From Deseret News archives:

Cards stun Panthers in NFC rout

Published: Saturday, Jan. 10, 2009 11:29 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The Arizona Cardinals were considered the softest team in the playoffs, unable to win far from home and carrying the scars of years of ineptitude.

But behind their cagey quarterback, dynamic receiver, improved defense — and a big assist from Jake Delhomme's horrible night — the Cardinals are a win away from the unthinkable: a berth in the Super Bowl.

Kurt Warner threw two touchdown passes, Larry Fitzgerald had 166 yards receiving and the Cardinals pounced on Delhomme's six turnovers Saturday night in a 33-13 win over the bumbling Panthers.

A team that had won only two playoff games in their history before last week's win over Atlanta, the Cardinals became the last NFC team to reach the conference championship since the 1970 merger with a win few saw coming.

Entering as a 10-point underdog and ridiculed for their 0-5 record in the Eastern time zone this season, Arizona (11-7) raced to a 27-7 halftime lead and cruised past the mistake-prone Panthers (12-5), who were the league's only unbeaten team at home in the regular season.

Story continues below
"Not many people had very nice things to say about us and didn't give us a chance," said Ken Whisenhunt, the second-year coach who has helped shed the losing culture of the franchise. "I think we've showed we can come to the East Coast and win a game. ... We believe in ourselves. I like being the underdog, and we're going to continue to be the underdog."

Arizona will either play at the New York Giants or host Philadelphia in the NFC championship game Jan. 18.

"I'm putting on my Philly hat right now," said Fitzgerald, who had a 29-yard touchdown catch in a dominant first half. "We would love to have a home game."

While the Cardinals proved they're for real, they also must thank Delhomme, who threw five interceptions and lost a fumble on his 34th birthday.

Just one shy of the NFL playoff record for interceptions, Delhomme became the first player to have five picks in the playoffs since Oakland's Rich Gannon in the 2003 Super Bowl against Tampa Bay.

He completed only 17 of 34 passes for 205 yards and one touchdown. His woes made Steve Smith a non-factor. The Pro Bowl receiver didn't have his first catch until the final minute of the third quarter.

"I'm at a loss for words," Delhomme said. "Usually I'm not. For one reason or another, I didn't give us a chance tonight."

Smith caught a meaningless 8-yard touchdown pass from Delhomme with 50 seconds left, when the Cardinals were celebrating.

Recent comments

Here's what happened. Jake Delhomme (who I'm ashamed to call my hero)...

RE: Shocker | Jan. 11, 2009 at 4:59 p.m.

What happened?

Shocker | Jan. 11, 2009 at 9:35 a.m.

Its a good thing the BCS has nothing to do with the NFL, The Cards...

Learn something BCS | Jan. 11, 2009 at 4:57 a.m.

Image
Kevin C. Cox, Getty Images

Arizona defensive back Ralph Brown of the Arizona Cardinals celebrates an interception with coach Ken Whisenhunt on Saturday.

previousnext

Latest comments

Re: Anonymous @6:24 No - what do you mean??

Don't weaken booster seat law

Society has an obligation to protect little children from asinine adults who...

Preps of the week

matt stewart is the best player in the state

Lawmakers, educators debate plan

How many other professions would you bbe willing to pay based on years of...

The choice to the voters is to elect local reps. Who then vote on national...

Democrats unveil jobs package

Citizens and politicians share the blame. When we go the wrong way long...

How are they overrated? they are 20-0 can your school say that. Seems like a...

Editorial: Air standards changing

The day American engineering matches Japanese and German engineering will...

Obama: GOP, Dems can spur jobs

Citizens and politicians share the blame. When we go the wrong way long...

Pagan: If I wish to state an opinion, I will state it. There is no...

Advertisements