
Linebacker Will Davis
is still around. His friend, linebacker Cody Brown
, is not.
Will Davis and Cody Brown were practically inseparable.
Until, of course, they were separated.
They were the two linebackers out of the 2009 draft the Cardinals wanted to develop. Brown, the second-rounder, seemed a surer bet. Then he wasn’t, first derailed by a broken wrist in the 2009 preseason and then an inability to progress on the field when he came back. Not that the two of them – fast friends since the day they arrived together – saw it coming.
In the preseason – before final cuts -- they had watched an episode of “Hard Knocks” which a
player had gotten released. They thought about the notion, although both thought they were safe.“It was a shock to everybody,” Davis said. “The funny thing is, we had talked about it before, how crazy it is to get cut from the time you get touched on the shoulder to the time you talk to your agent and he’s trying to calm you down and tell you what your options are, because you are in no-man’s land. It helps you realize you better not take anything for granted.”
Davis was the sixth-round pick who showed the Cards enough as a rookie that they still have hopes he can turn into another
(The Cards did sign veteran
If anything, the story of Davis and Brown serve as a cautionary tale of any player who might get too comfortable on this roster (and I suppose it was underscored again by the sudden release of quarterback
“They say from the first training camp, people are competing for spots and they don’t care where you came from,” Davis said. “You could come from under a trash can for all they care. They care about how you prepare on the field and how you retain things, things like that. When Cody was cut, it was shock, but here, the best person plays and everyone realizes that.”
Brown landed on the Jets’ practice squad and Davis stays in touch. Tuesday, when he and Brown likely would have been working out together, Davis had a pair of headphones while lifting weights.
As a player, the friends come and go. The business never stops.
THE BEANIE IMPACT
One of the big storylines of the week won’t play out until Sunday – how much running back
The question becomes how quickly Wells can be meshed into the offense, when a)
Trusting a rusty Wells to block in some situations may be difficult to ask. It may keep Beanie on the sideline more often, at least in the beginning.
SOME NUMBERS
Wide receiver
Running back Tim Hightower is averaging 7.0 yards a carry, the best mark in the NFL for backs with at least 20 attempts. Hightower has 169 yards on 24 carries this season.
Including the playoffs, the Cardinals have rushed for at least 100 yards as a team in 10 of their past 13 games.