
The Arizona Cardinals are mostly done with their roster construction ahead of training camp after busy stints in free agency and welcoming seven new players via the draft.
It won't be long before the Cardinals take the field at State Farm Stadium for training camp activities, where eventually the team will have to trim its roster to 53 players ahead of the regular season.
Arizona certainly has some tough decisions ahead, and even after attempting to do this ourselves, finding the right pieces to the puzzle felt like a near impossible task.
Note: For this exercise, we're including everybody at full health.
Jacoby Brissett, Carson Beck, Gardner Minshew
How this was almost different: Besides from Beck possibly winning the job (which still feels a bit more unlikely than likely) the Cardinals do have a massive decision on their hands when it comes to carrying two or three quarterbacks on the active roster. If it's two, and Brissett isn't traded, Minshew would be the odd man out.
Jeremiyah Love, Tyler Allgeier, James Conner, Bam Knight
How this was almost different: Our biggest snub of the roster might come here with Trey Benson missing the cut, though he's clearly behind the top three guys and Knight has more special teams prowess. That matters when deciding who squeezes onto the final roster, and unless Benson can just tear it up this summer, his spot is very much in danger.
Michael Wilson, Marvin Harrison Jr., Kendrick Bourne, Reggie Virgil, Devin Duvernay
How this was almost different: The Cardinals just might keep six receivers, which would give either Xavier Weaver, Simi Fehoko or Tejhaun Palmer a chance at the final roster. The depth chart, aside from the 1A/1B of Wilson and Harrison, feels pretty set.
Trey McBride, Elijah Higgins, Tip Reiman, Teagan Quitoriano
How this was almost different: The fourth tight end spot could go to almost anybody, including Rivaldo Fairweather and Jameson Geers. Whoever can block and play special teams the best? Come on down.
Paris Johnson Jr., Isaac Seumalo, Hjalte Froholdt, Chase Bisontis, Elijah Wilkinson, Jon Gaines, Isaiah Adams, Josh Fryar, Matt Pryor
How this was almost different: Look, any of the leftover guys (Jayden Williams, Hayden Conner, Oli Udoh, Christian Jones etc.) could sneak into the final spots and I wouldn't have any complaints. This is a very tough room to project.
Walter Nolen III, Roy Lopez, Darius Robinson, Kaleb Proctor, Andrew Billings, Dante Stills, L.J. Collier
How this was almost different: PJ Mustipher is a dog in his own respects, and for a Cardinals team that heavily rotates their front, keeping an extra body here wouldn't be crazy. Proctor, if good as advertised, could also sneak into starting duties.
Josh Sweat, Zaven Collins, Baron Browning, Jordan Burch, BJ Ojulari
How this was almost different: The Cardinals didn't really touch their outside linebacker room this offseason, giving a boost of confidence in the current crop of guys. There's not many changes to project here, but if anything (to spare a roster spot elsewhere) Ojulari might be sent packing depending on how his knee holds up in camp.
Mack Wilson Sr., Jack Gibbens, Cody Simon, Owen Pappoe
How this was almost different: Cody Simon could easily win the starting job after his experience last season, though we gave a slight edge to Gibbens thanks to his leadership, Super Bowl experience and pass coverage abilities. Rookie Karson Sharar could also steal a final roster spot from Pappoe if he truly balls out in camp.
Will Johnson, Garrett Williams, Denzel Burke, Starling Thomas, Sean Murphy-Bunting
How this was almost different: It's tough to leave off a former second-round pick in Max Melton, especially the flashes he displayed in his rookie season. However, the steep drop in play costs him a spot here to the now healthy veteran Murphy-Bunting. This is a corner room full of talent and this could be the toughest position group outside of the offensive line to project.
Budda Baker, Dadrion Taylor-Demerson, Andrew Wingard, Joey Blount
How this was almost different : Kitan Crawford performed really well and arguably deserves a roster spot here. It feels like a coin flip between him and Blount, though I gave the edge to Blount due to him being one of the team's best special teams players. Crawford did play good enough to warrant keeping five safeties.
Blake Gillikin (punter), Chad Ryland (kicker) and Casey Kreiter (long snapper)
How this was almost different: Joshua Karty somehow wins the job over Ryland. Karty was signed towards the end of last year and still poses a threat to win the job, though Ryland seems to be the more consistent of the two. Other than that, the punter and long snapper jobs are pretty set.
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