Cardinals Young Core Is Running Out Of Time Under Mike LaFleur

As the Arizona Cardinals gear up for the 2026 season, key players face pivotal moments in their careers under the new leadership of head coach Mike LaFleur.

The Arizona Cardinals are heading into 2026 with a lot to sort out, and that pressure doesn’t stop at the team level. Between a tough NFC West, a roster still settling in, and Mike LaFleur taking over as head coach, there’s plenty hanging over this season.

That backdrop makes 2026 a huge year for a handful of players, too. For some, it’s about living up to draft status. For others, it’s about proving they belong before the Cardinals make bigger decisions.

Marvin Harrison Jr. sits at the top of that list. He entered the 2024 NFL Draft with the kind of buzz that comes around once-in-a-generation prospects, the sort of receiver expected to change an offense right away. The pedigree was obvious, the production profile was clean, and the hype was enormous.

But his first two years in Arizona have been bumpy. The talent is still there, but drops, injuries and questions about how the Cardinals have used him have clouded the picture around the former No. 4 pick.

LaFleur’s arrival offers a fresh chance for Harrison to finally put everything together. If anyone can help him unlock that next level, it may be him.

If Harrison still can’t make that leap, it may say plenty about where he stands as an NFL player.

Arizona doesn’t have to look far down its own draft board for another major test case. Darius Robinson, taken No. 27 overall in 2024, has had a hard time getting traction on the defensive line. A calf injury in preseason practice, along with personal issues away from football, wiped out the momentum of what was supposed to be a big rookie year.

The follow-up in 2025 wasn’t much better. Robinson played 15 games, but the impact never really showed up.

In a defensive line rotation that spreads the workload around, it’s easy for a player to disappear - and Robinson has not done enough to separate himself. He’s got the size, he’s got the burst, but 2026 has to be the year he finally puts the pieces together.

With Arizona set to decide on his fifth-year option next offseason, the clock is very much ticking.

BJ Ojulari is in a different spot, but the stakes are just as real. Arizona’s outside linebacker group has its known pieces: Josh Sweat is the team’s top sack threat, Zaven Collins brings run support more than pass-rush juice, Baron Browning is a useful rotational rusher and Jordan Burch is only heading into his second season. Ojulari, though, is the one with the most intrigue.

He flashed enough as a rookie to look like a real edge threat, then a severe knee injury knocked him out for all of 2024 and half of 2025. That kind of recovery often takes time, and 2026 could be the season where he finally starts looking like himself again.

The Cardinals didn’t bring in much outside help at edge rusher, so the runway is there. Now Ojulari has to use it in the final year of his rookie deal.

Max Melton is facing a different kind of pressure. As Arizona’s second-round pick from two years ago, he hasn’t been able to find much consistency, and the ending to last season made things even tougher. He was effectively benched down the stretch, which is never a great place to start the next year.

The competition in the cornerback room only makes the path harder. Sean Murphy-Bunting and Starling Thomas are set to return from season-ending injuries, Garrett Williams isn’t far behind, and the rookie pairing of Will Johnson and Denzel Burke looked good enough to be the frontrunners entering training camp.

That leaves Melton lagging behind in a room that will give him a chance, but not much margin for error. His third season has become a major one, because another shaky year could push him out of the picture.

Then there’s Will Beck, the rookie quarterback who already finds himself in a very specific kind of pressure cooker. It’s early, of course, and no one is making final judgments on his career. But his situation in Arizona makes this different from the usual rookie evaluation.

Beck, a third-round pick, enters 2026 with Jacoby Brissett and Gardner Minshew ahead of him on the depth chart, which means there’s no real guarantee of playing time. On top of that, Arizona appears positioned to be active in the 2027 offseason, when the draft could offer a strong quarterback class.

That leaves Beck with one real shot to make his case to the front office. If he impresses, the Cardinals may not need to chase another quarterback right away.

If he doesn’t play, or doesn’t look the part, Arizona could be looking for its next franchise quarterback in the draft.

For Beck, that turns 2026 into a short but massive audition.

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