Cardinals Right Guard Battle Suddenly Feels More Serious Than Expected

The emerging competition between Isaiah Adams and Chase Bisontis is set to intensify the battle for the Cardinals' starting right guard spot.

The Cardinals’ right guard job may be a lot less settled than it looked when Arizona spent a premium pick on Chase Bisontis.

Bisontis arrived with the kind of profile that usually points to an immediate opening. He’s a second-round selection, the No. 34 overall pick, and the kind of interior lineman who brings both a nasty run-finishing edge and solid pass protection.

In other words, the sort of player teams expect to plug in and lean on quickly. But the path to a starting role in Arizona is not nearly that simple.

Isaiah Adams is still very much in the mix.

Adams has already started 16 games over his first two NFL seasons, and that experience gives him a real edge as camp approaches. He’s been inconsistent, sure, but he’s also the veteran in the room and the player who has already handled the job on Sundays. The Cardinals did not spend that kind of draft capital on Bisontis to watch him sit forever, though, and the competition at right guard is shaping up as one of the few real battles on the offensive line.

NFL offensive line specialist Brandon Thorn came away encouraged by what he saw from Adams in 2025. As he put it on X:

"Isaiah Adams physical tools and film last year, especially in 1v1 situations run and pass were much more impressive than I initially thought, making the trio at OG there with Seumalo/Bisontis more interesting as well,"

That’s exactly why this competition has some teeth to it. Adams didn’t play so well that Arizona could ignore the position and move on without adding serious competition, but he also did enough to keep the door open. The result is a battle that feels more like a genuine fight than a placeholder assignment.

Head coach Mike LaFleur has made the team’s plan for Bisontis clear: he’s going inside. That gives Arizona another body for the interior and reinforces the idea that the rookie was brought in to compete for immediate snaps, not just develop in the background.

Bisontis, for his part, sounds ready for whatever gets him on the field. “I’m just ready to do whatever. Whatever gets me on the field, whatever helps the team and myself,” he told reporters this offseason.

Elsewhere up front, the Cardinals appear much more set. Paris Johnson Jr., Isaac Seumalo and Hjalte Froholdt are locked into their spots, while Elijah Wilkinson is the clear favorite at right tackle. That leaves Adams and Bisontis fighting for one job, with no room for both.

Bisontis is still expected to win the role eventually. The real question is whether that happens right away in training camp, or whether Adams makes the rookie earn every snap.

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