
PITTSBURGH – There’s a quiet tension surrounding the Arizona Cardinals’ draft board, and it centers on one deceptively simple question: Will Arizona make a move at drafting a new QB for the future?
Three names hover in the second round range as Miami’s Carson Beck, Penn State’s Drew Allar, and LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier could be in the spotlight for the Cardinals. Each offers a different kind of gamble. Beck brings structure, Allar flashes physical upside, and Nussmeier thrives in chaos. Data tells us second-round quarterbacks are bets, not blueprints. But strategically, that’s exactly why this moment matters. Arizona isn’t drafting for immediate transformation; it’s drafting for optionality. Taking a quarterback here doesn’t lock the franchise into a future; it creates one.
On paper, the Arizona Cardinals’ current QB room doesn’t inspire long-term confidence. Jacoby Brissett and Gardner Minshew represent competence, not conviction. They can stabilize a season, maybe steal a few wins, but they don’t shift a franchise’s trajectory. That’s where the second round becomes fascinating.
For Arizona Cardinals fans, that distinction hits deeper than wins and losses. It’s about direction. A second-round QB signals intent that the organization is searching, experimenting, and refusing to settle. Passing on one reinforces a cycle of temporary fixes. The smartest play might not even be staying at pick No. 34. Trading back, accumulating capital, and still landing one of these quarterbacks reframes the decision from risk to value.
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