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Fitz's lone shutout, Friday before the Bills

Larry Fitzgerald did not catch a pass, and that was only the beginning of the brutality that was the Cardinals' last trip to Buffalo.

It was way (way) back in Fitz's rookie year of 2004. It was Denny Green's first season. Anquan Boldin was coming back that day after missing the first six games with a knee injury suffered in training camp. Boldin had four catches for 50 yards. Fitz, alas, was shut out — the only time in his career he has not caught a pass in a game.

"That was probably the first time in my life I didn't catch a ball," said Fitzgerald, whose consecutive-games-with-a-catch streak is at 181. "Ever since I started playing football. There's a first for everything."

(Fitz did have a rushing attempt, for four yards.)

Of course, there weren't many completions, period. Josh McCown completed just 9-of-24 passes, Drew Bledsoe just 8-of-17, as the teams played in nasty winds up to 30 miles an hour plus rain. It was a joy to watch. (It ended with a 38-14 Bills win).

The weather isn't supposed to be bad Sunday. The temperatures will be mild, the sun is supposed to be out, the wind at a minimum. And of course, Fitz is playing with a team 12 years later that is light years better than that group that went to New York.

-- No Evan Mathis this week, cut down by the dreaded turf toe. Earl Watford gets the start in his place. That's an interesting development, in part because ...

-- Sunday will be a big test for right tackle D.J. Humphries. The defense played by the Ryan brothers usually features high-pressure from the outside. Do they go after Humphries? Goodwin said Humphries is doing better, although he noted there were mental lapses both against the Buccaneers and in practice this week. "He is always going to feel the pressure from me and coach (Arians)," Goodwin said.

Now you have Watford and Humphries on the right side of the line without Mathis.

-- Defensive coordinator James Bettcher, on his reaction after hearing Bruce Arians accepting the blame for the zone-first defensive philosophy in the Patriots loss: "The first thing I thought was, we needed to tackle better in that game … our communication wasn't good enough."

"I love coach's input," Bettcher added. "He is one of the smartest men I have ever worked around. Not only is he the best head coach in the National Football League, he is a smart, smart football coach."

-- The Cardinals have yet to turn the ball over. Carson Palmer should have been picked a couple of times so far — the drop by Bucs CB Brent Grimes on the bad route by David Johnson last week the most memorable — but overall the QB has been good protecting the ball. In an offense like this, where the passing game will go down the field, a minimum of interceptions is impressive.

"Experience is one thing," Palmer said in his explanation why. "You know when to take your shots. You know whether it's the right type of third-down situation to be in, the right time of the game. You've got to be smart.

"(Interceptions are) going to happen. You try to avoid them as long as you can and when they do happen, you bounce back and go down and score on the next drive. That's something that I pride myself on."

-- While Arians said the cornerback spot across from Patrick Peterson would be shared work-wise between Marcus Cooper and Brandon Williams, Bettcher said whoever had the better week of practice was going to earn the playing time Sunday.

-- As we go, don't discount the idea that newcomer Tharold Simon could also start to get some defensive snaps at cornerback.

-- Former Cardinals linebacker Lorenzo Alexander, now 33 years old, is starting in Buffalo and has 1½ sacks and nine tackles in two games, plus a forced fumble and tackle for loss. "Lorenzo is playing really, really well," Cardinals offensive coordinator Harold Goodwin said. "He's got a sack and a half and he's missed two or three. Just missed."

-- So far, Markus Golden is keeping up with the higher-profile Chandler Jones in sacks. Both have two in two games. Golden shrugged off his pace, but admitted he'll be looking at it at season's end.

"At the end of the year, of course, numbers mean something to everybody," Golden said. "You want to do stuff people didn't think you could do, so of course the numbers matter, but I feel like if you compete at the high level and play to win, you'll get the numbers no matter what.

"Just got to keep hunting."

Buffalo awaits.

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