INDIANAPOLIS — The Arizona Cardinals are bleeding talent to the trainer’s table, and Monti Ossenfort has seen enough. After a brutal 2025 campaign derailed by a staggering number of injuries—most notably a foot injury that sidelined Kyler Murray for the bulk of the year—the front office is pulling the emergency brake at the 2026 NFL Combine. While new head coach Mike LaFleur officially finalized his primary staff this week, securing Nathaniel Hackett on offense and retaining Nick Rallis on defense, a glaring hole remains: the strength and conditioning department.
The Blueprint for Health
The hiring of Mike LaFleur breathed fresh life into the facility. Yet, schemes and play-calling mean nothing if the stars are stuck watching from the luxury suites. You could feel the frustration radiating from Ossenfort as he addressed the media horde on Tuesday. The chill of the Indianapolis winter perfectly matched the cold, hard reality facing the Arizona front office. The Cardinals lost significant man-games to injury last season, watching any competitive momentum evaporate by November.
Back in 2023, former head coach Jonathan Gannon brought in a sprawling medical and training team. Shea Thompson took the reins as director of football performance, Evan Marcus stepped up as head strength and conditioning coach, and Buddy Morris transitioned to senior reconditioning coordinator. Today, those positions hang in the balance.
Will LaFleur trim the fat? Will he bring in his own trusted guys from Los Angeles? Ossenfort isn’t tipping his hand just yet, but he knows the clock is ticking before players report back to Tempe in April for offseason workouts.
“We’re looking at everything — our training staff, our strength and conditioning staff, how we train players, how we treat players. Last year was tough. It’s tough when you acquire players, and you try to build a team, and then those players that you’re counting on, for whatever reason, they’re not out there. There are two things that suck about life in the NFL — it’s injuries and losing, and unfortunately, we suffered a lot of both last year.”
— Monti Ossenfort, General Manager
Draft Implications and What’s Next
This isn’t just about hiring a guy to run the weight room. It’s about fundamentally rewiring the Cardinals’ culture. Arizona holds the No. 3 overall pick in the upcoming 2026 NFL Draft. If they invest that premium draft capital in a cornerstone player—perhaps a highly-touted pass rusher or a blindside protector—they need a foolproof system to keep that rookie on the grass.
The front office is currently evaluating biometric tracking, recovery modalities, and daily practice structures. LaFleur comes from a Sean McVay coaching tree that heavily incorporates sports science and load management into the weekly grind. Expect the incoming medical staff to lean deeply into analytics to prevent soft-tissue injuries before they happen. For fans who braved the desert heat only to watch a depleted roster stumble through the final weeks of 2025, a modernized medical approach provides a necessary glimmer of hope.
- Protecting the Investments: Ossenfort must guard his draft picks. The incoming 2026 rookie class needs an elite, updated strength program to transition to Sunday speed safely.
- The Quarterback Question: Whether the Cardinals stick with a veteran stopgap or draft a rookie to eventually take snaps this fall, the offensive line and surrounding weapons must survive the grueling 17-game schedule.
Ossenfort is building from the ground up. If he nails this hire, the Cardinals instantly become a tougher out in the NFC West.

