview: Experienced wide receiver group buoyed by talent-rich freshman class

With a solid mix of experienced veterans and high-ceiling freshmen, the Ducks are stacked at the WR position going into 2021 season.

If your goal is to find the position group with the most depth and the highest ceiling on the Oregon Ducks roster, it’s hard to look past the wide receivers.

With a trio of veteran players ready to lead the group, plus a couple of true freshmen that could potentially emerge as the most talented players on the field, the Ducks will likely have no problems with the passing game this season, assuming that quarterback Anthony Brown is all that we expect him to be.

Spread across three positions, we can expect a lot of rotating for Oregon as they look to stay fresh and get all of their talents on the field. So how will the depth chart fill out across the board? Here’s our prediction, with a breakdown of each player.