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Cardinals letting Murray 'have a say' in personnel moves
The Cardinals think Kyler Murray has earned the right to have a say in personnel moves. Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Aaron Rodgers ain’t gonna like this. In only his third season in the NFL, Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray is already being empowered with input into what his team does on the transaction wire.

This comes directly from the top, as Cardinals head coach Kliff Kingsbury confirmed as much in addressing the media from training camp, per ESPN’s Josh Weinfuss:

Murray was the No. 1 overall pick in the 2019 NFL Draft out of Oklahoma, where he won the Heisman Trophy in his only year as the Sooners’ starter.

After an uneven rookie campaign on a struggling team, Arizona surrounded Murray with better talent in 2020, most notably in the form of All-Pro wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins. The results were evident, as Murray made strides as a passer and became more dangerous as a runner. The Cardinals have continued to be rather aggressive in stockpiling talent entering this new season. 

Kyler Murray’s contract status, NFC West have influenced Cardinals’ personnel decisions

  • Kyler Murray stats (2020, Arizona Cardinals): 375-of-558 passing (67.2%), 3,971 yards, 26 touchdowns, 12 interceptions; 133 carries, 819 yards, 11 TDs

You have to admire the Cardinals’ leadership for consulting with Murray about prospective moves. Heck, general manager Steve Kiem drafted Murray one year after trading into the top 10 to select UCLA QB Josh Rosen, so it behooves him to do whatever it takes to make that bold call work.

But let’s not get distracted from the main point. Obviously, moving off Rosen for Murray was a no-brainer and a great call.

The fact that Murray is on a rookie contract and isn’t due a massive payday yet is plenty reason enough for the Cardinals to go all-out in their efforts to contend for a championship.

Murray is probably imploring them to be aggressive, knowing that he’s going to be a massive salary-cap hit down the road. He’s smart enough to realize that there’s only a limited window of time to surround him with stars Arizona couldn’t afford otherwise.

While it’s easy for an organization to say it's not thinking about what goes on elsewhere, it’d be impossible and stupid for the Cardinals to ignore what their division rivals have done.

The Los Angeles Rams are in perpetual-attack mode, evident in their penchant for trading first-round picks, highlighted by their move from Jared Goff to Matthew Stafford this offseason. That’s not dissimilar to the way the Seattle Seahawks have made aggressive transactions, such as the Jamal Adams trade, to keep their Super Bowl window open during Russell Wilson‘s prime.

Last but not least, even with Jimmy Garoppolo still on the roster, the San Francisco 49ers traded two future first-rounders to get Trey Lance in the 2021 NFL Draft.

So yeah, it’s an absolute arms race in the NFC West, and to their credit, the Cards are doing their best to keep pace while keeping their QB in the loop. Whether it’s enough in 2021 or not largely comes down to how well Murray plays.

This article first appeared on Sportsnaut and was syndicated with permission.

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