In the cards: Murray, Kingsbury book 1st NFL win

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The Cardinals beat the 0-5 Cincinnati Bengals 26-23 on Sunday to give coach Kliff Kingsbury and rookie quarterback Kyler Murray their…

CINCINNATI — It wasn’t pretty, but Cardinals coach Kliff Kingsbury and rookie quarterback Kyler Murray won their first NFL game Sunday.

The Cardinals, who entered Sunday’s game winless, beat the 0-5 Cincinnati Bengals 26-23 at Paul Brown Stadium thanks to 514 yards of offense and a performance by Murray that showed his ongoing evolution as a quarterback.

Murray finished with 93 rushing yards, including 24 on perhaps the game’s most important play late in the fourth quarter to lead Arizona on its decisive drive, along with 253 passing yards.

After Arizona saw a 23-9 lead evaporate as the Bengals tied it at 23 with two minutes left, Murray led Arizona on a 62-yard drive that included a 24-yard pass to David Johnson and a 24-yard run, setting up a 31-yard field goal by Zane Gonzalez as time expired.

Murray showed his ability to score with his feet late in the first quarter on a 6-yard bootleg run on fourth-and-2. On the score, Murray displayed his speed, agility and quick feet while out running, hesitating, stutter-stepping and then finally powering his way into the end zone.

Aiding Murray was Kingsbury’s creative playcalling.

He used a series of jet sweeps and end-arounds as well as a play in which Murray threw a long lateral to Larry Fitzgerald, who was split out wide, and then Fitzgerald threw a lateral back to Murray, who had faded to his left as a receiver. The play gained only 5 yards but showed the lengths of Kingsbury’s creativity.

Murray finished with three throws of 24 yards or more, displaying his touch, accuracy and finesse throwing the ball.

The Cardinals continued their struggles in the red zone, finishing with one touchdown in five tries, but Kingsbury showed the ability to adapt by running the ball nine times in the red zone compared to five passes.

Murray also showed maturity when it came to dealing with defensive pressure.

He threw the ball away early in the game instead of trying to force it, and later threw a pass at the feet of his offensive line instead of throwing the ball away in the air.

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