
That’s the thing about playing on the edge all the time. There’s always the threat of falling over the side and into the abyss.
The Cardinals’ overtime magic ran out Sunday at University of Phoenix Stadium, just as it seemed to be picking up proper momentum as the regulation clock wound down. Instead, the Buffalo Bills hung a stunning 19-16 loss on the Cards, the team’s second straight defeat, and what looked like a win wasn’t.
“If we make more plays early in the game, then we don’t have to live on the edge,” coach Ken Whisenhunt said. “The stress of it is pretty tough on everybody.”
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Just like that, the Cards were beaten. It snapped a seven-game winning streak the Cardinals had complied in home overtime games.
“You go from on top of the world to feeling about as low as you can feel when you have an opportunity and you don’t come through, regardless of how it happened,” Feely said.
After their 4-0 start, the Cardinals (4-2) are now tied with the 49ers and the Seahawks for first place in the NFC West, with the Rams a game behind, all with the most difficult part of the Cards’ schedule about to get underway. Kolb too must undergo X-rays to look at the extent of his ribs and chest issues.
It wasn’t supposed to play out like that, not with the running game reenergized behind running back ![]()
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With Skelton active for the first time since his ankle injury put Kolb back in the lineup, he got a chance to play. Kolb’s scrambles were a big reason the Cards still had a chance, but it was a busted play – Whisenhunt said Powell went the wrong way on a draw play – left Kolb to run unexpectedly. The Bills’ tackle sandwich he became part of left Kolb leaving the field very slowly.
Whisenhunt wasn’t sure afterward how severe the injury will turn out to be. Skelton, however, had a chance to flip the storyline from the opener, when Kolb relieved him after an injury and provided the game-winning drive.
Skelton couldn’t get the winning points, but he convert a fourth-down play to set up Feely’s gigantic and normally improbable 61-yard game-tying shot.
“You don’t think there’s any way a guy is going to make a 61-yarder,” Bills coach Chan Gailey said.
Skelton tried to make Feely a hero times two. He hit Fitzgerald for a 28-yard pass after a Bills’ punt to set up Feely again on the final play. But it was tipped – Bills defensive end Alex Carrington was credited – and the ball glanced off the right upright. Feely said he hasn’t had a kick blocked or deflected since 2006, and while Stats LLC said Feely had one in 2009 while with the Jets, the significance remained.
“It’s been a long time,” Feely said.
It shouldn’t have mattered. “We prefer overtime,” Fitzgerald said. “We like it. We relish the opportunity. I think guys really like playing in crunch, pressure situations and thrive in it.” The Cardinals even stopped the Bills to begin overtime.
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The Cardinals will head to Minnesota next week, a place that hasn’t been kind to them in recent years. Depending on Kolb’s injuries, Skelton may find himself back in a starting role.
“All you can ask for is to give yourself an opportunity,” said Skelton, who was 2-for-10 for 45 yards. “We gave ourselves an opportunity.”
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But this time, the Cardinals couldn’t hold their balance while teetering on the edge.
“You don’t look at too much good stuff – the good stuff doesn’t matter when you lose the game,” defensive end ![]()
“We thought we had a chance (after Feely’s 61-yarder) but it shouldn’t have come to that. I know in my heart we are a better team than them, and we let them play a better game than us today.”