Cardinals' Offensive Line Depth


                   
                      photo by Tyler Drake Arizona Sports

By Walter Mitchell

Currently, the 2026 Arizona Cardinals' roster consists of:

* 37 players on offense

* 34 players on defense

* 4 players on special teams

Total: 75

Over 1/3 of the Cardinals' offensive players are offensive linemen, 13 of the 37 (35%).

Here they are, with their 2025 PFF grades plus their highest graded game:

LT - Paris Johnson Jr.  --- 76.6 --- 78.2 GB          

LT Demontrey Jacobs --- 63.7 --- 67.2 @ HOU

LT Josh Fryar --- 53.1 --- 69.2 ATL        

LT Osi Udoh --- 55.0 --- 79.5 SF

LG - Isaac Seumalo  --- 73.2 --- 93.4 BUF               

LG -Jon Gaines II --- 60.3 --- 81.9 LAR

LG Hayden Conner --- 65.8 --- 74.3 ATL

C - Hjalte Froholdt  --- 69.4 --- 79.5 @ SF               

RG - Isaiah Adams --- 57.2 --- 77.1 SF                

RT - Elijah Wilkinson --- 62.9 --- 74.9 @ ARI

RT Matt Pryor  --- 71.5 --- 75.6 LAR

LT Valentin Senn - IR

RT Christian Jones - IR         

Cardinals' Offensive Line Draft Capital:

* R1 --- Paris Johnson Jr. 2023

* R3 --- Isaiah Adams 2024

* R4 --- Jon Gaines II 2023

* R5 --- Christian Jones 2024

* R6 --- Hayden Conner 2025

* CFA - Josh Fryar 2025

* CFA --- Valentin Senn 2025

UFA Signees' Draft Selections

* R3 --- Isaac Seumalo 2016 PHI

* R6 --- Matt Pryor 2018 PHI

* R6 --- Osi Udoh 2019 MIN

*CFA --- Elijah Wilkinson 2017 DEN

Training Camp Competitions for Starting Assignments

LT1 - Paris Johnson Jr. - ✅

LG - Isaac Seumalo - ✅

C - Hjalte Froholdt - ✅

RG - Isaiah Adams, Jon Gaines II, Matt Pryor

RT - Elijah Wilkinson, Matt Pryor, Josh Fryar, Christian Jones, Osi Udoh

Prediction:

The Cardinals will keep 9 offensive linemen on the 53-man roster:

* LT Paris Johnson Jr.

* LG Isaac Seumalo

* C Hjalte Froholdt

* RG Isaiah Adams

* RT Elijah Wilkinson

* ST Josh Fryar

* SG/T Matt Pryor

* S G/C Jon Gaines II

* S C/G Hayden Conner

Practice Squad:

* LT Demontrey Jacobs

* RT Christian Jones

* ST/G Osi Udoh

Will the Cardinals draft any offensive linemen?

Given the signing of 4 veteran offensive linemen, it appears that Monti Ossenfort is planning to address other need positions on Days 1 and 2 of the 2026 NFL Draft.

But there are a couple of developmental offensive line prospects who might be given strong consideration on Day 3. 





Thanks to Jace for this Cardinals' Prospect Tracker. Here are the two developmental prospects the Cardinals met with at the NFL Combine. 

Memphis
OT

Memphis

Prospect Info

College
Memphis
Hometown
Class
Hollywood, FL
Senior
Height
6’ 9’’
Weight
325 lbs
Arm
34 1/4’’
Hand
10 1/8’’


Prospect Grade

5.89
Average backup or special-teamer
70Good

Score Breakdown

Production Score

66
2026 Combine OT Rank: 13th

Athleticism Score *est

81
2026 Combine OT Rank: 11th

Total Score

70
2026 Combine OT Rank: 18th

Combine Results

40: 5.17
10-yard split: 1.79
Vertical: 27"
Broad: 8'11"

Strengths

  • Fires heavy-handed punch to fit and control run blocks.
  • Gets into first contact with surprising bend for a tall tackle.
  • Plays with finisher’s mindset when he gets chances to bury blocks.
  • Stays sticky to blocks with vice-grip hand strength. 
  • Maximizes length with a firm, well-timed punch into rushers.
  • Unlocks hips and turns out ankles to sit and anchor against power.
  • Showed improvement in identifying end/tackle twist games in 2025.

Weaknesses

  • Will struggle to reach landmarks for back-side cut-off blocks.
  • Lumbering movement limits success in space and on combo climbs.
  • Can be displaced by stout 4i/5-technique take-ons.
  • Labors out of his stance and is late to his set-points against speed.
  • Average ability to recover and redirect once his edge is compromised.
  • Still overcommits and rides too deep on some end/tackle twists.

Overview

Burke is a tall tackle with plus drive-blocking talent for his body type. He uses flexible hips and ankles, along with well-placed hands, to create leverage at the point of attack. He finishes blocks with good aggression when the opportunity arises. A lack of short-area quickness limits his range as a run blocker and in pass protection. He’s scheme-dependent in the run game and will need help managing NFL edge speed, but strong hands allow for longer sustained control when he lands cleanly. There are areas of concern that might not be coachable, but Burke’s length and demeanor work in his favor.

Prospect Info

College
Georgia
Hometown
Class
Kingsland, GA
Senior
Height
6’ 5’’
Weight
334 lbs
Arm
33 5/8’’
Hand
10 3/8’’

Prospect Grade

5.86
Average backup or special-teamer
73Good

Production Score

73
2026 Combine G Rank: 5th

Athleticism Score *est

85
2026 Combine G Rank: 3rd

Total Score

73
2026 Combine G Rank: 11th

40-Yard Dash

5.09
Seconds

10-Yard Split

1.73
Seconds

Vertical Jump

29.5’’

Broad Jump

9’ 4’’

3-Cone Drill

--

20-Yd Shuttle

--

Bench Press

29
Reps
00:07 / 00:14
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Overview

Morris has a rare blend of intelligence, power and movement talent, but the profile is a little too uneven. He plays with a sky-high pad level and outside hands. He’s very strong in his upper body and is relatively light on his feet as a move blocker. His broad frame can be tough to get around in protection, but his inconsistent base width could lead to leakage against athletic rushers. Playing at a lighter weight would make him quicker/more efficient and could be the key to making it in the league.

Strengths

  • Freaky weight-room strength shows up on the field.
  • Athletic for his size with ability to adjust in space.
  • Uses size and nimble feet to climb and cover linebackers.
  • Stones the rush when landing hands directly into frame.
  • Uses grip strength to cinch up rushers who crowd him.
  • Keeps his pads over his shoes when passing off twists.

Weaknesses

  • Pops upright after snap and stays that way throughout the play.
  • Use of outside hands limit ability to control and sustain.
  • Inconsistent generating explosive contact at the point.
  • Base narrows when mirroring the rush.
  • Deadens feet on contact, allowing some leakage into gaps.
Conclusion: 

Monti Ossenfort has made a number of strong moves to improve the Cardinals' offensive line depth and talent. The competition for the RG and RT jobs should be robust and highly competitive. It appears that in light of signing 4 veteran free agents, Monti is not prioritizing the offensive line on Day 1 or 2 of the 2026 NFL Draft. 

Note: there could be another wild card free agent move if Monti and Dave Sears (former Lions' director of college scouting) attract Pro Bowl tackle Taylor Decker to Arizona, given he is eager and willing to start at RT.

The success of the Cardinals' offensive line is squarely in the hands of second-year coach Justin Frye. Apparently, the intention all along was for Coach Frye to be retained by new head coach Mike LaFleur. Last season, Justin Frye struggled to get the players to come off the ball in the running game the aggressive way they had under Klayton Adams. The unit's pass blocking was inconsistent due to injuries and having to throw the ball more than expected. But to be fair, Coach Frye showed some promise in helping the offense reach new heights in the passing game. Late in the season, despite the loss of RBs James Conner and Trey Benson, Frye got some good games from Bam Knight and Michael Carter. The plan this year is to rejuvenate the Cardinals' smashmouth running attack, which is one of the main reasons why Monti signed RT Elijah Wilkinson, who most likely was lauded by the Cardinals new RB Tyler Allgeier who ran a good deal behind Wilkinson for the Falcons last year.

Another key part of the plan is for the Cardinals to build on their now prolific passing game under QB Jacoby Brissett's leadership, this time around with a healthy Marvin Harrison Jr. and two new prize additions in Kendrick Bourne and Devin Duvernay. 

Justin Frye is going to have to sort through the position and depth competitions while adapting his 2025 schemes to Mike LaFleur's. This is a tall order for a 2nd year offensive line coach. 

2025 Offensive Rankins:
* Total yards: 19th
* Passing: 7th
* Rushing: 31st
* Scoring: 22nd
* Red Zone percentage: 22nd
* 3rd Down percentage: 9th

PFF Rankings:
* Offense: 21st
* Pass Blocking: 27th
* Run Blocking: 27th

What do you think of Monti's moves and the decision to retain Justin Frye as the offensive line coach?












Comments

  1. You’re probably right about Monti plan and not address the Oline in rds 1 -4 but I don’t think it’s the best long term successful strategy.

    This team loaded up with RBs to make the ground game a priority this offseason season and to help their QBs survival. But that RT side is nothing to be excited for.
    I am not a fan of Adams. I would start the journeyman Pryor at RG until a 4th round G draft prospect is ready. I would drat B Stephen’s from Iowa or B Schrauth from ND.
    I would draft a RT in round 3. M. Bell from Miami.
    This team needs to have their Oline settled and jelling before they find their QBofFuture.
    Use round 1 for a pass rusher and RD 2 for a DE/DT.
    I doubt Decker would come here with a pay cut to play RT, bet he gets a better opportunity.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I wasn't happy at all with the progress of OL under J Frye. I was surprised he was retained. We had a better OL under K Adams in '24. I am also not impressed with the job MO has done with his personnel choices. That said, we have 2 positions that are in complete limbo in RG & RT (per your chart) and filled with league backups. How after 3yrs of attempts to fix the OL can it still be missing 40% of an O-Line? For all of Monti's attention, it shows how inaccurate he (and our FO) is at evaluating talent and how weak our coaching has been in developing talent. Meaning Monti failed in his coaching hires to develop that talent as well.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In Frye's defense, it was mostly the veterans that disappointed: Brown, Hernandez, Williams and Beachum all had pff grades in the 50s. The young players outside of Fryar had better PFF grades than all of those guys. I think the coach probably has more impact on the young guys than the veterans. The fact is that Hernandez, Williams and Beachum all didn't have it physically last season due to injuries/age. That's not something any OL coach can fix. I'm fairly confident that K Adams wouldn't have been able to make those 3 look good last season either.

      Delete
  3. I think you're right the vets were terrible/underperforming last season. But I don't know how that defends Frye who coaches all the OL. Something -scheme, connection needed between linemen to work in unison-was off with his squad. Few if any OL improved his play last season besides consistently good Fro.
    This season we've shored up our left side and have solid depth. The Cardinals' right side offensive line is a textbook case of contradictory building and a potential disaster since players counted on to improve and start do not fit LaFleur's Wide Zone offense that lives and dies on lateral athleticism. Wilkinson, Fryer, Adams and Connor are slow footed maulers who just don't fit. The OL's competitiveness comes down to J Gaines who is a perfect fit and I'll be interested to see if he starts.
    In addition to Walt's smart suggestion to draft OTs in later rounds and players likeBlake Frazier - best blend of polish + fit, Logan Brown- highest upside, Caleb Tiernan-scheme technician are solid fits for LaFluers scheme A later pick who fits is Miami's day 3-4 pick Samson Okunlola who needs development but is another perfect fit for Lafluers scheme.

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