TEMPE, Ariz. — Jonathan Gannon's once-promising head coaching tenure with the Arizona Cardinals is done following a dismal third season that started with high expectations but quickly collapsed thanks to injuries, embarrassing gaffes and a long string of losses that became increasingly noncompetitive.
Now the franchise is preparing for a rebuild — again.
The Cardinals parted ways with Gannon on Monday, one day after a 37-20 loss to the Los Angeles Rams to end their season. It was the team's ninth straight loss and 14th setback in 15 games.
Now a new coaching staff will get the chance to rebuild a franchise that will have the No. 3 overall pick in April, but has been to the playoffs just once since 2016. General manager Monti Ossenfort will return.
The 43-year-old Gannon finished his tenure with a 15-36 record, including 3-14 this season. Gannon expressed optimism in recent weeks that he would return for a fourth season, but owner Michael Bidwill had other ideas, opting to look for the franchise's 13th head coach since moving to Arizona in 1988.
Pro Bowl tight end Trey McBride was one of many Cardinals players who voiced support for Gannon, but it wasn't enough to save his job.
''It's a team game — there's a lot of things that went wrong," McBride said shortly before Gannon was fired. ''You lose a couple close ones early and then just a little domino effect from there. Very frustrating season."
Gannon's dismissal is a development that seemed unlikely just a few months ago.