The Cardinals worked hard to build up their defensive line this offseason.
They signed Dalvin Tomlinson and Calais Campbell. They re-signed L.J. Collier. They were getting veterans Justin Jones and Bilal Nichols back from injury. And they had young players Darius Robinson – their 2024 first-round pick – and Dante Stills.
So Thursday night, they added … a potential Aaron Donald?
The Cardinals nabbed Ole Miss defensive tackle Walter Nolen with the 16th pick overall in the NFL draft, a player brimming with confidence, one who said “I’m a unicorn” with the ability to do whatever as long as the coaching is there, and who had said in an interview earlier in the offseason he thought he’d be the next Aaron Donald.
Nolen didn’t come quite as strong with the sentiment after being selected. But as a “smaller” defensive lineman at 6-foot-3 and under 300 pounds – like Donald had been – he wasn’t backing away from the comparison.
“I feel we have the same mentality when it comes to D-line,” Nolen said during his conference call Thursday after he was picked. “I can’t wait to get out there and hopefully do better than what he did. He set the bar pretty high.”
Nolen’s talent is unquestioned. But he lamented some of the criticisms he saw leveled against him – that he doesn’t love football, that he might not be a good teammate – and appreciated the Cardinals talking to him about it during a pre-draft visit.
“They didn’t think nothing about what people were saying (negative) about me,” Nolen said. “They came straight to the source. For them to believe in me, I can’t wait to get out there and perform.”
Nolen was a first-team All-American in 2024, his one season at Ole Miss after two years at Texas A&M. He finished with 6.5 sacks and 14 tackles for loss, and was a finalist for the Outland Trophy, which is awarded to the best offensive/defensive lineman in college football.