Deep Shot time. The Cardinals had an early lead, but Motor’s rushing TD put the Texans ahead. As a result, the Cardinals decided they would try to get the lead back with a deep TD. So, the Cardinals put their fastest WR Hollywood Brown on the same side as CB Derek Stingley Jr. As soon as the ball was snapped, my view through QB Kyler Murray was right to Brown. I saw him explode off the ball and I knew that’s where Murray was going to throw and he did. Murray launched all the way down the field and Sting played the deep ball about as well as any CB could play it. He saw Brown look up for the ball and that’s when Sting looked up too. When the ball descended, Sting just went up and snatched it away for his second career INT. What a play that was!
The Texans executed the end of half drive as they’ve done all year – brilliantly. At the 41-yard line, they had one timeout remaining and we were discussing on the broadcast that the Texans were setting up for the field goal. Well, C.J. Stroud and Tank Dell had other ideas. The Texans came out in a three WR set with TE Dalton Schultz in an offset FB position in the backfield to help in protection. Tank was in a condensed split on the right side. On the snap, Tank took off downfield; now, I can’t see exactly where he ended up, originally, but I do know where he ended up, eventually. Stroud took the snap and dropped to throw with a little pressure in his face. So, he escaped the pocket to the right side. When he did, Tank took off for the end zone. Stroud launched and it just flew over Cardinals CB Marco Wilson’s head…
…right into the hands of Tank Dell for a TD. Unreal. A HUGE TD just before the half.
4th Quarter – Cardinals ball
+31 yard line for the Cards
Cardinals RB James Conner gave the Texans fits in the run game throughout the contest, so when the Cardinals got into Texans territory, down by five, early in the fourth quarter, I was a little worried. But, Will Anderson Jr eased my worries with one of the most physically impressive plays I’ve seen in a while. The Cardinals came out in a balanced Pro set (TE/WR to each side – a formation I call Tech). They ran a zone read and Anderson Jr did something that he did a ton at Alabama – he ran right to the mesh – the handoff intersection between RB and QB. As soon as the ball was snapped, Anderson Jr took off and Murray saw him, but it was a half second too late because he couldn’t pull the ball from James Conner’s belly. Anderson Jr made contact with Conner immediately but it looked like Conner was going to spin out of the tackle attempt. However, the rookie from Alabama SNATCHED Conner with one hand and tossed him down for a HUGE TFL to start that fourth quarter drive.
4th Quarter – Cardinals ball
+27 yard line for the Cards
The Final Play. The ending of the Atlanta game resonates so much with me and I know that it resonates with DeMeco Ryans as well. He just will not let a QB sit still and make an easy throw late in any game. So, on this final play, the Cardinals had QB Kyler Murray in the gun with 3rd down RB Tony Jones to his side and a 2×2 set in the formation. Coach Ryans overloaded the left side of the formation with three down lineman, Jerry Hughes by himself to the right side and pressure coming…FAST. S Jalen Pitre blitzed off the right edge with Hughes, but the Cardinals did a decent job sliding the protection toward Hughes and Pitre. But, what they didn’t do was have an answer for Will Anderson Jr on the left side. Anderson Jr FLEW off the ball, beat TE Trey McBride inside easily and was in Murray’s face as he hit the final step of his drop. The DBs matched the routes and CB Steven Nelson was on Hollywood Brown immediately. Anderson was ON Murray so quickly that he just had to chuck it up in the air to avoid a sack. Nelson timed his break and swatted the ball away on its descent for the game ending play. Wow!