Carson Beck’s Biggest Problem Wasn’t His Arm

Hunter Tierney
By Hunter Tierney
May 21, 2026
Carson Beck’s Biggest Problem Wasn’t His Arm

Carson Beck’s arm became part of his draft story the second his 2024 season ended the way it did.

That was always going to happen. When a quarterback tears the UCL in his throwing elbow, has surgery, changes schools, misses the early part of the offseason, and then tries to rebuild his stock in one year, people are going to watch every throw like they’re diagnosing a car engine. Every ball that floats? Injury. Every late throw? Injury. Every miss outside the numbers? Injury. That’s just how these things go.

Now Beck is in Arizona, trying to turn the page with the Cardinals, and he has already made it pretty clear that he doesn’t want to live in that injury conversation forever:

"My arm feels great. It has for a while now."

Fair enough.

But honestly, I think the tape moved on from this conversation before a lot of people did.

The Arm Didn’t Look Gone To Me

The arm-strength conversation didn’t come out of nowhere. Beck tore the UCL in his throwing elbow in Georgia’s SEC title game against Texas, had surgery, missed the playoff run, then transferred to Miami with that hanging over everything.

That’s a rough setup for any quarterback. Your throwing arm is the whole job. So when people questioned whether the same ball would still come out after surgery, that was fair.

It also didn’t help that his 2024 Georgia season already looked shakier than 2023. The 2023 version of Beck looked clean, efficient, and in control. Then 2024 got choppier. Completion percentage dropped. Yards per attempt dropped. The picks doubled. Some of that had context around the offense and supporting cast, but the inconsistency wasn't deniable.

Then the elbow injury happened, and suddenly every throw gets viewed through the same lens: is the arm still the same?

That’s fair to ask. The problem is when that question becomes the answer before you look at the tape.

The Late Miami Tape Told A Different Story

If Beck’s arm was really the problem, the late-season tape should’ve made that obvious.

You’d expect Miami to shrink the offense. More screens. More quick game. Fewer throws that actually stress defenses. You’d expect a quarterback who looked hesitant to really rip it.

That’s just not what I saw.

The ball still jumps out of Beck’s hand. There are throws where he barely even looks loaded up and he still gets plenty on it. He can still drive the ball outside the numbers. He can still attack intermediate windows. And when the play is on time, he can still push the ball down the field without it looking forced.

More importantly, he still trusted the arm.

That stood out to me a lot. Beck didn’t play like someone scared to test windows. He still believed he could put the ball where he wanted it.

Now, that confidence gets him in trouble sometimes. There are definitely boneheaded throws on tape. But most of the misses and picks didn’t look like the arm failed him. They looked like he was late, his feet weren’t tied to the throw, or he trusted a window a half-second too long.

That’s quarterbacking stuff. Not automatically an arm-strength issue.

And honestly, the late-season numbers back that up. In November, Beck completed 76.7% of his passes with 13 touchdowns and over nine yards per attempt. Over his final four regular-season games, he threw for 1,125 yards with 11 touchdowns and one pick.

You can argue about the opponents if you want. That’s fair. But quarterbacks dealing with a truly compromised arm don’t finish the year throwing the ball like that.

Arm Strength And Timing Aren’t The Same Thing

Sep 13, 2025; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Miami Hurricanes quarterback Carson Beck (11) reacts against the South Florida Bulls during the second quarter at Hard Rock Stadium.
Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

There are definitely throws on Beck’s tape that don’t look special. He can be late. Pressure can speed him up. Sometimes his feet and arm aren’t tied together, and there are a few ā€œplease just take the sackā€ moments that would drive coaches insane.

But that’s different than the arm just not being there anymore.

A lot of times, people blame the arm for stuff that’s really timing, rhythm, or footwork. And honestly, those things can improve a lot faster than arm strength ever will. If the arm is truly gone, there usually isn’t some magical fix coming later.

With Beck, I don’t think that’s the issue.

When he’s on time and in rhythm, the ball gets there just fine. He can still drive intermediate throws or layer the ball without it looking forced. But when he’s late, everything starts looking worse.

And sure, Beck probably doesn’t have one of the five biggest arms in football. Fine. But there’s a huge difference between not having an elite arm and not having enough arm.

They’re not asking Beck to be Josh Allen and erase bad decisions with superhero throws. They’re betting on a quarterback with experience, toughness, confidence, and enough arm talent to make defenses pay when the offense is on schedule.

At Some Point, Arizona’s Going To Want To See This Live

Arizona doesn’t need Beck to walk in and save the franchise tomorrow. They took him in the third round and put him around veteran quarterbacks.

Honestly, that’s a pretty smart bet.

The Cardinals liked the experience, toughness, pocket presence, and confidence he plays with. Beck started a ton of games and still finished his final college season with 3,813 yards and 30 touchdowns.

The best version of Beck is confident, aggressive, and on schedule. He trusts his arm, but he’s not some chaos quarterback trying to survive every play off raw talent alone.

And honestly, Arizona has pieces that can help him. Trey McBride is a quarterback’s best friend over the middle. Marvin Harrison Jr. can win outside. Michael Wilson fits well in structure. There’s enough there to help Beck settle in if he gets real reps sooner rather than later.

Because if he’s on time and throwing in rhythm, nobody’s going to care whether his arm is ā€œelite.ā€ They’re going to care whether the ball gets where it needs to go.

That’s really the whole thing.


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