
The Arizona Cardinals snapped a five-game losing streak in the final game of Week 9, defeating the Dallas Cowboys, 27-17, on "Monday Night Football."
Here are our initial reactions:
A lot of talk in Dallas in recent weeks has centered around trade deadline acquisitions, but after Monday's loss, the Cowboys would be better off as sellers. With remaining games against the Philadelphia Eagles (6-2), Kansas City Chiefs (5-4), Detroit Lions (5-3) and Los Angeles Chargers (6-3), the Cowboys (3-5-1) don't have a realistic path to the playoffs. Any trade, which would likely include 2026 draft capital, could make it harder for Dallas to compete next season. The Cowboys would have been better off aggressively pursuing trades earlier in the season when it was obvious the defense was among the league's worst. But by stalling, Dallas waited too long for any potential move ahead of Tuesday's 4 p.m. ET deadline to make a difference.
The Cardinals (3-5) included a heavy dose of Harrison Jr. in their early script, and the decision worked wonders as the second-year pro had one of the best games of his young career.
Harrison finished with seven receptions, his most in a game since November 11, 2023, his final season at Ohio State, for 96 yards and a touchdown on an incredible move against Cowboys corner DaRon Bland that left the 2023 first-team All-Pro on the turf.
Marvin Harrison Jr. had him beat
— NFL (@NFL) November 4, 2025
AZvsDAL on ESPN/ABC
Stream on @NFLPlus and ESPN App pic.twitter.com/JZVxS69SG0
Arizona hasn't gotten enough of that type of production from Harrison since making him the No. 4 overall pick of the 2024 draft, but Monday showed that it's still far too early to give up on the talented wideout.
In the final moments of Arizona's upset win, play-by-play commentator Joe Buck pondered what the win means for the Cardinals going forward at quarterback. Backup Jacoby Brissett was sharp in his third consecutive start in place of injured starter Kyler Murray, ending the game 21-of-31 for 261 yards and three total touchdowns. The passing attack has been much more efficient under Brissett, with Arizona averaging 256.3 yards through the air over its past three games. In Murray's five starts, the offense averaged 170.2 passing yards per game.
As much as the Cardinals have invested in Murray, it could be hard to bench him for a journeyman backup. But based on production alone, Arizona doesn't have a decision to make at all. Brissett is the obvious answer.
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