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Mike LaFleur didn’t say yes to the first girl who asked him to dance. He waited and studied up on who his type was. Strange how most folks have “a type” of partner. Just one of those chemistry things, like preferring dark chocolate over milk. And then someone has to muck it up and ask for white chocolate.

Okay, okay, never write an article on an empty stomach. Got it.

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RELATED: CARDINALS STILL WAITING ON BRISSETT

And for LaFleur, it wasn’t a girl, but an NFL team. The Arizona Cardinals to be exact. The Cardinals had a long list that became a short list for their next head coach. They had to ask permission to talk to LaFleur because he was still employed by the Los Angeles Rams, a division foe of the Cardinals.

The Rams were in the playoffs, and so everyone associated with the team who might be interviewed for open coaching or front office positions with other clubs had strict guidelines as to when these football men/women could be interviewed around their team’s postseason journey.

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Remember this past college football season when Lane Kiffin got the LSU head coaching gig, who was not in the playoffs, and he left his Ole Miss squad, who was in the playoffs and had to rely on an assistant coach to help them run the table? The NFL never wants that type of mess to happen. Teams remain intact until they are out of the playoffs, and interviews for other jobs are always on the back burner.

So, after being contacted, LaFleur had some time to look over the Cardinals’ roster and see what they had, what the issues were, a good peek at their roster, what offensive weapons they had on file, and how the personnel that was already in place would fit his narrative and scheme going forward.

At some point, LaFleur decided to dump starting QB Kyler Murray and retain lifetime backup signalcaller Jacoby Brissett as his starting QB. That was quite a risk and a key decision. Releasing a seven-year former Number 1 overall draft pick, for a guy who is playing for his sixth NFL club during his 10-year career. On the flipside, Arizona was the only home Murray knew.

And so LaFleur ended up accepting the head coaching position with the Cardinals. He is an offensive-minded coach, and has specific needs on that side of the ball.

During free agency and then April’s college draft, GM Monti Ossenfort pretty much checked all of LaFleur’s boxes as far as personnel changes. Not that Ossenfort signed or drafted every player or position on LaFleur‘s want list, but most of those decisions were solidified.

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Ossenfort was even able to bring in an experienced journeyman for the backup QB spot, Gardner Minshew. Then he selected a young buck to groom and develop in Carson Beck out of Miami, taken in Round 3.

And then, LaFleur announced that Brissett would be the starting QB this year. He didn’t wait until training camp began, or after a few preseason games, or even the week before the Week 1 matchup against the Los Angeles Chargers. Nope, he just came right out and blurted the facts: Brissett was his guy.

But then Brissett made a declaration: He wanted a bump in pay.

When Brissett was signed way back last March to a two-year deal worth $12.5 million, it was to become Murray’s backup. Over $6 million a year riding the log is pretty good for a backup who wasn’t supposed to see the field that much. And why in the world did Ossenfort ink him to a two-year deal? Most veteran contracts that are for depth purposes usually are the one-year variety, just like Minshew was signed for this year.

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We all know the story. As it turned out, Murray and the Cardinals’ offense sputtered each week until Murray suffered a foot injury in Week 5 against the winless Tennessee Titans (who were gifted their first win of the season). Brissett came in, and each week the offense sprang to life. WR Michael Wilson had a career year, while TE Trey McBride went to the Pro Bowl, all while the running back room was nothing but backups and practice squad guys. Arizona kept Murray on IR for the remainder of the year.

The point of all this is that LaFleur picked the Cardinals. He picked their offense with a list of changes. He chose Brissett over Murray. What LaFleur could have accomplished, was to keep Murray and then let the two savvy veterans duke it out, then get rid of the loser. But LaFleur didn’t. He let Murray go, then stated that Brissett was his guy.

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