Darius Robinson isn’t walking into Year 3 with a stat line in mind. He’s walking in with a cleaner head, a sharper feel for his game and a lot less interest in overcomplicating what comes next.
That’s a notable shift from the version of Robinson who stood in front of reporters in Week 13 of the 2025 season after Arizona’s loss to Tampa Bay, when the Cardinals had fallen to 3-9 and he admitted, “I am not who I thought I was,”
Now, in July 2026 at the team’s training facility in Tempe, the 24-year-old defensive lineman sounds far more settled. His confidence is there, but it’s tied to a simple challenge: staying steady.
“Super high because I know I can do it,” Robinson said Tuesday. “It’s just, ‘Can you be consistent?’
“I got better and better each year in college. So that’s the same way I’m visiting it now in the league, and just having that mindset, just attacking and just one day at a time. So I’m super excited.”
For Robinson, the third season of a rookie deal comes with the usual pressure that follows early promise. He’s not trying to dress it up. He’s treating it like football, and nothing more.
“It’s just football, just playing a game and just putting one foot forward each day,” he said. “I feel if you overthink it, then that’s where you get all this pressure and stuff.”
Through his first two NFL seasons with Arizona, Robinson has played in 21 games with 12 starts and posted 53 tackles, two sacks and one fumble recovery. His rookie year was interrupted by a calf injury in training camp that kept him out for most of the season, though he returned for the final six games and finished with 10 tackles and one sack.
Last season, he took a bigger step statistically, ending with 43 tackles, one sack, four tackles for loss and a fumble recovery. As for getting his body ready for camp?
“Just getting swole,” he said with a laugh.
Robinson is headed to Las Vegas for the Sack Summit, a three-day gathering that begins Thursday and draws some of the NFL’s top pass rushers. He was there last year too, and he sees real value in being around that kind of room.
“It’s super beneficial because they have the best players there and they’ll tell you what they think on your rush moves and what’s their mindset, they’ll share information,” he said. “Nobody’s really gate-keeping.”
The offseason work has been all about the details. Robinson said he’s been “watching the tape with a magnifying glass” and “focusing on the small things” as he sharpens his pass rush. That means plenty of attention on the basics that can separate a solid season from a real breakout.
“Working pass rush in the offseason, using my hands and all those different things to help me get the results I want,” Robinson said. “Focus on my get off, focus on my hands, my pad level and all that stuff, and that’ll take care of what I want to reach for myself.”
Arizona’s defensive front will look familiar in a lot of places this season, with Dante Stills, Walter Nolen III and Josh Sweat among the names around Robinson. The group is carrying a shared edge after the way last year ended.
“We’re all hungry,” Robinson said. “It just really hasn’t been the results we’ve wanted.
Everybody understands the target and what we’re willing to do to reach where we want to be. We got a lot of guys who are super motivated, super hungry and just super excited for this year.”
There’s also continuity behind the defense, with coordinator Nick Rallis back in place. Robinson believes that matters, especially after another offseason in the same system. Rallis, for his part, praised Robinson late last season for what he was doing against the run and how he was affecting quarterbacks.
“I thought he did some really good things in the run game,” Rallis said, ‘knocking it back and being disruptive, playing fast and violent right now. He is a huge piece right now to our defense.
I feel his presence. In terms of the pass game, he’s done a really good job of pushing the pocket to where, even if the ball gets out, quarterbacks are feeling him at their feet.”
Robinson thinks that familiarity will help him play faster in 2026. During OTAs, he said the scheme felt natural.
“During OTAs, I didn’t really think about anything,” he said. “I just played, and I feel like that’s going to be a big help for me this year with familiarity with the calls and everything.”
And after last season’s doubts, he’s not chasing numbers now. He’s chasing reliability, accountability and a tape that says enough on its own.
“I was expecting to be just a good teammate, be somebody that can be accountable each and every day, and really just let the tape do the talking,” Robinson said. “I really don’t want to put any goals or things out there.”
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