The Seahawks weren’t the only local football team that was made better over the weekend. The NFL draft also helped the Washington Huskies. Their loss of eight players to the pros — only Alabama (10) and Ohio State (nine) contributed more — was a net gain for the program. There’s nothing more impressive to top-tier recruits than for a school to be known as a pipeline to Pete Carroll, Bill Belichick, and . . . well, the Arizona Cardinals.
The woebegone (3-13) Cards added a third former Washington defensive back, Byron Murphy, who joins Budda Baker and Ezekiel Turner. General manager Steve Keim apparently is operating a DBU satellite campus in Glendale.
That’s a remarkable purple splotch in the middle of all that red. But the suspicion is it won’t move the needle of sentiment among Seahawks fans. Among all Seahawks opponents, the Cards have become the most annoying.
Their home stadium is where the Seahawks had their most agonizing defeat, and their field-on-a-cookie-sheet was where the Seahawks lost Kam Chancellor and Cliff Avril to career-ending injuries.
In eight games between the division rivals over the past four seasons, the otherwise woebegone Zonas have won three (all at the Clink) and tied one. They nearly won both games in 2018, the Seahawks prevailing each time on last-second field goals by the now-retired Sebastian Janikowski.
For a team that hasn’t done squat regarding beating the rest of the league, these guys are somehow arrogant about their semi-hegemony in Seattle. In December 2017, ahead of the trip north, then-coach Bruce Arians famously popped his suspenders.
“We’ve got a big one next week, we know that’s our home field,” Arians said. “We’re going up there and kicking their asses.”
The newsboy-cap-wearing prophet foretold the future. The Cards somehow won 26-24 despite being directed by dubious Drew Stanton, perhaps the worst backup QB to win a game at the sometimes-formidable Clink.
Think about that for a minute. If the Cards can beat the Seahawks in Seattle with Stanton, what might they do with Heisman Trophy-winning QB Kyler Murray, the draft’s No. 1 pick? Which is another thing. They stole the Seahawks’ secret sauce — they hired a paradigm-busting short quarterback who’s a football sniper via ground or air.
And now they use the first pick in the second round — the second cornerback overall — to add another quality DB from the Seahawks’ home world.
Well, that’s not quite true.
The redshirt sophomore was a three-year hire by Huskies coach Chris Petersen. Murphy’s home world is the desert. He’s from Scottsdale. In 2015, he was the Arizonas high school player of the year. The honor included getting his name stitched on the back of a Cardinals jersey.
NFL Draft Picks Over the Past 3 Seasons:
1. Washington – 18
2. Utah – 14
3. USC – 13
4. Stanford – 11
4. UCLA – 11
6. Oregon – 6
6. ASU – 6
6. Colorado – 6
9. WSU – 5
9. Cal – 5
11. Zona – 2
11. OSU – 2#NFLDraft— WestCoastCFB (@WestCoastCFB) April 27, 2019
“Ever since then, I was like, man, I want to play for the Cardinals,” Murphy told Phoenix-area reporters Friday after his selection. “That call . . . I kind of had it in the back of my mind I could be a Cardinal. This whole day I’ve been emotional, thinking about the whole being a part of the Birdgang.
“… I just felt like if I was going to be a Cardinal, it would be the best day of my life. Today — man. Man.”
During his time in Montlake, he had plenty of exposure to the Legion of Boom. But his dream was elsewhere. Cool.
From a UW perspective, Murphy’s success is another benchmark for Petersen’s increasing influence. He plucked Murphy from the back yards of Pac-12 competitors Arizona State and Arizona.
The eight players drafted are the most for Washington since 10 were taken in 1998, led by Olin Kreutz and Benji Olson. The 18 draftees over the past three seasons leads the Pac-12.
The Huskies’ national profile seems to grow by the year under Petersen, which is critical if Washington, conference champion in two of the past three seasons, is to make the talent breakthrough to be more than kings of a weak region.
In the big-boy bowl losses to Alabama, Penn State and Ohio State, the gap was plain. But the NFL scouts seem to suggest the gap is closing. Installing three players from one school into a single pro secondary is largely coincidence, but nevertheless impressive.
If Murphy or Baker in the fall pull off a pick-six on Russell Wilson to decide a game at the Clink, the 12s will suggest that Seahawks GM John Schneider make plans — Seattle traffic being what it is — for a satellite campus in Montlake, from where eight defensive backs have found their way to the NFL since Petersen’s first year in 2013.
This is what it’s all about 😊 @byronmurphy#CardsDraft pic.twitter.com/MkFVCuFNnA
— Arizona Cardinals (@AZCardinals) April 26, 2019
4 Comments
I guess Cards decided Josh Rosen is a bust. Any assessment of his reputation in the league at this point? Is he considered an attitude/locker room problem? I’m still intrigued by him and wish him well.
It’s a mixed bag, but I’ve read nothing to suggest his negative qualities after one year can’t be mitigated. He’s not a bust, not like Manziel/Russell/Leaf/McGwire/Leaf.
IMO they just got swept up by the Kyler Murray fervor. I hope Rosen becomes the next Drew Brees.
I had some mild hope for Rapp to become a Seahawk though I have no problem with their draft. You can’t draft everyone. I think. But after losing both Earl and Kam in recent years Rapp would have been great to have patrolling in the Hawks defense.
I’m not impressed with the Cardinals brain trust. Especially after how they handled the whole scenario with Rosen. I feel as though they’re a a step behind Jed York and both franchises will find a way to screw things up. The Rams put all their resources into last season and fell short. According to Rams Wire they had 23 free agents at the end of the season and they’ve already lost Lamarcus Joyner and Rodger Saffold, and won’t re-sign Ndamukong Suh. There’s a window of opportunity for the Hawks to have another division title.