Arizona
Roundtable: What is a successful Arizona Cardinals season in 2022?
There’s star expertise on this Arizona Cardinals staff, for certain. Depth may very well be a problem, as may too few upgrades on the defensive aspect of the ball.
Rather a lot in 2022 relies on the Cardinals bettering internally, be it quarterback Kyler Murray, coach Kliff Kingsbury or younger first-round picks Isaiah Simmons and Zaven Collins.
So earlier than Arizona embarks on the season with a Week 1 recreation towards the Kansas Metropolis Chiefs, we requested our Arizona Sports activities hosts, editors and reporters two questions on this 12 months’s staff. First up on this roundtable:
What would you think about a profitable season for the Cardinals, and do you assume they’ll obtain it?
Dan Bickley, co-host of Bickley & Marotta: To be deemed successful, the Cardinals have to make the playoffs. They don’t have to win a playoff recreation, however a reliable playoff efficiency is crucial. They get there on the again of Kyler Murray.
Vince Marotta, co-host of Bickley & Marotta: Coming off an 11-win season throughout which the Cardinals had a number of bizarre or painful losses (Inexperienced Bay, Carolina, Detroit, Seattle), something lower than a return to the playoffs could be a step again and a disappointment. Truly, examine that: A return postseason engagement ending in one other embarrassing loss that sticks with the fan base for 9 months wouldn’t be successful. Make the playoffs and present up … who is aware of? Perhaps win a recreation or two?
Heading into the season, there are such a lot of questions surrounding the personnel of this staff, I don’t assume they’ll attain that customary regardless of the NFC as an entire seeming much less daunting than final season heading into Week 1.
Ron Wolfley, co-host of Wolf & Luke: A playoff win will suffice. They’ve improved yearly beneath Kliff Kingsbury; they’ve made the playoffs. The one occasion that may proceed the momentum of the group is a playoff look by which they play properly … and win.
Luke Lapinski, co-host of Wolf & Luke: Enchancment and success are two various things. They may enhance on final 12 months by successful one other common season recreation, and even simply ending stronger in December. That’s probably not success at this level although. The bar has been raised and I believe the one method we — they usually, for that matter — are going to think about this successful is that if they win at the very least one playoff recreation. It’s 12 months 4 for Kyler and Kliff, they usually simply obtained large extensions.
We are able to’t name this an experiment anymore. They’re all in. And whenever you’re in win-now mode with a franchise quarterback and a younger coach you’ve dedicated to for years and years (and extra years), it’s time to begin making an influence within the playoffs. The NFC has some good groups, however it’s not on the extent of the AFC for the time being, so the chance is there.
Then once more, after seeing the primary damage report of the season, perhaps “success” is solely discovering a method to area a full lineup towards the Chiefs in Week 1.
Dave Burns, co-host of Burns & Gambo: A profitable season can solely be measured by development and enchancment over the season earlier than. And for that to occur the Cardinals should win a playoff recreation. It has solely occurred one season since Kurt Warner retired, and it’s lengthy overdue. Sadly for the Playing cards, I don’t assume it is going to occur. Too many questions and holes on protection. An excessive amount of uncertainty about how they’ll end.
John Gambadoro, co-host of Burns & Gambo: With a brutal schedule and a few apparent weaknesses on that protection at edge rusher and cornerback, I might say a profitable season is gaining a Wild Card spot and going again to the playoffs for the second consecutive season. I believe the ceiling for Arizona is 10 wins, however the ground is seven. The NFC is just not almost nearly as good because the AFC, so a playoff berth could also be had with a 9-8 file.
Tyler Drake, ArizonaSports.com Cardinals reporter and co-host of the Cardinals Nook podcast: The Cardinals cracked the postseason for the primary time in years in 2021, dismal exhibiting or not. They need to not solely return to the playoffs for a second straight 12 months, however they need to additionally appear to be they belong with the league’s greatest. They can’t lay one other egg like they did within the NFC Wild Card recreation towards the Los Angeles Rams.
Erik Ruby, Arizona Sports activities contributor and co-host of the Cardinals Nook podcast: A profitable season is just not one which has a sure variety of wins or requires Arizona to make the playoffs. A profitable season is one by which this staff reveals development. Win video games at dwelling, win video games within the again half of the season and begin the playoffs sturdy. If the Cardinals do exactly a few of that, then the season may very well be thought-about successful.
Kellan Olson, ArizonaSports.com editor: Ending above .500. It’s a brutal schedule and I believe there are far too many “if’s” throughout the board to have faith on this staff making noise within the playoffs. A breakdown of these qualifiers:
If Hollywood Brown is a seamless match and if a wholesome Zach Allen is a difference-maker and if changing Chandler Jones isn’t a problem and if Isaiah Simmons has a breakout season and if Zaven Collins and Nick Vigil are strong and if Byron Murphy Jr. performs like he did within the first half of final 12 months and if Marco Wilson can enhance and if Trayvon Mullen Jr. is a reliable NFL cornerback. That’s so much, so I’m going to say no.
Jake Anderson, ArizonaSports.com editor: Something wanting a playoff berth for the Cardinals in 2022 ought to be thought-about a failure, particularly after flaming out final season. That being stated, I believe attending to the divisional spherical could be gravy. However given the place the staff is heading into Week 1 and Kingsbury’s historical past within the second half of seasons, a aggressive playoff recreation ought to be each anticipated and achievable.
Kevin Zimmerman, ArizonaSports.com lead editor: Merely incomes a playoff berth could be successful for a staff that’s within the top-third of hardest schedules, in accordance with Sharp Soccer Evaluation. Past how far Arizona goes as soon as there, it’s vital to see how this factor seems with Murray locked right into a contract. If he takes one other step ahead, Kingsbury doesn’t finish the 12 months on the new seat and Vance Joseph stays a head-coaching candidate, it’ll be arduous to complain.
My expectations are comparatively low, however I nonetheless assume the Cardinals can examine all these packing containers. The offensive expertise among the many first-stringers is simply too good for Kingsbury to fail even when accidents hit, and Joseph all the time figures out methods to get probably the most out of his personnel. So far as successful within the postseason, I’m unsure.
Arizona
Kingpin: Arizona father and son ran large-scale drug trafficking ring, DOJ says
PHOENIX – The Department of Justice says the two leaders of a large-scale, drug-trafficking ring are a father and son with roots in Phoenix.
In addition to charges of narcotics, conspiracy and money laundering, prosecutors are charging the two men with the “Kingpin” statute, also known as the Continuing Criminal Enterprise Statute.
In January 2024, a federal grand jury in Johnstown, Pennsylvania charged 35 people in a second superseding indictment, accusing the group of participating in a “violent transnational drug and money laundering operation” between August 2021 and June 2023.
Twenty-six of the 35 defendants are from the Phoenix area. A wiretap investigation by the FBI led to the discovery of the alleged drug ring.
Marcos Monarrez-Mendoza mugshot
Marcos Monarrez-Mendoza, 55, was convicted and sentenced to prison in 2013 for using the mail to set up a methamphetamine delivery system in Texas. A decade later, prosecutors believe he and his son Marcos Monarrez Jr. – aka “Nene” – are the leaders of the Monarrez Drug Trafficking Organization based in Phoenix.
The father and son are accused of importing millions of fentanyl pills, kilograms of fentanyl powder, hundreds of pounds of methamphetamine and dozens of kilos of cocaine from Mexico and selling it throughout the U.S.
Court documents say the Monarrez DTO worked with four major suppliers from Mexico and Phoenix. Those four men are also charged in this case, including Jaime Ledesma.
Ledesma is serving time in an Arizona state prison for previous convictions of narcotics possession for sale and weapons misconduct.
Investigators say Monarrez DTO paid numerous distributors and couriers to transport and deliver shipments of fentanyl, meth and cocaine to re-distributors in Phoenix, Seattle, Minneapolis, Cleveland, Wichita, Kansas, Fort Wayne, Indiana and Western Pennsylvania.
Through court records, FOX 10 identified some of the defendants accused of working for Monarrez-Mendoza to distribute illicit drugs, including Cesar Monarrez – aka “Pollo,” Colby Barrow – aka “Bando,” Donald Garwood and Valeriz Sanchez, all based in the Phoenix area.
Carlos Zamora – aka “Calancho” – is not only accused of re-distributing fentanyl and meth – but law enforcement calls him the “enforcer” of the operation and says he was paid by Monarrez Jr. to perpetrate violence, including a drive-by shooting.
Where does our state stand amongst drug trafficking nationwide?
“We are ground zero for drug trafficking right here,” says Special Agent in Charge Cheri Oz of the DEA’s Phoenix Field Division.
Since 2020, Oz and her team have been on the frontlines of the fentanyl crisis in Arizona, seizing historic amounts of drugs.
“Synthetics are the wave of the future,” she says. “With methamphetamine and fentanyl, the cartels have learned chemistry and they’re making concoctions in the jungles and basements and kitchens. They’re packaging those up and selling them, bringing them into the United States and selling them here.”
She says the Sinaloa Cartel and the Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generacion – known as “CJNG” – are the largest Mexican criminal syndicates that threaten the U.S., but it’s not migrants that primarily bring in illicit drugs on foot.
Couriers or “mules” drive through legal ports of entry at the southern border to bring drugs into Arizona.
Authorities also seize drugs at airports like Phoenix Sky Harbor, discovering products hidden in checked luggage and containers. By land and by air, Oz says it’s moving fast and agents are trying to keep up.
“The cartels find very innovative and creative ways to conceal loads and bring them into this country. We’ve seen them inside teddy bears if they go through the mail. Everything that you can imagine, think drug trafficking, illicit drug trafficking is a $3 trillion business. So that’s a lot of money, a lot of reasons to try and bring poison into this country. So, they will be very creative. They will do anything they can to get their poison into the United States,” Oz said.
The black market at the southern border is where drugs and firearms trafficking collide.
“In Mexico you can only buy a weapon through the army. There are only two stores in all of Mexico, and you have to have a permit in order to buy a weapon. So, it is extremely controlled arms regulation or weapons regulation,” says Rafael Barcelo Durazo.
Barcelo is Tucson’s Mexican Consul. He says both sides of the border feel the negative effects.
In the U.S. government’s case against the Monarrez DTO, one of its alleged suppliers – Humberto Arredondo-Soto, was paid in military-grade firearms, including AK-47 and short-stock Draco rifles, Glock handguns and FN SCAR assault rifles smuggled to Mexico by couriers from the U.S.
“From 75 to 80% of the weapons seized in the commission of a crime in Mexico, those were weapons bought in the United States and were illegally trafficked into Mexico,” said Barcelo.
Court records reveal the magnitude of executed search warrants linked to the Monarrez Drug Trafficking Organization.
Phoenix take down seizure
In 2023, authorities searched nine Phoenix locations, seizing 27 kilograms of fentanyl pills, seven and a half kilograms of fentanyl powder, nearly 50 pounds of meth, 12 firearms and more than $200,000 in cash.
Seattle take down seizure
At the same time in Seattle, five search warrants led to the seizure of 27 kilograms of fentanyl pills, 14 firearms and nearly $400,000.
Pills hidden in supplement bottles seized in a flight from Phoenix to Minneapolis in 2022
This seizure happened in 2022 after investigators learned a passenger on a commercial flight from Phoenix to Minneapolis was in contact with members of the Monarrez DTO.
Just weeks later in another alleged smuggling attempt from Phoenix to Minneapolis, authorities seized two protein tubs of fentanyl pills, weighing 20 kilograms, also linked to the Monarrez organization.
“The organized crime has taken so many lives in Mexico and I think from the public opinion point of view in the United States, it’s only the drugs that are the priority. But you cannot tackle the drug trafficking if you don’t tackle, also, the illegal trafficking of weapons from the United States,” says Barcelo.
It doesn’t stop behind bars
The DOJ says while Monarrez Jr. was in prison in the Western District of Pennsylvania, he used contraband cell phones to communicate with other co-conspirators on the outside and orchestrate the distribution of 500,000 fentanyl pills throughout the nation.
Marcos Sr. was arrested by Chandler Police in November 2023 on drug and money laundering charges.
Out of the 35 defendants, five have taken plea deals and four of them have been sentenced.
Oz says Arizona is ground zero for drug trafficking here in Arizona, impacting so many families across the state.
‘We watched her die’
“I miss her so much every day. I miss her laugh. She was very sarcastic. She was always laughing, always making jokes. And she was just super fun. She just lit up everybody’s life,” says Danya Ayers, the mother of Hannah Pairrett.
Ayers doesn’t miss a chance to tell her daughter’s story because she’s no longer here.
In June 2019, she warned her 16-year-old daughter about the dangers of buying pills off the street.
“She actually said ‘I would never be stupid enough,’ which were her words. ‘I’m not stupid enough to go out and buy something if I don’t. I’m not going to do that because I know better,’” said Danya.
But Hannah ultimately bought what she believed were three Adderall pills. An hour later, Hannah overdosed and was rushed to Phoenix Children’s Hospital.
Danya remembers seeing her daughter in the ICU.
“And if she does make it, it would be a miracle, and she would not be the same person because she would have been severely brain-damaged because of how long she was down for,” Danya said.
The pill Hannah took was laced with fentanyl. Her death was one of 1,294 fatal opioid overdoses in Arizona in 2019.
“We watched her die,” says Danya.
For Danya, the repercussions of one drug sale changed her family’s life.
In November 2023, Michael Allen Fox was sentenced to six years in prison for the distribution of fentanyl that caused Hannah Pairrett’s death.
Fox is not linked to the Monarrez DTO.
“There’s a little bit of closure because he did get sentenced, and he is in prison now. But the sentencing was only six years. So, we don’t feel like that was the justice that she deserved,” says Danya.
Meanwhile, the DEA says fentanyl seizures in Arizona have started to decline.
“We have a ton of fentanyl that’s coming into the United States. However, I’m happy to say that our numbers are plateauing and even going down just slightly,” says Oz.
Danya makes it her mission to educate parents about the fears of fentanyl and to watch out for the signs before it’s too late.
“To watch your child die or to hear that your child is gone. Nobody, you don’t want that. Nobody wants that,” she says. “So that’s what I really want to try to get out there is you never forget. It never goes away. And it never stops hurting to lose your child like that.”
As for the Kingpin Statute, te sentence for a conviction carries a mandatory minimum of 20 years in prison and a maximum of life in prison.
Only a handful of Americans have been charged with that statute.
Arizona
Oldest US firearm unearthed in Arizona, a bronze cannon linked to Coronado expedition
Independent researchers in Arizona have unearthed a bronze cannon linked to the Vázquez de Coronado expedition, making it the oldest firearm ever found in the continental United States. The discovery sheds new light on the artillery used during the 1539–1542 expedition into the American Southwest.
In the early 16th century, reports of wealthy cities north of Mexico sparked Spanish interest in further exploration. Inspired by the accounts of past conquistador raids and tales of the Seven Cities of Cíbola relayed by Fray Marcos de Niza, Viceroy Antonio de Mendoza organized an expedition led by Francisco Vázquez de Coronado in 1539.
Coronado, who mortgaged his wife’s possessions and borrowed heavily for the excursion, went in search of these legendary cities in hopes of stealing gold and precious stones, claiming land and enslaving large populations for forced labor.
With 150 mounted soldiers, 200 infantrymen, and hundreds of native recruits, the expedition would ultimately face disappointment when the cities did not match the grandeur described. Instead of finding riches or large populations to enslave, the armed force mostly looted blankets and pottery from small Pueblo communities in the Southwest before turning back when they reached the Great Plains of Kansas.
In the study, “Coronado’s Cannon: A 1539–42 Coronado Expedition Cannon Discovered in Arizona,” published in the International Journal of Historical Archaeology, the team details a bronze cannon found at an excavation site in the Santa Cruz Valley of Arizona and how they connect it to Francisco Vázquez de Coronado.
The cannon was found on the floor of a Spanish stone-and-adobe structure, dated to the Coronado era using radiocarbon dating and optically stimulated luminescence techniques. Other artifacts recovered from the site align with the expedition, including European pottery and olive jar sherds, glass shards, and weapon parts.
Sometimes referred to as a wall gun, the unearthed cannon was an early type of firearm requiring two people to operate. Designed primarily for use along fortification walls, the expedition reportedly utilized them as an offensive weapon to breach wooden or light adobe walls of domestic dwellings in the cities they encountered.
Measuring 42 inches in length and weighing about 40 pounds, the cannon type would typically make use of a large wooden tripod. It shows evidence of being sand-cast with three sprue marks along the bottom axis and four iron pins used in the casting process. The plain and unadorned casting design suggests it may have been cast in Mexico or the Caribbean rather than Spain, where a more decorative approach was common.
It is also suggested that the cannon could have been purchased from a previous Spanish expedition, possibly even from Ponce de León. The cannon was found unloaded and shows no evidence of use in the battle, raising questions about why it was left behind.
Historical accounts indicate that the local Sobaipuri O’odham people attacked the settlement, leading to the Spaniards retreating from the area. Clusters of lead shot and distinctive Sobaipuri arrowheads at the site reinforce the narrative of a confrontation.
This discovery provides the first known firearm from the Coronado expedition and offers insights into early Spanish-Native American interactions in the Southwest. Further analyses are planned to determine the gun’s exact origins and study other site artifacts.
More information:
Deni J. Seymour et al, Coronado’s Cannon: A 1539-42 Coronado Expedition Cannon Discovered in Arizona, International Journal of Historical Archaeology (2024). DOI: 10.1007/s10761-024-00761-7
© 2024 Science X Network
Citation:
Oldest US firearm unearthed in Arizona, a bronze cannon linked to Coronado expedition (2024, November 25)
retrieved 25 November 2024
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Arizona
Mike Macdonald Addresses The Team After Big Divisional Win Over The Arizona Cardinals – 2024 Week 12
Quarterback Geno Smith reflects on the Seahawks’ important home win against the Arizona Cardinals. The game, described as having a playoff atmosphere, saw standout performances from the defense, including Leonard Williams, Devon Witherspoon, and Coby Bryant, who scored a pick-six (0:21). Smith highlights the team’s efficient offense and a crucial 8-minute drive in the fourth quarter (1:02). He notes a shift in how defenses are playing against them, with more zone coverage and fewer blitzes (1:41). Smith praises the defense’s dominance and emphasizes the importance of complementary football (2:18). The victory puts the Seahawks in a strong position in their division, energizing both the team and their fans who had recently experienced power outages in the city (5:29).
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