The Arizona Cardinals added two scouts to their personnel department this week, expanding evaluation bandwidth in both pro and college tiers. The hires come eight months into general manager Monti Ossenfort's second offseason cycle and four months before the 2025 NFL Draft, when Arizona holds the 13th overall pick and seven total selections.
The Cardinals did not disclose compensation or prior affiliations, standard practice for mid-level scouting appointments. One hire focuses on college evaluation; the other joins the pro personnel side, responsible for opponent advance work, free-agent tracking, and trade targeting. Both report through Arizona's director of player personnel, a structure Ossenfort imported from his Tennessee tenure under Jon Robinson.
The timing matters for two reasons. First, the Cardinals enter a critical evaluation window on their own roster. Quarterback Kyler Murray is 18 months removed from ACL surgery and carries a $51.6 million cap hit in 2026, the first year Arizona can exit his contract without prohibitive dead money. Second, Arizona's $47 million in projected 2025 cap space—ninth-most in the league—requires precise targeting. The Cardinals need edge rush, interior offensive line depth, and a decision on whether 2024 first-rounder Marvin Harrison Jr. requires a true WR2 or whether Ossenfort bets on late-round development.
Pro scouts are the connective tissue between game-planning staff and front-office deal structure. They file weekly reports on upcoming opponents, flagging practice-squad elevations, snap-count trends, and contract situations that signal trade availability. When Kansas City called Philadelphia about a March cornerback swap in 2023, the recommendation came from a pro scout who had watched that defender on special teams for three weeks. Arizona's expanded pro staff suggests Ossenfort expects to be active in the March 12-14 trade window before free agency opens, particularly if a veteran edge or guard becomes available at $4-6 million annual value.
College scouts work differently. They cover assigned regions, filing reports from September through January, then converge for February Senior Bowl and Combine evaluation. Arizona's college hire arrives late in the cycle but early enough to contribute Shrine Bowl and East-West evaluations in late January, plus in-person pro day visits in March. The Cardinals have invested heavily in offensive skill talent—three first-round picks on offense since 2022—but remain thin on defensive front-seven depth, the archetype most available in rounds three through five.
Ossenfort's scouting expansion mirrors the approach he used in Tennessee, where the Titans added four scouts between 2016 and 2019 before drafting A.J. Brown, Jeffery Simmons, and Harold Landry in consecutive classes. Arizona's current scouting staff numbers roughly 18 full-time evaluators, middle-of-the-pack for NFC West operations but smaller than San Francisco's 24-person department. The gap shows in late-round hit rate: the Cardinals have started two sixth- or seventh-round picks in the past three seasons; the 49ers have started nine.
Watch for Arizona's presence at the January 30-31 Senior Bowl in Mobile, Alabama, where Ossenfort traditionally conducts informal trade conversations with other GMs during practice breaks. The Cardinals' scout expansion positions them to act quickly if a non-playoff team signals interest in moving back from the top 20 of April's draft. Arizona holds $13.2 million in rollover cap space, which can be deployed mid-season if a proven edge rusher becomes available at the trade deadline—a scenario the expanded pro staff is now better equipped to evaluate.
The Cardinals open 2025 training camp in late July with 31 players under contract beyond this season, the fewest in the NFC. Every evaluation matters.