The Cardinals have arrived at the bye weekend, and that itself is an accomplishment. In a world where the coronavirus - or the potential to catch the coronavirus - overshadows everything, that the Cards have made it though seven games without an issue is a big step. So too is how they have played. It was hard to get a sense of exactly where this team was coming out of training camp, but here they are, among the leaders in the NFC, battling for the top of the best division in football. "Prior to the season, just instinctively, I had a feel that we had a chance to be a pretty good football team," GM Steve Keim said. "I also felt like, if we were going to lose games, it was going to be because we beat ourselves. I don't want to say that with any arrogance, but at the same time the way we have lost those two games are because of self-inflicted mistakes. I know a lot of teams can say that, but I truly feel like, when we put it all together, and we do everything we can do from a talent and a team standpoint, I feel like we're going to be a hard out." So what have the Cardinals learned at the bye? KYLER MURRAY'S LEGS HAVE BECOME A MAJOR WEAPON ?Kyler Murray?'s ability to run and scramble was always part of his game - it's why he was the No. 1 overall pick. But he and coach Kliff Kingsbury have unlocked the run in 2020. Murray is on pace for just under 1,000 yards rushing, he already has scored seven touchdowns on the ground and he is averaging 6.7 yards a carry. At the same time, he has figured out how to use his legs for good, avoiding sacks much better than as a rookie, having been sacked only nine times in seven games. KLIFF KINGSBURY IS (MOSTLY) AGGRESSIVE OK, so if Kingsbury had to do it over again, he probably stays on offense in overtime rather than settle for a second-down field-goal try, but truthfully, that was one of the rare times Kingsbury hasn't pushed it. He goes for it often on fourth down, he likes to up-tempo the offense. And it's paid off - the Cardinals are averaging 29 points a game and trending up. DEANDRE HOPKINS IS EXACTLY WHAT WAS PROMISED The Cardinals won the ?DeAndre Hopkins? trade when it happened - that was a given. But Hopkins has been spectacular in his first seven games as a Cardinal. He leads the league in catches (57) and yards (704) and has already made a handful of crucial plays. As the Cardinals' offense evolves, it underscores how they needed a No. 1 receiver, and what impact Hopkins has made. CHASE EDMONDS PLAYS A VITAL ROLE IN THE OFFENSE The Cardinals will have to find out how to deal with the loss of ?Kenyan Drake?, who has been solid if not spectacular the first part of the season. The duo of Drake and ?Chase Edmonds? was as good as there is as a two-some. More falls on the shoulders of Edmonds, who, in his limited touches, has been excellent all season. It's only because he doesn't get the ball a ton that his year hasn't been noticed more. The Cards don't beat the Seahawks without his timely plays. He'll get more work now as the starter; he can't wait to get that chance. THE OFFENSIVE LINE HAS DEPTH The offensive line is ranked high in the key metrics, and even if the players themselves shrug that off, it's clear the unit has become something impressive. Some of it is the quarterback and the way Kingsbury runs the offense, but it's also they way the group has been playing - and even if a player has an injury, GM Steve Keim has finally built a unit that can survive some mishaps. ISAIAH SIMMONS IS A WORK-IN-PROGRESS It's the (non-)story of the pre-bye, how much first-round pick Isaiah Simmons isn't playing. Some of it is Simmons' inability to get any offseason work at a position for which he needed it at inside linebacker. Some of it is the realization that, at this point, De'Vondre Campbell is better for the defense. Simmons capped his first half of the season with a (soon-to-be) game-winning interception against the Seahawks. Will he play a lot more in the coming weeks? Hard to say. But barring injury, the Cardinals aren't going to put him out there just for the sake of having him out there. BUDDA BAKER IS A STAR The safety made a Pro Bowl last year. And then the Cardinals gave him a giant contract extension. Maybe Budda Baker was trying to live up to all that - or maybe Baker is just that guy. Either way, he has been one of the best in the NFL, showing it when he has played and proving it even when he did not (in Carolina.) Baker was named a captain after Chandler Jones got hurt, and it makes too much sense. He's become the heartbeat of the defense, much like predecessor Tyrann Mathieu was once upon a time. BUT BAKER CAN'T OUTRUN DK METCALF I mean, we all saw it. But it was a hell of an interception. EVEN WITHOUT CHANDLER JONES, THE CARDS CAN PRESSURE THE PASSER Losing Jones was crushing. The man is one of the best in the league, and the Cards lost in the locker room there too. But defensive coordinator Vance Joseph has found a way. The Cards still have 19 sacks, which is among the best in the league, and they are pushing the pocket. Now they have Markus Golden arriving to help. The secondary has played well, but the pass rush has to hold up its end of the bargain. So far, so good. Sando: "Having a young QB with ability lifts up everyone in the organization." Ruiz: "Having a star quarterback. Kyler is developing into that star quarterback this season, and when you have a guy like that, it gives you such a bigger margin for error. Like you saw on Sunday, they made those mistakes and made some coaching mistakes. They didn't capitalize on some opportunities they had, and it didn't matter because they had Kyler. His unique skillset allowed those late drives to happen. He just unlocks so much for that offense and for the team as a whole." Q: How would you handicap the NFC West? Orlovsky: "I'd say the Rams stand out. I took the Rams to win the division before the season started, just because I think they are the most complete football team. ... I said this (Tuesday): the common theme of all the NFC West teams is one, they've all got great coaching, two, all of their quarterbacks are playing good football, but the differentiator is the Rams have at least some form of a defense. Seattle right now doesn't. San Francisco is just so banged up, but they might be getting healthier. Arizona, if their defense continues to buckle down in crucial situations, they're going to be really, really difficult to play against. I could convince anybody that any team in that division is going to win. I truly feel confident saying that. I can't do that in any other division." Schatz: "We've got Seattle 38%, the Rams 27, Arizona 26 and the 49ers 9 (to win the NFC West). The deal is, the 49ers and the Rams, their schedules get much harder going forward. Arizona's schedule gets a little harder, and Seattle's schedule gets even less a little bit harder. There's not much change to Seattle's. We have the entire division having a winning record 38% of the time, but the entire division making the playoffs only 5% of the time because New Orleans and Tampa Bay are so good." Sando: "The NFC West is tough to handicap. All the teams are good but flawed. I default to the team with the best QB (Seattle) but think the Seahawks will have a hard time sweeping any season series in the division." Ruiz: "I would probably put Seattle as the top team in that division, and I think I would go Rams over the Cardinals at this point, though I feel like the Cardinals, Rams and 49ers are stuck in a group just below Seattle. But Arizona has the best point-differential in the division. Maybe what we saw against Seattle, that's what we'll see going forward. And if that's the case - the defense playing well and the offense starting to click in both phases, the passing game and the running game - I would not be surprised if the Cardinals are right there by the Seahawks by December."