The strength of the 2025 NFL Draft lies in its depth of talent and wide range of options beyond the initial stars. The Arizona Cardinals are set to be beneficiaries of that fact at pick 16.
But some concerning news has come out of late regarding the health of a variety of prospects. In fact, oft-mocked players like Will Johnson have been notably flagged with injury concerns that might not have been there before.
Some big yikes injury updates from Albert Breer:
— Johnny Venerable (@JohnnyVenerable) April 21, 2025
• Michigan CB Will Johnson has a knee issue that’s been flagged. It shouldn’t affect him in the short term, but teams are concerned it could impact his longevity. Add to the questions on Johnson’s long speed, which were not…
With this in mind, the Cardinals will have to walk this line carefully going forward. Often, a prospect flagged by injury might still be a good fit for the team.
Does an injury concern necessarily invalidate a player's draft stock, or their potential to develop into a future star player? No, absolutely not.
And the Cardinals haven't always shied away from those types of players in the past. Notably, star slot CB Garrett Williams began his Cardinals tenure in rehab from a torn ACL.
DL Darius Robinson had injury concerns of his own, and was unfortunately held out unexpectedly due to a calf injury that took longer than might have been initially thought.
Clearly, GM Monti Ossenfort doesn't see injury history as a reason to rule out players. In fact, it could even work in his favor, giving him a chance to select his guy at 16, or even trade down and still find a player like Johnson or Campbell.
But then there are other players like Josh Simmons. Simmons' injury is a more severe, less-conventional type of injury, as the Ohio State OL tore his patellar tendon. Especially for a player of his size at his position, those can be career-limiters, or issues that continue to nag and show up as the wear and tear of a 17-game season takes hold.
Ultimately, there's little to worry about Ossenfort making a poor decision based on injury status, but the Cardinals have been known to make picks of less-than-stable guys in recent years.
Ossenfort will have to carefully balance the upside of prospects' raw abilities with the injury factors surrounding them.
Regardless, it's a safe bet the Cardinals will be able to find a contributor early in the draft, even if there are red flags. But it's something to be quite wary of.
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