WEBVTT - Big Red Rage - Hooray For Hollywood

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<v Speaker 1>Strap on the boots and scrape up the knuckles ahead.

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<v Speaker 1>He got Jack. This is the big red Rain presented

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<v Speaker 1>by Santanford in Gilbert. Harry's Gonna score Touchdown. Slim to

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<v Speaker 1>the ground by Buddha Baker Like a torpedo. He came

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<v Speaker 1>flying into the backbea. The rage is brought to you

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<v Speaker 1>by satan Ford in Gilbert. Are you Santanford State Farm?

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<v Speaker 1>Talk to an agent today at eight hundred State Farm,

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<v Speaker 1>And by Arizona Cardinals Podcasts visit acy Cardinals dot Com,

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<v Speaker 1>Slash Podcasts, The Rods, Rising Guard, temperatureizing vision, flurring, rage

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<v Speaker 1>taking over. Here's Paul Calvec Holly Wood, Holly Wood and

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<v Speaker 1>Ron will Flint. It doesn't get any better than that horse.

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<v Speaker 1>Unleash the fiard. Mister Ron Wolfley, you heard this scientific

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<v Speaker 1>term new for twenty twenty two, TikTok brain. No, I

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<v Speaker 1>have not, Polly. It's a big story in the journal

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<v Speaker 1>this week. Researchers have actually done brain scans to confirm

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<v Speaker 1>that TikTok brain is real, extremely real, Ron Wolfley, it

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<v Speaker 1>is on. I quickly define it the dopamine rush of

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<v Speaker 1>endless short videos, which makes it hard for young viewers

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<v Speaker 1>to switch their focus to slower moving activities, and a

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<v Speaker 1>result says you might imagine in a decreased attention span

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<v Speaker 1>plus human who's easily distracted. While Polly, you know what, Honestly,

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<v Speaker 1>I am distracted, and I know you know that I

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<v Speaker 1>am so distracted so much of the time for so

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<v Speaker 1>many different reasons. But it's not because of TikTok. Yeah,

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<v Speaker 1>you are ahead of your time. You know, it's not

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<v Speaker 1>just kids. It's not just kids who suffer from, as

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<v Speaker 1>I read here, making it harder for kids to sustain.

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<v Speaker 1>Activities do not provide instant and constant satisfaction. Yes, Paul, Now,

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<v Speaker 1>I bring this up not only because of its relation

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<v Speaker 1>to you, Ron Wilfley, even though it has nothing to

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<v Speaker 1>do with TikTok. Once again, you are the outlier in

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<v Speaker 1>the study, Okay, you are the anomaly. I bring this

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<v Speaker 1>up because I feel like maybe I'm suffering from TikTok

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<v Speaker 1>brain in that in that everything that has gone on

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<v Speaker 1>since the last edition of The Big Red Rage presented

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<v Speaker 1>by Santan Ford in Gilbert, right, I mean this last edition,

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<v Speaker 1>we were on the air, We're talking about stinking mock drafts,

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<v Speaker 1>and think of everything that has gone down. That feels

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<v Speaker 1>like so two months ago and it was only a

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<v Speaker 1>matter of a few days. Yeah, a couple of things

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<v Speaker 1>on this, Paul. Number one, I don't know about TikTok,

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<v Speaker 1>but your forehead's big enough to play TikTok toe that much.

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<v Speaker 1>I do know. That's number one, Paul. And I would

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<v Speaker 1>also say, yeah, there has been an awful lot that

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<v Speaker 1>has transpired, has there not? In the NFL Draft and

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<v Speaker 1>the Arizona Cardinals in will this be a different team

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<v Speaker 1>than a year ago? Yes, indeed it will, and we

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<v Speaker 1>will hear from their first round pick, ostensibly in Marquise

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<v Speaker 1>Hollywood Brown was acquired from the Baltimore Ravens. In fact,

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<v Speaker 1>you know, I mean there I was on stage wolf

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<v Speaker 1>at the draft party, and all of a sudden in

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<v Speaker 1>the year, you know, on the year piece, So like

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<v Speaker 1>blah ba, we just traded for Marquise Hollywood Brown and

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<v Speaker 1>he'll be here in a matter of moments. Did you

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<v Speaker 1>believe that? Honestly? I mean when you first heard that,

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<v Speaker 1>Because when I first got the text, I was like,

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<v Speaker 1>knock it off. I thought, well, I believe the trade.

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<v Speaker 1>I was pretty sure I believe the trade. I thought

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<v Speaker 1>when they said he's gonna I'm like it would be

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<v Speaker 1>via satellite up on the JumboTron. I didn't know he'd

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<v Speaker 1>actually be there in person, which he was a matter

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<v Speaker 1>of moments later. And you know what, the next day

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<v Speaker 1>we had a chance to sit down to Marquise hollywo

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<v Speaker 1>Brown and we're gonna hear that. Okay, momentarily on the

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<v Speaker 1>Big Red Rage. But there's been some news in between.

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<v Speaker 1>And I'd rather take forehead jokes all night than read

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<v Speaker 1>the following that DeAndre Hopkins has been suspended without pay

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<v Speaker 1>for the first six games of the twenty twenty two

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<v Speaker 1>regular season for violating the NFL Policy on Performance enhancing substances.

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<v Speaker 1>Your reaction, Ron Wilfin, Yeah, Polly, what a bummer this

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<v Speaker 1>is to actually hear this. Um. Listen, there are guys

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<v Speaker 1>out there. They put a lot of stuff into their body.

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<v Speaker 1>They do the best they can to get in shape.

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<v Speaker 1>I have no idea the particulars, of course, what DeAndre

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<v Speaker 1>Hopkins and what it means and what it says about

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<v Speaker 1>him and his career. I really don't. I just know this.

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<v Speaker 1>The fact is d hop is not going to be

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<v Speaker 1>there for the Arizona Cardinals in the first six weeks

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<v Speaker 1>of the season. That's what I know. How does that

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<v Speaker 1>change the dynamic of this team? I don't know, Polly,

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<v Speaker 1>We're gonna find out. But man, I don't know about you.

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<v Speaker 1>I'm really really happy Marcus Brown is here that much,

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<v Speaker 1>I will tell you, and not some rookie wide receiver

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<v Speaker 1>that they drafted number twenty three overall. Yeah, you in

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<v Speaker 1>the head coach Cliff Kingsbury. In fact, here's Coach Cliff

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<v Speaker 1>talking about Marquise Hollywood Brown. It's just the fit in

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<v Speaker 1>this Cardinals offense that has a lot of similarities to Oklahoma,

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<v Speaker 1>more playmakers. We can have the better dynamic guy who

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<v Speaker 1>can take the top off inside outside, And you know,

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<v Speaker 1>I think he's just scratching the surface. We really feel

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<v Speaker 1>like he fits what we do. Played in a similar

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<v Speaker 1>scheme in college there ATWU with Lincoln, and so it

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<v Speaker 1>should be a quick learning curve as well. And you

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<v Speaker 1>know what, and astute observation, Well, this isn't some rookie

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<v Speaker 1>where you're gonna wonder is he going to be regular

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<v Speaker 1>season ready week one. There have been plenty of rookie

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<v Speaker 1>receivers will look great in August and then failed to

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<v Speaker 1>produce in September. You have no idea until regular season

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<v Speaker 1>games get going. But that is not the case with

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<v Speaker 1>Marquise Hollywood. Brown not only a proven thousand yard receiver,

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<v Speaker 1>but obviously as a few years in the league, has

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<v Speaker 1>familiarity with the playbook, has instant chemistry with the quarterback.

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<v Speaker 1>So to what degree do you think it will be

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<v Speaker 1>plug and play man, Yeah, that's the question, PAULA. I

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<v Speaker 1>really don't know. I don't know what it's going to

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<v Speaker 1>look like. I don't know what they're gonna do. I suspect, Paul,

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<v Speaker 1>and this is my own suspicion. Nobody has told me this,

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<v Speaker 1>but I suspect we're going to see a lot more

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<v Speaker 1>twelve personnel. Paul. You know the way I feel about this.

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<v Speaker 1>I've talked to you about it before in the past. Right,

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<v Speaker 1>twelve personnel, one back, two tight ends, two wide receivers,

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<v Speaker 1>and rundown situation first and ten and second and one

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<v Speaker 1>to six. That rundown situation I think is going to

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<v Speaker 1>be the biggest evolution of this offense going forward. Twelve personnel,

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<v Speaker 1>more two tight ends and rundown situation. Now, whether that's

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<v Speaker 1>Max Williams and Zach Ertz or whether that Is zach

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<v Speaker 1>Ertz and Trey McBride. That remains to be seen, Paulie,

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<v Speaker 1>but I do believe we're going to see a lot

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<v Speaker 1>more of that, and because of it, you could build

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<v Speaker 1>an argument. I don't agree necessarily with the argument, but

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<v Speaker 1>you could build an argument that Marquis Brown is going

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<v Speaker 1>to mean more. He's gonna mean more because of the

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<v Speaker 1>run by guy, that he is over the top than

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<v Speaker 1>what d Hop would actually provide in terms of actually

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<v Speaker 1>being that much better than a J. Green. And by

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<v Speaker 1>the way, for the record, the media did ask Cliff

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<v Speaker 1>Kingsbury whether he was going to run thirteen personnel now

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<v Speaker 1>that so we'll see if he's sandbagging or not out

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<v Speaker 1>of necessity. We'll see, you know, Marky's Hollywood. Brown thinks

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<v Speaker 1>he escaped the Ravens offense, and Greg Roman maybe not

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<v Speaker 1>the first six games. Cardinals might be running three tight ends.

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<v Speaker 1>We'll see about that. Yeah, you know, honestly, right now,

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<v Speaker 1>I cannot wait to see it when d Hop does

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<v Speaker 1>get back. When he does get back, oh my goodness,

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<v Speaker 1>look out, because what Marcus Brown brings to this offense

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<v Speaker 1>is exactly what they need. And it's not just a

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<v Speaker 1>track guy. It's not just a guy who's wanted a

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<v Speaker 1>four three five. It's a guy that is a good

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<v Speaker 1>wide receiver who will catch the ball down the field

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<v Speaker 1>if you throw it up to him. Oh my goodness,

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<v Speaker 1>that is exactly what this offense needed. By the way,

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<v Speaker 1>coming up Marquis Hollywood Brown, I do ask him how

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<v Speaker 1>fast are you? Because you know, a lot of people

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<v Speaker 1>think that he's definitely a sub four three guy if

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<v Speaker 1>he would have been healthy coming out of Okooma with

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<v Speaker 1>a foot and he would have run at the combine,

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<v Speaker 1>which he never did. Quentin Harris, the VP of Player Personnel,

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<v Speaker 1>this week on the Pash Podcast, and he was just

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<v Speaker 1>talking about what lies straight ahead for Markis Brown here

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<v Speaker 1>with the Cardinals. Hollywood's opportunity. He's gonna have more opportunity

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<v Speaker 1>here than he did in Baltimore. So I think that's

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<v Speaker 1>the biggest thing, because you know, even though we do

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<v Speaker 1>have a solid run game, we're gonna throw the ball around.

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<v Speaker 1>We're gonna use four wide, five wide at times, so

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<v Speaker 1>you know, the opportunity. If you're a receiver, you want

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<v Speaker 1>the ball. So I think it was, you know, the

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<v Speaker 1>differences offenses for Hollywood is going to be very good

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<v Speaker 1>for him. Looks all you've got to say, Paulie, is

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<v Speaker 1>this right here that Marquis Brown has never played with

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<v Speaker 1>a wide receiver like dhob never that much, I know. Okay, Yeah,

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<v Speaker 1>you're not gonna have him for the first six games. Okay,

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<v Speaker 1>there's eleven more after that, by the way, So Marquis

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<v Speaker 1>Brown will never have played with a guy the caliber

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<v Speaker 1>of DeAndre Hopkins. That's gonna help Marquis Brown. Forget about

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<v Speaker 1>the fact Marquis Brown is going to help the Hoppin

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<v Speaker 1>zach Ertz, especially when they're running that short to intermediate

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<v Speaker 1>stuff over the middle of the field in particular. Oh yeah,

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<v Speaker 1>he's gonna help them a lot, provide a lot of

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<v Speaker 1>aid comfort from shelter, loosen up that secondary, no doubt

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<v Speaker 1>about it. But you gotta remember, this is a guy

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<v Speaker 1>that had ninety one receptions himself for over a thousand yards.

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<v Speaker 1>This is a guy that is super explosive on the outside,

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<v Speaker 1>who can hold up on his own. What is the

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<v Speaker 1>hop gonna do for Marquise Brown when he gets back. Well,

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<v Speaker 1>you had Lincoln Riley, now the USC coach, on this

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<v Speaker 1>week at eight seven FM Arizona Sports, and you just

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<v Speaker 1>asked him a Marquis Brown, right, and just his ability

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<v Speaker 1>as a receiver more than just a earner. And his speed. Guy,

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<v Speaker 1>here's Lincoln Riley. Everybody sees a speed like anybody on

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<v Speaker 1>earth can see. This guy's pretty fast. But on top

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<v Speaker 1>of it, most people aren't able to track a ball

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<v Speaker 1>running full speed down the field with another guy hanging

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<v Speaker 1>all over you. Most most people can't track the ball

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<v Speaker 1>at the level that this guy can. And so it's

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<v Speaker 1>a cool combination. Who throws a better deep ball, Kyler

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<v Speaker 1>Murray or Lamar Jackson. Kyler Murray and Lamar Jackson would

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<v Speaker 1>tell you that. And here's the other thing that I

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<v Speaker 1>liked hearing from Lincoln Riley because I listened to an

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<v Speaker 1>interview Wolf and he's not the first one to say

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<v Speaker 1>it that Marky's Hollywood Brown is a competitor. This dude,

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<v Speaker 1>this dude is really competitive in practice. He's all in.

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<v Speaker 1>He cares about it a lot. He's all ball. I mean,

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<v Speaker 1>he's really into football. And if you if you get

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<v Speaker 1>to know his backstory and how he spent a year

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<v Speaker 1>at at junior college and just the way he defied

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<v Speaker 1>the odds to end up at Oklahoma and the NFL,

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<v Speaker 1>you know, I think that matters, that it matters to

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<v Speaker 1>him to such a big yeah. No, you're right, Polly,

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<v Speaker 1>And again I wonder what this offense is going to

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<v Speaker 1>look like. I love the signings, of course of the

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<v Speaker 1>off season. I love all the tea leaves, so to speak,

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<v Speaker 1>that we're reading right now and where the offense is

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<v Speaker 1>headed and where all of this information and these signings

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<v Speaker 1>actually point to. But we're gonna have to wait and see, Polly,

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<v Speaker 1>because it's not going to look the same until d

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<v Speaker 1>Hop obviously gets back. Yeah, and this just didn't The

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<v Speaker 1>Cardinals didn't look good on offense without d Hop, Yes,

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<v Speaker 1>and last year, and that is a fact. And coach

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<v Speaker 1>Cliff keeps taking the blame and maybe rightfully so. But

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<v Speaker 1>was it really the play calling or was it more

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<v Speaker 1>the lack of playmakers? And so we'll see. Sean McVay

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<v Speaker 1>had to evolve his system and he did after a

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<v Speaker 1>three game losing streak, and it took him all the

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<v Speaker 1>way to the Super Bowl. So now it's in the

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<v Speaker 1>Cardinals offensive coach's court and they got to try and

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<v Speaker 1>figure this out. And by the way, a little bit

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<v Speaker 1>later we'll talk about Mexico City. That was the other

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<v Speaker 1>headline this week Cardinal Niners Week eleven Monday Night Football.

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<v Speaker 1>That'll be Thanksgiving Week? How about that? And season tickets

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<v Speaker 1>available now at State Farm Stadium This year. Matchups include

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<v Speaker 1>ram Seahawks, Yes, Buck Saints, Chiefs, Chargers, Patriots, and Eagles.

0:12:14.840 --> 0:12:18.480
<v Speaker 1>How about that? Godasy Cardinals dot com slash season for

0:12:18.640 --> 0:12:22.400
<v Speaker 1>more ticket info. Marquise Hollywood Brown next on the Big

0:12:22.480 --> 0:12:32.600
<v Speaker 1>Red Rate presented by Santan Poord and Gilbert Jackson. I'm

0:12:32.640 --> 0:12:35.199
<v Speaker 1>burned down one of the throw going deep looking for

0:12:35.280 --> 0:12:41.760
<v Speaker 1>Hollywood Brown and zol touch stop Hollywood Row. Surprise, surprise.

0:12:42.600 --> 0:12:45.240
<v Speaker 1>He is a guy that makes sense for a number

0:12:45.240 --> 0:12:49.440
<v Speaker 1>of reasons. Number one, two years of control costs, getting

0:12:49.480 --> 0:12:53.280
<v Speaker 1>a dynamic receiver who's played inside outside obviously, the chemistry

0:12:53.320 --> 0:12:55.520
<v Speaker 1>with our quarterback, and a guy who can be a

0:12:55.600 --> 0:12:58.679
<v Speaker 1>dynamic vertical thread, which is something we were looking for

0:12:58.880 --> 0:13:01.199
<v Speaker 1>as well. As I had a very strong feeling that

0:13:01.240 --> 0:13:03.400
<v Speaker 1>the board was going to fall away. It did, and

0:13:03.480 --> 0:13:07.160
<v Speaker 1>I'm awfully glad that we made this trade. Yeah, Steve

0:13:07.240 --> 0:13:11.480
<v Speaker 1>Kind wasn't kidding. It was a surprise all around. Not

0:13:11.640 --> 0:13:15.240
<v Speaker 1>only did the NFL, but Cardinal's nation yours truly. I

0:13:15.400 --> 0:13:17.160
<v Speaker 1>was up on stage or the draft party in in

0:13:17.200 --> 0:13:19.360
<v Speaker 1>a matter of a half hour, Hollywood Brown was on

0:13:19.520 --> 0:13:23.160
<v Speaker 1>stage with yours truly intean and you're still smiling. I mean,

0:13:23.240 --> 0:13:26.360
<v Speaker 1>here we are and you're still smiling. Man. Just this

0:13:26.520 --> 0:13:29.120
<v Speaker 1>has been all good all around for you, hasn't it. Yes,

0:13:29.320 --> 0:13:32.720
<v Speaker 1>it's been. It's been amazing. It's been funny. By the way,

0:13:32.760 --> 0:13:34.719
<v Speaker 1>the owner was up on stage and actually get this

0:13:34.720 --> 0:13:36.480
<v Speaker 1>side of the way, right off the top, he was

0:13:36.960 --> 0:13:40.600
<v Speaker 1>consistently calling you Hollywood. Okay, but that's Michael Bidwall, he's

0:13:40.600 --> 0:13:42.120
<v Speaker 1>the owner. Can we call you Hollywood? Do you like

0:13:42.240 --> 0:13:45.120
<v Speaker 1>being called Hollywood? Oh yeah, I have no issue. Uh yeah,

0:13:45.200 --> 0:13:47.400
<v Speaker 1>you can call me considering you have an ecklas on

0:13:47.520 --> 0:13:50.079
<v Speaker 1>right now, that says Hollywood, right yeah. Yeah, it's good

0:13:50.120 --> 0:13:53.000
<v Speaker 1>for a business. But that that nickname didn't come until

0:13:53.320 --> 0:13:56.880
<v Speaker 1>Oklahoma is because before that you were known as Jet

0:13:57.520 --> 0:13:59.760
<v Speaker 1>and that was obviously based on your speed, right yeah,

0:14:00.000 --> 0:14:01.959
<v Speaker 1>and getting caught out since I was like eight years old.

0:14:02.640 --> 0:14:06.480
<v Speaker 1>So how did Hollywood come into play? Gus Johnson, the announcer,

0:14:06.679 --> 0:14:08.839
<v Speaker 1>called me that it was a game I broke the

0:14:08.880 --> 0:14:11.280
<v Speaker 1>school record, had like two hundred and sixty five yards,

0:14:11.720 --> 0:14:14.720
<v Speaker 1>and from that point on everyone just called me, Hollywood,

0:14:14.800 --> 0:14:17.800
<v Speaker 1>So I kind of just embraced it's good. That's good.

0:14:17.880 --> 0:14:20.840
<v Speaker 1>So what sort of surprise was it to you? Because

0:14:20.920 --> 0:14:22.720
<v Speaker 1>I told you we were on stage and they're talking

0:14:22.760 --> 0:14:24.640
<v Speaker 1>in my ear and they're like, the trade just went

0:14:24.720 --> 0:14:26.360
<v Speaker 1>down and oh, by the way, he's gonna be here

0:14:26.360 --> 0:14:29.000
<v Speaker 1>in thirty minutes, and I'm like, wow. And how long

0:14:29.080 --> 0:14:32.000
<v Speaker 1>did you have to hold on to that secret? H

0:14:32.280 --> 0:14:35.480
<v Speaker 1>A A couple of days. I was holding on to it.

0:14:35.520 --> 0:14:37.400
<v Speaker 1>I mean it was in the worse for it something

0:14:37.520 --> 0:14:39.600
<v Speaker 1>quite some time. You know, I knew it was a

0:14:39.680 --> 0:14:42.440
<v Speaker 1>possibility that it could happen. But when I finally knew

0:14:42.480 --> 0:14:44.320
<v Speaker 1>that it actually wasn't gonna happen, you know, it was

0:14:44.400 --> 0:14:46.680
<v Speaker 1>kind of it was kind of hard it just keep it,

0:14:46.800 --> 0:14:48.720
<v Speaker 1>keep going because you had to keep it from Kyler

0:14:48.760 --> 0:14:52.200
<v Speaker 1>as well. Yes, yes, what's the reaction been from Kyler?

0:14:52.240 --> 0:14:54.440
<v Speaker 1>We know he sent the text messenger Steve Kine with

0:14:54.520 --> 0:14:57.680
<v Speaker 1>the fireball emojis. How about with you? He's incided, Uh,

0:14:57.800 --> 0:15:00.520
<v Speaker 1>we don't. We don't talk to each other, like even

0:15:00.560 --> 0:15:02.120
<v Speaker 1>though we've been spending in the last two weeks with

0:15:02.200 --> 0:15:04.600
<v Speaker 1>each other, we've been calling a nut style because it's

0:15:04.600 --> 0:15:07.480
<v Speaker 1>actually not happened. So we both excited. How colose are

0:15:07.560 --> 0:15:10.560
<v Speaker 1>you too? We're very close. Kyler was like my host

0:15:10.640 --> 0:15:13.200
<v Speaker 1>when I when I took my visit to Oklahoma, and

0:15:13.520 --> 0:15:16.400
<v Speaker 1>since we got there, you know, he wasn't a starter

0:15:16.520 --> 0:15:19.080
<v Speaker 1>and I wasn't a starter, so we were together from

0:15:19.120 --> 0:15:21.880
<v Speaker 1>it all the way through. So we're very close. And

0:15:21.960 --> 0:15:25.800
<v Speaker 1>you guys have been throwing in Texas this off season. Yeah? Nice? Nice?

0:15:25.960 --> 0:15:30.080
<v Speaker 1>So how much chemistry is there already once you get

0:15:30.160 --> 0:15:32.360
<v Speaker 1>into this season, you know, get the training camp. I mean,

0:15:32.440 --> 0:15:34.680
<v Speaker 1>how much chemistry have you guys already navigated down that

0:15:34.800 --> 0:15:37.760
<v Speaker 1>learning curve? A lot of chemistry. He knows how I think,

0:15:37.840 --> 0:15:40.080
<v Speaker 1>I know how he thinks, I know what he what

0:15:40.200 --> 0:15:44.080
<v Speaker 1>he likes. So I'm excited. I think it was ten

0:15:44.160 --> 0:15:46.920
<v Speaker 1>of his touchdowns in his Heisman campaign went to you

0:15:47.920 --> 0:15:50.720
<v Speaker 1>and his tweet was, let's run it back. Yeah, okay?

0:15:51.080 --> 0:15:53.240
<v Speaker 1>Is that plausible? Is that feasible? Is that do? How

0:15:53.320 --> 0:15:56.560
<v Speaker 1>realistic is that you guys can recapture that sort of production.

0:15:57.000 --> 0:16:00.400
<v Speaker 1>I think it's very reasonable. I mean, we're far from

0:16:00.440 --> 0:16:03.840
<v Speaker 1>college and we're even better players than we were back then,

0:16:03.960 --> 0:16:06.000
<v Speaker 1>so I think we just got to get to work

0:16:06.120 --> 0:16:09.680
<v Speaker 1>and really see how we could do it. Marquise Hollywood Brown,

0:16:09.720 --> 0:16:11.320
<v Speaker 1>our guests here on the Big Red Rage. We were

0:16:11.440 --> 0:16:14.120
<v Speaker 1>the GM Steve Khmer, this kind of report you taught

0:16:14.160 --> 0:16:17.560
<v Speaker 1>us about your play? What can Cardinals fans expect from

0:16:17.640 --> 0:16:20.360
<v Speaker 1>Hollywood Brown? Spent a lot of big plays. I mean,

0:16:20.400 --> 0:16:23.040
<v Speaker 1>I played with a lot of passion, a lot of excitement,

0:16:23.520 --> 0:16:25.880
<v Speaker 1>and you know, however, I gotta do it, you know,

0:16:25.960 --> 0:16:27.960
<v Speaker 1>to help the team win. I'm definitely gonna do it.

0:16:28.760 --> 0:16:30.800
<v Speaker 1>How fast are you? I know it's a simple question,

0:16:31.120 --> 0:16:33.320
<v Speaker 1>but it's not a simple answer because you didn't run

0:16:33.360 --> 0:16:36.640
<v Speaker 1>the forty at the combine, So I mean, what how

0:16:36.680 --> 0:16:38.640
<v Speaker 1>do you answer that when people ask you? I just

0:16:38.720 --> 0:16:41.000
<v Speaker 1>say I'm very fast, and they're like, how fast are you?

0:16:41.080 --> 0:16:43.840
<v Speaker 1>It's your forty? I'm glad. I don't know. I never

0:16:43.920 --> 0:16:45.320
<v Speaker 1>get to run it, so I don't never got to

0:16:45.400 --> 0:16:47.280
<v Speaker 1>run it. So we're just gonna keep in the mystery.

0:16:47.560 --> 0:16:49.840
<v Speaker 1>I've seen speculation though, if you were healthy, you would

0:16:49.840 --> 0:16:53.080
<v Speaker 1>have been a sub four three guy. Yeah, accurate, definitely,

0:16:53.200 --> 0:16:57.680
<v Speaker 1>definitely accurate. Okay, so how does that translate into a game.

0:16:57.800 --> 0:17:00.400
<v Speaker 1>For example, I've heard it said also you using a

0:17:00.520 --> 0:17:03.320
<v Speaker 1>secondary and I remember JJ Nelson was a four two

0:17:03.320 --> 0:17:05.040
<v Speaker 1>eight guy. Played for the Cardinals a few years ago,

0:17:05.040 --> 0:17:06.440
<v Speaker 1>and he said he break the I'll only go out

0:17:06.440 --> 0:17:09.000
<v Speaker 1>to the ex receiver and the DBS would literally say, hey,

0:17:09.040 --> 0:17:11.199
<v Speaker 1>don't run that four two eight now, and they back up,

0:17:11.240 --> 0:17:14.360
<v Speaker 1>they take a couple extra steps. Do you literally witness

0:17:14.600 --> 0:17:17.760
<v Speaker 1>yourself and your speed? And the Scotter reports loosening a

0:17:17.880 --> 0:17:20.359
<v Speaker 1>secondary h Yeah, definitely. I mean, since I've been in

0:17:20.440 --> 0:17:22.960
<v Speaker 1>the league, you know, I'm probably up there for the

0:17:23.280 --> 0:17:26.440
<v Speaker 1>most cushion in the league. Guys don't already impress me

0:17:26.520 --> 0:17:28.920
<v Speaker 1>that much, and it opens things up for everyone. So

0:17:29.280 --> 0:17:30.960
<v Speaker 1>I'm so happy that you know, I'm part of this

0:17:31.480 --> 0:17:34.159
<v Speaker 1>group because you know, we got guys who can attack

0:17:34.240 --> 0:17:36.119
<v Speaker 1>on all levels of the field. So it's gonna be

0:17:36.280 --> 0:17:38.560
<v Speaker 1>very hard to contain us. How familiar are you with

0:17:38.640 --> 0:17:41.760
<v Speaker 1>this offense just from your Oklahoma days? Because Cliff Kingsbury stided,

0:17:41.840 --> 0:17:43.680
<v Speaker 1>you know what, we run a system that's pretty darn

0:17:43.760 --> 0:17:46.439
<v Speaker 1>similar to Lincoln Riley. Yeah, definitely. You know they come

0:17:46.520 --> 0:17:50.280
<v Speaker 1>from the same tree. Uh you know testas test recruited

0:17:50.359 --> 0:17:53.520
<v Speaker 1>me and you know they was they had a good run,

0:17:53.920 --> 0:17:57.399
<v Speaker 1>and I'm pretty familiar with you know already. The stuff

0:17:57.440 --> 0:18:00.920
<v Speaker 1>I've been hearing is pretty similar to clip joke about

0:18:00.920 --> 0:18:03.520
<v Speaker 1>that that he tried to recruit you at Texas Tech. Uh. Yeah,

0:18:03.600 --> 0:18:05.760
<v Speaker 1>he's he's a you know, it's uh he glad that

0:18:06.119 --> 0:18:08.240
<v Speaker 1>I'm finally on his team and I have to play

0:18:08.280 --> 0:18:10.600
<v Speaker 1>against him, right. I think he said the same thing

0:18:10.680 --> 0:18:13.399
<v Speaker 1>with Kyler as well. Yeah, that's good Hollywood Brown, our

0:18:13.400 --> 0:18:19.040
<v Speaker 1>guest considering this offense versus a Baltimore Ravens offense that look,

0:18:19.080 --> 0:18:22.040
<v Speaker 1>I mean, Lamar Jackson obviously dynamic, but I think of

0:18:22.080 --> 0:18:24.600
<v Speaker 1>the Ravens offense, I think of a run first, run

0:18:24.680 --> 0:18:27.880
<v Speaker 1>heavy offense, a lot of tight ends. How much more

0:18:28.000 --> 0:18:30.359
<v Speaker 1>potential can you unlock in your own game just based

0:18:30.400 --> 0:18:33.760
<v Speaker 1>on this scheme? Yeah, I think I haven't even showcase

0:18:34.000 --> 0:18:36.560
<v Speaker 1>anything I really could do in the NFL yet. Like

0:18:36.720 --> 0:18:39.399
<v Speaker 1>I said, I'm such a guy, you know that whatever

0:18:39.480 --> 0:18:40.840
<v Speaker 1>the team asked me to do, I'm gonna do. And

0:18:40.920 --> 0:18:42.879
<v Speaker 1>that's what I did in Baltimore. You know, I was

0:18:43.160 --> 0:18:45.720
<v Speaker 1>happy with my time there, and you know, I'm very

0:18:45.720 --> 0:18:48.280
<v Speaker 1>exited the potential that I can I can do in

0:18:48.359 --> 0:18:51.119
<v Speaker 1>this offense. And I'm guessing you're looking forward to Kyler's

0:18:51.160 --> 0:18:52.760
<v Speaker 1>deep ball. He throws one of the best deep balls

0:18:52.800 --> 0:18:56.040
<v Speaker 1>in the league. Doesn't he Yeah, definitely. Are you strictling

0:18:56.040 --> 0:18:58.479
<v Speaker 1>an outside receiver or do you see yourself as more

0:18:58.640 --> 0:19:01.920
<v Speaker 1>versatile than that? Yeah? I could play all over wherever

0:19:01.960 --> 0:19:06.480
<v Speaker 1>they need me. Really. Yeah, little quarterback action, that's good.

0:19:06.880 --> 0:19:08.920
<v Speaker 1>That's good. I mean, you know, so you consider this

0:19:09.080 --> 0:19:12.719
<v Speaker 1>offense a very good fit? Yes, sir? Okay? All right? Uh?

0:19:12.880 --> 0:19:14.639
<v Speaker 1>And how familiar do you think you'll be with it?

0:19:14.680 --> 0:19:16.680
<v Speaker 1>Will it be you know, a learning curve through camp

0:19:16.760 --> 0:19:18.080
<v Speaker 1>or are you gonna be good to go? You think

0:19:18.119 --> 0:19:20.560
<v Speaker 1>by week one? I think I'm gonna be good to go. Uh.

0:19:21.080 --> 0:19:23.280
<v Speaker 1>You know it's my it's my job, my priority, So

0:19:23.600 --> 0:19:25.800
<v Speaker 1>I'll be good to And I bet you're looking forward

0:19:25.800 --> 0:19:29.720
<v Speaker 1>to the sunshine in Arizona. Definitely, definitely definitely didn't like

0:19:29.840 --> 0:19:32.720
<v Speaker 1>the cold, so I'm happy about that. I've heard you're

0:19:32.720 --> 0:19:37.119
<v Speaker 1>also very competitive in practice, true or false? Very true?

0:19:38.080 --> 0:19:42.040
<v Speaker 1>Where does that come from? Um? Just growing up? And

0:19:42.400 --> 0:19:46.600
<v Speaker 1>you know my ties with ab um just you want

0:19:46.640 --> 0:19:48.600
<v Speaker 1>to practice how you really want to play. So when

0:19:48.600 --> 0:19:50.960
<v Speaker 1>I'm in practice, I envision myself. You know, when I

0:19:51.040 --> 0:19:53.520
<v Speaker 1>catch this slant, I'm gonna take it to the end zone.

0:19:53.640 --> 0:19:56.160
<v Speaker 1>Even though we might be practicing at the ten down

0:19:56.280 --> 0:19:58.359
<v Speaker 1>here I'm gonna take it to the end zone because

0:19:58.400 --> 0:20:00.879
<v Speaker 1>that's what I'm gonna doing the game. So just bringing

0:20:00.920 --> 0:20:02.800
<v Speaker 1>that energy so when you win the game, it makes

0:20:02.840 --> 0:20:05.280
<v Speaker 1>it a lot easier. So, as a guy whose Twitter

0:20:05.359 --> 0:20:08.200
<v Speaker 1>handle was Primetime Underscore Jet, what was like to fly

0:20:08.320 --> 0:20:11.119
<v Speaker 1>with Michael Bidwell on the team plane? It was crazy?

0:20:11.400 --> 0:20:14.439
<v Speaker 1>He flies to hisself, So, you know, just getting up

0:20:14.480 --> 0:20:17.040
<v Speaker 1>there and seeing how everything went down was it was

0:20:17.119 --> 0:20:19.720
<v Speaker 1>pretty exciting. Yeah, that was that was pretty amazing. There's

0:20:19.800 --> 0:20:21.840
<v Speaker 1>no doubt about it. I mean, you made it to

0:20:21.960 --> 0:20:24.000
<v Speaker 1>the draft party and now you're here to stay. So

0:20:24.359 --> 0:20:27.840
<v Speaker 1>Marquise Hollywood Brown, we look forward to congratulations on everything.

0:20:27.960 --> 0:20:30.160
<v Speaker 1>Thank you, I appreciate you guys. There you go, Hollywood

0:20:30.160 --> 0:20:32.679
<v Speaker 1>Brown here on the Big Red Rape presented by Satan

0:20:32.800 --> 0:20:39.240
<v Speaker 1>Pord and Gilbert Back. Right after this, the Arizona Cardinals

0:20:39.240 --> 0:20:50.040
<v Speaker 1>select trade McBride, Cameron Thomas j standard pick up down,

0:20:50.119 --> 0:20:53.320
<v Speaker 1>he goes, goes carls Day, Candon traffic early pick and

0:20:53.520 --> 0:20:56.720
<v Speaker 1>then mccride with a catch of the sideline flung down

0:20:56.760 --> 0:21:09.600
<v Speaker 1>by Cameron Thomas from my James Standers. Ross got himselves

0:21:09.640 --> 0:21:12.400
<v Speaker 1>a birthday on the Pride. He's got a star town

0:21:13.119 --> 0:21:19.680
<v Speaker 1>say there's your day two picks rounds two and three.

0:21:19.760 --> 0:21:22.000
<v Speaker 1>Get to know him. They're gonna be given every single

0:21:22.160 --> 0:21:25.560
<v Speaker 1>chance to figure into the rotation effective immediately for the years.

0:21:25.600 --> 0:21:28.159
<v Speaker 1>On A Cardinals twenty twenty two Welcome back into the

0:21:28.200 --> 0:21:31.480
<v Speaker 1>Big Red Rage, presented by santan ford Ian Gilbert Paul

0:21:31.560 --> 0:21:35.000
<v Speaker 1>kelvc Ron Wolfley's special thanks to Marquise Hollywood Brown and

0:21:35.520 --> 0:21:38.000
<v Speaker 1>by the way, great to hear from him. We obviously

0:21:38.080 --> 0:21:41.680
<v Speaker 1>heard from him the morning after the Thursday night first round,

0:21:41.800 --> 0:21:43.720
<v Speaker 1>so that was less than twenty four hours after the

0:21:43.800 --> 0:21:46.960
<v Speaker 1>trade was official and before the DeAndre Hopkins news, So

0:21:47.119 --> 0:21:50.600
<v Speaker 1>just an fyi on that one. Some of the quick takeaways,

0:21:50.640 --> 0:21:52.680
<v Speaker 1>wolf I don't know what stood out to you, but

0:21:52.960 --> 0:21:55.760
<v Speaker 1>you know, he confirmed he's he's. His word was definitely

0:21:55.800 --> 0:21:57.880
<v Speaker 1>when I asked him if he's a sub four three guy.

0:21:58.640 --> 0:22:01.480
<v Speaker 1>He was very bullish on trying to recapture that chemistry

0:22:01.640 --> 0:22:05.520
<v Speaker 1>and that productivity with Kyler Murray. I liked how he

0:22:05.640 --> 0:22:08.160
<v Speaker 1>cited that, and he talked about this little later too,

0:22:08.320 --> 0:22:11.240
<v Speaker 1>the analytics that he's been up among the league leaders

0:22:11.640 --> 0:22:15.280
<v Speaker 1>for most cushion in the league by DBS, and his

0:22:15.480 --> 0:22:18.240
<v Speaker 1>words how it opens it up for everyone else in

0:22:18.359 --> 0:22:20.879
<v Speaker 1>the offense, which is exactly what the Cardinals had in

0:22:20.960 --> 0:22:23.679
<v Speaker 1>mind when they traded for him, I presume. And then

0:22:23.720 --> 0:22:25.119
<v Speaker 1>the last thing is when he said, you know what,

0:22:25.240 --> 0:22:27.680
<v Speaker 1>I haven't even had a chance to showcase what I

0:22:27.720 --> 0:22:29.800
<v Speaker 1>can do in the NFL. Yet you know what, PAULI

0:22:29.960 --> 0:22:32.680
<v Speaker 1>That to me was what resonated the most with me.

0:22:33.040 --> 0:22:35.600
<v Speaker 1>It is all I could think of was DeAndre Hopkins.

0:22:35.760 --> 0:22:37.800
<v Speaker 1>I'm sorry. I know that he's not going to play

0:22:38.160 --> 0:22:41.119
<v Speaker 1>for the first six weeks and that really does suck, Buttermilk,

0:22:41.320 --> 0:22:43.800
<v Speaker 1>there's no other way to cut it. It does. Yet

0:22:43.840 --> 0:22:46.920
<v Speaker 1>at the same time, that to me is what I'm

0:22:47.000 --> 0:22:51.240
<v Speaker 1>so fascinated. Listen, Marquis Brown is suddenly going to change

0:22:51.520 --> 0:22:53.560
<v Speaker 1>what the Arizona Cardinals are going to be able to do.

0:22:53.800 --> 0:22:56.320
<v Speaker 1>Even when he doesn't get the ball, Paul, yep. And

0:22:56.840 --> 0:22:59.720
<v Speaker 1>even when he doesn't get the ball, he's going to

0:22:59.760 --> 0:23:03.520
<v Speaker 1>get impact. What a defense is gonna do to defend

0:23:03.920 --> 0:23:07.240
<v Speaker 1>DeAndre Hopkins and Zach Ertz, especially over the middle of

0:23:07.280 --> 0:23:10.360
<v Speaker 1>the field. He's going to open up a lot when

0:23:10.400 --> 0:23:12.440
<v Speaker 1>he doesn't get the ball. But when he does, and

0:23:12.600 --> 0:23:15.600
<v Speaker 1>this is what I was talking about, he's an excellent

0:23:15.720 --> 0:23:19.320
<v Speaker 1>option to get the ball himself to get open to

0:23:19.480 --> 0:23:23.240
<v Speaker 1>run by people and suddenly throw the ball down the field.

0:23:23.640 --> 0:23:27.280
<v Speaker 1>What is d hop gonna do for Marquise Brown. That's

0:23:27.320 --> 0:23:29.880
<v Speaker 1>gonna be something that he's gonna have to get used

0:23:29.920 --> 0:23:34.080
<v Speaker 1>to because he's not had a DeAndre Hopkins opposite of him. Yeah,

0:23:34.119 --> 0:23:36.600
<v Speaker 1>win healthy when they have all their weapons. I think

0:23:36.680 --> 0:23:41.040
<v Speaker 1>this fulfills Cliff Kingsbury's original vision of forcing a defense

0:23:41.160 --> 0:23:44.080
<v Speaker 1>to defend every blade of grass. You now have the

0:23:44.160 --> 0:23:47.080
<v Speaker 1>burner over the top, you got DeAndre Hopkins and maybe

0:23:47.080 --> 0:23:50.080
<v Speaker 1>aj Green working the sidelines. You have two maybe three

0:23:50.160 --> 0:23:53.000
<v Speaker 1>tight ends going at the seams. You have a Rondel

0:23:53.040 --> 0:23:56.159
<v Speaker 1>Mare all over the place. Laterally maybe crossers what have you,

0:23:56.280 --> 0:23:59.480
<v Speaker 1>maybe more downfield, but you really are able to stretch

0:23:59.600 --> 0:24:02.879
<v Speaker 1>that defense, not unlike warriors or sons right where you

0:24:03.000 --> 0:24:04.879
<v Speaker 1>stretch the floor and you try and make a defense,

0:24:05.320 --> 0:24:08.679
<v Speaker 1>you know, play to every single square inch of space

0:24:08.760 --> 0:24:12.200
<v Speaker 1>out there. And when they have that compliment, and that's

0:24:12.240 --> 0:24:14.720
<v Speaker 1>a big reason I presume they went after the tight

0:24:14.880 --> 0:24:17.119
<v Speaker 1>end in round two and Trey McBride. We heard some

0:24:17.200 --> 0:24:21.280
<v Speaker 1>of the highlights right there. Dang. So Steve Kime was

0:24:21.320 --> 0:24:23.159
<v Speaker 1>asked for a scatter report because I think we were

0:24:23.160 --> 0:24:26.760
<v Speaker 1>all ear holed by that nobody saw a tight end

0:24:26.800 --> 0:24:29.800
<v Speaker 1>coming in round two of this draft. Here's a general manager.

0:24:30.040 --> 0:24:31.760
<v Speaker 1>People ask, what do you like about him? I don't

0:24:31.760 --> 0:24:33.520
<v Speaker 1>know what's there not to like about them? You know,

0:24:33.640 --> 0:24:38.680
<v Speaker 1>special human, special player, rare stats, obviously over a thousand

0:24:38.760 --> 0:24:41.959
<v Speaker 1>yards receiver as a tight end, ninetiesome catches. The guy

0:24:42.040 --> 0:24:44.040
<v Speaker 1>can do it all. He can play inline, he can flex,

0:24:44.560 --> 0:24:46.640
<v Speaker 1>he can motion, he can play out of the backfield.

0:24:46.960 --> 0:24:50.600
<v Speaker 1>He's got tremendous hands, great catching radius, really strong in

0:24:50.640 --> 0:24:54.600
<v Speaker 1>a crowd, characters off the charts, three time captain, phenomenal leader,

0:24:55.119 --> 0:24:58.320
<v Speaker 1>and just thankful he was there. And if they're not

0:24:58.480 --> 0:25:01.240
<v Speaker 1>willing to give a timetable on mat X Williams, and

0:25:01.440 --> 0:25:04.919
<v Speaker 1>there's true uncertainty there about when he might be available,

0:25:05.240 --> 0:25:08.000
<v Speaker 1>then that makes even more sense why they went Trey

0:25:08.080 --> 0:25:11.800
<v Speaker 1>McBride in round two. Yeah, and once again, I'm sorry, Paul,

0:25:11.920 --> 0:25:15.879
<v Speaker 1>but it signals a paradigm shift in this offense away

0:25:15.960 --> 0:25:19.879
<v Speaker 1>from eleven personnel and more towards twelve personnel. That that

0:25:20.000 --> 0:25:23.520
<v Speaker 1>doesn't mean they're not going to use eleven personnel, don't.

0:25:23.720 --> 0:25:25.960
<v Speaker 1>I mean hear he'd by words, and hear them well

0:25:26.080 --> 0:25:29.240
<v Speaker 1>they're gonna use three y They are going to do that,

0:25:29.720 --> 0:25:33.760
<v Speaker 1>but this is going to we're gonna see more twelve personnel,

0:25:34.160 --> 0:25:37.080
<v Speaker 1>two tight ends. You're not going to sign Zach Ertz

0:25:37.560 --> 0:25:40.479
<v Speaker 1>as a free agent, which was very, very cool when

0:25:40.520 --> 0:25:42.959
<v Speaker 1>they did it. He's going to be the move tight end,

0:25:43.080 --> 0:25:44.840
<v Speaker 1>but you're not going to sign him to a three

0:25:44.920 --> 0:25:49.600
<v Speaker 1>year contract, PAULI and not play him. He's going to play.

0:25:50.119 --> 0:25:53.760
<v Speaker 1>You're not gonna draft Trey McBride even though he was

0:25:53.880 --> 0:25:57.600
<v Speaker 1>the highest player rated on your board and not use him. Well,

0:25:57.640 --> 0:26:00.760
<v Speaker 1>guess what, Trey McBride, what's so cool about him? He

0:26:00.840 --> 0:26:03.640
<v Speaker 1>can either be your stud tight end line up where

0:26:03.720 --> 0:26:06.920
<v Speaker 1>Max Williams typically would line up. If Max isn't ready

0:26:07.000 --> 0:26:10.240
<v Speaker 1>to go, or if he's still rehabbing, maybe Trey McBride

0:26:10.359 --> 0:26:12.639
<v Speaker 1>is going to get the opportunity to line up and

0:26:12.760 --> 0:26:14.760
<v Speaker 1>be the stud tight end, or he could be the

0:26:14.880 --> 0:26:17.520
<v Speaker 1>move tight end, the h he could be the why

0:26:18.000 --> 0:26:20.960
<v Speaker 1>or the age Paulie. And that's the great thing about it.

0:26:21.160 --> 0:26:23.600
<v Speaker 1>He could either start in either one of those positions,

0:26:23.880 --> 0:26:26.520
<v Speaker 1>or he could back up either one of those positions

0:26:26.600 --> 0:26:29.040
<v Speaker 1>or both. Paul Yeah, I've had multiple people in the

0:26:29.080 --> 0:26:30.879
<v Speaker 1>war room confirmed that well, if that they love the

0:26:30.960 --> 0:26:33.240
<v Speaker 1>fact you can play in line, he can flex out,

0:26:33.560 --> 0:26:35.280
<v Speaker 1>you can go in motion, they can put him in

0:26:35.320 --> 0:26:38.080
<v Speaker 1>the backfield. He ran a four five four forty, so

0:26:38.640 --> 0:26:42.280
<v Speaker 1>he has that athleticism plus, as Steve Kinme also said,

0:26:42.359 --> 0:26:44.480
<v Speaker 1>it is a pick for the future. Zach Ertz in

0:26:44.560 --> 0:26:47.359
<v Speaker 1>his early thirties, Max Williams in his late twenties. You

0:26:47.440 --> 0:26:49.520
<v Speaker 1>got a guy in line was the same age bracket

0:26:49.640 --> 0:26:52.520
<v Speaker 1>as a Kyler Murray and a Marquis Hollywood Brown. So okay,

0:26:53.119 --> 0:26:57.240
<v Speaker 1>there's your core of guys. And so that's a Trey

0:26:57.320 --> 0:26:59.840
<v Speaker 1>McBride who came from Colorado State, and that was in

0:27:00.080 --> 0:27:03.080
<v Speaker 1>round two. Then in round three, the first pick in

0:27:03.200 --> 0:27:06.280
<v Speaker 1>round three Cameron Thomas out of San Diego State six

0:27:06.400 --> 0:27:09.760
<v Speaker 1>four two sixty seven, a second team All American. And

0:27:09.880 --> 0:27:12.800
<v Speaker 1>here's Quentin Harris, VP of Player Personnel on the pashpod.

0:27:13.040 --> 0:27:16.400
<v Speaker 1>When it comes to Cam Thomas, Cam he's super athletic.

0:27:16.640 --> 0:27:18.879
<v Speaker 1>And what you loved about Cam is you loved his interview,

0:27:19.000 --> 0:27:21.080
<v Speaker 1>You love the intensity, but and you love the way

0:27:21.119 --> 0:27:23.639
<v Speaker 1>he played the game. And also with Cam is he

0:27:23.920 --> 0:27:26.359
<v Speaker 1>showed some ability to put his hand in the ground

0:27:26.400 --> 0:27:27.960
<v Speaker 1>and play some of the five play some of the

0:27:28.000 --> 0:27:31.160
<v Speaker 1>outside backer stuff due to his athleticism. So we really

0:27:31.240 --> 0:27:35.080
<v Speaker 1>loved his motor, his temperament. Yeah, the word is huge

0:27:35.200 --> 0:27:39.080
<v Speaker 1>motor in Cats. All out effort is what they say

0:27:39.080 --> 0:27:41.600
<v Speaker 1>about this guy. Production off the charts. And look when

0:27:41.600 --> 0:27:43.639
<v Speaker 1>it comes to Cameron Thomas and my J Sanders in

0:27:43.720 --> 0:27:46.960
<v Speaker 1>this round three to meet, it was production over projection.

0:27:47.320 --> 0:27:50.080
<v Speaker 1>They went with guys who actually posted numbers, even though

0:27:50.119 --> 0:27:51.920
<v Speaker 1>my J. Sanders didn't finish a number of sex and

0:27:51.960 --> 0:27:54.359
<v Speaker 1>we'll get to that in a minute. But with Cam Thomas, man,

0:27:54.480 --> 0:27:57.520
<v Speaker 1>the numbers are there, yes, Polly, And this is what

0:27:57.640 --> 0:28:00.359
<v Speaker 1>I love too, what you just said right there, that

0:28:00.480 --> 0:28:06.520
<v Speaker 1>you've got this production over projection. I love it. Kyle

0:28:06.640 --> 0:28:08.840
<v Speaker 1>Van Deenbosch, as a matter of fact, was talking about

0:28:08.880 --> 0:28:11.640
<v Speaker 1>this very thing, how he wanted to see the Cardinals

0:28:11.720 --> 0:28:15.160
<v Speaker 1>draft guys with a high floor, which is a great

0:28:15.200 --> 0:28:17.840
<v Speaker 1>way of saying it as opposed to a high ceiling.

0:28:18.280 --> 0:28:21.520
<v Speaker 1>Give me a high floor. This is what this guy's

0:28:21.680 --> 0:28:24.560
<v Speaker 1>baseline is going to be right here, and I think

0:28:24.600 --> 0:28:27.359
<v Speaker 1>they really did that in this draft. I'm gonna be

0:28:27.520 --> 0:28:30.439
<v Speaker 1>really interested to see how they're gonna use Cameron Thomas,

0:28:30.680 --> 0:28:33.640
<v Speaker 1>of course, and how often they will stick his hand

0:28:34.040 --> 0:28:36.200
<v Speaker 1>in the dirt and bring him off the edge. But

0:28:36.640 --> 0:28:39.280
<v Speaker 1>you have to remember, once again, one of the strengths

0:28:39.320 --> 0:28:42.920
<v Speaker 1>of Vans Joseph was the fact that he was a

0:28:43.200 --> 0:28:48.000
<v Speaker 1>master schemer. Paul the ability to actually bring five generate

0:28:48.120 --> 0:28:53.200
<v Speaker 1>pressure with five complex pressure packages. That's one of the

0:28:53.280 --> 0:28:55.800
<v Speaker 1>reasons why he became a head coach up in Denver,

0:28:56.000 --> 0:28:58.960
<v Speaker 1>because he built this reputation for being a guy that

0:28:59.080 --> 0:29:02.080
<v Speaker 1>could do that well. In twenty twenty, as I've discussed,

0:29:02.360 --> 0:29:05.880
<v Speaker 1>where Chandler Jones had one sack in five games, the

0:29:05.960 --> 0:29:09.640
<v Speaker 1>Arizona Cardinals finished number five in sacks per attempt. Ask

0:29:09.720 --> 0:29:13.400
<v Speaker 1>yourself this, why did that happen? They had some talented

0:29:13.520 --> 0:29:18.880
<v Speaker 1>guys that were involved in rushing the passer. That's you

0:29:18.960 --> 0:29:21.720
<v Speaker 1>know what, scheme wise, that's all they needed. They needed

0:29:21.760 --> 0:29:24.840
<v Speaker 1>a break and that's what Vance Joseph gave them. This

0:29:25.120 --> 0:29:28.400
<v Speaker 1>is what I think Cam is really going to benefit

0:29:28.560 --> 0:29:31.160
<v Speaker 1>from Cam Thomas is the fact that he's going to

0:29:31.240 --> 0:29:34.840
<v Speaker 1>be in this high pressure scheme bring five. You just

0:29:35.000 --> 0:29:37.800
<v Speaker 1>don't know which five are coming. I think these guys

0:29:37.880 --> 0:29:42.160
<v Speaker 1>Sanders and Thomas have a chance to contribute, he said.

0:29:42.200 --> 0:29:44.440
<v Speaker 1>He told the media quote, I'm an edge rusher even

0:29:44.480 --> 0:29:46.400
<v Speaker 1>though he admits he does have the potential to move

0:29:46.440 --> 0:29:48.920
<v Speaker 1>inside to a five technique when and if needed. Okay,

0:29:49.320 --> 0:29:52.640
<v Speaker 1>and then there's My J. Sanders. So whereas Cameron Thomas

0:29:52.720 --> 0:29:56.400
<v Speaker 1>has traits of a JJ Watt a little bit few

0:29:56.520 --> 0:29:59.480
<v Speaker 1>traits anywhere he wore number ninety nine, they look at

0:29:59.640 --> 0:30:02.360
<v Speaker 1>My J. Sanders and they say he has traits of

0:30:02.480 --> 0:30:04.680
<v Speaker 1>a Chandler Jones, just in terms of the body type.

0:30:04.680 --> 0:30:08.000
<v Speaker 1>In the length six five two forty something. He has

0:30:08.040 --> 0:30:11.040
<v Speaker 1>those long arms. Once again, Quentin Harris on the Pashpod

0:30:11.160 --> 0:30:14.000
<v Speaker 1>talking about the round three pick out of Cincinnati, Maj.

0:30:14.720 --> 0:30:16.960
<v Speaker 1>You look at his numbers, You're like, they're kind of

0:30:17.000 --> 0:30:18.920
<v Speaker 1>a whole hum. But if you really study the tape

0:30:18.960 --> 0:30:21.320
<v Speaker 1>and you really study how disrupt if this guy is

0:30:21.760 --> 0:30:24.640
<v Speaker 1>uh Maja, you're getting a guy that is a tempo

0:30:24.720 --> 0:30:28.160
<v Speaker 1>center um plays with his hair on fire, tons of upside.

0:30:28.240 --> 0:30:30.920
<v Speaker 1>Now he's gonna have to work on finishing rushes because

0:30:30.920 --> 0:30:33.360
<v Speaker 1>he missed about seven sacks just because he's you know,

0:30:33.600 --> 0:30:36.160
<v Speaker 1>he plays with that temple in that effort. So there's

0:30:36.160 --> 0:30:38.480
<v Speaker 1>little details that all these guys need to work on,

0:30:38.600 --> 0:30:41.240
<v Speaker 1>But specifically Maj is just gonna have to just to

0:30:41.280 --> 0:30:46.720
<v Speaker 1>slow down a little bit interesting ahead. His sixty two

0:30:46.760 --> 0:30:49.720
<v Speaker 1>total pressures real quick led the conference, but if you're looking,

0:30:49.800 --> 0:30:51.840
<v Speaker 1>might didn't have more sacks. I found that interesting when

0:30:51.880 --> 0:30:54.840
<v Speaker 1>Quinn Harris said, there he just didn't finish enough. What's

0:30:54.880 --> 0:30:58.880
<v Speaker 1>amazing about Sanders to me is he is long, and

0:30:59.080 --> 0:31:03.080
<v Speaker 1>he does look like a young Chandler Jones. Okay, And

0:31:03.160 --> 0:31:05.280
<v Speaker 1>I would tell him, right now, go ahead and just

0:31:05.560 --> 0:31:10.280
<v Speaker 1>rip every pass rush of Chandler Jones. Watch every every

0:31:10.440 --> 0:31:13.840
<v Speaker 1>pass rush of Chandler Jones. That's what I would do

0:31:14.040 --> 0:31:17.000
<v Speaker 1>right there. If I were my Jay Harris, I would

0:31:17.120 --> 0:31:19.920
<v Speaker 1>do that thing right. I'd watch it and study it

0:31:20.440 --> 0:31:25.080
<v Speaker 1>because he's long, just like Chan was. You know. It's

0:31:25.160 --> 0:31:27.920
<v Speaker 1>interesting Also, Kim had cited how he played his best

0:31:28.000 --> 0:31:30.080
<v Speaker 1>games and the biggest games. They got to see him

0:31:30.120 --> 0:31:32.400
<v Speaker 1>against an Alabama. They got to see him against a

0:31:32.560 --> 0:31:35.440
<v Speaker 1>Notre Dame and go against guys like an Evan Neil.

0:31:35.600 --> 0:31:38.680
<v Speaker 1>So that film goes a long way. When you play

0:31:38.720 --> 0:31:40.680
<v Speaker 1>at Cincinnati and they can see you against a Notre

0:31:40.760 --> 0:31:43.000
<v Speaker 1>Dame offensive line, that sort of thing, and they can

0:31:43.040 --> 0:31:45.960
<v Speaker 1>see how disruptive he can still be. Now well, real quick,

0:31:46.000 --> 0:31:49.240
<v Speaker 1>I mean they have a need opposite of Marcus Golden.

0:31:49.360 --> 0:31:51.760
<v Speaker 1>How realistic, feasible, and doable is it that one of

0:31:51.800 --> 0:31:54.400
<v Speaker 1>these two guys could actually be part of a rotation

0:31:54.480 --> 0:31:58.200
<v Speaker 1>on the edge week one. You know, Pouli on the edge.

0:31:58.240 --> 0:32:01.120
<v Speaker 1>I think week one, there's a real pability that, Yeah,

0:32:01.160 --> 0:32:02.920
<v Speaker 1>they're going to contribute, They're going to line up and

0:32:02.960 --> 0:32:05.280
<v Speaker 1>I could see one of them starting Week one. I

0:32:05.360 --> 0:32:08.800
<v Speaker 1>could see that on the edge in certain third and

0:32:08.920 --> 0:32:13.440
<v Speaker 1>obvious pass situations or just obvious pass situations period, I

0:32:13.560 --> 0:32:16.600
<v Speaker 1>could see that Pauli. Once again, because you're going to

0:32:16.720 --> 0:32:20.080
<v Speaker 1>scheme a lot of your pressure. There are three ways

0:32:20.160 --> 0:32:24.040
<v Speaker 1>basically to get pressure. You scheme pressure, you've got covered sacks,

0:32:24.400 --> 0:32:26.840
<v Speaker 1>or you're just better then where you line four guys

0:32:26.920 --> 0:32:29.360
<v Speaker 1>up and you just get to the quarterback because you're

0:32:29.400 --> 0:32:31.760
<v Speaker 1>better than the five guys trying to block you. I

0:32:31.840 --> 0:32:33.520
<v Speaker 1>think the Cardinals are going to have to do it

0:32:33.720 --> 0:32:36.920
<v Speaker 1>via scheme and coming off the edge. Paul. For the

0:32:37.040 --> 0:32:40.960
<v Speaker 1>most part, it's a pretty simple thing to do, and

0:32:41.120 --> 0:32:43.440
<v Speaker 1>that's one of the reasons why I think a rookie

0:32:43.800 --> 0:32:46.880
<v Speaker 1>that is going to truly play the edge, I think

0:32:47.120 --> 0:32:50.400
<v Speaker 1>we'll be able to contribute because hey, it's line up

0:32:50.480 --> 0:32:53.520
<v Speaker 1>and go get the quarterback. Let MoMA and Papa take over.

0:32:53.880 --> 0:32:56.000
<v Speaker 1>Would you agree that if there's a time time sign

0:32:56.080 --> 0:32:58.200
<v Speaker 1>between now and camp, it's gonna come at edge rusher

0:32:58.280 --> 0:33:02.400
<v Speaker 1>and or d tackle. Yes, yes, I think defensive tackle,

0:33:02.520 --> 0:33:06.440
<v Speaker 1>maybe even corner bully, maybe even something where bringing a

0:33:06.600 --> 0:33:09.360
<v Speaker 1>veteran corner and Robert Alfred I could see. I could

0:33:09.440 --> 0:33:11.480
<v Speaker 1>see that happening, and I would do it. There are

0:33:11.520 --> 0:33:14.080
<v Speaker 1>some other guys that are out there as well. Kyle

0:33:14.280 --> 0:33:17.200
<v Speaker 1>Fuller is still out there, a guy that had a

0:33:17.320 --> 0:33:21.160
<v Speaker 1>very disappointing season with the Denver Broncos last year, signed

0:33:21.200 --> 0:33:24.600
<v Speaker 1>a one year contract for nine point five. Hey, listen, Kyle,

0:33:24.840 --> 0:33:28.200
<v Speaker 1>we got the opportunity if you possibly possibly coming here

0:33:28.440 --> 0:33:33.440
<v Speaker 1>and earning a starting spot that I'm sure would be tantalizing.

0:33:34.080 --> 0:33:36.480
<v Speaker 1>You're coinn and Harris. There a couple of sound bites.

0:33:36.520 --> 0:33:39.280
<v Speaker 1>It's episode twenty nine of the Day Pash Podcast, featuring

0:33:39.320 --> 0:33:41.880
<v Speaker 1>the Cardinals Vice President of Player Personnel coin Harris. It's

0:33:41.880 --> 0:33:45.160
<v Speaker 1>available now. To catch up on past episodes followed Daypash

0:33:45.240 --> 0:33:48.120
<v Speaker 1>Podcast via your preferred podcast provider and get the latest

0:33:48.160 --> 0:33:52.160
<v Speaker 1>updates via Twitter at pash pod. Some great stuff on

0:33:52.240 --> 0:33:54.840
<v Speaker 1>the draft and if you notice I didn't mention offensive

0:33:54.880 --> 0:33:57.760
<v Speaker 1>line as a kid time sign as because the Cardinals

0:33:57.800 --> 0:34:01.480
<v Speaker 1>are bullish on especially a couple of guards they got

0:34:01.640 --> 0:34:04.400
<v Speaker 1>and day three and if you're looking for the rookie,

0:34:04.440 --> 0:34:07.400
<v Speaker 1>you might have the quickest path to reps an actual

0:34:07.560 --> 0:34:10.600
<v Speaker 1>game time right away. It might be the running back

0:34:10.800 --> 0:34:13.480
<v Speaker 1>in round six out of the USC We'll cover all

0:34:13.560 --> 0:34:16.680
<v Speaker 1>that and talk about the Cardinals big road trip in

0:34:16.840 --> 0:34:19.640
<v Speaker 1>Mexico City. It is now official. It is a big

0:34:19.719 --> 0:34:22.799
<v Speaker 1>red rage presented by santan Ford and Gilbert. We are

0:34:23.239 --> 0:34:38.480
<v Speaker 1>santan Ford for a shot into the end zone here

0:34:39.040 --> 0:34:41.600
<v Speaker 1>Johnson the lead of the laft bolt, the fitzgalda right

0:34:41.680 --> 0:34:44.879
<v Speaker 1>time at agel back to help protect Josh mccount. There

0:34:44.960 --> 0:34:47.040
<v Speaker 1>than one of the seventeen account back to twelve going

0:34:47.120 --> 0:34:49.439
<v Speaker 1>a lot in the end zone far side, Fitzjoel goals

0:34:49.480 --> 0:34:54.160
<v Speaker 1>up topical for summer Orry Fitzgiel for the second of

0:34:54.200 --> 0:34:57.560
<v Speaker 1>the year. I'm on that day, fash. Yes, that was

0:34:58.000 --> 0:35:02.080
<v Speaker 1>from Mexico City circa two thousand and five, first year

0:35:02.120 --> 0:35:04.000
<v Speaker 1>on the air together as a collective voice of the

0:35:04.080 --> 0:35:06.719
<v Speaker 1>Arizona Cardinals, and all these years later, Ron Wolfley, I

0:35:06.760 --> 0:35:10.080
<v Speaker 1>would say, in my humble opinion that Mexico City road

0:35:10.080 --> 0:35:13.279
<v Speaker 1>Trip is still top five all time in the nearly

0:35:13.320 --> 0:35:16.520
<v Speaker 1>two decades we've been doing this. Would you agree or disagree? Yeah, Bull,

0:35:16.640 --> 0:35:19.279
<v Speaker 1>I would agree right there. It's interesting to hear the

0:35:19.400 --> 0:35:24.480
<v Speaker 1>bird Dave pass, it'll bottle, very interesting ball calling that

0:35:24.719 --> 0:35:27.040
<v Speaker 1>right there. You know. And every time you bring up

0:35:27.120 --> 0:35:30.440
<v Speaker 1>Mexico City, you know what I talk about? Okay, the

0:35:30.560 --> 0:35:32.399
<v Speaker 1>first thing I think of is every time they kicked

0:35:32.440 --> 0:35:35.200
<v Speaker 1>the ball off, they went nuts. Remember half ball? The

0:35:35.400 --> 0:35:39.759
<v Speaker 1>crowd went nuts every time Neil was it Neil Rockers. Yeah,

0:35:39.800 --> 0:35:42.160
<v Speaker 1>back then when you see the ball off and kick

0:35:42.239 --> 0:35:45.720
<v Speaker 1>it off ball, the crowd would explode and you knew,

0:35:46.560 --> 0:35:49.440
<v Speaker 1>you knew that was gonna happen. Because we're doing the

0:35:49.480 --> 0:35:52.360
<v Speaker 1>pregame show. It's two hours before kickoff and there's already

0:35:52.480 --> 0:35:55.400
<v Speaker 1>fifty thousand people in their seats, and as the kickers

0:35:55.440 --> 0:35:58.680
<v Speaker 1>and punters are warming up, the crowd's going nuts. Anybody

0:35:58.719 --> 0:36:01.719
<v Speaker 1>who kicked a pigskin got a standing ovation because you know,

0:36:01.800 --> 0:36:04.359
<v Speaker 1>it's soccer crazy. I mean, it is hallowed ground as

0:36:04.400 --> 0:36:07.399
<v Speaker 1>Stadio Azteca when it comes to football, right, and when

0:36:07.400 --> 0:36:10.600
<v Speaker 1>it comes to soccer and what they call football in Mexico,

0:36:10.800 --> 0:36:13.320
<v Speaker 1>and it's gonna be Monday Night Football Week eleven, November

0:36:13.400 --> 0:36:16.680
<v Speaker 1>twenty first fucking Achman on the call. So there you go.

0:36:16.760 --> 0:36:21.120
<v Speaker 1>That's official now as Stadio Azteca Cardinals and forty nine Ers.

0:36:21.200 --> 0:36:25.200
<v Speaker 1>The remaining schedule comes out next Thursday, May twelfth. I'll

0:36:25.280 --> 0:36:29.480
<v Speaker 1>call it. You know how cavernous attack is right? Oh

0:36:29.680 --> 0:36:33.360
<v Speaker 1>my goodness. That is the other thing too, how cavernick.

0:36:33.600 --> 0:36:37.880
<v Speaker 1>That is a huge structure. I've been on the sidelines

0:36:38.000 --> 0:36:40.800
<v Speaker 1>in ann Arbor, at the Big House and as Stadio

0:36:40.840 --> 0:36:44.480
<v Speaker 1>Asteca dwarfst in a lot of ways, it is ginormous.

0:36:44.760 --> 0:36:49.799
<v Speaker 1>It's just it's amazing site and it's higher elevation than Flagstaff.

0:36:49.920 --> 0:36:52.680
<v Speaker 1>Keep that in mind. That's why Neil Rackers wanted he

0:36:52.760 --> 0:36:54.680
<v Speaker 1>had six fuel goals and that win against the Niners

0:36:54.719 --> 0:36:56.440
<v Speaker 1>in two thousand and five, he wanted a shot at

0:36:56.480 --> 0:37:00.360
<v Speaker 1>a seventy yard fuel goal. Yeah, that's this because of

0:37:00.440 --> 0:37:02.759
<v Speaker 1>the light air. He was convinced he was gonna drill

0:37:02.800 --> 0:37:04.920
<v Speaker 1>a seven yard field goal. He never got the opportunity. Yes,

0:37:05.120 --> 0:37:07.680
<v Speaker 1>of course, he had the fans behind him to do that, Paul,

0:37:07.760 --> 0:37:10.840
<v Speaker 1>and you know it, yep. So if you don't have

0:37:11.040 --> 0:37:14.200
<v Speaker 1>your day three Arizona Cardinals draft picks memorized, Okay, I

0:37:14.280 --> 0:37:16.919
<v Speaker 1>got you here. Keyanta Ingram, running back out of USC

0:37:17.080 --> 0:37:21.360
<v Speaker 1>in round six. Licida Smith also in round six, the

0:37:21.480 --> 0:37:25.000
<v Speaker 1>guard out of Virginia Tech six three three fourteen. Then

0:37:25.160 --> 0:37:27.800
<v Speaker 1>in round seven he had three picks. Chris Matthew, this

0:37:28.040 --> 0:37:31.680
<v Speaker 1>six two corner out of Valdosta State with an eighty

0:37:31.760 --> 0:37:33.800
<v Speaker 1>inch wingspan, by the way, and by the way of

0:37:33.840 --> 0:37:36.839
<v Speaker 1>Baldosta State currently has two active corners in the NFL,

0:37:36.920 --> 0:37:39.040
<v Speaker 1>including Kenny Moore of the Colts. If he didn't know that,

0:37:39.640 --> 0:37:42.400
<v Speaker 1>Jesse Luke Hatta, the linebacker out of Penn State he

0:37:42.520 --> 0:37:44.880
<v Speaker 1>was in round seven as well, might be inside, might

0:37:44.920 --> 0:37:48.279
<v Speaker 1>be outside. And then Marquis Hayes, the guard out of

0:37:48.280 --> 0:37:51.280
<v Speaker 1>Oklahoma six five three eighteen. All he did was started

0:37:51.320 --> 0:37:54.280
<v Speaker 1>his final thirty seven games at left guard for Oklahoma,

0:37:54.320 --> 0:37:56.520
<v Speaker 1>and he was second team All Big Twelve. But if

0:37:56.600 --> 0:37:59.000
<v Speaker 1>I was asking which one of those guys you think

0:37:59.160 --> 0:38:01.799
<v Speaker 1>might have the quickest pat to real action in a game,

0:38:01.880 --> 0:38:05.320
<v Speaker 1>who would you say? Yeah, you know what, Paulie. Honestly, listen,

0:38:05.400 --> 0:38:07.520
<v Speaker 1>it's not like I've sat down and watched an awful

0:38:07.560 --> 0:38:09.200
<v Speaker 1>lot of tape on these guys. But can I just

0:38:09.320 --> 0:38:12.480
<v Speaker 1>say right now the person that I'm most interested in

0:38:13.040 --> 0:38:17.920
<v Speaker 1>is number two fifteen, Lacida Smith. Okay, oh, did you

0:38:18.000 --> 0:38:21.040
<v Speaker 1>hear what he said after Baulunity. He just wants a chance.

0:38:21.200 --> 0:38:25.480
<v Speaker 1>He wants the chance to be able to compete and start.

0:38:25.880 --> 0:38:28.480
<v Speaker 1>He wants the chance. He just wants to be given

0:38:28.880 --> 0:38:32.840
<v Speaker 1>the opportunity to guess what, Lacidas, You're gonna get that opportunity.

0:38:32.960 --> 0:38:36.719
<v Speaker 1>He's gonna get that opportunity to compete and to make

0:38:36.840 --> 0:38:40.040
<v Speaker 1>the team and make the roster. He's gonna be given

0:38:40.080 --> 0:38:43.399
<v Speaker 1>that opportunity. And when you hear a guys say that, man,

0:38:43.520 --> 0:38:47.320
<v Speaker 1>that's intriguing to me. Paul right, the confidence level that

0:38:47.480 --> 0:38:50.239
<v Speaker 1>he displayed, he told the media, and you're gonna like

0:38:50.320 --> 0:38:53.120
<v Speaker 1>this quote. I pack a punch in the run game.

0:38:53.480 --> 0:38:55.240
<v Speaker 1>I come off the ball with a lot of power.

0:38:55.800 --> 0:38:58.759
<v Speaker 1>That was Lacida Smith. Here's Quinn Harris, the VP of

0:38:58.800 --> 0:39:01.120
<v Speaker 1>Player person on the Pass when he was asked about

0:39:01.160 --> 0:39:03.880
<v Speaker 1>the Cardinals sixth round pick out of Virginia Tech. I

0:39:04.080 --> 0:39:06.800
<v Speaker 1>really like Lucida Smith, our guard we took out of

0:39:07.040 --> 0:39:11.720
<v Speaker 1>Virginia Tech. This guy is athletic, he's an excellent pooler.

0:39:12.000 --> 0:39:14.759
<v Speaker 1>He's tough, he's physical, and a lot of times you know,

0:39:14.920 --> 0:39:17.879
<v Speaker 1>you watch NFL lineman and you're like, ah, he's tough,

0:39:17.960 --> 0:39:20.440
<v Speaker 1>he's strong, but he's slow footed. This guy is everything.

0:39:21.120 --> 0:39:23.439
<v Speaker 1>He was a steel in my opinion, for us, He's

0:39:23.640 --> 0:39:26.359
<v Speaker 1>one guy that once he gets his opportunity, it's it's

0:39:26.360 --> 0:39:28.400
<v Speaker 1>gonna be tough to remove him from the seat. And

0:39:28.480 --> 0:39:30.520
<v Speaker 1>I think you know his temperament. And again when we

0:39:30.600 --> 0:39:33.560
<v Speaker 1>talk about bringing these A and B football characters at

0:39:33.640 --> 0:39:35.920
<v Speaker 1>guys in, he's one of those guys. He's a former

0:39:36.000 --> 0:39:39.080
<v Speaker 1>high school tight end who was moved to offensive line,

0:39:39.120 --> 0:39:42.120
<v Speaker 1>hence the feat and Wolf. I don't know how you

0:39:42.400 --> 0:39:44.960
<v Speaker 1>you really diagnose the right guard position right now, but

0:39:45.280 --> 0:39:48.640
<v Speaker 1>if you're looking at Will Hernandez obviously, but then you

0:39:48.760 --> 0:39:51.760
<v Speaker 1>have Justin Murray, who you figure is gonna be healthy

0:39:51.800 --> 0:39:55.120
<v Speaker 1>by that time training camp rolls around. So I don't

0:39:55.120 --> 0:39:57.200
<v Speaker 1>know how you handicap that right guard spot or how

0:39:57.280 --> 0:40:00.760
<v Speaker 1>wide open it might be. You know what, Paul, Once again,

0:40:01.480 --> 0:40:03.719
<v Speaker 1>I think Will Hernandez is going to be given the

0:40:03.800 --> 0:40:06.919
<v Speaker 1>opportunity day one to go out and win that job,

0:40:07.440 --> 0:40:10.560
<v Speaker 1>and I think that he will. But it doesn't mean

0:40:10.640 --> 0:40:12.960
<v Speaker 1>that there's not going to be some type of competition.

0:40:13.320 --> 0:40:15.880
<v Speaker 1>Justin Murray, you bring that up. That's a great to me.

0:40:16.080 --> 0:40:18.480
<v Speaker 1>That was a big loss for the Arizona Cardinals. And

0:40:18.640 --> 0:40:21.680
<v Speaker 1>I know nobody's gonna say that, Paully. Nobody's gonna say

0:40:21.800 --> 0:40:24.960
<v Speaker 1>but you know, Paul, because you were there, You saw that.

0:40:25.160 --> 0:40:29.280
<v Speaker 1>You were on the sideline. Yes, indeed, the sideline reporter

0:40:29.440 --> 0:40:32.560
<v Speaker 1>with a belt high perspective. You saw it. Though, Paul,

0:40:32.680 --> 0:40:34.160
<v Speaker 1>let me say this. You know what I saw. I

0:40:34.239 --> 0:40:36.719
<v Speaker 1>saw a quarterback who didn't have confidence in the right

0:40:36.760 --> 0:40:40.560
<v Speaker 1>guard position. That's what I saw, and it had a

0:40:40.600 --> 0:40:43.399
<v Speaker 1>big effect, especially when they played the Rams those last

0:40:43.440 --> 0:40:46.080
<v Speaker 1>two games. Here's what I like, Paully about what Lucida

0:40:46.160 --> 0:40:48.920
<v Speaker 1>Smith said. I like the fact that he was saying

0:40:49.080 --> 0:40:53.520
<v Speaker 1>he fancies himself to be a brawler. Okay, now I'm

0:40:53.600 --> 0:40:56.200
<v Speaker 1>paraphrasing what he said, but he was saying, and you

0:40:56.320 --> 0:41:00.160
<v Speaker 1>already hinted at this, his strength he felt was the

0:41:00.239 --> 0:41:04.080
<v Speaker 1>run game coming off the ball, baby, doing it with

0:41:04.239 --> 0:41:07.440
<v Speaker 1>a dark heart and a painted face coming off the

0:41:07.560 --> 0:41:11.640
<v Speaker 1>ball and ripping the bloody knuckles up through somebody's face mask.

0:41:12.200 --> 0:41:14.760
<v Speaker 1>That to me is what gets me fired up, because

0:41:15.160 --> 0:41:19.480
<v Speaker 1>you're not gonna say that unless you really believe that

0:41:19.640 --> 0:41:22.200
<v Speaker 1>about yourself. You're not going to say it, because guess

0:41:22.239 --> 0:41:25.399
<v Speaker 1>what lacide is. We're all gonna find out. We're gonna

0:41:25.400 --> 0:41:28.200
<v Speaker 1>get a great opportunity to find out if you're really

0:41:28.280 --> 0:41:30.520
<v Speaker 1>gonna do that, And if you're not gonna do it,

0:41:30.680 --> 0:41:33.360
<v Speaker 1>why would you say it. I don't think Lucida Smith

0:41:33.840 --> 0:41:37.080
<v Speaker 1>was saying anything that was ridiculous. I think he was

0:41:37.200 --> 0:41:40.040
<v Speaker 1>stating what he believes he is. And that's the thing

0:41:40.120 --> 0:41:42.959
<v Speaker 1>I can't wait to see. Let's see it in training camp.

0:41:43.080 --> 0:41:46.600
<v Speaker 1>All right, So who's my date three? Pick? Right to get?

0:41:46.680 --> 0:41:51.960
<v Speaker 1>You know, thanks for asking me. Ingram the running back

0:41:52.000 --> 0:41:55.160
<v Speaker 1>out of USC. Just the fact that you can't you

0:41:55.239 --> 0:41:58.360
<v Speaker 1>can't run James Connor into the ground, and that backup

0:41:58.480 --> 0:42:01.080
<v Speaker 1>running back spot I think is wide open. And when

0:42:01.120 --> 0:42:04.160
<v Speaker 1>this kid comes in, it's six foot two twenty. He

0:42:04.320 --> 0:42:07.719
<v Speaker 1>considers himself quote a true three down running back, big

0:42:07.840 --> 0:42:10.480
<v Speaker 1>time recruit and went to Texas and then transfer to USC.

0:42:11.120 --> 0:42:13.759
<v Speaker 1>A bigger back who can run between the tackles, can

0:42:13.880 --> 0:42:17.480
<v Speaker 1>move in space, can catch the football. I think, especially

0:42:17.520 --> 0:42:21.239
<v Speaker 1>at that position where we've seen rookies assimilate right away

0:42:21.320 --> 0:42:24.239
<v Speaker 1>to the NFL. I think, you know, Benjamin and Jonathan Moore,

0:42:24.320 --> 0:42:26.640
<v Speaker 1>they have a competition on their hands from Kante Ingram.

0:42:26.719 --> 0:42:29.040
<v Speaker 1>And once again, why would you get a guy that big, Paul,

0:42:29.040 --> 0:42:30.640
<v Speaker 1>why would you Why would you not get a guy

0:42:30.760 --> 0:42:33.839
<v Speaker 1>more like Chase Edmonds as opposed to James Connor? Why

0:42:33.920 --> 0:42:36.160
<v Speaker 1>why would you do that? Paul? Are you gonna go

0:42:36.200 --> 0:42:38.239
<v Speaker 1>ahead and read into that? Is that what you're saying, Paul,

0:42:38.239 --> 0:42:41.120
<v Speaker 1>You're saying the guy's six foot two hundred twenty pounds

0:42:41.320 --> 0:42:44.919
<v Speaker 1>can run the ball in between the tab? Yeah, that's

0:42:44.960 --> 0:42:49.160
<v Speaker 1>what I would say. Is this is all pointing to

0:42:49.360 --> 0:42:54.239
<v Speaker 1>way more traditional, more use of a more traditional, more

0:42:54.400 --> 0:42:58.120
<v Speaker 1>power schemed offense. Now are we going to see it?

0:42:58.400 --> 0:43:01.840
<v Speaker 1>I don't know, but Paul, thinking of the Tennessee Titans

0:43:02.080 --> 0:43:07.040
<v Speaker 1>and blending eleven personnel with the new era offense with

0:43:07.280 --> 0:43:11.560
<v Speaker 1>twelve personnel in the more traditional offense, I'm sorry, but

0:43:11.800 --> 0:43:15.880
<v Speaker 1>that's what I think of the Tennessee Titans and their offense,

0:43:16.239 --> 0:43:19.200
<v Speaker 1>which is killer when they do it right. Is that

0:43:19.520 --> 0:43:23.719
<v Speaker 1>something that Cliff Kingsbury could scheme up for Kyler Murray

0:43:23.800 --> 0:43:27.560
<v Speaker 1>in this offense? Yeah, based on what we're seeing in

0:43:27.640 --> 0:43:31.359
<v Speaker 1>the signings, Yes, I think that's what we could see.

0:43:32.040 --> 0:43:33.920
<v Speaker 1>And by the way, when the Cardinals go to Nashville

0:43:33.960 --> 0:43:37.000
<v Speaker 1>for that joint practice with the Titans. Man, there's gonna

0:43:37.000 --> 0:43:39.359
<v Speaker 1>be a lot of storylines. I mean, the Titans right

0:43:39.400 --> 0:43:41.520
<v Speaker 1>now are tracking to have the most drama of any

0:43:41.600 --> 0:43:44.239
<v Speaker 1>team in the league with this whole Ryan Tannehill situation

0:43:44.400 --> 0:43:46.360
<v Speaker 1>and Malik willis coming in and I'm not going to

0:43:46.440 --> 0:43:49.480
<v Speaker 1>mentor him, and then he's not showing up for the

0:43:49.560 --> 0:43:52.880
<v Speaker 1>OTAs because he has a quote home renovation. He's seen too.

0:43:53.000 --> 0:43:56.160
<v Speaker 1>So Ryan Tannehill, the franchise quarterback, hasn't been there. And

0:43:56.400 --> 0:43:58.839
<v Speaker 1>now there's reports from Adam Schefter that they actually tried

0:43:58.920 --> 0:44:01.960
<v Speaker 1>in the offseason to trade for Aaron Rodgers or try

0:44:02.000 --> 0:44:05.080
<v Speaker 1>and get to Shaun Watson instead of Ryan Tannehill, who,

0:44:05.160 --> 0:44:07.520
<v Speaker 1>by the way, there's no guaranteed money coming his way

0:44:07.800 --> 0:44:10.480
<v Speaker 1>next season, so they're looking to pull the trigger, you know,

0:44:10.680 --> 0:44:13.200
<v Speaker 1>the hook on him. So you watched that whole week

0:44:13.320 --> 0:44:15.680
<v Speaker 1>is going to be really interesting. That joint practice against

0:44:15.680 --> 0:44:17.960
<v Speaker 1>the type, Yes, PAULI. And by the way, if in

0:44:18.040 --> 0:44:21.080
<v Speaker 1>fact I did have plans of combining that eleven and

0:44:21.200 --> 0:44:23.960
<v Speaker 1>twelve personnel, the old and the new man, why not

0:44:24.080 --> 0:44:27.560
<v Speaker 1>go practice against those guys, that would make a lot

0:44:27.640 --> 0:44:32.480
<v Speaker 1>of sense. Yes. Rookie minicamp by the way is next

0:44:32.560 --> 0:44:35.839
<v Speaker 1>weekend starts a week from today or so. Special thanks

0:44:35.960 --> 0:44:40.000
<v Speaker 1>as always Senior broadcast Manager and producer Jim Almohundro Technical

0:44:40.080 --> 0:44:44.279
<v Speaker 1>Director Cody Fincher. Special thanks to Marquis Hollywood Browning and

0:44:44.400 --> 0:44:46.640
<v Speaker 1>well you've met him before, My guy Jules can get

0:44:46.719 --> 0:44:48.839
<v Speaker 1>him a shout out right now. He's at mile one

0:44:49.040 --> 0:44:52.960
<v Speaker 1>eighty eight in the Cocadona two fifty which runs across

0:44:53.080 --> 0:44:56.279
<v Speaker 1>Arizona Ultra Marathon, is doing two hundred and fifty miles.

0:44:56.480 --> 0:44:59.359
<v Speaker 1>Go for a Jules. It's been the Big Red Rage

0:44:59.360 --> 0:45:05.080
<v Speaker 1>presented by s It's at Ford in Gilbert. Number one

0:45:05.600 --> 0:45:12.120
<v Speaker 1>til you've been listening to the Big Red Rage presented

0:45:12.160 --> 0:45:18.000
<v Speaker 1>by Santanford in Gilbert, are you? Santanford State Farm talked

0:45:18.040 --> 0:45:21.239
<v Speaker 1>to an agent today at eight hundred State Farm and

0:45:21.480 --> 0:45:27.440
<v Speaker 1>by Arizona Cardinals Podcasts visit acy Cardinals dot com Slash Podcasts.

0:45:27.880 --> 0:45:32.160
<v Speaker 1>This has been an exclusive presentation of Arizona Cardinals Football Club.