GLENDALE, Ariz. — D.J. Humphries' stunned expression — mouth hanging open and arms in the air while slowly walking around the field — said it all as Arizona's left tackle tried to process what he just saw.
But here's the deal about DeAndre Hopkins' miraculous catch over three defenders on a throw from Kyler Murray with 2 seconds left that lifted the Cardinals to a 32-30 win over the Buffalo Bills on Sunday: It was a planned play.
Sort of.
The Hail Mary, or in this case the "Hail Murray," is certainly a low-percentage, desperation play. But this version is one the Cardinals had been practicing for nearly two years since coach Kliff Kingsbury arrived in the desert. It didn't go exactly to script, but the gist was what the Cardinals wanted.
"That's the only time I've ever seen it not be luck," Humphries said on Monday. "(Hopkins) went up and took that ball out of the air, grabbed it, brought it down and scored that touchdown. It wasn't falling and then cradling the ball, it wasn't a he-tipped-it-and-I-caught-it.'
"It was 'These three guys are around me, I want the ball more, and I'm going to go get it.'"
Here's a breakdown of how the play developed from players and coaches:
It started with Murray rolling to his left, which was the plan, even though the right-hander had to throw across his body. The problem was that Humphries slipped and fell while blocking and it allowed Buffalo's Mario Addison a clear lane to tackle the quarterback.