Andy Holloway said he is forgiving Marvin Harrison after a rookie campaign that felt disappointing only because expectations were ridiculous. Harrison still delivered an 8-80-8 season (62-885-8) and became just the sixth rookie WR in the past decade to hit those thresholds, joining A.J. Brown, Michael Thomas, Ja’Marr Chase, Jordan Addison and Brian Thomas. His 21 percent target share parallels what A.J. Brown (19.5 %) and CeeDee Lamb (19 %) posted before erupting in year two. Holloway noted Arizona used Harrison as a deep decoy on roughly half his routes, which opened the middle for Trey McBride, but that role should expand in 2025: the Cardinals devoted almost their entire draft to defense, signaling full confidence in their young offensive core. With more schemed underneath targets, a proven red-zone nose (eight TDs) and another offseason with Kyler Murray, Holloway expects Harrison to leap from last year's WR28 finish to reliable WR1 levels and is happy to pounce on any early season-long discount.