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Arizona Cardinals cornerback Jamell Fleming has hit a rough patch late in his rookie season.

Defensive coordinator Ray Horton described Fleming's play early in the year as "spectacular," but thinks the corner since has had "a sense of lull" or "complacency" as of late.

"I think he probably thought there is nothing to this league. I don't have to prepare, I don't have to study, I don't have to challenge myself and you really do every day or you get run by," Horton said.

The Cardinals selected the former Oklahoma Sooner in the third round of the 2012 NFL Draft, but Horton doesn't want the young cornerback to act like a rookie anymore.

"I need him to grow up, mature, be a professional and in my opinion, he is not at that point yet," Horton said. "We had a long talk yesterday, so it will be interesting to see how he performs."

Fleming said that he had no argument with what Horton told him.

"Him being honest is what I want," Fleming said. "I don't want him to lie to me and tell me something I want to hear."

Horton said he challenged Fleming to be a very good special teams player and wanted to see what the rookie could do on Sunday.

"Whenever they put me in, that's where I am going to make my mark," Fleming said. "I'm just trying to get better."

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    AZCrazy wrote...
    must be hard
    It's easy to forget as fans that these 'professionals' we yell and scream and hope for, are just 22 -26 year old kids. Most people that age you wouldn't trust to wash your car correctly, but these guys have to perform against the best in the world with literally millions of people watching. Moving out on your own for the first time, moving to a new city, joining an existing tough group of veterans, being handed hundreds of complex pages of playbook to learn, and having to perform against world class athletes right off the bat. Oh, and here's $100K per week, you figure it out.
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