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Preseason # 2 Saturday, August 18, 2007 – 1:00 P.M. Arizona Cardinals Football Club Game Release THIS WEEK’S GAME The Cardinals open up their second season at University of Phoenix Stadium as the Houston Texans make their first ever trip to Arizona. The Cardinals, the NFL’s oldest continuously owned franchise, host the Texans, the NFL’s newest team, for the first time in either the preseason or regular season. The Texans are one of seven teams (Ravens, Panthers, Colts, Jaguars, Giants and Eagles) that the Cardinals have never faced in the preseason. The two teams have met only once, when the Cardinals traveled to Houston on 12/18/05 and suffered a 30-19 loss at Reliant Stadium. The Texans, under second-year head coach Gary Kubiak, are led on offense by quarterback Matt Schaub, who was acquired in an offseason trade with the Atlanta Falcons. Cardinals head coach Ken Whisenhunt, coming off 27-23 defeat at Oakland last week in his first game, will lead his team in front of the home crowd for the first time. ARIZONA CARDINALS (0-1) Vs. HOUSTON TEXANS (0-1) University of Phoenix Stadium THE COACHES Ken Whisenhunt Gary Kubiak 0-0 Overall Record 6-10 0-0 Regular Season Record 6-10 0-0 Playoff Record 0-0 1 st Years as Head Coach in NFL 2 nd 1 st Years with team 2 nd BROADCAST INFORMATION TELEVISION CARDINALS RADIO NETWORK Network: ABC-15 Flagship: KTAR 92.3 FM Play-by-Play: Brian Davis Play-by-Play: Jon Bloom Color Analyst: Bill Lewis Color Analyst: Ron Wolfley Sideline: Jody Jackson Sideline: Paul Calvisi CARDINALS SPANISH RADIO FSN Arizona Flagship: KMIA 710 AM Live: Tucson & Yuma Play-by-Play: Gabriel Trujillo Replay: Sun., 1:00 PM Color Analyst: Luis Zendejas (Statewide) Sirius Satellite Radio – Channel 181 (Home Broadcast) Mark Dalton Vice President, Media Relations Mike Helm Media Relations Coordinator [email protected] 602/379-1720 [email protected] 602/379-1647 Chris Melvin – Media Relations Manager Nate LoCascio – Media Relations Assistant [email protected] 602/379-1882 [email protected] 602/379-1620 8701 S. Hardy Drive, Tempe, AZ 85284 Phone: 602-379-0101 Fax: 602-379-1821 www.azcardinals.com SERIES HISTORY The preseason history between the Cardinals and the Texans will be written this week, as Saturday marks the first meeting between the two teams in preseason action. The teams have only met one time in the regular season, on December 18, 2005, when the Cardinals traveled to Houston and lost 30-19 after both QB’s Kurt Warner and Josh McCown went down in the first half. Warner’s injury to his right knee put an end to his first year with the Cardinals. Saturday’s matchup will mark the first home game for new head coach Ken Whisenhunt and his new staff as they take on second year head coach Gary Kubiak’s revamped Texans squad and new starting quarterback Matt Schaub. LIVE ON NFL NETWORK The NFL Network will continue its extensive coverage of the preseason this week with 11 games to air on the all-football channel. The NFL Network will telecast the Houston Texans at Arizona Cardinals live Saturday at 1:00 PM local time. It will be the first game played this season at University of Phoenix Stadium -- site of Super Bowl XLII in February. The NFL Network will be using the television feeds of local broadcasters and make use of both sets of announcers, using the Cardinals announcers in the first half and the Texans announcers in the second half. The game is one of a record eight preseason games carried live by NFL Network in ’07.
Transcript
Page 1: University of Phoenix Stadiumprod.static.cardinals.clubs.nfl.com/.../vshouston8-18.pdfgame played this season at University of Phoenix Stadium -- site of Super Bowl XLII in February.

Preseason # 2 Saturday, August 18, 2007 – 1:00 P.M.

Arizona Cardinals Football Club Game Release

THIS WEEK’S GAME The Cardinals open up their second season at University of Phoenix Stadium as the Houston Texans make their first ever trip to Arizona.

The Cardinals, the NFL’s oldest continuously owned franchise, host the Texans, the NFL’s newest team, for the first time in either the preseason or regular season. The Texans are one of seven teams (Ravens, Panthers, Colts, Jaguars, Giants and Eagles) that the Cardinals have never faced in the preseason.

The two teams have met only once, when the Cardinals traveled to Houston on 12/18/05 and suffered a 30-19 loss at Reliant Stadium.

The Texans, under second-year head coach Gary Kubiak, are led on offense by quarterback Matt Schaub, who was acquired in an offseason trade with the Atlanta Falcons.

Cardinals head coach Ken Whisenhunt, coming off 27-23 defeat at Oakland last week in his first game, will lead his team in front of the home crowd for the first time.

ARIZONA CARDINALS (0-1)

Vs.

HOUSTON TEXANS (0-1)

University of Phoenix Stadium

THE COACHES Ken Whisenhunt Gary Kubiak 0-0 Overall Record 6-10 0-0 Regular Season Record 6-10 0-0 Playoff Record 0-0 1st Years as Head Coach in NFL 2nd

1st Years with team 2nd

BROADCAST INFORMATION TELEVISION CARDINALS RADIO NETWORKNetwork: ABC-15 Flagship: KTAR 92.3 FM Play-by-Play: Brian Davis Play-by-Play: Jon Bloom Color Analyst: Bill Lewis Color Analyst: Ron Wolfley Sideline: Jody Jackson Sideline: Paul Calvisi

CARDINALS SPANISH RADIO FSN ArizonaFlagship: KMIA 710 AM Live: Tucson & Yuma Play-by-Play: Gabriel Trujillo Replay: Sun., 1:00 PM Color Analyst: Luis Zendejas (Statewide)

Sirius Satellite Radio – Channel 181 (Home Broadcast)

Mark Dalton – Vice President, Media Relations Mike Helm – Media Relations Coordinator [email protected] 602/379-1720 [email protected] 602/379-1647

Chris Melvin – Media Relations Manager Nate LoCascio – Media Relations Assistant [email protected] 602/379-1882 [email protected] 602/379-1620

8701 S. Hardy Drive, Tempe, AZ 85284 Phone: 602-379-0101 Fax: 602-379-1821 www.azcardinals.com

SERIES HISTORY

The preseason history between the Cardinals and the Texans will be written this week, as Saturday marks the first meeting between the two teams in preseason action.

The teams have only met one time in the regular season, on December 18, 2005, when the Cardinals traveled to Houston and lost 30-19 after both QB’s Kurt Warner and Josh McCown went down in the first half. Warner’s injury to his right knee put an end to his first year with the Cardinals.

Saturday’s matchup will mark the first home game for new head coach Ken Whisenhunt and his new staff as they take on second year head coach Gary Kubiak’s revamped Texans squad and new starting quarterback Matt Schaub.

LIVE ON NFL NETWORK The NFL Network will continue its extensive coverage of the preseason this week with 11 games to air on the all-football channel.

The NFL Network will telecast the Houston Texans at Arizona Cardinals live Saturday at 1:00 PM local time. It will be the first game played this season at University of Phoenix Stadium -- site of Super Bowl XLII in February.

The NFL Network will be using the television feeds of local broadcasters and make use of both sets of announcers, using the Cardinals announcers in the first half and the Texans announcers in the second half.

The game is one of a record eight preseason games carried live by NFL Network in ’07.

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SUPER BOWL RETURNS TO ARIZONA

On February 3, 2008, Super Bowl XLII comes to Glendale as the country’s most popular sporting event arrives at University of Phoenix Stadium. Along with the 73,000 that will be on hand for the game, over 100 million viewers are expected to tune in to the game being played on the Cardinals home field.

With an estimated economic impact of $300-400 million and worldwide viewership, the City of Glendale and the State of Arizona stand to reap the benefits of having built the country’s most state-of-the-art and technologically advanced sporting facility.

Having last hosted the Super Bowl on January 28, 1996 when the Dallas Cowboys overcame the Pittsburgh Steelers 27-17 at Sun Devil Stadium, Arizona will again have a chance to shine as it plays host to the 100,000-plus out-of-state fans who will be on hand to participate in the week-long activities preceding the game. In addition to the fans, more than 3,000 media members are expected to attend the event.

Thousands of Valley residents will have an opportunity to be part of the action as the Super Bowl Host Committee looks to train up to 10,000 volunteers to work in fields such as hospitality, transportation and special events. Information and application forms for volunteers are available at www.azsuperbowl.com, the official website of the 2008 Super Bowl in Arizona.

RECORD ATTENDANCE IN 2006

The Cardinals sold out every game in 2006 which led to a new franchise record for attendance in a season.

In 2006, the Cardinals had 508,829 fans visit University of Phoenix Stadium during the regular season. That number eclipsed the previous record of 497,330 set in 1994 by more than 11,000 fans.

For the first time in NFL history, paid attendance for all NFL games surpassed the 22 million mark and, for the fifth consecutive year, the paid attendance established a new record.

NFL paid attendance for all 2006 games was 22,199,712, an increase of more than 400,000 (407,616) over the previous record total of 21,792,096 in 2005.

The 2006 NFL regular-season total paid attendance of 17,340,879 and the average of 67,738 per game were both all-time records as well.

With season tickets at University of Phoenix Stadium sold out for the 2007 season, the Cardinals and the NFL look to continue their unprecedented success.

UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX STADIUM IN YEAR ONE

In 2006, the Cardinals played their inaugural season at University of Phoenix Stadium and the venue lived up to all the hype.

It was recognized as one of the top 10 sports facilities in the world by BusinessWeek and was the only facility in North America to be placed on the list.

University of Phoenix Stadium was also named the best in the NFL by Street & Smith’s Sports Business Journal and the field was named the best playing surface in the NFL in a Sporting News survey of NFL players.

In its first year of operation the stadium proved to be a truly multipurpose facility, hosting everything from high school proms to the BCS National Championship Game. In February of 2008, it will host Super Bowl XLII and in 2009 it will host the Regionals of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

The facility is equipped to host football, basketball, soccer concerts, consumer shows, motor sports, rodeos and corporate events and it indeed held almost all of those events in its first year of operation.

In the first 10 months of operation alone, the stadium welcomed 1,236,327 visitors and booked 216 event days.

STADIUM CONTINUES TO WIN PRAISE

Before it even opened, University of Phoenix Stadium was winning praise from all over the world. Nothing about that changed as the field completed its first year of operation.

Street & Smith’s Sports Business Journal and SportsBusiness Daily conducted its second annual SBJ/SBD Readers Survey on the state of the sports industry and University of Phoenix Stadium was named the top stadium in the NFL.

University of Phoenix Stadium took the title from historic Lambeau Field, the winner in 2005.

Best NFL Stadium 16.4% University of Phoenix Stadium (AZ Cardinals) 12.6% Lambeau Field (Green Bay Packers) 7.1% Qwest Field (Seattle Seahawks) 6.8% Gillette Stadium (New England Patriots) 6.7% Lincoln Financial Field (Philadelphia Eagles) 6.6% Soldier Field (Chicago Bears)

In addition to being recognized as the NFL’s best stadium, University of Phoenix Stadium has also been lauded for its playing surface.

In a Sporting News survey conducted in 2006, players across the NFL voted the surface that lays inside the stadium’s unique retractable tray as the best playing surface in the NFL.

The domed stadium has a retractable playing field, the only of its kind in America, allowing games to be played on natural grass as it is tended during the week outside of the stadium and moved indoors on gameday.

Cardinals vs. Texans Page 2 of 23 www.azcardinals.com

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CARDINALS CATEGORY TEXANS 5-11 Record 6-10311 Points Scored 267387 Points Allowed 36626 Touchdowns Scored 3046 Touchdowns Allowed 422 Rushing TDs 13

21 Passing TDs 143 Return TDs 3

22 Rushing TDs Allowed 1617 Passing TDs Allowed 227 Return TDs Allowed 4

45/286 Sacked/Yards Lost 43/25426/16 Fumbles/Lost 28/12

21 Had Intercepted 1343/45 Field Goals Made/Attempted 25/29348.4 Total Yards Per Game 279.1295.6 Opp. Total Yards Per Game 337.571.1 Rushing Yards Per Game 105.4

102.0 Opp. Rushing Yards Per Game 122.3277.3 Passing Yards Per Game 173.6193.6 Opp. Passing Yards Per Game 215.3-11 Turnover Ratio -3

31:20 Average Time of Possession 29:148/32/1 NFL Rank-Total Offense/Run/Pass 28/21/27

8/10/12 NFL Rank-Total Defense/Run/Pass 24/21/273/6 2-Point Conversions 2/3

@ NE Next Week Vs. Dal

CARDINALS & TEXANS IN 2006 CARDINALS RADIO AFFILIATES

KTAR 92.3 FM Phoenix

KTAR 620 AM Phoenix

KJLL 1330 AM Tucson

KATO 1230 AM Thatcher

KAZM 780 AM Sedona

KHIL 1250 AM Wilcox

KIKO 1340 AM Miami

KNTR 980 AM Lake Havasu

KPPV 106.7 FM Prescott Valley

KQNA 1130 AM Prescott

KDEF 1150 AM Albuquerque, NM

KTAN 1420 AM Sierra Vista

KZUA 92.1 FM Holbrook

KVNA 600 AM Flagstaff

KBLU 560 AM Yuma

CARDINALS & TEXANS - THE LAST TIMELast Meeting

Texans 30, Caridnals 19 December 18, 2005 – Reliant Stadium - (70,024)

Looking for their 3rd straight road win, the Cardinals headed to Houston to face the 1-12 Texans. They left with an 11-point loss after surrendering 24 second quarter points and being forced to go to their #3 QB by the start of the second half. Starter Kurt Warner suffered a right knee injury on the game’s third snap but stayed in until early in the second quarter when he re-aggravated it. He was replaced by Josh McCown but a stomach virus forced McCown out after just one series and #3 QB John Navarre took over from there. After the Cardinals stuffed Houston on a 4th-n-1 on the Texans first drive, Neil Rackers’ 26-yard FG opened the scoring and put them up 3-0. After a long return, the Texans rushed on 8 of the next 9 plays, the last of which was a 7-yard TD run by Jonathan Wells. Warner went 5-5 for 77 yards on the ensuing drive, including 4-72 to WR Anquan Boldin who ended the drive with a 20-yard TD reception that put AZ ahead 10-7. It would be Warner’s final play of the season because of a sprained MCL. The Texans responded by moving 63 yards in 10 plays, capped by a 25-yard TD run by RB Vernon Morency. Arizona seemed poised to answer but Reggie Swinton fumbled after a long kickoff return and the Texans recovered at the AZ 36. Nine plays later, Wells scored his second TD on a 9-yard run that put Houston up 21-10. On his fourth play in relief of Warner, McCown was INT’d by CB Glenn Earl at the AZ 38. That led to a 27-yard Kris Brown FG that made the score 24-10 at intermission. Brown opened the third quarter with a 41-yard FG to make it 27-10. With McCown too ill to continue, Navarre played the entire 2nd half. Houston held onto its 17-point lead until early in the 4th quarter when Rackers made it 27-13 with a 42-yard FG, his 36th of the year (3 shy of the NFL record). With 5:36 to play, Navarre hit Larry Fitzgerald with a 12-yard TD pass but the PAT failed due to a bad snap and the Cards trailed 27-19. A three-n-out by the Texans gave Arizona the ball back at its own 13 down 8 with 3:05 to play and one timeout. However, a fumble at the end of a catch by FB Obafemi Ayanbadejo turned the ball back to Houston and Brown’s 26-yard FG provided the game’s final points.

CARDINALS 3 7 0 9 19 TEXANS 0 24 3 3 30

Team Qtr. Time Scoring Play Drive Score CARDS 1 3:43 Rackers 26-yard FG 11-42, 6:48 3-0 Texans 2 14:23 Wells 7-yard run (Brown kick) 9-46, 4:20 3-7 CARDS 2 10:16 Boldin 20-yard pass from Warner (Rackers kick) 7-81, 4:07 10-7 Texans 2 4:57 Morency 25-yard run (Brown kick) 10-63, 5:19 10-14 Texans 2 1:50 Wells 3-yard run (Brown kick) 9-45, 2:57 10-21 Texans 2 0:08 Brown 27-yard FG 8-29, 1:10 10-24 Texans 3 12:13 Brown 41-yard FG 8-37, 2:47 10-27 CARDS 4 14:46 Rackers 42-yard FG 7-27, 1:52 13-27 CARDS 4 5:32 Fitzgerald 12-yard pass from Navarre (kick aborted) 6-58, 3:14 19-27 Texans 4 0:27 Brown 26-yard FG 4-46, 2:06 19-30

STATISTICS

AZ HOU First Downs 16 18 Rushes-Yards 13-39 35-119 Net Passing Yards 262 134 Total Net Yards 301 253 Passing (A-C-I) 38-25-2 33-22-1 Sacked by Opp. 6-39 3-16 Punts-Average 4-49.3 4-40.0 Fumbles-Lost 3-2 1-1 Penalties 7-69 5-43 Time of Possession 27:36 32:24

Weather: Indoors

RUSHING CARDS: Shipp 6-28; Arrington 7-11. Texans: Wells 28-87, 2 TD; Morency 5-32, TD; Carr 1-2; A. Johnson 1-(-2).

PASSING CARDS: Navarre 14-24, 174 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT; Warner 10-10, 115 yds, 1 TD, 0 INT; McCown 1-4, 2 yds, 0 TD, 1 INT. Texans: Carr 22-33, 150 yds, 0 TD, 1 INT. RECEIVING:CARDS: Boldin 8-134, TD; Fitzgerald 6-85, 1 TD; Bergen 3-18; McCoy 2-28, Shipp 2-14; Arrington 2-4; B. Johnson 1-12; Ayanbadejo 1-6. Texans: A. Johnson 7-51; Gaffney 5-39; Rivers 4-20; Bradford 3-11; Wells 1-11; Morgan 1-9, Morency 1-9.

Cardinals vs. Texans Page 3 of 23 www.azcardinals.com

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HIGHLIGHTS FROM LAST WEEKS GAME

Going deep to Johnson-After his 18.5 yards per reception average ranked third in the NFL among receivers with at least 30 catches in 2006, Bryant Johnson picked up exactly where he left off, hauling in three receptions for 87 yards (29.0-yard average) including a game long 58-yard TD reception from Kurt Warner in the second quarter.

Rackers from way out-Pro Bowl kicker Neil Rackers entered 2007 with a bang. As the first half expired, Rackers connected on his first FG attempt of the season, a 59-yarder that sailed through the middle of the uprights.

Shipp solidifies his spot-Seventh year running back Marcel Shipp provided the spark for the Cardinals running game, rushing seven times for 35 yards with the first-team offensive line. Five of Shipp’s seven rushes went for five yards or more.

Pago makes his mark-Undrafted rookie free agent linebacker Pago Togafau made an impressive debut, leading all defenders with eight tackles while also recording one special teams tackle.

Breaston shows his stuff-Cardinals fifth round draft pick (142nd overall) was impressive in his return duties, returning two kickoffs for 63 yards (31.5-yard average) including a 45-yard return. He also added a 14-yard punt return.

NOTES FROM PRESEAON GAME 1

Quarterback Kurt Warner was perfect on Saturday, completing both of his passes for 73 yards, including a 58-yard TD to Bryant Johnson. Warner had a perfect 158.3 passer rating.

Defensive end Chris Cooper had an impact game against his former team, collecting six tackles, two sacks and one forced fumble.

Kicker Neil Rackers reached the endzone on all five of his kickoffs, including three that went for touchbacks.

Defensive tackle Alan Branch recorded a fumble recovery in his first NFL action.

The Cardinals topped 100-yards rushing, going for 103 yards on 24 attempts, good for a 4.3-yard average. Four Cardinals (Shipp.Arrington, Boyd and Boldin) had runs of seven yards or more.

Preseason Game 1Raiders 27, CARDINALS 23

August 11, 2007 – McAfee Coliseum – (39,911)

The Cardinals traveled to Oakland to open their 2007 preseason slate and played their first game under new head coach Ken Whisenhunt. Second-year QB Matt Leinart started the game and played the first three series while the majority of Arizona’s starters played into the second quarter. After a scoreless opening quarter of action, the Raiders got on the board first thanks to a 1-yard scoring run by RB Dominic Rhodes. It was set-up by a suspect pass interference call in the end zone one play earlier. The Cardinals answered quickly when QB Kurt Warner – in his first and only series in relief of Leinart – connected with WR Bryant Johnson on a crossing pattern that went for a 58-yard TD. Warner was replaced by Shane Boyd and on the next series, Boyd’s first pass attempt was picked off by Oakland safety Hiram Eugene who returned it 36 yards for a TD. The Oakland lead increased to 21-7 when Raider QB Andrew Walter capped a 14-play drive with a 3-yard TD pass to WR Mike Williams with just 0:28 to play in the first half. That proved to be just enough time for Boyd to get the Cardinals into position for a 59-yard Neil Rackers FG on the final play of the first half. Boyd ended Arizona’s opening drive of the third quarter with an 8-yard TD run on a QB draw. The next two Cardinals drives ended with Rackers FGs of 37 and 25 yards that gave Arizona a 24-21 lead through three quarters. However, Oakland booted two fourth quarter field goals to re-take the lead and claimed a 27-23 victory. Not unexpectedly, Cardinals RB Edgerrin James saw very little action and logged just two carries. Back-up Marcel Shipp looked particularly strong running the ball and finished with 35 yards on 7 carries. The game did not come without a heavy cost on the injury front as starting LB Chike Okeafor (torn biceps) and OT Oliver Ross (torn triceps) both suffered serious injuries.

CARDINALS 0 10 13 0 23 RAIDERS 0 21 0 6 27

Team Qtr. Time Scoring Play Drive Score Raiders 2 13:45 Rhodes 1-yard run (Janikowski kick) 12-80, 7:05 0-7 CARDS 2 11:35 B.Johnson 58-yard pass from Warner (Rackers kick) 4-82, 2:10 7-7 Raiders 2 9:00 Eugene 36-yard INT return -- 7-14 Raiders 2 0:28 Williams 3-yard pass from Walter (Janikowski kick) 14-67, 6:50 7-21 CARDS 2 0:00 Rackers 59-yard FG 4-29, 0:28 10-21 CARDS 3 9:38 Boyd 8-yard run (Rackers kick) 8-38, 3:55 17-21 CARDS 3 8:39 Rackers 37-yard FG 4-(-2), 0:54 20-21 CARDS 3 3:40 Rackers 25-yard FG 7-38, 3:15 23-21 Raiders 4 8:10 Janikowski 27-yard FG 10-69, 3:47 23-24 Raiders 4 2:20 Frederickson 48-yard FG 6-20, 2:51 23-27

STATISTICS AZ OAK

First Downs 14 19 Rushes-Yards 24-103 35-120 Net Passing Yards 163 155 Total Net Yards 266 275 Passing (A-C-I) 32-14-1 32-18-0 Sacked by Opp. 3-26 2-15 Punts-Average 6-40.2 5-44.8 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-1 Penalties 7-59 8-58 Time of Possession 26:19 33:41

Weather: Sunny & clear; 64 degrees, 68% humidity, winds WSW 16mph

RUSHING CARDS: Shipp 7-35; Arrington 9-32; Boyd 2-17, TD; Baylark 3-9; Boldin 1-7; James 2-3.RAIDERS: Echemandu 17-75; Fargas 8-24; Rhodes 8-21; McCown 1-0; Culpepper 1-0.

PASSING CARDS: Boyd 7-19, 66 yds, 0 TD, 1 INT; Leinart 5-11, 50 yds, 0 TD, 0 INT; Warner 2-2, 73, 1 TD, 0 INT. RAIDERS: Culpepper 5-12, 78 yds, 0 TD, 0 INT; Walter 8-11, 50 yds, 1 TD, 0 INT; McCown 5-9, 50 yds, 1 TD, 0 INT.

RECEIVINGCARDS: B. Johnson 3-87, TD; Boldin 2-17; Merritt 2-13; Fitzgerald 1-20; Watkins 1-13; McCoy 1-9; Spurlock 1-0; James 1-8; Arrington 1-8, Pope 1-5. RAIDERS: Madsen 3-23; Griffith 3-10; Higgins 2-59; Porter 2-17; Williams 2-17 TD; Miller 1-14; Rhodes 1-10; McFoy 1-9; Morant 1-6; Stewart 1-4; Curry 1-1.

LAST WEEK’S GAME

Cardinals vs. Texans Page 4 of 23 www.azcardinals.com

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HIGHLIGHTS FROM 2006

From Indy to Arizona: On March 12, 2006, the Cardinals signed running back Edgerrin James to a four-year contract. Like that, the Cardinals had one of the games most talented and accomplished backs.

With the 10th pick in the 2006 NFL Draft: The Cardinals selected quarterback Matt Leinart with the 10th overall selection in the draft. The Heisman winner, two-time National Champion and owner of a 37-2 record as a starter at USC instantly became the face of the organization.

Cardinals open the doors to their new home: The Cardinals welcomed fans to University of Phoenix Stadium for the first time during Week One of the preseason when they welcomed the defending Super Bowl Champion Pittsburgh Steelers on August 12. Every game was sold out before the season began as the Cardinals established a new franchise attendance record with 508,829 fans visiting during the regular season.

Cardinal greats remembered in Ring of Honor: In their new stadium, the Cardinals were able to honor numerous figures who have made a profound impact on the organization. Eleven members of the organization were enshrined in the Cardinals Ring of Honor during the season: Fullback Ernie Nevers, former owner Charles W. Bidwill, Sr., quarterback Jimmy Conzelman, halfback Charley Trippi, quarterback John (Paddy) Driscoll, halfback Ollie Matson, cornerback Dick (Night Train) Lane, tackles DanDierdorf, halfback Marshall Goldberg, safety Pat Tillman and free safety Larry Wilson.

Tillman memorialized: Before the Cardinals November 12 contest against the Dallas Cowboys, the Cardinals unveiled a memorial to former Cardinals safety Pat Tillman. The plaza surrounding the stadium is now known as Pat Tillman Freedom Plaza. The memorial includes a eight foot tall white bronze sculpture of Tillman that stands in front of a nine-football wall that measure 42 feet across, Tillman’s number at Arizona State. A 60-foot circular pool of tranquility and a grove of 40 Oak trees that symbolize Tillman’sjersey number with the Cardinals complete the memorial. Tillman was added to the Ring of Honor at halftime of the Dallas game.

300 and counting: Pro Bowl receiver Anquan Boldin reached 300 career receptions faster than any player in NFL history when he reached the feat in Oakland on October 22. He hit the mark in only 47 games, seven faster than the previous record holder, formerDenver receiver Lionel Taylor.

Leinart set rookie record: After taking over the Cardinals starting quarterback spot in week five, Leinart met ups and downs during his 11 starts. One of the ups was Leinart’s performance against the Vikings on November 26 when he became the first rookie in NFL history to throw for over 400 yards in a game when he piled up 405 yards through the air in Minneosta. The previous record belonged to former Cardinals QB Jake Plummer who threw for 388 yards against the Giants on November 16, 1997.

Wilson earns first trip to Hawaii: The recognition was long overdue but strong safety Adrian Wilson was finally selected as a Pro Bowl player. Wilson made himself known in 2006 by returning both a fumble and interception 99-yards for touchdowns while leadingthe Cardinals in interceptions (4), forced fumbles (4) and tackles for a loss (8).

CARDINALS 2007 DRAFT PICKS

The Cardinals first draft under new head coach Ken Whisenunt went as scripted. Whisenhunt said before the draft that the team would select players they thought could compete for starting jobs and increase the team’s depth.

The Cardinals made five selections in the 2007 draft, choosing three offensive players and two defensive players.

Cardinals 2007 Draft

T Levi Brown-Taken with the Cardinals first pick in the first round (5th overall), Brown started 45 career games for the Penn State Nittany Lions. DT Alan Branch-The first pick of the second round (33rd

overall), Arizona traded up to get the former Michigan standout when they sent a fourth round selection to Oakland. LB Buster Davis-Taken in the third round (69th overall), Davis led Florida State in tackling in each of his final three years with the Seminoles. WR Steve Breaston-A fifth round pick (142nd overall), Breaston appeared in 48 games for Michigan and averaged 116.9 all-purpose yards per game. TE Ben Patrick-The Cardinals selected Patrick in the seventh round (215th overall). Patrick became Deleware’s first-ever first-team All-America selection in 2006.

2007 OPPONENTS

Home 2006 Away 2006St. Louis 8-8 St. Louis 8-8 San Francisco 7-9 San Francisco 7-9 Seattle* 9-7 Seattle* 9-7 Atlanta 7-9 New Orleans* 10-6 Carolina 8-8 Tampa Bay 4-12 Cleveland 4-12 Baltimore* 13-3 Pittsburgh 8-8 Cincinnati 8-8 Detroit 2-14 Washington 5-11

Aside from their normal NFC West opponents, the Cardinals will play the AFC North and the NFC South in 2007.

The Cards will also play the Washington Redskins and Detroit Lions, who finished with the same position as the Cardinals in their division.

The Cards will face three teams that made the playoffs in 2006: Seattle, Baltimore and New Orleans. The Cards will face each of those teams on the road.

New Orleans is one of only three teams in the NFC to finish with double-digit wins. The other two were Chicago (13-3) and Philadelphia (10-6).

*2006 playoff team

Cardinals vs. Texans Page 5 of 23 www.azcardinals.com

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SUPER BOWL CHAMPS AND THE PRESEASON

Success in the preseason isn’t always guaranteed in the regular season. When the Colts won the Super Bowl in 2006, they went 1-3 in the preseason and they had won only one of the last 10 preseason games. Below is a breakdown of all 41 Super Bowl champions and their performance in that year’s preseason.

YEAR TEAM RECORD YEAR TEAM RECORD2006 Indianapolis 1-3 1985 Chicago 1-3 2005 Pittsburgh 3-1 1984 San Fran 2-2 2004 New England 1-3 1983 LA Raiders 1-3 2003 New England 4-0 1982 Washington 0-4 2002 Tampa Bay 3-1 1981 San Franc 2-2 2001 New England 3-1 1980 Oakland 2-2 2000 Baltimore 4-0 1979 Pittsburgh 3-1 1999 St. Louis 2-2 1978 Pittsburgh 2-2 1998 Denver 3-1 1977 Dallas 3-3 1997 Denver 3-2 1976 Oakland 5-1 1996 Green Bay 3-1 1975 Pittsburgh 3-4 1995 Dallas 2-3 1974 Pittsburgh 6-0 1994 San Fran 3-1 1973 Miami 4-2-1 1993 Dallas 1-3-1 1972 Miami 3-3 1992 Dallas 2-3 1971 Dallas 6-0 1991 Washington 1-3 1970 Baltimore 4-2 1990 NY Giants 4-0 1969 Kansas City 6-0 1989 San Fran 3-2 1968 NY Jets 3-2 1988 San Fran 3-2 1967 Green Bay 6-0 1987 Washington 3-1 1966 Green Bay 3-2 1986 NY Giants 3-1

TOTAL: 120-72-2 (.600)

CARDINALS IN THE PRESEASON

Since relocating to Arizona in 1988, the Cardinals have a 38-39 record in the preseason. Below is a record of the Cardinals in the preseason since the relocation.

YEAR RECORD1988 1-3 1989 1-3 1990 0-4 1991 4-0 1992 3-1 1993 3-1 1994 1-3 1995 3-1 1996 1-3 1997 1-3 1998 2-2 1999 1-3 2000 1-3 2001 3-1 2002 3-1 2003 4-0 2004 1-3 2005 3-1 2006 2-2 2007 0-1

38-39

The year the Cardinals made the playoffs in 1998, the team finished 2-2 in the preseason.

2007 SCHEDULE NOTES

� The Cardinals travel to San Francisco to take on the 49ers on Monday Night Football during kickoff weekend. The showdown between NFC West foes that takes place on September 10 will be the Cardinals first opening week Monday Night appearance in team history.

� When the Cardinals travel to Baltimore on September 23, it will be the first time they have done so since 1997 and only the second time the team has visited Baltimore. The only other time the teams met in the Ravens hometown the Cardinals came out with at 16-13 victory. It will also mark only the fourth time the two teams have squared off.

� When the Steelers come to University of Phoenix Stadium on September 30 in Week 4, Cardinals first-year head coach Ken Whisenhunt will be facing his former team for the first time. Whisenhunt was with the Steelers the previous six seasons, the last three as the offensive coordinator. Assistant head coach/offensive line Russ Grimm and special teams coach Kevin Spencer, who both made the switch to Arizona with Whisenhunt, will also be facing the Steelers for the first time as adversaries since leaving.

� After facing the Carolina Panthers each year from 2001-05, the rivalry took a short hiatus in 2006. It resumes on October 14 when the Cardinals play host to Carolina and try to snap the Panthers three game winning streak. The last Cardinal victory came at Carolina in 2002 when Arizona pulled out a 16-13 win.

� It will be the 112th meeting between two of the NFL’s oldest franchises when the Cardinals travel to the nation’s capital on October 21 in a rivalry that dates back to 1937.

� The Cardinals host the Detroit Lions on October 11 in a series that dates back to 1934. The Lions dominated the early series with the Cardinals winning only two of 24 games (three ties) between 1934 and 1945. Since then, the Cardinals hold an 18-12 advantage over the Lions in the series.

� In what has traditionally been a high scoring battle, with the teams combining to score an average of 63.4 points per game in their eight meetings, the Cardinals look to win their second consecutive game against the Cincinnati Bengals when they travel to Cincinnati on November 18. The last time the two teams met was Arizona’s 17-14 victory at home in 2003.

� The Cardinals and the Cleveland Browns do battle for just the fifth time in the last 19 years when the Browns come to University of Phoenix Stadium on December 2.

� The Cardinals make their first trip to New Orleans since the Hurricane Katrina disaster when they play the Saints on December 16. The Cardinals have visited the home of Mardi Gras nine times in their 24 meetings.

� The Cardinals look to take back control of a series they once dominated when they invite the Atlanta Falcons to University of Phoenix Stadium on December 23. The Cardinals won 10 of the first 14 meetings between the two teams but Atlanta has won four contests in a row.

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FIRST YEAR IN THE NEST

For the Cardinals, 2007 doesn’t just bring with it the promise of a new season, it also ushers in the Ken Whisenhunt era in the desert.

On January 14, the Cardinals named Whisenhunt their new head coach. He comes to Arizona after having spent the previous six years with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Prior to joining the Steelers, Whisenhunt coached the tight ends with the NY Jets (2000), special teams with the Cleveland Browns (1999) and tight ends with the Baltimore Ravens (1997-98).

Having served as the Steelers tight ends coach from 2001-2003, Whisenhunt was then promoted to offensive coordinator where, over the next three years, he not only helped lead the Steelers to a victory in Super Bowl XL, but he also gained a reputation as one of the most innovative play-callers in the NFL.

In his tenure as offensive coordinator, Whisenhunt: � Improved the Steelers running game from 31st overall

to second overall in his first year as coordinator. � Helped lead the team to a victory in Super Bowl XL. � Averaged 2,226 yards and 18 TDs a season on the

ground. � Helped guide the team to a 34-14 record.

2007 HEAD COACHING CLASS Cardinals head coach Ken Whisenhunt joins Atlanta’s Bobby Petrino, Miami’s Cam Cameron, Oakland’s Lane Kiffin and Pittsburgh’s Mike Tomlin as first year head coaches entering the 2007 season looking to repeat the success of last year’s rookie coaches Sean Payton (Saints) and Eric Mangini (Jets). Payton and Mangini were the only two first-year head coaches that finished 2006 with a winning record and a playoff appearance.

However, all but two teams (Detroit and Minnesota) managed to improve upon their record from 2005. Below is a list of the 2006 rookie head coaches and the results of their inaugural season vs. the results of their team’s 2005 performance:

Coach (Team) W-L ’06 W-L ’05 +/-Brad Childress (Minnesota) 6-10 9-7 -3 Gary Kubiak (Houston) 6-10 2-14 +4 Scott Linehan (St. Louis) 8-8 6-10 +2 Eric Mangini (NYJ) 10-6* 4-12 +6 Rod Marinelli (Detroit) 3-13 5-11 -2 Mike McCarthy (Green Bay) 8-8 4-12 +4 Sean Payton (New Orleans) 13-3** 3-13 +10

* Clinched playoff birth ** Clinched NFC South title

VERY SPECIAL TEAMS

The Cardinals enter the 2007 season with an impressive roster of special teams performers. Whether it be players held over fromthe 2006 Cardinals roster or players added by new head coach Ken Whisenhunt, Arizona’s special teamers have had significant success in the NFL.

Among the standouts on the Cardinals special teams are:

J.J. Arrington-The Cardinals kickoff return man in 2006, Arrington became the first Cardinal since 2003 to return a kickoff for a TD when he took the opening kickoff 99 yards at Minnesota on 11/26/06.

Aaron Francisco-Francisco was selected as a Pro Bowl alternate for his special teams play in 2006 after leading the Cardinals in tackles with 23.

Nathan Hodel-In his sixth year with the Cardinals, Hodel is one of the steadiest long snappers in the NFL having handled the longsnapping duties in all 80 games over the last five seasons, never missing a snap over that period.

Hanik Milligan-Claimed by the Cardinals off waivers on 9/3/06 and re-signed to a two-year contract in March of 2007, Milligan has collected 58 special teams tackles over the last three seasons and was named to the Pro Bowl as a special teams need player in 2005 with San Diego.

Sean Morey-A special teams standout throughout his career, Morey was named the Steelers’ Special Teams Co-Captain in 2005 and 2006, leading Pittsburgh in special teams tackles in each of his three years with the Steelers (2004-06) and was named a ProBowl alternate in 2005.

Scott Player-Entering his 10th year with the Cardinals, Player earned a Pro Bowl selection in 2000 and is the Cardinals all-time leader in total career punts (714), yards (30,752) and punts downed inside the 20 (179).

Neil Rackers-A Pro Bowler in 2005, Rackers holds the NFL’s all-time record for field goals in a season with 40. Rackers connected on 31 consecutive field goal attempts in 2005, shattering the previous franchise record of 11 set by Bill Gramatica in 2001 and his 95.2 field goal percentage (40-42) in 2005 is another Cardinals record.

Matt Ware-Having collected 46 special teams tackles over the last three seasons, Ware ranked second in special teams unit production points (169) for the Eagles in 2005.

The Cardinals added another piece they believe will help them in the 2007 season when they selected Michigan wide receiver/return specialist Steve Breaston in the fifth round (142nd overall) of the draft. Breaston holds the Big Ten career records for punt returns (127) and yards (1,599). He also holds Michigan records in each of those categories as well as kickoff returns (77),yards (1,993), and punt return touchdowns (4, tied with Derrick Alexander).

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PENDERGAST STILL THE MAN FOR CARDS DEFENSE

Despite hiring new head coach Ken Whisenhunt and almost entirely remaking the Cardinals coaching staff, defensive coordinator Clancy Pendergast still holds the reigns of the Cardinals defense.

Pendergast, who was one of two assistants retained by Whisenhunt (assistant defensive backs coach Rick Courtright was the other) enters his fourth season with the Cardinals.

A native of Phoenix, Pengergast improved the defense’s overall ranking from 26th to 12th overall in his first year as coordinator. In 2005, the defense ranked 8th overall, the first top ten ranking for a Cardinals defense since 1994 when they ranked third overall.

The Cardinals 2006 defense forced 33 turnovers (17 fumble recoveries and 16 interceptions) which was good for fifth most in the NFL. In the three years under Pendergast, the defense forced 89 turnovers, which ranks 10th in the NFL over that span.

An innovative defensive mind, Pendergast has helped players such as Bertrand Berry and Adrian Wilson to Pro Bowl appearances. Wilson, used all over the field in Pendergast’s schemes, has become one of the most feared defenders in the NFL.

SUPER STAFF

The Cardinals are a team widely recognized around the league as having outstanding talent. With Pro Bowlers several skill positions and a young franchise quarterback, the team has been taking huge strides towards success.

The organization took another giant stride in the offseason, securing an almost entirely revamped coaching staff. It is a staff loaded with coaches who have already shown an ability to reach the big game. Whether it be at the collegiate or professional level, as players or as coaches, this staff is one that has shown a knack for bringing home the hardware.

SUPER BOWL APPEARANCES

Coach Player Coach TotalHead Coach Ken Whisenhunt - 1 (win) 1 (win) Asst. Head Coach Russ Grimm 4 (3 wins) 1 (win) 5 (4 win) DB Coach Teryl Austin - 1 1 RB Coach Maurice Carthon 2 (2 wins) 1 3 (2 wins) Def. Quality Control Matt Raich - 1 (win) 1 (win) QB Coach Jeff Rutledge 3 (2 wins) - 3 (2 wins) S.T. Coach Kevin Spencer - 1 (win) 1 (win) 15 total (11 wins)

COLLEGE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPSCoach School (Year)Rick Courtright (as a coach) Washington (1991) Matt Raich (as a player) Westminster (1989) Jeff Rutledge (as a player) Alabama (1978)

In total, the Cardinals new coaching staff has a combined 110 years of coaching experience at the NFL level, 115 years of coaching experience at the college level and 50 years of experience playing at the NFL level.

A LOTT OF IMPROVEMENT

One of head coach Ken Whisenhunt’s most talked about hires has been strength and conditioning coach John Lott.

It didn’t take the Texas native and 10-year NFL veteran to make an impact on the organization. Over a six week period this offseason, Lott oversaw the complete renovation of the Cardinals weight room at the Tempe training facility.

Under Lott, the team’s training philosophy gears more towards free weights (bench press, squats, medicine ball and power cleans) as well as dynamic movements on the field. The new workout is focused not only on improving the player’s strength but their flexibility and overall athleticism as well.

A quick look around the locker room will answer any questions as to whether the offseason program has been a success. The amount of weight that players on both sides of the ball have lost is staggering.

Player New Weight Lost (Pds)G Elton Brown 340 47 DT Gabe Watson 330 40 RG Deuce Lutui 338 39 DT Jonathan Lewis 312 30 T Qasim Mitchell 347 30 LG Reggie Wells 318 23 RT Oliver Ross 327 20

BRINGING THE RUSH

The Cardinals rushing attack finished ranked 32nd overall in 2005 and 30th overall in 2006, making it an area the Red Birds are striving to improve heading into 2007.

Enter new Head Coach Ken Whisenhunt and his Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Line Russ Grimm. As two of the main components behind Pittsburgh’s formidable rushing attack, they look to duplicate their success here in Arizona. Here is a look at the Steelers’ rushing numbers between 2004-2006, Whisenhunt’s years as offensive coordinator.

Year Att. Yds. Avg. TD2006 469 1,992 4.3 16 2005 549 2,223 4.1 21 2004 618 2,464 4.0 16Totals 1,636 6,679 4.1 53

Between 2004 and 2006, the Steelers offense averaged 545 rushing attempts, 2,226 yards for a 4.1 yard average and almost 18 TD’s.

Of the 3,013 total offensive plays run by the Steelers between 2004 and 2006, 1,636 of them, or 54.3%, were rushing plays.

Between that same time period, the Cardinals ran a total of 3,121 plays, with 1,254 of them, or 40.2%, as rushing plays.

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STRENGTHENING THE CORE

Cardinals General Manager Rod Graves has spent the past few seasons identifying the team’s core players and re-signing them to contracts or extending their existing deals.

Anquan Boldin-A two-time Pro Bowler who reached 300 receptions faster than any receiver in NFL history. He signed a four-year contract extension in July of 2005.

Darnell Dockett-Has started 47 or 48 games in his first three seasons while displaying impressive big-play ability. He signed a five-year contract extension in October of 2006.

Aaron Francisco-Has played in 27 games his first two years and was named a Pro Bowl alternate for his special teams prowess in 2006. Signed a four-year contract extension in December of 2006.

Gerald Hayes-Coming off his first season as a full-time starter at linebacker and led the team with 111 tackles despite missing two games. Signed a five-year contract extension in November of 2006.

Neil Rackers-Set the NFL record for field goals in a season in 2005 when he connected on 40. Signed a four-year extension in November of 2005.

Reggie Wells-Has started the last 42 games in which he appeared in with the Cardinals. Cardinals offered an offer sheet from the Buffalo Bills which resulted in a five-year deal that he signed in March of 2006.

Adrian Wilson-Has become the unquestioned leader of the Cardinals defense while earning his first Pro Bowl nod in 2006. Signed a five-year extension in December of 2004.

HALEY FOLLOWING LINEAGE

Todd Haley may be in his first year as offensive coordinator for the Cardinals but he is not new to the NFL. In his 11th

NFL season, he comes from the Dallas where he was the Cowboys passing game coordinator in 2006.

However, Haley’s introduction to the NFL came a lot earlier than 11 years ago. The son of Dick Haley, the former Director of Player Personnel for the Pittsburgh Steelers (1971-90) and New York Jets (1991-2002), Todd has been around the NFL his entire life.

Long before he became a coach, Haley was a ballboy for the Super Bowl Championship Steelers teams of the 1970s.

He got his first NFL coaching job in 1997 with the New York Jets under head coach Bill Parcells. He then went on to coach receivers in Chicago (2001-03) and Dallas (2004-06) before coming to Arizona

FREE AGENT SIGNINGS

The Cardinals new coaching staff went into free agency in the offseason with the intent on picking up numerous players who could compete for starting positions and help increase the depth on the team.

Here are some of the free agents signed by the Cardinals in the offseason.

Mike Gandy-Signed with the Cardinals as an unrestricted free agent on 4/2/07. Has started the last 62 games in which he has appeared with the Buffalo Bills (2005-06) and Chicago Bears (2001-04).

Terrence Holt-The younger brother of NFC West rival Torry Holt, was a college teammate and roommate of Cardinals Pro Bowl safety Adrian Wilson at North Carolina State. Started 27 of the 53 games he appeared in at Detroit (2003-06).

Roderick Hood- Appeared in 56 regular season games with the Eagles between 2003-06 and also played in seven postseason games with three starts. In 2005, was selected to USA Today’s “All-Joe” team which recognizes players whose contributions are valuable but seldom heralded.

Al Johnson-Was the Cardinals first free agent signing of 2007 after agreeing to a four-year contract on 3/5/07. Originally a second round pick (38th overall) in the 2003 NFL Draft by Dallas, started 31 consecutive games for the Cowboys between 2004-2005.

Sean Morey-A special teams standout throughout his career, he was named the Steelers’ Special Teams Co-Captain in 2005 and 2006, leading Pittsburgh in special teams tackles in each of his three years with the Steelers (2004-06) and was named a Pro Bowl alternate in 2005.

Terrelle Smith-Has blocked for a 1,000-yard rusher five times in his seven years in the league, including running backs Deuce McCallister and Ricky Williams in New Orleans and Reuben Droughns in Cleveland.

GRIMM TAKES OVER THE LINE One of the first areas new head coach Ken Whisenhunt wanted to address when he took over in Arizona was the offensive line. The first thing he had to do was find a new offensive line coach and when your top candidate has a resume that reads:

� Three time Super Bowl Champion as an offensive lineman

� One Super Bowl Championship as an offensive line coach

� Four -time Pro Bowl selection as an offensive lineman

� First-team selection to the 1980’s all-decade team as an offensive lineman

� Hall of Fame nominee as an offensive lineman

It would be safe to say that you need to look no further.

Russ Grimm took over the assistant head coach/offensive line position on Januray 23 and has wasted no time pushing his philosophies of toughness and discipline and finding the personnel to fit that philosophy.

With Grimm’s input, the Cardinals went out and signed free agent linemen Al Johnson, Mike Gandy and drafted tackle Levi Brown with the fifth overall pick in the 2007 NFL Draft, which makes for a good start to the Grimm tenure.

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DOMINATING SINCE 1999

Edgerrin James was selected by the Colts with the fourth-overall pick in the 1999 NFL Draft and since that time no other running back has gained as many yards on the ground as James.

Since entering the league, James has tallied 10,385 yards. The next closest back is Tiki Barber, who retired following the 2006 season. The active rusher closest to James is San Diego running back LaDainian Tomlinson, who has gained 9,176 since 1999.

Here’s a look at the top five running backs by yardage since 1999:

Player Yards Attempts Games Edgerrin James 9,226 2,188 96 Curtis Martin 9,015 2,191 108 Corey Dillon 8,170 1,924 103 Tiki Barber 8,110 1,702 110 Shaun Alexander 7,817 1,717 96

MAKING A MOVE

Having entrenched himself among the top 20 All-Time NFL rushing leaders in 2006 when he moved into 19th place, James looks to make a significant move up the list with another 1,00-yard season in 2007.

It shouldn’t take long for James to get to the 17th spot, as he only needs 65 yards to pass Tiki Barber for that spot. If James rushes for 1,000 for the second consecutive season in Arizona, he will at least reach Washington great John Riggins who currently sits in 13th place with 11,352 career yards.

Entering 2007, James is the only active player on the rushing list, with running back Curtis Martin, a close James friend, retiring before the season.

All-Time NFL Rushing Leaders: Rk Player Att. Yds. TD 1 Emmitt Smith 4,409 18,355 164 2 Walter Payton 3,838 16,726 110 3 Barry Sanders 3,062 15,269 99 4 Curtis Martin 3,518 14,101 90 5 Jerome Bettis 3,479 13,662 91 6 Eric Dickerson 2,996 13,259 90 7 Tony Dorsett 2,936 12,739 77 8 Jim Brown 2,359 12,312 106 9 Marshall Faulk 2,836 12,279 100 10 Marcus Allen 3,022 12,243 123 11 Franco Harris 2,949 12,120 91 12 Thurman Thomas 2,877 12,074 65 13 John Riggins 2,916 11,352 104 14 Corey Dillon* 2,618 11,241 82 15 O.J. Simpson 2,404 11,236 61 16 Ricky Watters 2,622 10,643 78 17 Tiki Barber 2,217 10,449 55 18 Eddie George 2,865 10,441 68 19 Edgerrin James* 2,525 10,385 70 20 O.J. Anderson 2,562 10,273 81

* Denotes active players

BY THE NUMBERS

508,829Record number of fans that visited University of Phoenix Stadium during the regular season, with every game a

sellout.

104, 78 Average temperature in Phoenix and Flagstaff during the

month of August.

28Number of days the Cardinals will be in training camp in 2007. They reported on July 27 and will break camp on

August 23.

19Number of rookie free agents on the Cardinals roster at the

beginning of training camp.

3Number of rookie free agents that appeared in a regular

season games in 2006 (Darrell Hunter, A.J. Schable, Michael Spurlock).

39Number of players on the 2007 training camp roster that

were not on the 2006 end of season roster. .

11Number of Super Bowl Championships won by members of

the new coaching staff, either as a coach or as a player.

158.3Quarterback rating of Cardinals QB Kurt Warner after last

week’s contest at Oakland. Warner earned the perfect rating by completing both his passes for 73 yards, including

a 58-yard TD pass to Bryant Johnson.

159Pounds lost by just five offensive linemen (Elton Brown, Deuce Lutui, Qasim Mitchell, Oliver Ross and Reggie

Wells) during the offseason conditioning program.

2Number of stadiums in the NFL with retractable roofs, University of Phoenix Stadium and Houston’s Reliant

Stadium.

23Age of WR Larry Fitzgerald, making him the second youngest receiver on the roster (Greg Lee, 22), even though he is in his fourth season with the Cardinals.

Fitzgerald turns 24 on August 31.

1Number of afternoon games, out of 65 total, that will be played in the 2007 preseason. The Cardinals host the

Houston Texans Saturday at 1:00 PM.

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LEINART ENTERS YEAR TWO

The Matt Leinart era in Arizona began earlier than expected in 2006. After taking over the starting role in Week five against Kansas City, Leinart performed well in his first NFL action.

Leinart showed significant improvement as the year went on, improving his stats in nearly every category over the last six weeks of the season.

Some of Leinart’s accomplishments in his first year:

� Set NFL rookie record for passing yards in a game with 405 @ Min (11/26). Leinart became the first rookie in NFL history to pass for more than 400 yards in a game.

� Started 11 games and set the Cardinals franchise record for passing yards by a rookie with 2,547, breaking Jake Plummer’s previous record of 2,203 set in 1997.

� Became the first Cardinals quarterback since Jake Plummer in 2001 to have three games in a season with a 100+ quarterback rating.

� Threw for 200 yards or more in eight games while completing 60% or more of his passes in five of his final six starts of the season.

CARDS-TEXANS CONNECTIONS

Texans defensive assistant Frank Bush served as linebackers coach from 2004-06 and also as assistant head coach in 2006 for the Cardinals.

Texans running backs coach Chick Harris played at Northern Arizona University from 1966-69 and Frank Pollack played from 1985-89 and coached from 2005-06 for the Lumberjacks.

Texans assistant defensive backs coach Martin Baylessplayed for the St. Louis Cardinals in 1984 and defensive assistant Perry Carter played for the Arizona Cardinals in 1994.

Cardinals linebackers coach Billy Davis served as a defensive assistant/defensive lineS in Green Bay while Texans Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Coordinator MikeSherman was Head Coach in 2000 and Texans defensive line coach Jethro Franklin served in the same capacity.

Texans defensive tackle Tim Bulman was originally signed by the Cardinals as an undrafted rookie free agent in 2005. He played in eight games with one start for the Cardinals.

Houston punter Chad Stanley played for the Cardinals from November to December in 2001, playing in four games and punting 19 times.

Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner was teammates with Texans cornerback Dexter McCleon and defensive tackle Jeff Zgonina in St.Louis from 1999-2002. All played key roles in the Rams victory in Super Bowl XXXIV in which Warner was named MVP.

Cardinals defensive end Bertrand Berry played for the Denver Broncos from 2001-03 while Texans head coach Gary Kubiak served as offensive coordinator.

Texans rookie quarterback Jared Zabransky was named the Offensive Most Valuable Player in his final collegiate game, the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl that was held at University of Phoenix Stadium. Zabransky’s Boise State team pulled out a thrilling 43-42 victory over Oklahoma.

Cardinals cornerback Antrel Rolle (2001-04) was teammates with Texans wide receiver Andre Johnson(2001-02) and tackle Eric Winston (2002-05) at the Univeristy of Miami. Rolle and Johnson helped Miami win the 2001 National Championship and Rolle and Winston assisted Miami in the 2002 National Championship game in Tempe.

In 1997 Cardinals fullback Terrelle Smith played with Texans free safety Jason Simmons at Arizona State University. Houston center Drew Hodgdon was also a Sun Devil from 2000-04.

Houston tackle Kevin Barry attended the University of Arizona where he was a two-year starter (2000-01). Played in 22 games during his career with the Wildcats, making 18 starts.

THE YOUNG AND THE TALENTED

The Cardinals have a wealth of talent on both the offensive and defensive sides of the field. Among them are Pro Bowlers, up-and-coming stars and NFL record holders. Not only are they talented, they are young as well.

Here is a look at some of the Cardinals starters and their ages:

Offense Defense WR Boldin 26 DE Berry 31 RG Lutui 24 DT Dockett 26 LG Wells 26 DT Watson 23 RT Brown 23 DT Branch 22 TE Pope 23 LB Dansby 25 WR Fitzgerald 23 LB Hayes 26 WR B. Johnson 26 CB Rolle 24 QB Leinart 24 CB Green 25 RB James 29 SS Wilson 27

INJURY BUG HITS CARDINALS

The Cardinals managed to remain healthy for the first few weeks of training camp but they came out of their first preseason game with no such luck.

Starting linebacker Chike Okeafor and starting right tackle Oliver Ross were both injured during the preseason opener at Oakland last weekend.

Okeafor, who led the Cardinals in sacks in 2006, tore his bicep muscle and Ross tore a tricep muscle. Both will get second opinions before any further action is taken.

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FRESH FROM HAWAII

Cardinals strong safety Adrian Wilson enters the 2007 season the way he feels he should have entered the last couple of seasons, fresh off a Pro Bowl appearance.

Wilson made it virtually impossible for voters to keep him away from Hawaii with his performance in 2006. The seventh year pro became the first player in NFL history with two touchdowns of 99+ yards in the same season after he returned both an interception and a fumble for touchdowns.

On October 1 at Atlanta, Wilson picked off a Michael Vick pass that turned what might have been a 16-3 second quarter lead into a 10-9 Cardinals lead when he ran it back 99 yards for the third touchdown of his career.

On November 26 he scooped up a Chester Taylor fumble in the fourth quarter and returned it for a touchdown as the Vikings tried to put away the game in the fourth quarter.

Along with becoming the only defenseman with two 99-yard touchdowns in the same season, Wilson became the only NFL player in history with multiple 99-yarders without the benefit of a kickoff return.

Wilson rounded out his Pro Bowl season by leading the team in interceptions (4), forced fumbles (4), fumble recoveries (2, tie), tackles for a loss (8), and was third in tackles (87) and fourth in sacks (5).

BOLDIN STILL BREAKING RECORDS

In his first four seasons with the Cardinals, Anquan Boldin has recorded 342 receptions, topping the 100-catch mark in two of those three seasons.

Boldin was the fastest player to reach 200 receptions, reaching the milestone in 2005. In 2006, Boldin became the fastest receiver ever to 300 receptions.

After 56 career games, Boldin’s 342 receptions top even the most elite receivers in NFL history. Names like Jerry Rice, Michael Irvin, Tim Brown and Marvin Harrison have number well below Boldin’s. In fact, Boldin’s 342 receptions are 64 more than the next closest on that list, Marvin Harrison, who had 278.

Boldin became the fastest to 300 receptions on October 22 in Oakland during his 47th career game. That was seven games than the previous record holder Lionel Taylor of Denver.

Below is a history of Boldin’s receiving milestones:

Receptions # of Games Opponent, Date 50 9 @ Pit, 11/9/03 100 16 vs. Min, 12/28/03 150 25 @ Sea, 12/26/04 200 34 @ StL, 11/20/05 250 39 vs. Phi, 12/24/05 300 47 @ Oak, 10/22/06

BERRY RETURNS

Cardinals defensive end Bertrand Berry is no stranger to adversity, or overcoming it.

Originally drafted by the Colts as a linebacker, Berry moved to defensive end early in his career. Following his stint with the Colts, Berry signed with the St. Louis Rams but didn’t make it through training camp.

Berry then spent 2000 out of football. After a try out with the Denver Broncos on New Years Day 2001, Berry signed with the Broncos where he spent three seasons before signing with the Cardinals in 2004.

After recording an NFC high 14.5 sacks and being named to his first career Pro Bowl in 2004, Berry was on pace for another trip to Hawaii in 2005, recording six sacks in the first eight games before suffering a pectoral muscle injury vs. Seattle (11/6/05) and was placed on injured reserve.

Berry headed into the 2006 season healthy and ready to chase down opposing quarterbacks. Berry was again back to form, collecting six sacks in the final five games he played before suffering a triceps injury vs. Detroit (11/19/106). For the second time in two years, one of the Cardinals unquestioned defensive leaders had to be placed on injured reserve.

Back at full health, Berry enters the 2007 ready to reclaim his spot as one of the league’s premiere pass rushers.

SO YOUNG IT IS SCARY

Larry Fitzgerald has had, when compared to many, a career already in the NFL. He has a Pro Bowl appearance, 3,135 yards receiving on 230 receptions and nine career 100-yard games.

Entering his fourth season in the NFL, the scariest thing about Fitzgerald is that he is only going to get better as he gets older.

At 23 years of age, Fitzgerald is the second youngest receiver on the team despite the fact that he has started in 45 games already. He established the franchise record for receptions in a season with 103 in 2005, only his second year in the NFL. In fact, at 22 years and 123 days, Fitzgerald became the youngest receiver in NFL history to record a 100-catch campaign when he reached the milestone at Indianapolis on 1/1/06.

In 2006, Fitzgerald missed the first action of his NFL career when he had to sit out weeks 6-8 with a hamstring injury. Despite the missed time, Fitzgerald fell only 54 yards short of his second consecutive 1,000-yard season.

In 2007, Fitzgerald can reach a few more milestones if he continues at his current pace. He can:

� Become only the eighth receiver in Cardinals history with two 1,000-yard seasons.

� Reach 4,000 career receiving yards with 865 yards in 2007.

� With 70 receptions, he will reach 300 for his career.

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CARDS RECENT TRANSACTIONS

Fri, Aug. 3 Released G T.J. Downing.

Thurs, Aug. 2 Signed T Levi Brown (first round, 5th

overall, Penn State, to a six-year contract.

Thurs, Aug. 2 Signed S Oliver Celestin to a one-year contract.

Wed, Jul. 25 Signed DT Alan Branch (second round, 33rd overall, Michigan) to a four-year contract.

Thur, Jul. 19 Signed LB Buster Davis (third round, 69th

overall, Florida State) to a three-year contract.

Tues, Jun. 19 Signed WR Steve Breaston (fifth round, 142nd overall, Michigan) to a three-year contract.

Mon, Jun. 18 Signed TE Ben Patrick (seventh round, 215th overall, Delaware) to a three-year contract.

Tues, Jun. 5 Released FB Obafemi Ayanbadejo, GMilford Brown, and DT Kendrick Clancy.

Tues, May 29 Signed TE Tim Euhus to a one-year contract and released WR Evan Prall.

ROOKIE FREE AGENTS

Making the roster as an undrafted rookie free agent is a tall task in the NFL. The Cardinals enter the 2007 preseason with 17 players trying to become the next Aaron Francisco or Marcel Shipp.

CB Michael Adams-Was the number one cornerback at Louisiana-Lafayette and was also the team’s leading punt returner. CB Travarous Bain-At Northwestern (FL) High School, was a two-time Foot Locker All-America performer in track.RB Steve Baylark-Was given the Marcel Shipp ironman Award as a senior, named after the current Cardinals running back. DT Ray Blagman-Was a strong all-around athlete who lettered in football, track and wrestling at Roosevelt (NY) High School. FB Tim Castille-His brother, Simeon, is a senior defensive back for Alabama and his father, Jeremiah, was an All-America defensive back for the Tide. G Jon Hameister-Ries-Did not play football until his senior year at Strathcona High School in Edmonton, Alberta. LB David Holloway-His father, Brian, was an NFL All-Pro who played for the New England Patriots and Los Angeles Raiders while his maternal grandfather, Johnny “Pie” McKenzie, played in the NHL for the Boston Bruins. G Brian Johnson-A versatile lineman who started 28 times in 44 career games, his starts came at right guard (12), right tackle (15) and left guard (1). S Brandon Keeler-Won the State 4A Championship in the long jump and 110 hurdles as a senior while placing fifth in the 300 hurdles and sixth in the triple jump. QB Toby Korrodi-Married his high school sweetheart, Laura, and has two sons—Toby and Jacob, and a daughter, Carly. P Ricky Schmitt-Did not play football at Salem (VA) High School until his senior season and was named an All-Beach District punter/kicker in his lone season. G Lyle Sendlein-A Scottsdale, AZ native, he attended Chaparral High School. His father, Robin, was a linebacker at UT (1977-80) and played eight years in the NFL for Minnesota, Miami and Houston. Brother, Austin, was also a letter winner for the Longhorns from 2002-03. FB BranDon Snow-Awarded the 2001 Gatorade Player-of-the-Year Award for the state of Deleware after earning first-team All-State fullback and second-team All-State linebacker honors. LB Pago Togafau-Lettered in football at Long Beach (CA) Poly High School, one of the nation’s top prep programs and was a first-team All-Moore League selection. WR Matt Trannon-As a three-year letterman in basketball for the MSU Spartans, was a member of the 2004-2005 team, appearing in 26 games, that advanced to the NCAA Final Four in St. Louis. Is the cousin of former Cardinals defensive back (1985-91) and current scout Lonnie Young. T Elliott Vallejo-After transferring from UCLA to California-Davis following the 2002 season, went on to start 32 consecutive games to finish his college career. FB Roshon Vercher-Appeared in 44 games for Fresno State and was the lead blocker for four consecutive 1,000-yard rushers during his days with the Bulldogs.

JUST 100 MORE

Cardinals placekicker Neil Rackers is coming off back-to-back 100+ point seasons, something accomplished one other time in Cardinals history.

Cardinals back Pat Harder was the first player in NFL history to have three consecutive 100-point seasons (1947-49).

If Rackers can make it three years in a row with at least 100 points he will not only share the franchise record with Harder, but he will also move into second place on the Cardinals all-time points list. He needs exactly 100 points to move ahead of Greg Davis, who currently sits in second place with 484 career points. Cardinal great Jim Bakken holds the Cardinals career points record with 1,380.

All-Time Points LeadersPlayer, Years Points Jim Bakken, 1962-78 1,380 Greg Davis, 1991-96 484 Neil O’Donoghue, 1980-85 439 Roy Green, 1979-90 414 Pat Harder, 1946-50 389 Bobby Joe Conrad, 1958-68 389 Neil Rackers, 2003- 385 Sonny Randle, 1959-66 360

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STRENGTH OF SCHEDULE

The Cardinals enter the 2007 season with the easiest schedule among the 32 teams in the NFL based on 2006 records.

The Oakland Raiders and Buffalo Bills are tied for the hardest schedule. Their opponents went 138-118 (.539) in 2006.

The Cardinals opponents went 118-138 (.461) in 2006. The NFC West has three of the top five easiest schedules in 2007, with the St. Louis Rams and San Francisco 49ers joining the Cardinals.

Here’s a breakdown of the five hardest and five easiest schedules. Chicago, for the second year in a row, has one of the easiest schedules in the NFL.

Five Hardest Team W L Pct.1t. Oakland Raiders 139 117 .543 1t. Buffalo Bills 139 117 .543 3. New England Patriots 138 118 .539 4. Jacksonville Jaguars 138 118 .539 5. Tennessee Titans 136 120 .531

Five Easiest Team W L Pct.28t. St. Louis Rams 121 135 .473 28t. Atlanta Falcons 121 135 .473 30. San Francisco 49ers 120 136 .469 31. Chicago Bears 119 137 .465 32. Arizona Cardinals 118 138 .461

CARDINALS ON THE NFL NETWORK

The NFL Network will be airing 52 preseason games in 29 days in 2007, including a record eight live games.

The Cardinals will appear in two of those live games when the Houston Texans visit Arizona this Saturday, Aug. 18 at 1:00 PM and when the San Diego Chargers come to University of Phoenix Stadium on Saturday, Aug. 25 at 7:00 PM as the second game in an NFL Network doubleheader.

For the simulcasts, the NFL Network will be using the television feeds of local broadcasters and make use of both sets of announcers. For example, when Houston visits Arizona, NFL Network will use the Cardinals announcers in the first half and the Texans announcers in the second half.

The only games the NFL Network will not air during the 2007 preseason are the 13 games that are nationally televised by the NFL’s other network partners—CBS, ESPN, FOX and NBC.

CARDS OPEN ON MNF

For the first time in team history, the Cardinals will open a season on Monday Night Football.

In head coach Ken Whisenhunt’s first regular season appearance, the Cardinals travel to San Francisco to face the 49ers in the second half of a Monday Night doubleheader on ESPN.

“It is special to be on Monday Night Football and to get an opening week Monday Night game is particularly exciting,” said Cardianls head coach Ken Whisenhunt. “Playing a strong and talented team like the 49ers right out of the block will certainly be a good early test for our team.”

The Cardinals have played on Monday Night Footbal 17 times since 1970. Last year the Cardinals hosted the Chicago Bears at University of Phoenix Stadium in the team’s first appearance on MNF since 1999.

This year’s match-up with the 49ers will mark the first MNF road game for the Cardinals since the team traveled to Washington to play the Redskins in 1985.

CARDINALS 2007 SCHEDULE All times MST (Arizona)

Preseason Date Opponent Location Time/Result Aug. 11 at Oak McAfee Coliseum L, 23-27Aug. 18 vs. Hou University of Phoenix Stadium 1:00 PM Aug. 25 vs. SD University of Phoenix Stadium 7:00 PM Aug. 30 at Den Invesco Field 6:00 PM

Regular Season Date Opponent Location Time/Result Sep. 10 at SF# Monster Park 7:15 PM Sep. 16 vs. Sea University of Phoenix Stadium 1:05 PM Sep. 23 at Bal M&T Bank Stadium 10:00 AM Sep. 30 vs. Pit University of Phoenix Stadium 1:15 PM Oct. 7 at StL Edward Jones Dome 10:00 AM Oct. 14 vs. Car University of Phoenix Stadium 1:05 PM Oct. 21 at Was FedEx Field 10:00 AMOct. 28 BYE Nov. 4 at TB Raymond James Stadium 11:00 AM Nov. 11 vs. Det University of Phoenix Stadium 2:15 PM Nov. 18 at Cin* Paul Brown Stadium 11:00 AM Nov. 25 vs. SF* University of Phoenix Stadium 2:05 PM Dec. 2 vs. Cle* University of Phoenix Stadium 2:05 PM Dec. 9 at Sea * Qwest Field 2:05 PMDec. 16 at NO* Louisiana Superdome 11:00 AM Dec. 23 vs. Atl* University of Phoenix Stadium 2:05 PM Dec. 30 vs. StL* University of Phoenix Stadium 2:15 PM

# Denotes Monday Night Football * May be moved to Sunday Night Football

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UPCOMING PRACTICE SCHEDULE Monday, 8/13/07 3:05-4:55 PM

Tuesday, 8/14/07 3:05-5:05 PM

Wednesday, 8/15/07 9:05-10:35 AM 3:05-5:00 PM

Thursday, 8/16/07 3:05-4:55 PM

Friday, 8/17/07 9:00-10:00 AM (Walk Thru) Leave for Phoenix

Saturday, 8/18/06 Cardinals vs. Texans, 1:00 PM

THIS WEEK IN THE NFL All Times Local

Thursday, Aug. 16 Miami at Kansas City 7:00 PM

Friday, Aug. 17 Minnesota at NY Jets 8:00 PM Atlanta at Buffalo 7:00 PM Carolina at Philadelphia 7:00 PM Tennessee at New England 8:00 PM

Saturday, Aug. 18 San Diego at St. Louis 7:00 PM Houston at Arizona 1:00 PM Detroit at Cleveland 7:00 PM New Orleans at Cincinnati 7:30 PM Tampa Bay at Jacksonville 7:30 PM Denver at Dallas 7:00 PM Pittsburgh at Washington 8:00 PM Seattle at Green Bay 7:00 PM Oakland at San Francisco 7:00 PM

Sunday, Aug. 19 NY Giants at Baltimore 8:00 PM

Monday, Aug. 13 Chicago at Indianapolis 8:00 PM

CARDINALS ROSTER FACTS AND FIGURES

� Oldest Cardinals player — Scott Player, 37, Born 12/17/69

� Youngest Cardinals player — Ricky Schmitt, 21, Born 8/17/85

� Most seasons as a Cardinal — Scott Player, 10th Cardinal season

� Most NFL seasons — Bertrand Berry, Scott Player, Kurt Warner -- 10 seasons

� College with the most Cardinals — Florida State – 4 � Largest Cardinal — T Qasim Mitchell, 6-5, 347 � Tallest Cardinal – TE Leonard Pope, 6-8 � Shortest Cardinal — CB Michael Adams, 5-8 � Former 1st-round draft picks — 7, Levi Brown, Bryant

Johnson, Calvin Pace, Larry Fitzgerald, Antrel Rolle, Edgerrin James, Matt Leinart

� Former Pro Bowlers — 8, Scott Player, Kurt Warner, Anquan Boldin, Bertrand Berry, Larry Fitzgerald, Neil Rackers, Edgerrin James, Adrian Wilson, Hanik Milligan

� Coaches who played in the NFL — 6, Maurice Carthon, Russ Grimm, John Lott, Jeff Rutledge, Dedric Ward, Ken Whisenhunt

� Cardinals with NFL Europe experience — 9, Shane Boyd, Greg Lee, Ahmad Merritt, Qasim Mitchell, Sean Morey, Alex Shor, Anotnio Smith, Kurt Warner, Justin Wyatt

� Furthest away from home — WR Sean Morey, Edmonton, Alberta, 1,389.6 miles

� Closest to home — G Deuce Lutui, Mesa, Arizona � Cardinals not from NCAA Division I A schools — 16,

Travarous Bain, Steve Baylark, Chris Cooper, Brandon Keeler, Toby Korrodi, LeRon McCoy, Qasim Mitchell, Sean Morey, Ben Patrick, A.J. Schable, Ricky Schmitt, Marcel Shipp, Pago Togafau, Elliott Vallejo, Kurt Warner, Reggie Wells

� 2007 Rookie Free Agents — 17, Michael Adams, Travarous Bain, Steve Baylark, Ray Blagman, Tim Castille, Jon Hameister-Ries, David Holloway, Brian Johnson, Brandon Keeler, Toby Korrodi, Ricky Schmitt, Lyle Sendlein, BranDon Snow, Pago Togafau, Matt Trannon, Elliott Vallejo, Roshon Vercher

� Cardinals with Playoff Experience – 15, Monty Beisel, Ralph Brown, Chris Cooper, Brandon Gorin, Roderick Hood, Edgerrin James, Al Johnson, Ahmad Merritt, Hanik Milligan, Qasim Mitchell, Sean Morey, Chike Okeafor, Joe Tafoya, Matt Ware, Kurt Warner

� Average Age – 25.3

CARDINALS PRONUNCIATIONS Travarous Bain tra-VAIR-usMonty Beisel BYE-sullBertrand Berry BURR-trend Troy Bienemann BEN-a-men Steve Breaston BREST-in Oliver Celestin Sell-us-teen Jon Hameister-Ries HAM-ister-REESE Ross Kolodziej kuh-LODGE-ee Toby Korrodi kuh-ROAD-ee Deuce Lutui lah-TOO-ee LeRon McCoy luh-RON Hanik Milligan HAN-nick Qasim Mitchell kuh-SEEM A.J. Schable SHAY-bull Pago Togafau PONG-go TON-guh-FOW Elliot Vallejo vuh-LAY-ho

2007 KEY DATES

August 28 Roster cutdown to maximum of 75 September 1 Roster cutdown to maximum of 53 September 2 Clubs may establish practice squad of eight players September 10 Arizona at San Francisco – MNF. October 16 Trading deadline. October 22-24 NFL Fall Meeting (Dallas, Texas) December 29-30 Regular season ends

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Arizona Cardinals / Week 2 / Through Saturday, August 11, 2007 / Preseason

Won 0, Lost 1

8/11/2007 L 23- 27 at Oakland RaidersArizona Opponent

Total First Downs 14 19Rushing 5 11Passing 8 6Penalty 1 23rd Down: Made/Att 3/13 8/173rd Down Pct. 23.1% 47.1%4th Down: Made/Att 0/1 1/24th Down Pct. 0.0% 50.0%

Possession Avg. 26:19 33:41Total Net Yards 266 275

Avg. Per Game 266.0 275.0Total Plays 59 69Avg. Per Play 4.5 4.0

Net Yards Rushing 103 120Avg. Per Game 103.0 120.0Total Rushes 24 35

Net Yards Passing 163 155Avg. Per Game 163.0 155.0Sacked/Yards Lost 3/26 2/15Gross Yards 189 170Attempts/Completions 32/14 32/18Completion Pct. 43.8% 56.3%Had Intercepted 1 0

Punts/Average 6/40.2 5/44.8Net Punting Avg. 28.2 41.2Penalties/Yards 7/59 8/58Fumbles/Ball Lost 0/0 3/1Touchdowns 2 3

Rushing 1 1Passing 1 1Returns 0 1

Score By Periods Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PtsTeam 0 10 13 0 0 23Opponents 0 21 0 6 0 27Scoring TD Ru Pa Rt PAT FG 2Pt PtsN.Rackers 0 0 0 0 2/2 3/3 0 11B.Johnson 1 0 1 0 0/0 0/0 0 6S.Boyd 1 1 0 0 0/0 0/0 0 6Team 2 1 1 0 2/2 3/3 0 23Opponents 3 1 1 1 3/3 2/2 0 272-Pt. Conversions: Team 0/ 0, Opponents: 0/ 0Sacks: C.Cooper 2.0 Team: 2.0, Opponents: 3.0

Rushing No. Yds Avg Long TDM.Shipp 7 35 5.0 8 0J.Arrington 9 32 3.6 8 0S.Boyd 2 17 8.5 9 1S.Baylark 3 9 3.0 3 0A.Boldin 1 7 7.0 7 0E.James 2 3 1.5 2 0Team 24 103 4.3 9 1Opponents 35 120 3.4 13 1

Receiving No. Yds Avg Long TDB.Johnson 3 87 29.0 58t 1A.Boldin 2 17 8.5 12 0A.Merritt 2 13 6.5 7 0L.Fitzgerald 1 20 20.0 20 0T.Watkins 1 13 13.0 13 0L.McCoy 1 9 9.0 9 0M.Spurlock 1 9 9.0 9 0J.Arrington 1 8 8.0 8 0E.James 1 8 8.0 8 0L.Pope 1 5 5.0 5 0Team 14 189 13.5 58t 1Opponents 18 170 9.4 50 1

Interceptions No. Yds Avg Long TDOpponents 1 36 36.0 36t 1

Punting No Yds Avg Net TB In Lg BS.Player 4 167 41.8 28.8 1 0 45 0R.Schmitt 2 74 37.0 27.0 0 0 42 0Team 6 241 40.2 28.2 1 0 45 0Opponents 5 224 44.8 41.2 0 2 64 0

Punt Returns Ret FC Yds Avg Long TDS.Breaston 2 0 18 9.0 14 0Team 2 0 18 9.0 14 0Opponents 3 1 52 17.3 21 0

Kickoff Returns No. Yds Avg Long TDS.Breaston 2 63 31.5 41 0M.Shipp 2 37 18.5 22 0J.Arrington 1 21 21.0 21 0Team 5 121 24.2 41 0Opponents 2 44 22.0 23 0

Field Goals 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+N.Rackers 0/ 0 1/ 1 1/ 1 0/ 0 1/ 1Team 0/ 0 1/ 1 1/ 1 0/ 0 1/ 1Opponents 0/ 0 1/ 1 0/ 0 1/ 1 0/ 0

Fumbles Lost Opponent Fumble Recoveries: A.Branch 1 Total: 1

Passing Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD TD% Int Int% Long Sack Lost RatingK.Warner 2 2 73 100.0% 36.5 1 50.0% 0 0.0% 58t 0/ 0 158.3S.Boyd 19 7 66 36.8% 3.5 0 0.0% 1 5.3% 14 3/ 26 25.3M.Leinart 11 5 50 45.5% 4.5 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 20 0/ 0 58.9Team 32 14 189 43.8% 5.9 1 3.1% 1 3.1% 58t 3/ 26 60.6Opponents 32 18 170 56.3% 5.3 1 3.1% 0 0.0% 50 2/ 15 81.5

Page 1 of 1NFL GameStats Live: ARZ Weekly Report

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ARIZONA CARDINALS 2007 DEPTH CHART

OFFENSE

WR 11 Larry Fitzgerald 80 Bryant Johnson 14 Todd Watkins 19 LeRon McCoy 17 Matt Trannon 84 Greg Lee

LT 69 Mike Gandy 72 Brandon Gorin 73 Qasim Mitchell

LG 74 Reggie Wells 61 Elton Brown 66 Jon Hameister-Ries

C 50 Al Johnson (60 Nick Leckey) 63 Lyle Sendlein

RG 76 Deuce Lutui 65 Brian Johnson

RT (79 Oliver Ross) 75 Levi Brown 68 Elliot Vallejo

TE 82 Leonard Pope 83 Troy Bienemann 39 Tim Euhus 85 John Bronson 89 Ben Patrick 49 Alex Shor

WR 81 Anquan Boldin 87 Sean Morey 15 Micheal Spurlock 86 Ahmad Merritt 18 Steve Breaston

QB 7 Matt Leinart 13 Kurt Warner 9 Shane Boyd 12 Toby Korrodi RB 32 Edgerrin James 31 Marcel Shipp 28 J.J. Arrington 33 Steve Baylark FB 45 Terrelle Smith 46 Tim Castille 39 BranDon Snow 36 Roshon Vercher

(44 A.J. Schable) DEFENSE

LDE 94 Antonio Smith (95 Jonathan Lewis) 96 Ross Kolodziej

NT 98 Gabe Watson 78 Alan Branch 62 Ray Blagman

DT 90 Darnell Dockett 93 Chris Cooper 91 Rodney Bailiey

RDE 92 Bertrand Berry 97 Calvin Pace 71 Joe Tafoya

SLB (56 Chike Okeafor) 55 Darryl Blackstock 57 David Holloway

MLB 54 Gerald Hayes 52 Monty Beisel 51 Pago Togafau

WLB 58 Karlos Dansby 59 Brandon Johnson 53 Buster Davis

LCB 21 Antrel Rolle 23 Darrell Hunter 29 Justin Wyatt 41 Travarous Bain

SS 24 Adrian Wilson 38 Brandon Keeler 37 Hanik Milligan 35 Oliver Celestin

FS 47 Aaron Francisco 42 Terrence Holt 22 Matt Ware

RCB 25 Eric Green 26 Rod Hood 20 Ralph Brown 27 Michael Adams

SPECIALISTS

K 1 Neil Rackers 2 Ricky Schmitt

P 10 Scott Player 2 Ricky Schmitt

LS 48 Nathan Hodel 83 Troy Bienemann

H 10 Scott Player 87 Sean Morey 2 Ricky Schmitt

KR 31 Marcel Shipp 28 J.J. Arrington 18 Steve Breaston 87 Sean Morey

PR 18 Steve Breaston 15 Micheal Spurlock 80 Bryant Johnson 26 Rod Hood

NOTE: Rookies are underlined; Injured players in parentheses

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No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. AgeNFLExp. College

HowAcquired

2006GP-GS-DNP-IA

1 Neil Rackers K 6-1 202 30 8 Illinois FA-03 16-0-0-02 Ricky Schmitt P/K 6-2 205 21 R Shepherd FA-07 N/A7 Matt Leinart QB 6-5 232 24 2 USC D1-06 12-11-3-19 Shane Boyd QB 6-1 224 24 1 Kentucky FA-06 0-0-0-110 Scott Player P 6-1 206 37 10 Florida State FA-98 16-0-0-011 Larry Fitzgerald WR 6-3 226 23 4 Pittsburgh D1-04 13-13-0-312 Toby Korrodi QB 6-3 228 23 R Central Missouri FA-07 N/A13 Kurt Warner QB 6-2 222 36 10 Northern Iowa UFA-05 (NYG) 6-5-10-014 Todd Watkins WR 6-2 186 24 1 Brigham Young D7-06 0-0-0-115 Micheal Spurlock WR 5-10 208 24 2 Mississippi FA-06 1-0-0-017 Matt Trannon WR 6-6 225 24 R Michigan State FA-07 N/A18 Steve Breaston WR 6-0 189 23 R Michigan D5-07 N/A19 LeRon McCoy WR 6-1 217 25 3 Indiana (PA) D7-05 0-0-0-020 Ralph Brown CB 5-10 185 28 8 Nebraska UFA-07 (Clev) 16-4-0-021 Antrel Rolle CB 6-0 208 24 3 Miami D1-05 16-16-0-022 Matt Ware S 6-2 214 24 4 UCLA WV-06 (Phi) 14-1-0-223 Darrell Hunter CB 6-1 212 23 2 Miami (OH) FA-06 3-0-0-124 Adrian Wilson SS 6-3 230 27 7 North Carolina State D3-01 16-16-0-025 Eric Green CB 5-11 195 25 3 Virginia Tech D3a-05 15-8-0-126 Roderick Hood CB 5-11 198 25 5 Auburn UFA-07 (Phi) 10-5-0-627 Michael Adams CB 5-8 181 22 R Louisiana-Lafayette FA-07 N/A28 J.J. Arrington RB 5-9 212 24 3 California D2-05 16-0-0-029 Justin Wyatt CB 5-9 191 23 1 USC FA-06 0-0-0-031 Marcel Shipp RB 5-11 224 28 7 Massachusetts FA-01 15-0-0-132 Edgerrin James RB 6-0 220 29 9 Miami UFA-06 (Ind) 16-16-0-033 Steve Baylark RB 6-0 224 24 R Massachusetts FA-07 N/A34 BranDon Snow FB 6-0 242 24 R Penn State FA-07 N/A35 Oliver Celestin SS 6-0 207 26 4 Texas Southern FA-07 13-0-0-336 Roshon Vercher FB 5-11 250 23 R Fresno State FA-07 N/A37 Hanik Milligan SS 6-3 209 27 5 Houston WV-06 (SD) 16-0-0-038 Brandon Keeler S 6-3 216 22 R Eastern Washington FA-07 N/A39 Tim Euhus TE 6-5 256 26 4 Oregon State FA-07 1-0-0-341 Travarous Bain CB 6-0 182 23 R Hampton FA-07 N/A42 Terrence Holt FS 6-2 204 27 5 North Carolina State UFA-07 (Det) 16-15-0-044 A.J. Schable FB 6-3 269 23 2 South Dakota FA-06 11-0-0-545 Terrelle Smith FB 6-0 250 29 8 Arizona State UFA-07 (Clev) 16-8-0-046 Tim Castille FB 5-11 234 23 R Alabama FA-07 N/A47 Aaron Francisco FS 6-2 207 24 3 Brigham Young FA-05 16-2-0-048 Nathan Hodel LS 6-2 238 29 6 Illinois FA-01 16-0-0-049 Alex Shor TE 6-7 250 24 1 Syracuse FA-06 0-0-0-050 Al Johnson C 6-5 305 28 5 Wisconsin UFA-07 (Dal) 16-0-0-051 Pago Togafau MLB 5-10 242 23 R Idaho State FA-07 N/A52 Monty Beisel MLB 6-3 244 28 7 Kansas State FA-06 8-2-0-053 Buster Davis LB 5-9 242 23 R Florida State D3-07 N/A54 Gerald Hayes MLB 6-1 249 26 5 Pittsburgh D3-03 14-14-0-255 Darryl Blackstock OLB 6-3 244 24 3 Virginia D3b-05 16-1-0-056 Chike Okeafor OLB 6-5 247 31 9 Purdue UFA-05 (Sea) 16-15-0-057 David Holloway LB 6-2 234 23 R Maryland FA-07 N/A58 Karlos Dansby LB 6-4 250 25 4 Auburn D2-04 14-10-0-259 Brandon Johnson OLB 6-5 232 24 2 Louisville D5-06 3-0-0-1360 Nick Leckey C 6-3 300 25 4 Kansas State D6-04 14-11-2-061 Elton Brown G 6-5 332 25 3 Virginia D4-05 0-0-0-1662 Ray Blagman DT 6-2 328 23 R Connecticut FA-07 N/A63 Lyle Sendlein C 6-2 300 23 R Texas FA-07 N/A65 Brian Johnson G 6-4 312 23 R LSU FA-07 N/A66 Jon Hameister-Ries G 6-6 308 23 R Tulsa FA-07 N/A68 Elliot Vallejo T 6-7 312 23 R Cal-Davis FA-07 N/A69 Mike Gandy T 6-4 308 28 7 Notre Dame UFA-07 (Buf) 16-16-0-071 Joe Tafoya DE 6-4 258 28 6 Arizona UFA-07 (Sea) 13-0-0-372 Brandon Gorin T 6-6 309 29 6 Purdue TR-06 (NE) 0-0-2-1473 Qasim Mitchell T 6-5 325 27 5 North Carolina A&T FA-07 0-0-0-074 Reggie Wells G 6-4 305 26 5 Clarion (Pa.) D6a-03 16-16-0-075 Levi Brown T 6-5 322 23 R Penn State D1-07 N/A76 Deuce Lutui G 6-4 328 24 2 USC D2-06 15-9-0-178 Alan Branch DT 6-5 332 22 R Michigan D2-07 N/A79 Oliver Ross T 6-4 310 32 9 Iowa State UFA-05 (Pitt) 11-5-4-180 Bryant Johnson WR 6-3 213 26 5 Penn State D1a-03 16-8-0-081 Anquan Boldin WR 6-1 217 26 5 Florida State D2-03 16-16-0-082 Leonard Pope TE 6-8 258 23 2 Georgia D3-06 16-6-0-083 Troy Bienemann TE 6-5 253 24 1 Washington State FA-07 0-0-0-084 Greg Lee WR 6-1 201 22 1 Pittsburgh FA-06 0-0-0-085 John Bronson TE 6-3 267 25 3 Penn State FA-05 2-0-0-286 Ahmad Merritt WR 5-10 197 30 4 Wisconsin FA-07 0-0-0-087 Sean Morey WR 5-11 193 31 6 Brown UFA-07 (Pitt) 16-0-0-089 Ben Patrick TE 6-3 254 22 R Delaware D7-07 N/A90 Darnell Dockett DT 6-4 285 26 4 Florida State D3-04 16-16-0-091 Rodney Bailey DE 6-3 309 27 7 Ohio State UFA-07 (Pitt) 12-0-0-492 Bertrand Berry DE 6-3 264 31 10 Notre Dame UFA-04 (Den) 10-10-0-093 Chris Cooper DT/DE 6-5 280 29 6 Nebraska-Omaha FA-06 13-0-0-094 Antonio Smith DE 6-4 282 25 4 Oklahoma State D5-04 16-8-0-095 Jonathan Lewis DT 6-1 285 23 2 Virginia Tech D6-06 4-0-0-1296 Ross Kolodziej DT 6-3 289 29 7 Wisconsin UFA-07 (Minn) 12-0-0-497 Calvin Pace DE 6-4 270 26 5 Wake Forest D1b-03 16-5-0-098 Gabe Watson DT 6-3 332 23 2 Michigan D4-06 12-5-0-4

ARIZONA CARDINALS NUMERIC ROSTER

Head Coach: Ken Whisenhunt. Assistants: Russ Grimm (assistant head coach/offensive line), Clancy Pendergast (defensive coordinator), Todd Haley (offensivecoordinator), Ron Aiken (defensive line), Teryl Austin (defensive backs), Maurice Carthon (running backs), Rick Courtright (assistant defensive backs), Billy Davis (linebackers), Freddie Kitchens (tight ends), John Lott (strength and conditioning), MikeMiller (wide receivers), Matt Raich (defensive assistant), Jeff Rutledge (quarterbacks), Kevin Spencer (special teams), Dedric Ward (offensive quality control).

2007 Coaching Staff

8/13/2007

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No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Birth DateNFL Exp. College Hometown

27 Adams, Michael CB 5-8 181 6/17/1985 R Louisiana-Lafayette Dallas, TX28 Arrington, J.J. RB 5-9 212 1/23/1983 3 California Nashville, NC91 Bailey, Rodney DE 6-3 309 10/7/1979 7 Ohio State Cleveland, OH41 Bain, Travarous CB 6-0 182 10/15/1983 R Hampton Miami, FL33 Baylark, Steve RB 6-0 224 7/28/1983 R Massachusetts Apopka, FL52 Beisel, Monty MLB 6-3 244 8/20/1978 7 Kansas State Douglass, KS92 Berry, Bertrand DE 6-3 264 8/15/1975 10 Notre Dame Houston, TX83 Bienemann, Troy TE 6-5 253 2/18/1983 1 Washington State Mountain View, CA55 Blackstock, Darryl OLB 6-3 244 5/30/1983 3 Virginia Newport News, VA62 Blagman, Ray DT 6-2 328 6/1/1984 R Connecticut Roosevelt, NY81 Boldin, Anquan WR 6-1 217 10/3/1980 5 Florida State Pahokee, FL9 Boyd, Shane QB 6-1 224 11/18/1982 1 Kentucky Lexington, KY78 Branch, Alan DT 6-5 332 12/29/1984 R Michigan Rio Rancho, NM18 Breaston, Steve WR 6-0 189 8/20/1983 R Michigan North Braddock, PA85 Bronson, John TE 6-3 267 7/8/1982 3 Penn State Kent, WA61 Brown, Elton G 6-5 332 5/22/1982 3 Virginia Hampton, VA75 Brown, Levi T 6-5 322 3/16/1984 R Penn State Norfolk, VA20 Brown, Ralph CB 5-10 185 9/16/1978 8 Nebraska LaPuenta, CA46 Castille, Tim FB 5-11 234 5/29/1984 R Alabama Birmingham, AL35 Celestin, Oliver S 6-0 207 2/25/1981 4 Texas Southern New Orleans, LA93 Cooper, Chris DT/DE 6-5 280 12/27/1977 6 Nebraska-Omaha Rochester, MN58 Dansby, Karlos LB 6-4 250 11/3/1981 4 Auburn Birmingham, AL53 Davis, Buster LB 5-9 242 10/20/1983 R Florida State Daytona Beach, FL90 Dockett, Darnell DT 6-4 285 5/27/1981 4 Florida State Burtonsville, MD39 Euhus, Tim TE 6-5 256 10/2/1980 4 Oregon State Eugene, OR11 Fitzgerald, Larry WR 6-3 226 8/31/1983 4 Pittsburgh Minneapolis, MN47 Francisco, Aaron FS 6-2 207 7/5/1983 3 Brigham Young Laie, HI69 Gandy, Mike T 6-4 308 1/3/1979 7 Notre Dame Dallas, TX72 Gorin, Brandon T 6-6 309 7/17/1978 6 Purdue Muncie, IN25 Green, Eric CB 5-11 195 3/16/1982 3 Virginia Tech Pahokee, FL66 Hameister-Ries, Jon G 6-6 308 1/26/1984 R Tulsa Edmonton, Alberta54 Hayes, Gerald MLB 6-1 249 10/10/1980 5 Pittsburgh Paterson, NJ48 Hodel, Nathan LS 6-2 238 11/12/1977 6 Illinois Fairview Heights, IL57 Holloway, David LB 6-2 234 12/4/1983 R Maryland Stephentown, NY42 Holt, Terrence FS 6-2 204 3/5/1980 5 North Carolina State Gibsonville, NC26 Hood, Roderick CB 5-11 198 10/3/1981 5 Auburn Columbus, GA23 Hunter, Darrell CB 6-1 212 11/29/1983 2 Miami (OH) Middletown, OH32 James, Edgerrin RB 6-0 220 8/1/1978 9 Miami Immokalee, FL50 Johnson, Al C 6-5 305 1/27/1979 5 Wisconsin Brussels, WI59 Johnson, Brandon OLB 6-5 232 5/5/1983 2 Louisville Birmingham, AL65 Johnson, Brian G 6-4 312 3/24/1984 R LSU Tallahassee, FL80 Johnson, Bryant WR 6-3 213 3/7/1981 5 Penn State Baltimore, MD38 Keeler, Brandon S 6-3 216 8/17/1984 R Eastern Washington Federal Way, WA96 Kolodziej, Ross DT 6-3 289 5/11/1978 7 Wisconsin Plover, WI12 Korrodi, Toby QB 6-3 228 9/20/1983 R Central Missouri San Antonio, TX60 Leckey, Nick C 6-3 300 3/12/1982 4 Kansas State Grapevine, TX84 Lee, Greg WR 6-1 201 10/19/1984 1 Pittsburgh Tampa, FL7 Leinart, Matt QB 6-5 232 5/11/1983 2 USC Santa Ana, CA95 Lewis, Jonathan DT 6-1 285 7/12/1984 2 Virginia Tech Richmond, VA76 Lutui, Deuce G 6-4 328 5/5/1983 2 USC Mesa, AZ19 McCoy, LeRon WR 6-1 217 1/24/1982 3 Indiana (Pa.) Harrisburg, PA86 Merritt, Ahmad WR 5-10 197 2/5/1977 4 Wisconsin Chicago, IL37 Milligan, Hanik SS 6-3 209 11/3/1979 5 Houston Coconut Creek, FL73 Mitchell, Qasim T 6-5 325 12/3/1979 5 North Carolina A&T Jacksonville, NC87 Morey, Sean WR 5-11 193 2/26/1976 6 Brown Marshfield, MA56 Okeafor, Chike OLB 6-5 247 3/27/1976 9 Purdue Grand Rapids, MI97 Pace, Calvin DE 6-4 270 10/28/1980 5 Wake Forest Douglasville, GA89 Patrick, Ben TE 6-3 254 8/23/1984 R Delaware Savannah, GA10 Player, Scott P 6-1 206 12/17/1969 10 Florida State St. Augustine, FL82 Pope, Leonard TE 6-8 258 9/10/1983 2 Georgia Americus, GA1 Rackers, Neil K 6-1 202 8/16/1976 8 Illinois St. Louis, MO21 Rolle, Antrel CB 6-0 208 12/16/1982 3 Miami Homestead, FL79 Ross, Oliver T 6-4 310 9/27/1974 9 Iowa State Los Angeles, CA44 Schable, A.J. FB 6-3 269 5/18/1984 2 South Dakota Ida Grove, IA2 Schmitt, Ricky P/K 6-2 205 8/17/1985 R Shepherd Virginia Beach, VA63 Sendlein, Lyle G 6-2 300 3/16/1984 R Texas Scottsdale, AZ31 Shipp, Marcel RB 5-11 224 8/8/1978 7 Massachusetts Paterson, NJ49 Shor, Alex TE 6-7 250 1/29/1983 1 Syracuse Panama City, FL94 Smith, Antonio DE 6-4 282 10/21/1981 4 Oklahoma State Oklahoma City, OK45 Smith, Terrelle FB 6-0 250 3/12/1978 8 Arizona State West Covina, CA34 Snow, BranDon FB 6-0 242 6/9/1983 R Penn State Wilmington, DE15 Spurlock, Micheal WR 5-10 208 1/31/1983 2 Mississippi Indianola, MS71 Tafoya, Joe DE 6-4 258 9/6/1978 6 Arizona Pittsburg, CA51 Togafau, Pago MLB 5-10 242 1/10/1984 R Idaho State Long Beach, CA17 Trannon, Matt WR 6-6 225 7/22/1983 R Michigan State Flint, MI68 Vallejo, Elliott T 6-7 312 5/17/1984 R Cal-Davis Salinas, CA36 Vercher, Roshon FB 5-11 250 12/15/1983 R Fresno State Bakersfield, CA22 Ware, Matt S 6-2 214 12/2/1982 4 UCLA Los Angeles, CA13 Warner, Kurt QB 6-2 222 6/22/1971 10 Northern Iowa Burlington, IA14 Watkins, Todd WR 6-2 186 6/22/1983 1 Brigham Young San Diego, CA98 Watson, Gabe DT 6-3 332 9/24/1983 2 Michigan Southfield, MI74 Wells, Reggie G 6-4 305 11/3/1980 5 Clarion (PA) Library, PA24 Wilson, Adrian SS 6-3 230 10/12/1979 7 North Carolina State High Point, NC29 Wyatt, Justin CB 5-9 191 1/27/1984 1 USC Compton, CA

ARIZONA CARDINALS ALPHA ROSTER

8/13/2007

Cardinals vs. Texans Page 19 of 23 www.azcardinals.com

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No. Name Pos. College Ht. Wt. Age NFL Exp.

62 Ray Blagman DT Connecticut 6-2 328 23 R78 Alan Branch DT Michigan 6-5 332 22 R90 Darnell Dockett DT Florida State 6-4 285 26 496 Ross Kolodziej DT Wisconsin 6-3 289 29 795 Jonathan Lewis DT Virginia Tech 6-1 285 23 298 G b W DT Mi hi 6 3 332 23 2

Defensive Tackles (6)

Roster By Postion

98 Gabe Watson DT Michigan 6-3 332 23 2

91 Rodney Bailey DE Ohio State 6-3 309 27 792 Bertrand Berry DE Notre Dame 6-3 264 31 1093 Chris Cooper DE Nebraska-Omaha 6-5 280 29 697 Calvin Pace DE Wake Forest 6-4 270 26 594 Antonio Smith DE Oklahoma State 6-4 282 25 471 Joe Tafoya DE Arizona 6-4 258 28 6

52 Monty Beisel MLB Kansas State 6-3 244 28 755 Darryl Blackstock OLB Virginia 6-3 244 24 358 Karlos Dansby LB Auburn 6-4 250 25 4

Defensive Ends (6)

Linebackers (9)

53 Buster Davis LB Florida State 5-9 242 23 R54 Gerald Hayes MLB Pittsburgh 6-1 249 26 557 David Holloway LB Maryland 6-2 234 23 R59 Brandon Johnson OLB Louisville 6-5 232 24 256 Chike Okeafor OLB Purdue 6-5 247 31 951 Pago Togafau MLB Idaho State 5-10 242 23 R

27 Michael Adams CB Louisiana-Lafayette 5-8 181 22 R41 Travarous Bain CB Hampton 6-0 182 23 R20 Ralph Brown CB Nebraska 5-10 185 28 825 Eric Green CB Virginia Tech 5-11 195 25 326 Roderick Hood CB Auburn 5-11 198 25 523 Darrell Hunter CB Miami (OH) 6-1 212 23 2

Cornerbacks (8)

( )21 Antrel Rolle CB Miami 6-0 208 24 329 Justin Wyatt CB USC 5-9 191 23 1

47 Aaron Francisco FS Brigham Young 6-2 207 24 335 Oliver Celestin SS Texas Southern 6-0 207 26 442 Terrence Holt FS North Carolina State 6-2 204 27 538 Brandon Keeler S Eastern Washington 6-3 216 22 R37 Hanik Milligan SS Houston 6-3 209 27 522 Matt Ware S UCLA 6-2 214 24 424 Adrian Wilson SS North Carolina State 6-3 230 27 7

48 Nathan Hodel LS Illinois 6-2 238 29 6

Safeties (7)

Long Snapper (1)

10 Scott Player P Florida State 6-1 206 37 102 Ricky Schmitt P/K Shepherd 6-2 205 21 R

1 Neil Rackers K Illnois 6-1 202 30 8

61 Elton Brown G Virginia 6-5 332 25 375 Levi Brown T Penn State 6-5 322 23 R69 Mike Gandy T Notre Dame 6-4 308 28 772 Brandon Gorin T Purdue 6-6 309 29 666 Jon Hameister-Ries G Tulsa 6-6 308 23 R50 Al J h C Wi i 6 5 305 28 5

Punter (2)

Kicker (1)

Offensive Line (14)

50 Al Johnson C Wisconsin 6-5 305 28 565 Brian Johnson G LSU 6-4 312 23 R60 Nick Leckey C Kansas State 6-3 300 25 476 Deuce Lutui G USC 6-4 328 24 273 Qasim Mitchell T North Carolina A&T 6-5 325 27 579 Oliver Ross T Iowa State 6-4 310 32 963 Lyle Sendlein C Texas 6-2 300 23 R68 Elliot Vallejo T Cal-Davis 6-7 312 23 R74 Reggie Wells G Clarion (Pa.) 6-4 305 26 5

83 Troy Bienemann TE Washington State 6-5 253 24 185 John Bronson TE Penn State 6-3 267 25 339 Tim Euhus TE Oregon State 6-5 256 26 4

Tight Ends (6)

89 Ben Patrick TE Delaware 6-3 254 22 R82 Leonard Pope TE Georgia 6-8 258 23 249 Alex Shor TE Syracuse 6-7 250 24 1

28 J.J. Arrington RB California 5-9 212 24 333 Steve Baylark RB Massachusetts 6-0 224 24 R46 Tim Castille FB Alabama 5-11 234 23 R32 Edgerrin James RB Miami 6-0 220 29 944 A.J. Schable FB South Dakota 6-3 269 23 231 Marcel Shipp RB Massachusetts 5-11 224 29 745 Terrelle Smith FB Arizona State 6-0 250 29 834 BranDon Snow FB Penn State 6-0 242 24 R36 Roshon Vercher FB Fresno State 5-11 250 23 R

Running Backs (9)

36 Roshon Vercher FB Fresno State 5 11 250 23 R

81 Anquan Boldin WR Florida State 6-1 217 26 518 Steve Breaston WR Michigan 6-0 189 23 R11 Larry Fitzgerald WR Pittsburgh 6-3 226 23 480 Bryant Johnson WR Penn State 6-3 213 26 584 Greg Lee WR Pittsburgh 6-1 201 22 119 LeRon McCoy WR Indiana (PA) 6-1 217 25 386 Ahmad Merritt WR Wisconsin 5-10 197 30 487 Sean Morey WR Brown 5-11 193 31 615 Micheal Spurlock WR Mississippi 5-10 208 24 217 Matt Trannon WR Michigan State 6-6 225 24 R14 Todd Watkins WR Brigham Young 6-2 186 24 1

Wide Receivers (11)

9 Shane Boyd QB Kentucky 6-1 224 24 112 Toby Korrodi QB Central Missouri 6-3 228 23 R7 Matt Leinart QB USC 6-5 232 24 213 Kurt Warner QB N. Iowa 6-2 222 36 10

Quarterbacks (4)

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DRAFT WAIVERS TRADES 1998 Scott Player

2001 Adrian Wilson (3) Nathan Hodel Marcel Shipp (R)

2003 Bryant Johnson (1a) Calvin Pace (1b) Anquan Boldin (2) Gerald Hayes (3) Reggie Wells (6a)

Neil Rackers

2004 Larry Fitzgerald (1) Karlos Dansby (2) Darnell Dockett (3) Antonio Smith (5) Nick Leckey (6)

Bertrand Berry (Den)

2005 Antrel Rolle (1) J.J. Arrington (2) Eric Green (3a) Darryl Blackstock (3b) Elton Brown (4) LeRon McCoy (7)

John Bronson (R) Aaron Francisco (R) Chike Okeafor (Sea) Oliver Ross (Pit) Kurt Warner (NYG)

2007 Arizona Cardinals – How They Were Built

FREE AGENTS

2006 Matt Leinart (1) Deuce Lutui (2) Leonard Pope (3) Gabe Watson (4) Brandon Johnson (5) Jonathan Lewis (6) Todd Watkins (7)

Brandon Gorin (NE) Hanik Milligan (SD) Matt Ware (Phi)

Monty Beisel Shane Boyd Chris Cooper Darrell Hunter (R) Edgerrin James (Ind) Greg Lee (R) A.J. Schable (R) Micheal Spurlock (R) Justin Wyatt (R)

2007 Levi Brown (1) Alan Branch (2) Buster Davis (3) Steve Breaston (5) Ben Patrick (7)

Rodney Bailey (Pitt) Troy Bienemann Ralph Brown (Clev) Oliver Celestin Mike Gandy (Buf) Roderick Hood (Phi) Terrence Holt (Det) Al Johnson (Dal) Ross Kolodziej (Min) Ahmad Merritt Qasim Mitchell Sean Morey (Pitt) Alex Shor Terrelle Smith (Clev) Joe Tafoya (Sea) Michael Adams (R) Travarous Bain (R) Steve Baylark (R) Ray Blagman (R) Tim Castille (R) Jon Hameister-Ries (R) David Holloway (R) Brian Johnson (R) Brandon Keeler (R) Toby Korrodi (R) Ricky Schmitt (R) Lyle Sendlein (R) BranDon Snow (R) Pago Togafau (R) Matt Trannon (R) Elliot Vallejo (R)

Cardinals vs. Texans Page 21 of 23 www.azcardinals.com

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ARIZONA CARDINALS 2006 FINAL TEAM AND INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

WON 5, LOST 11 * RUSHING No. Yds Avg Long TD 09/10 W 34-27 San Francisco 63,407 James 337 1159 3.4 18 6 09/17 L 10-21 at Seattle 67,470 Leinart 22 49 2.2 14 2 09/24 L 14-16 St. Louis 63,278 Shipp 17 41 2.4 9t 4 10/01 L 10-32 at Atlanta 68,981 Ayanbadejo 9 37 4.1 11 0 10/08 L 20-23 Kansas City 63,445 Boldin 5 28 5.6 18 0 10/16 L 23-24 Chicago 63,977 Arrington 14 19 1.4 9 0 10/22 L 9-22 at Oakland 61,595 Schable 1 5 5.0 5 0 10/29 L 14-31 at Green Bay 70,809 Warner 13 3 0.2 9 0 11/12 L 10-27 Dallas 63,926 Fitzgerald 0 0 --- --- 0 11/19 W 17-10 Detroit 63,348 Bry. Johnson 1 -3 -3.0 -3 0 11/26 L 26-31 at Minnesota 63,483 TEAM 419 1338 3.2 18 12 12/03 W 34-20 at St. Louis 65,612 OPPONENTS 458 1897 4.1 78t 16 12/10 W 27-21 Seattle 63,603 * RECEIVING No. Yds Avg Long TD 12/17 L 20-37 Denver 63,845 Boldin 83 1203 14.5 64 4 12/24 W 26-20 at San Francisco 67,751 Fitzgerald 69 946 13.7 57 6 12/31 L 20-27 at San Diego 66,492 Bry. Johnson 40 740 18.5 58 4 Ariz. Opp. James 38 217 5.7 14 0 TOTAL FIRST DOWNS 298 331 Walters 23 209 9.1 26 2 Rushing 84 114 Ayanbadejo 17 139 8.2 27 0 Passing 187 186 Pope 16 161 10.1 33 0 Penalty 27 31 Bergen 15 111 7.4 17 1 3rd Down: Made/Att 83/212 83/201 Arrington 8 58 7.3 19 0 3rd Down Pct. 39.2 41.3 Shipp 6 60 10.0 22 0 4th Down: Made/Att 10/15 7/15 Spurlock 4 31 7.8 15 0 4th Down Pct. 66.7 46.7 Wakefield 2 24 12.0 19 0 POSSESSION AVG. 29:59 30:01 Bronson 1 25 25.0 25 0 TOTAL NET YARDS 5000 5591 TEAM 322 3924 12.2 64 17 Avg. Per Game 312.5 349.4 OPPONENTS 321 3932 12.2 78 21 Total Plays 999 1018 * INTERCEPTIONS No. Yds Avg Long TD Avg. Per Play 5.0 5.5 Wilson 4 146 36.5 99t 1 NET YARDS RUSHING 1338 1897 Griffith 3 30 10.0 23 0 Avg. Per Game 83.6 118.6 Hayes 3 24 8.0 24 0 Total Rushes 419 458 Francisco 2 61 30.5 44 0 NET YARDS PASSING 3662 3694 Macklin 1 56 56.0 56 0 Avg. Per Game 228.9 230.9 Rolle 1 23 23.0 23 0 Sacked/Yards Lost 35/262 38/238 Beisel 1 11 11.0 11 0 Gross Yards 3924 3932 Dockett 1 -1 -1.0 -1 0 Att./Completions 545/322 522/321 TEAM 16 350 21.9 99t 1 Completion Pct. 59.1 61.5 OPPONENTS 17 110 6.5 37t 1 Had Intercepted 17 16 * PUNTING No. Yds Avg Net TB In Lg B PUNTS/AVERAGE 68/43.6 58/44.8 Player 66 2965 44.9 34.5 3 18 58 2 NET PUNTING AVG. 68/34.5 58/37.7 TEAM 68 2965 43.6 34.5 3 18 58 2 PENALTIES/YARDS 117/937 95/815 OPPONENTS 58 2596 44.8 37.7 8 18 66 0 FUMBLES/BALL LOST 31/13 29/17 * PUNT RETURNS Ret FC Yds Avg Long TD TOUCHDOWNS 33 42 Walters 24 12 250 10.4 37 0 Rushing 12 16 Bry. Johnson 1 1 0 0.0 0 0 Passing 17 21 TEAM 25 13 250 10.0 37 0 Returns 4 5 OPPONENTS 44 6 562 12.8 83t 1 * SCORE BY PERIODS Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 OT PTS * KICKOFF RETURNS No. Yds Avg Long TD TEAM 104 81 46 83 0 314 Arrington 67 1520 22.7 99t 1 OPPONENTS 84 100 100 105 0 389 Spurlock 3 54 18.0 21 0 * SCORING TD-Ru-Pa-Rt K-PAT FG S PTS Bry. Johnson 2 29 14.5 16 0 Rackers 0 0 0 0 32/32 28/37 0 116 Wakefield 1 7 7.0 7 0 Fitzgerald 6 0 6 0 0 36 TEAM 73 1610 22.1 99t 1 James 6 6 0 0 0 36 OPPONENTS 58 1481 25.5 64 0 Boldin 4 0 4 0 0 24 * FIELD GOALS 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Bry. Johnson 4 0 4 0 0 24 Rackers 0/ 0 11/11 9/ 9 7/10 1/7 Shipp 4 4 0 0 0 24 TEAM 0/ 0 11/11 9/ 9 7/10 1/7 Leinart 2 2 0 0 0 12 OPPONENTS 1/ 1 9/ 9 11/13 9/ 9 1/2 Walters 2 0 2 0 0 12 Rackers: (36G,30G)(51N,53N,43G)()(29G)(41G,Wilson 2 0 0 2 0 12 45G,51N)(52N,41G,28G,29G,40N)(49N,29G,45G,38G)Arrington 1 0 0 1 0 6 ()(28G)(36G)(21G,50G,41N)(23G,20G)(32G,53N,Bergen 1 0 1 0 0 6 40G)(49G,50N,38G)(25G,39G,37G,32G)(28G,20G)Smith 1 0 0 1 0 6 OPPONENTS: (34N,22G,44G)(30B)(26G,47G,21G)TEAM 33 12 17 4 32/32 28/37 0 314 (34G,40G,51G,36G,26G,28G)(45G,40G,19G)(23G)OPPONENTS 42 16 21 5 42/42 31/34 1 389 (31G,35G)(42G)(28G,38G)(32G,52N)(40G)(27G,37G)2-Pt. Conversions: TEAM 0-1, OPPONENTS 0-0 ()(30G,22G,30G)(49G,32G)(47G,35G)SACKS: Okeafor 8.5, Dansby 8, Berry 6, Wilson 5, Smith 2.5, Cooper LG 2, Cooper TM 2, Dockett 2, Clancy 1, Hayes 1, Pace 1, Watson 1, TEAM 38, OPPONENTS 35

* PASSING Att Cmp Yds Cmp% Yds/Att TD TD% Int Int% Long Sack/Lost Rating Leinart 377 214 2547 56.8 6.76 11 2.9 12 3.2 58 21/ 158 74.0 Warner 168 108 1377 64.3 8.20 6 3.6 5 3.0 64 14/ 104 89.3 TEAM 545 322 3924 59.1 7.20 17 3.1 17 3.1 64 35/ 262 78.7 OPPONENTS 522 321 3932 61.5 7.53 21 4.0 16 3.1 78 38/ 238 85.4

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(based on coaches film review)

QB QB SPECIAL TEAMS

Name TT UT AT TFL Sacks/Yds INT PD FF FR PRS HITS TT UT AT FF FR BP/K

Gerald Hayes 111 90 21 6 1/2 3 7 - 2 - 1 - - - - - -

Karlos Dansby 94 75 19 5 8/47 - 5 3 1 1 4 - - - - - -

Adrian Wilson 87 78 9 8 5/33 4 9 4 2 3 - - - - - - -

Antrel Rolle 87 81 6 - - 1 10 2 - - - 1 1 - - - -

Robert Griffith 83 70 13 - - 3 9 2 1 - - 1 - 1 - - -

Orlando Huff 79 64 15 1 - - 5 1 - - - - - - - - -

Chike Okeafor 56 45 11 6 8.5/57 - 6 2 2 13 16 - - - - - -

Darnell Dockett 53 39 14 7 2/13 1 2 1 2 7 6 - - - - - -

Eric Green 44 42 2 - - - 13 1 1 - - 3 3 - - - -

Kendrick Clancy 37 29 8 3 1/8 - - 1 - - - - - - - - -

David Macklin 33 32 1 1 - 1 6 - - - - 1 1 - - - -

Aaron Francisco 29 25 4 1 - 2 5 - - - - 23 16 7 - - -

Antonio Smith 29 20 9 - 2.5/9 - 1 - 2 7 6 - - - - - -

Calvin Pace 28 22 6 - 1/6 - 1 2 - 2 - 11 10 1 - - 1

Bertrand Berry 26 20 6 4 6/43 - 2 3 1 11 9 - - - - - -

Chris Cooper 23 15 8 1 2/15 - 3 - 1 4 4 - - - - - -

Gabe Watson 16 12 4 - 1/5 - - - 1 1 2 - - - - - -

Monty Beisel 14 12 2 1 - 1 1 - - 1 - 6 3 3 - - -

Arizona Cardinals 2006 Defensive Statistics

Robert Tate 8 8 - - - - 1 - - - - 1 - 1 - - -

Matt Ware 7 6 1 - - - 1 1 - - - 14 9 5 - - -

Darryl Blackstock 6 5 1 - - - - - 1 1 - 13 7 6 - - -

Jonathan Lewis 4 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Langston Moore 2 2 - 1 - - - - - - 2 - - - - - -

Darrell Hunter 1 1 - - - - - - - - - 1 1 - - - -

James Darling 1 1 - - - - - - - - - 1 1 - - - -

Hanik Milligan - - - - - - - - - - - 22 16 6 - - -

Obafemi Ayanbadejo - - - - - - - - - - - 13 9 4 - - -

A.J. Schable - - - - - - - - - - - 12 10 2 - 1 -

Marcel Shipp - - - - - - - - - - - 10 9 1 - - -

Nathan Hodel - - - - - - - - - - - 5 4 1 - - -

Neil Rackers - - - - - - - - - - - 5 5 - - - -

J.J. Arrington - - - - - - - - - - - 3 2 1 - - -

Fred Wakefield - - - - - - - - - - - 2 2 - - - -

Brandon Johnson - - - - - - - - - - - 2 2 - - - -

Scott Player - - - - - - - - - - - 1 1 - - - -

Troy Walters - - - - - - - - - - - 1 1 - - - -

Miscellaneous:

Calvin Pace: Blocked field goal at Seattle Seahawks, Sept. 17

Adrian Wilson: 99-yard interception return for a touchdown at Atlanta Falcons, Oct. 1

Darryl Blackstock: Recovered onside kick at Minnesota Vikings, Nov. 26

Adrian Wilson: 99-yard fumble return for a touchdown at Minnesota Vikings, Nov. 26y g ,

Antonio Smith: 4-yard fumble return for a touchdown vs. Denver Broncos, Dec. 17

Cardinals vs. Texans Page 23 of 23 www.azcardinals.com


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