Drew Petzing and Jonathan Gannon have said they strip down the playbook and start over following each season.
The one thing that doesn't change, however, is the language.
"If we're speaking French, then we're not going into the season speaking Italian," said Petzing, the Cardinals' offensive coordinator.
Still, the language that both Petzing and quarterback Kyler Murray speak, besides English of course, is football.
"Obviously this is Year Three in the system with Drew, but I know what he wants," Murray said. "And he knows what I like."
Since Murray entered the league in 2019, the landscape of the sport has evolved. For the Cardinals' signal caller, a lot has changed as well. Most notably, Murray goes into an offseason with continuity at the forefront with 1,000-plus yard receiver in Trey McBride and running back James Conner reaching over 1,000 rushing yards in back-to-back seasons. There's optimism surrounding wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. as his second season begins.
What hasn't changed is his approach to training camp.
"The goal is to win each day," Murray said. "I'm trying to focus on today, get better today, and be consistent."
Murray did not say if he would play in the preseason, deferring the decision to Gannon.
The Cardinals finished the 2024 season on the brink of a Top-10 offense, finishing 11th in yards. Before the bye week, Murray was a name thrown around in the MVP discussion, but second half struggles quieted such talk.
Going into his seventh season in the league, Murray does have the capability to remain in those conversations. He has discussed a desire to generate more explosives while also utilizing his dual threat skillset.
But in order to reach those achievements, consistency is needed, something which hasn't come as easily in the NFL as it had in his previous football life.
"When you've been doing it your whole life at the best of the best level, it's one of those things where it's boring doing the right (expletive) over and over again, but I would say that's probably the secret." Murray said. "Those type of things at this position, that's the kicker. Don't get bored playing, they tell me that all of the time, so that's definitely something for me I always stick to."
With that mindset, Murray has been able to grow on the leadership front. For the second consecutive offseason, the quarterback invited the skill players to Los Angeles to get additional work prior to training camp.
"His leadership has gotten better every single year, obviously I've only been here for a year and a little bit of change now, so for me, I've seen the leader and who he is," Harrison said. "He's just been such a great leader. He talks to all the guys, uplifts everybody. It really brings out the best in everybody. When it's time to turn that switch on, it's time to go fast and go hard, he's the first one to get everybody going."
As much as Murray has evolved over the years and seen "damn near every defense", he recognizes the sport will continue to find new wrinkles that'll keep opponents on the edge.
What won't change, however, is the dialogue between himself and Petzing. Considering the offense has been centered around continuity and communication, consistency is anticipated to follow suit.
"I think early in the process you're talking about the logistics of what we're doing? Where are people lined up? How are we moving around the formation?" Petzing said. "I think we're having some of those conversations faster into training camp."