ARIZONA CARDINALS

What they said about Cardinals Ring of Honor inductee Carson Palmer

Sep 28, 2019, 8:01 AM | Updated: Sep 29, 2019, 6:49 pm

Follow @AZSportsPresented By...

Former Arizona Cardinals quarterback Carson Palmer will be inducted into the team’s Ring of Honor during a home game against the Seattle Seahawks this Sunday, and the event makes it timely for his old teammates to share their stories about him.

The themes were about friendly bets — and dressing ridiculously after losing them — hard work and toughness.

Oh, and that Palmer, a No. 1 pick, was the prototype for a pro-style quarterback.

But before we get to the best of those comments, Palmer joined Doug & Wolf in June to tell the 98.7 FM Arizona’s Sports Station hosts what being inducted into the ring of honor means to him and how he hopes to be remembered by Arizona fans.

Former Cardinals quarterback Carson Palmer

“I just hope they remember some of those special games we played at home. Obviously that game we played against the Packers to move on in the playoffs. We played some really special games — the Sunday Night Football games, the Monday Night Football games, the divisional games. It was just so much fun playing inside of that environment.

“There’s just something different about playing inside that stadium. Our fans really understand the game. There’s so many places you go and play, they’re cheering at the wrong time, and they don’t understand how important this third down is and they’re not quite that loud. And I loved it when I was on the road, they weren’t quite that loud. But our fans get the game. They understand football, they’ve seen a lot of it. They knew exactly how important every third down was. As the importance wore on in the game, you could feel the intensity rise and our fans stand up to the challenge of that team we’re playing against. It’s not like that in every stadium.”

Former Cardinals head coach Bruce Arians

“Pete Carroll and I were standing before a game one day up in Seattle and we said, ‘If you’re ever going to build one, just put one together, it’ll look just like that.’ Nobody threw a prettier ball. Nobody really knew how hard he worked at his craft, not just mentally but physically.

“He would work on his body for at least three hours a day — rotator cuffs, every part of his body. Then he really got into the virtual reality … he actually put it in his house. For him, he had to manage family time. He’d get the kids to bed and he’d watch every single rep in practice on that virtual reality that he took in practice. So he really practiced twice for every game, so his preparation was flawless.

“If I had a bad play called he’d get me out of it. He never ran a bad play. You could depend so much on him. I can’t say enough about Carson.”

Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury

“I think he’s one of the most underrated quarterbacks of all-time. Actually came out (of college), same year, was at the Senior Bowl and unfortunately got put on his team. I remember walking out the first day and it’s just like this Greek god throwing lightening bolts. Like, this is not going to be a good week for me, next to him.

“Phenomenal talent. I mean, like, if God made a quarterback, how it’s supposed to look, how he’s supposed to throw, how he’s supposed to drop, great charisma, personality.”

Cardinals GM Steve Keim

“He is a special person, a special player. It was the perfect storm in a good way when we made that trade for him. That guy was not only a tremendous leader but a special person in the locker room. I look up to him in a number of ways, as a person and a dad.

“It’s funny I feel like it was yesterday when I was watching the tape of him when he was playing for the Raiders and thinking to myself, this guy still threw for over 4,000 yards. I’ll never forget talking to (Cardinals president Michael Bidwill) about it … the perception that it was around the league because people thought he quit on the Bengals — the perception was so wrong because the guy was tougher than probably anybody I’ve ever been around, physically and mentality.

“Looking back on those times and some of the conversions he and I had and the advice that he gave me — I would call Carson when we would either trade or draft players and ask him what he thought because I respected him that much.”

Seahawks head coach and former USC coach Pete Carroll

“I think, first, it’s a well-deserved recognition and honor. He’s been a great competitor and a great factor in the league for a long time. He came in with all of the hype you could ever have – Heisman, first pick, all that stuff – and lived up to it. The fact that he’s such a well-rounded good person and good guy to go along with the competitiveness and then all the marvelous skills.

“He’s really well-rounded, and he gave you his best shot whenever he had the chance. I loved playing with him, I loved playing against him and I love that he’s getting this recognition right now because he really deserves it.”

Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald

“His toughness. You guys saw him on the field … just to the great measures and lengths he would go to keep himself healthy. It was no secret he took a beating.

“I remember ’15 playing with an index dislocation. I mean, that’s the finger that really controls your accuracy and the countless other injuries he tried to play through.”

Cardinals offensive tackle D.J. Humphries

“I think that was a big adjustment for me (as a young player) is understanding when to be serious and when to play around. He kind of started understanding that about me and learned that was more of my energy and (was) kind of feeding into it. He always kind of fed my flame a little bit. It would always amp me up if he saw me make a big block after a play. Even if he see me get beat on something, like I said, he expects such a high level from his guys. I’m just blessed to be able to be around a dude like that to kind of instill those values early in my career.”

“I think was always one of his good things … the people he was around, he took the time to understand them and understand how they tick and the type of guys they were. Some guys he knew he could joke around, there were some guys he knew that wasn’t their personality.”

Cardinals running back David Johnson

“His humor, he’s always joking, even serious moments. I think that’s one of the things I loved about him, we’d have a two-minute drill or something, he’s joking with us. He just likes to enjoy his life … enjoy being in the league. When you see that, it helps out the morale.

“I always say, anytime I talk about Carson, he was such a tremendous help for me. Not just me but everyone on the team. When I came in as a rookie, man, my head was spinning, trying to learn (Bruce Arians’) offense, and B.A.’s over here cursing me out and stuff. Carson was the one who always kept me mellow, kept me even-keeled. I’m always going to be grateful for that.”

Array
Presented By
Western Governors University

Presented By
Western Governors University

Arizona Cardinals

Trey Lance...

Arizona Sports

What is the going rate for top 5 picks? Looking at NFL Draft trades with Cardinals facing choices

The Cardinals are in the opportunistic position of owning the No. 4 pick when more teams need a quarterback entering the NFL Draft.

4 hours ago

Monti Ossenfort chats with Michael Bidwill pregame...

Tyler Drake

Cardinals Corner: Best- and worst-case scenarios for Cardinals’ NFL Draft

Cardinals Corner co-hosts Tyler Drake and Lauren Koval break down the best- and worst-case scenarios for Arizona this NFL Draft.

7 hours ago

LSU's Malik Nabers, a top NFL Draft prospect...

John Gambadoro

The Gambo 5: Predicting whom the Arizona Cardinals pick 1st in 2024

Marvin Harrison Jr., Malik Nabers, Rome Odunze and two others are on Gambo's list of predicted Arizona Cardinals picks in the 2024 NFL Draft.

12 hours ago

Monti Ossenfort speaks at the NFL Combine...

Tyler Drake

NFL mock draft tracker: What will the Cardinals do with the No. 4 pick?

A look at the players being mocked to the Arizona Cardinals at No. 4 overall in the first round of the 2024 NFL Draft.

14 hours ago

Steve Keim looks on...

Tyler Drake

Ex-Cardinals general manager Steve Keim ‘much happier now’ after rehab stint

Arizona Cardinals GM Steve Keim opened up about his mysterious leave of absence and parting of ways from the team on Tuesday.

1 day ago

Presented By...

Arizona Sports Video

Video: What is the best move the Cardinals can make in the 1st round of the NFL Draft?

On this episode of Cardinals Corner, Arizona Sports Cardinals reporter Tyler Drake and do-it-all contributor Lauren Koval dive into their best- and worst-case scenarios for the Cardinals in the first round of the 2024 NFL Draft.

1 day ago

What they said about Cardinals Ring of Honor inductee Carson Palmer