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AP: 789e5f28-4945-46b0-a63a-9f6042a1b18b
Indianapolis Colts coach Bruce Arians, left, talks with officials in the second quarter of an NFL football game against the Houston Texans, Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
Bruce Arians was named the Arizona Cardinals head coach. The more research I did on Arians, the more I like the hire. This guy's résumé looks like the greater metro Phoenix phone book. His reputation precedes him, indeed.

I talked to many coaches, players, analysts and personnel men in the National Football League and their reports are filled with effusive praise for Arians. It's difficult to maintain a sterling reputation when you work with people in a win at all cost environment, where tempers flare and words are filtered through clenched teeth, but Arians has some how pulled it off.

Here's what I found:

Bruce Arians is a "great guy." In all the conversations that I had, this was the central theme. It's not a surprise to those I talked to that Arians took over for Chuck Pagano when Pagano was diagnosed with leukemia and kept the team focused and motivated. Arians was "made for that job" and he constantly reminded Colts players of their mission: play hard enough to get into the postseason so Pagano could coach them in a playoff game.

This, believe it or not, is a critical dynamic for Arizona. I believe in stability and consistency but you'll never have that stability and consistency if the organization doesn't hire a guy they can live with and grow with. According to those I spoke with, Arians is that guy.

Bruce Arians is a Tom Moore disciple. Tom Moore was the offensive coordinator for the Indianapolis Colts when Peyton Manning was a rookie. As we all know, Manning and Moore went on to change the landscape of the NFL for the next 11 years and Arians was right in the middle of that schematic quake.

Arians is smart and has a creative mind. Some believe he was the architect behind the destruction, devastation and demolition of NFL defenses that saw a QB throw for over 4,000 yards, had two 1,000-yard receivers and a 1,000-yard running back. His fingerprints are all over one of the most brilliant concepts the league has ever known: simplexity.

Simplexity, in a gross generality, involves simple schemes with complex execution. In a paradigm of personnel groups, formations, movement and offensive coordinator sleight of hand, Manning, Moore and Arians developed an offense that included four running plays, 10 passing plays, one personnel group and one formation.

The genius of the scheme was that those running it didn't care if they looked like a genius. But simplexity also included the likes of Manning, Marvin Harrison, Reggie Wayne, Dallas Clark and Edgerrin James. The Cardinals don't have that kind of talent but the remnants of that offense still linger in the scheme Arians will bring to Arizona.

Arians' reputation swirls around the core belief he is quarterback sensei, a developer/producer of the most coveted commodity an NFL franchise can have. Since 1998, 15-years later, Arians has worked with four quarterbacks: Manning, Tim Couch, Ben Roethlisberger and Andrew Luck. This guy knows quarterbacks and what it takes to be a quarterback in the National Football League.

This was a major plus in the pros column while interviewing with the Cardinals. The quarterback position is going to be job one for Arians and his staff. The only thing more clouded and convoluted than the Cardinals quarterback position are found in space and Arians has proven he can bring rookie quarterbacks along and make young quarterbacks better.

This guy's a coach at heart, not an administrator. Arians' peers tell me that he will get up in your face and keep you accountable and then be the first guy that hugs you as you walk off the field. He wants you to get it right. He cares about the success of his players and wants them to care about it the way he does. Arians does it his way. One personnel man told me Arians the "definition of a real ball coach" and players have said "he knows what he wants and will not back down from anybody."

The only negative I could find on Bruce Arians was his age. He's 60 years old and although he has head coaching experience, it was on an interim basis. But after talking with people that would know, Arians has no problem generating energy, passion and a fist in the air.

Time will tell on whether or not Bruce Arians will be a good head coach but if the reviews of his ability, knowledge and worthiness are any indication, the Cardinals did well.

Ron Wolfley, Co-host of Doug & Wolf

12 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
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  • Abuse
    Whatashame wrote...
    You have never
    met a hire that you did not like. You are a wonderful company man Wolf.
  • Abuse
    toofuninaz wrote...
    It's all about winning
    He may be a great coach. And somehow Keim and Bidwell might give him good players to use. But is he really going to bring Bowles in as DC? How sad that because of a personal promise he made to the guy he'd run off Horton? Not a good move!
  • Abuse
    Hummer71 wrote...
    Love Ronnie but
    This is all great if BA is a OC. He's a head coach Ronnie. I'll cover a Con since you didn't want to. He's about to hire a DC that no one wanted. With the QB's in the NFL West, this frightens me. They are doing cartwheels in Philly now that they can get rid of him. BA better be a guru. His offense will have to score 28 plus every week.
  • Abuse
    HunterSThompson wrote...
    Thanks for making my prediction come true.
    "Positive Thursday" wind chimes indeed. The spin above sounds nice in a vaccuum, but losing Ray Horton for Arians is a joke that will set this franchise back years. Prediction: 5 years from now Arians is long gone, while Ray Horton is commanding a Superbowl contender. "Stability and consistency"? How is the Cardinals organization supped to "live and grow" with a guy 60 years old and in suspect health?
  • Abuse
    theuglytruth wrote...
    I'll be ready to change the channel
    if all Wolf does is put on the rose colored glasses and spits crap down my ears. Sorry, just calling it like I see it.
  • Abuse
    Tom S. wrote...
    Lemonade with Lemons?
    What did he do with Couch? When you've got the likes of Manning, Roethlisberger and Luck to work with, you'll look like a genius. When you've got Couch or Skelton/Lindley you'll look like an idiot. I don't care what you say, Doug, Jurecki, whoever, this team should have hired Horton as HC. And if not, they should have made retaining Horton a condition of the hire. If they didn't like it, so be it, hit the road. Then they should have given Horton a big bonus for staying on for his last year so they could groom a disciple to take over next year.
  • Abuse
    mtj8nau wrote...
    Wow I am really surprised...
    ...that the company man Wolf would totally be all over this hire. They could have hired anyone and he would praise the crap out of it.
  • Abuse
    Larry B. wrote...
    Points are needed
    @Hummer71: If you scored 28 points in any playoff game this past weekend, you lost. The Cardinals this year couldn't score 28 points in 2 games! Defense is great, but the NFL is an offensive league with rules designed for lots of scoring. If you don't have a high-powered offense, you will lose, lose, lose.
  • Abuse
    CoachK wrote...
    Cardinals Most Likely Mock draft
    This is how I see the Cards draft under Arians: Rd-1: Barkevious Mingo, OLB/DE Rd-2: Eddie Lacy, RB Rd-3: Oday Aboushi, OT Rd-4: Zac Dysert, QB Rd-5: Travis Kelce, TE Rd-6: Duke Williams, S Rd-7: Keith Pough, LB Offensive line and a quality running back are top priority in my opinion, and best available athletes for lower rounds. Kolb will be in pro bowl under Arians.
  • Abuse
    JW L. wrote...
    A bit worrisome
    Despite the fact Arians won in Indy, he did it with a staff someone else built. So far, he has shown he doesn't feel comfortable with a strong willed coach, Horton, and has brought in guys that don't seem to have that great a resume. On the plus side, he probably will not be worse than the previous staff. I just wish he had the cajones to take on guys already here that seem to know how to coach. I worry that he is a wimpy people manager that needs a bunch of 'yes men' around him.
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