ARIZONA CARDINALS

Problems for the Cardinals? Kolb’s not even in the top three

Oct 10, 2011, 4:08 PM | Updated: 5:37 pm

Without question, the rumors about where Kevin Kolb would
land to play quarterback in 2011 were the most prevalent
during the offseason and NFL lockout. Of course, most
people knew that Kolb would end up in Arizona, and he did.

We know that the Cardinals gave up a lot to get him. We
also know that the Cardinals rewarded Kolb with a hefty
contract that guarantees him $21 million.

This decision split Cardinal fans into two different
categories; those who though Kolb was the answer, and
those who thought the price the Cardinals paid in the
trade and the contract was entirely too steep for a player
who had seven career NFL starts heading into the season.

After a 1-4 start including Sunday’s 34-10 loss at
Minnesota (and the Kolb era), and the number of fans
heaping on criticism on Kolb, blaming him for the dismal
showing and calling for his ouster is growing by the
minute.

The question is, why?

I nearly fell off my chair on Sunday following the
Cardinals’ ugly 34-10 loss to the previously winless
Minnesota Vikings, when a caller phoned into “Cardinal
Talk” with Jon Bloom and Rob Fredrickson, and suggested
that Richard Bartel is the answer for the Cardinals at QB.

Huh?

Look, I’m the first to admit that Kolb has been average at
best. He was good against Carolina, decent against
Washington and the Giants and bad against Seattle and
Minnesota.

But if you’re arguing that Kolb’s not the answer because
he doesn’t have the experience at this level, you can’t,
in the next breath, suggest that a guy who has thrown a
total of 34 garbage-time passes in the NFL is.

And don’t throw the “Bartel was awesome in the preseason”
argument at me either. So was Max Hall. The NFL
preseason is nearly meaningless—it’s a dressed-up
practice. Seattle’s Charlie Whitehurst was the league’s
top rated passer in the preseason. To quote Forrest Gump,
“that’s all I have to say about that”.

On my list of concerns with this football team heading
into the bye week, Kevin Kolb’s play ranks 5th. The
offensive line has done a less-than-stellar job in
protecting Kolb. He was sacked four times against the
Vikings, and was hit six more. There’s already been a
shuffle at right tackle with Jeremy Bridges replacing
Brandon Keith. At left tackle, Levi Brown is, well, he’s
Levi Brown.

On defense, the pass rush from outside linebackers has
been virtually non-existent. Veterans Joey Porter and
Clark Haggans have combined for one quarterback sack this
season. They’ve been able to hold off youngsters O’Brien
Schofield and Sam Acho on the depth chart despite little
production.

And the pass coverage, for the most part, has been bad as
well. It’s not that evident on the stat sheet from
Sunday, mostly because Donovan McNabb isn’t very good, and
the Vikings ran the ball on nearly 64% of their offensive
snaps. Both A.J. Jefferson (who was actually pretty good
on Sunday) and Patrick Peterson have been picked on, and
the safeties have lagged in coverage all season.

And there’s also that issue of number two wide receiver.
Andre Roberts has been a disappointment so far, and Early
Doucet has been okay. But neither is a big enough threat
to dissuade opposing defenses from bracketing Larry
Fitzgerald. Fitz has more catches through five games this
year (28) than last (26), but has been targeted 11 less
times. This is simply because he’s rarely open because of
the defense’s attention to him.

I won’t sit here and say everything’s fine with the
Arizona Cardinals and that it’s early, there’s a lot of
football left, and they play in the worst division in the
NFL. From what I’ve seen through five games, I can’t
paint that picture with any kind of conscience.

This is a below-average football team at best. But the
blame shouldn’t be pointed solely in the direction of the
quarterback.

No, this 1-4 start has been a total team effort.

Arizona Cardinals

Rutgers cornerback Max Melton celebrates...

Tyler Drake

Arizona Cardinals select Rutgers CB Max Melton with No. 43 pick in 2024 NFL Draft

The Arizona Cardinals took Rutgers cornerback Max Melton with the No. 43 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft.

1 hour ago

Arizona Cardinals GM Monti Ossenfort talks to reporters...

Tyler Drake

Cardinals trade Nos. 35, 186 to Falcons for Nos. 43, 79 in 2024 NFL Draft

The Arizona Cardinals have traded Nos. 35 and 186 to the Atlanta Falcons in exchange for Nos. 43 and 79 in the 2024 NFL Draft.

2 hours ago

Marvin Harrison Sr. and Marvin Harrison Jr. pose for a photo...

Tyler Drake

On or off the field, Marvin Harrison Sr. couldn’t be prouder of his son

Seeing your son reach new heights as a football player can do a lot for a father's pride, especially if that parent is an NFL Hall of Famer.

3 hours ago

Defensive back Cooper DeJean...

Arizona Sports

Cardinals NFL Draft Day 2 mock drafts roundup: McKinstry, DeJean on the board

At the conclusion of the first round, the Day 2 mock drafts come out, and there are a lot of ideas for whom the Cardinals will end up with.

8 hours ago

Kyler Murray...

Alex Weiner

Cardinals’ Monti Ossenfort feels good about options in 2nd round of NFL Draft

The Cardinals still see talented options on the board as they prepare to pick 35th overall at the NFL Draft.

9 hours ago

Korey Cunningham...

Arizona Sports

Former Cardinals OL Korey Cunningham found dead at age 28

Korey Cunningham, a former offensive lineman who played with the Arizona Cardinals, has died at the age of 28.

10 hours ago

Problems for the Cardinals? Kolb’s not even in the top three