
PITTSBURGH – The Arizona Cardinals didn’t just draft offensive line help with Chase Bisontis at No. 34; they made a statement about how they intend to win.
For years, Arizona chased answers at quarterback while neglecting the infrastructure around them. Kyler Murray’s tenure was defined as much by improvisation as it was by survival. Now, with Jacoby Brissett and Gardner Minshew bridging an uncertain future, the organization is flipping the equation: fix the line first, then let the quarterback succeed within it.
Bisontis represents that philosophical pivot. At Texas A&M, his value wasn’t just physical dominance; it was consistency in the most volatile space on the field. Interior pressure collapses play faster than edge rush, and league data continues to show quarterbacks perform significantly worse when pressure comes up the middle. By investing early in a guard, Arizona is targeting the root of offensive instability.
For Cardinals fans, this requires a mindset shift. Offensive linemen don’t sell jerseys or dominate highlight reels. But they define whether those moments can exist at all. This pick isn’t about flash, it’s about function. Strategically, this move aligns timelines. A young, fortified offensive line creates a runway for whichever quarterback becomes the future, and for the new and incoming RB Jeremiyah Love they drafted third overall. It also supports the run game, shortens games, and protects a defense that’s still developing. Arizona isn’t rebuilding randomly; it’s rebuilding deliberately.
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