Arizona Cardinals’ violation was a rotary bike in three plus quarters on Thursday night against Seattle Seahawks.
Kyler Murray and Crew couldn’t start and couldn’t find Paydirt until less than six minutes later and ran 20-6 in the fourth quarter. When they finally logged in, Arizona made a furious return to tie the game, 20-20, with 28 seconds left. They watched as Sam Darnold went slowly in Seattle in the other direction for the game that won the game in a 23-20 final.
“We have to do more plays. We have to meet, be ready to go. It’s like S —- is charging, you know what I mean and it takes too long,” said Murray. “Obviously, the resilience of the team, you love to see it and you feel like you give yourself the opportunity to win the game at the end, but it’s just too late.”
Cardinals returned 115 meters in total, 8 first floors and 3 points in their first 8 drives, two of whom ended on Murray’s shutters. In his last three drives, Arizona raised 138 meters, 10 first downturns, 17 points – FG, eg, eg.
Fallen in 2-2, the Cardinal lost to the final play in two games at four days intervals.
Early only to find their steps down the elastic reflected the game of the second year of the recipient of Marvin Harrison Jr..
In the first half, 2024 did not search no. 4 in total lost in your own head. At some point, it seemed like he and Murray had never played together before. Harrison reached 1 of 5 in the first half in eight meters. Murray was based on both shutters, including one of Harrison’s hand to be shocked by a defender.
Blunders Harrison and the inability of the offense led to boos from Cardinals fans leaving half time.
Murray said after the loss that the fight would not prevent him from moving to Harrison.
“He needs me, I need him,” Murray said. “This is a team sport, four -quarters of games and I understand that he doesn’t come out of the game. I don’t want him to come out of the game.
Harrison turned things around in the second half and reached all five of his targets in 58 meters and contact. After the situation, Harrison, who did not speak to the media after the game, looked like a giant weight had been taken off his shoulders.
“I love how he fought back and continued to play hard and continued to play,” Murray said. “Obviously he probably is going to go home and think about it —. But at the end of the day, again, it’s football. We all make mistakes. But he kept fighting. I’m excited.”
Harrison’s struggle to open the season has been obvious. They were on display for domestic audiences at Prietime on Thursday night. His drops, flubs and lack of chemistry with Murray have delayed the cards.
“I’m not worried about Marv at all,” said Cardinals coach Jonathan Gannon. “He just gets nice. He is resilient, just like this crew is.”
After Harrison’s character finally was fully loaded in the second half on Thursday, the hope is that he will remain in the game and perhaps Cardinals’ offense can start.