ARIZONA CARDINALS

Sometimes, it’s just not in the cards

Aug 26, 2013, 10:50 PM | Updated: 10:50 pm

When Arizona Cardinals rookie Jonathan Cooper went down in a heap Saturday night, the air was sucked out of University of Phoenix Stadium.

When word came down that the prized first round pick had broken his leg, you could hear the voices of Cardinal fans rise as one to ask, “Why us?”

I understand. The ongoing slog of trying to live down a hundred years of brutal Cardinal football history is a grind. And though the football air has become much sweeter to breathe since the Cardinals qualified for the Super Bowl in 2009, the old ghosts still haunt the organization and its fan base. As much as anyone on the roster, Jonathan Cooper represented the new direction this team was headed and now his career is put on hold for a year just as it was getting started.

But Cooper will be back. He will play well. And he still has a very bright future ahead of him.

Then, there’s Kevin Kolb.

I know Cardinal fans hold zero affection for old #4. He certainly didn’t make good on the substantial investment the organization made in him. And he’s made a lot of money for all his injury-shortened seasons.

And yet I can’t help but feel bad for the ol’ boy.

I was one of the local radio hosts encouraging the Cardinals to acquire Kolb. How did I know he was so brittle?

I saw a guy who could complete 60 percent of his passes, had good maneuverability in the pocket and had been given a ringing endorsement from Andy Reid as his quarterback of the future before Michael Vick arrived in Philly in 2010 and played like an MVP.

A short camp, injuries, a terrible offensive line — 2011 was a disaster for Kolb. However, the Cardinals did start 4-0 with Kolb at the helm to start 2012. I wanted to be right in my assessment of him, so I said to myself, “if only he could avoid injury.” But I know now it wasn’t possible.

There are plenty of athletes who aren’t tough enough to withstand the grind of an NFL season. That wasn’t Kolb’s issue. The guy was plenty tough. He just couldn’t avoid injury. He was like Nordberg in The Naked Gun.

How does Brett Favre play the most reckless brand of football any quarterback has played in the modern era and somehow start 297 consecutive games when Kevin Kolb can’t slide for a first down in a preseason game without getting severely concussed from a knee to the head?

All men are not created equally. Favre was Unbreakable. Kolb is Mr. Glass.

No one said life is fair.

Kevin Kolb’s Cardinal career ended when he was crushed on a scramble downfield. His ribs were so severely broken they detached from the sternum. If that wasn’t bad enough, he then had complications during his rehab. Turns out, the ribs were so greatly damaged they didn’t heal like normal cracked ribs. No, cartilage muscle closed up over the ribs, slowing the recovery process, and eliminating Kolb’s chances of returning to the team in 2012. It was suggested then that Kevin Kolb should consider retirement, but he persevered.

Arizona cut him and he signed with the Bills for a third crack at being named an NFL starting quarterback. What happens? Kolb slips on a wet mat at practice, injures his knee, loses the chance to start the next preseason game, and rookie EJ Manuel goes out and takes the starting job from him.

At this point, you don’t know whether to laugh or cry.

Then, as a change of pace, Kolb actually catches a break when Manuel injures a knee. Kolb gets a second chance at proving he’s a starter. But in the midst of a successful scoring drive, he scrambles for a first down, gets kneed to the head, leaves the game four plays later with severe concussion symptoms, and now his career could be over.

And perhaps it should be.

Maybe Kevin Kolb will now go on to discover the cure for cancer or write the next great American novel, but someone or something is telling Kevin Kolb that football just isn’t in the cards.

Presented By
Western Governors University

Arizona Cardinals

Arizona Cardinals GM Monti Ossenfort talks to reporters...

Tyler Drake

Monti Ossenfort keeping trade options open as Cardinals’ draft board nears completion

The Arizona Cardinals have about 95% of their draft board completed about a week out from the NFL Draft and continue to look at all avenues.

12 hours ago

Monti Ossenfort looks on during the 2023 NFL Draft Combine...

Tyler Drake

Daniel Jeremiah: NFL Draft is Cardinals’ moment to set up franchise for years to come

The 2024 NFL Draft marks a big set-your-franchise-up situation for the Arizona Cardinals, says NFL Network's Daniel Jeremiah.

16 hours ago

Cardinals owner Michael Bidwill speaks at a press conference...

Tyler Drake

Michael Bidwill: Cardinals ‘aligned on getting this thing right’ in 2024

Michael Bidwill believes the Cardinals aren't that far off from really turning things around under Jonathan Gannon and Monti Ossenfort.

2 days ago

Marvin Harrison Jr....

Nick Borgia

Marvin Harrison Jr. remains Cardinals top pick in latest ESPN mock

With the 2024 NFL draft just around the corner, ESPN's latest mock draft details what could be in store for the Cardinals' first six picks.

3 days ago

Rome Odunze...

Kevin Zimmerman

Peter Schrager’s NFL mock draft has a surprising Cardinals trade-down with Giants

Peter Schrager believes the New York Giants could trade with the Arizona Cardinals, who move down to the No. 6 pick to select Rome Odunze.

3 days ago

Trey McBride works out...

Tyler Drake

Tweaked process, same message: Cardinals begin strength and conditioning program

Arizona Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon isn't the biggest believer in picking up where you left off, especially on a year-to-year basis.

3 days ago

Sometimes, it’s just not in the cards