Cardinals must continue to rely on QB Kyler Murray

Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray turned in an inconsistent 2024 in his first full season under offensive coordinator Drew Petzing.

The franchise signal caller put together an impressive 10-game stretch highlighted by 12 touchdowns to just three interceptions, only for the wheels to come off in the backend of the season.

That first-place feeling sitting 6-4 at the bye week? That was quickly eroded behind three straight losses on the way to a sputtering 2-5 finish and 8-9 final record.

For a Cardinals team that hangs its hat on limiting turnovers and generating explosive plays, that’s a big no-no.

Fans (continue to) go back and forth as to whether or not Murray is the answer moving forward. Owner Michael Bidwill, however, remains one-sided on the polarizing signal caller.

“What he is is a dual threat quarterback. When he’s healthy he scares every defensive coordinator and he has a chance to change the game with his feet and with his arm,” Bidwill told Arizona Sports’ Bickley & Marotta during Newsmakers Week on Friday. “When you look at it, we’ve got to continue to rely on him and he’s got to play at a high level. He knows that.

“He’s working hard. … He needs to take the next step and we’re excited about our future with Kyler. He’s a great quarterback. I think we need to continue to build around that offense for him.”

Murray certainly deserves some of the blame for his fall off in the latter half of the season.

It wasn’t all on him, though.

While the Cardinals defense improved over the course of the year, the talent deficiencies popped up regularly — as did the inability to consistently rush the passer. Injuries to both sides of the football didn’t help matters, either, especially when depth was tested late in games.

Even with his miscues, Murray still finished seventh in completion percentage (68.8%), ninth in QBR (66.5), 11th in passing yards (3,851).

In general manager Monti Ossenfort’s eyes, progress starts with a collective step forward.

“It’s the same thing with our whole team. We have to finish,” Ossenfort added. “There were those tight games. Was it only Kyler? No, there were other things that the rest of the team could do. Does Kyler have to play better? Absolutely he does.

“When Kyler was (not turning the ball over and generating explosives), he was rolling. … And then when those games get tight and we turn the ball over and Kyler’s involved in some of those, that’s where it’s going to be tough to win and it’s going to be tough to win late in the season when the window of opportunity just shrinks. That’s a hump we have to get over. Kyler has to improve on that. The whole team has to improve on that. We have to raise our level of consistency.”




No Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *