Sports
Beloved Former Vikings WR Unleashes Fury on Cardinals
Hall of Fame wide receiver Cris Carter, who spent most of his career with the Minnesota Vikings, is not impressed with the Arizona Cardinals as an organization. In short, he thinks that franchise is “awful.”
A fresh start in Minnesota could rewrite the entire Kyler Murray conversation.
Carter has intimate knowledge of the Cardinals’ interworkings because his lifelong pal, Larry Fitzgerald, played 17 seasons for the franchise. And the curtain peel-back is not pretty.
The Cardinals’ Mess Adds Context to Murray’s Vikings Arrival
Carter was not afraid to rip the Cardinals.
Carter on ARI
The Hall of Famer hopped on the Fully Loaded Podcast last week and unleashed: “I’m gonna tell you something that you’ve never heard before about the Arizona Cardinals. They have one of the worst ownership groups. They do not know what they’re doing. And I couldn’t say this for a long time because my kid was playing out there — Larry Fitzgerald. He’s a first-ballot Hall of Famer; now, I can let go. They’re awful. The way they do things is awful. He was lucky to survive his career there.”
“They’re so inconsistent. They have no plan. They have no rhyme. They have no action plan — like what they’re going to do. And — they ruin a lot of good players. Players don’t go to Arizona and become Hall of Famers, typically. They’re fortunate with Kurt Warner and Larry Fitzgerald that they escaped, but they were who they were.”
The funny part? Most non-Cardinals fans already thought this about Arizona. Carter merely confirmed what most commonly believe.
Carter added about the Vikings’ new quarterback: “Kyler Murray, to me, could be a Baker Mayfield. He could be a Sam Darnold. He’s got talent. Put it in the right system and support it the right way. He’s played some hell of a football. To keep him healthy and keep him confident — that’s what they need.”
The Murray Angle
Murray is now the Vikings’ quarterback, and because Carter played for the purple from 1990 to 2001, he has a vested interest in Murray’s upcoming stint. It’s still shocking to process that the Cardinals offloaded Murray in favor of Jacoby Brissett and Carson Beck, while paying him to play for the Vikings in 2026.
If Carter has it right, Murray could be the product of poor ownership, never able to fully take off, as Arizona hasn’t empowered many — outside of Fitzgerald and Warner — to thrive.
Think: one man’s trash is another’s treasure.
NFL Report Cards Confirm It
Carter isn’t alone with his assessment of the Cardinals’ ownership and the enterprise. Annually (although 2026 could be the last, as owners don’t want them anymore), the NFLPA releases team report cards, with the Cardinals habitually near the bottom.
In 2026, they ranked second-to-last. These are the details from ESPN:
Treatment of Families: D+
Home Game Field: B
Food/Dining Area: C-
Nutritionist/Dietician: B
Locker Room: F-
Training Room: D+
Training Staff: B-
Weight Room: D+
Strength Coaches: B-
Position Coaches: B+
Offensive Coordinator: B-
Defensive Coordinator: C+
Special Teams Coordinator: B
Team Travel: C+
Head Coach: B+
General Manager: B
Team Ownership: F
Overall Rank: 31
Strangely, the Pittsburgh Steelers finished dead last in overall rank this year.
Arizona Sports‘ Tyler Drake on the Cardinals’ NFLPA grades: “In previous years, the report cards were posted with details to the NFLPA website and included plenty of breakdowns from team owner to cafeteria. This time around, however, the report cards are now internal after the NFL won a grievance filed against the NFLPA to not make the scores public.”
“Arizona’s locker room amenities have been a primary sore spot since the report cards were first created. They again received an F- in this year’s report card. As for head coach, which was a category added in 2024, Arizona saw no less than a B+ with Jonathan Gannon running the show the past three years. Gannon was fired this offseason and replaced by head coach Mike LaFleur.”
A New Beginning for Murray
Murray will get a chance to re-prove his status as a two-time Pro Bowler in Minnesota. He has Kevin O’Connell, widely known as a “quarterback whisperer,” at his side. Even better, there’s Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison, and the NFL’s third-ranked defense from a season ago to further help the newcomer.
Carter claimed Murray could become “another Baker Mayfield or Sam Darnold,” but the ironic part is that those two quarterbacks were punchlines before they turned their careers around. Mayfield flamed out of Carolina; so did Darnold. They didn’t have two Pro Bowls like Murray, nor did they boast Murray’s efficiency and volume stats through seven seasons.
While Mayfield and Darnold needed full-scale career reclamation, Murray merely needs to be himself and continue his production from Arizona — and stay healthy.
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