\-- Parsons will move around, and while left tackle Paris Johnson Jr. is ready for the task – "Beauty of the NFL," Johnson said. "Amazing rushers every week." – Parsons does line up about 35 percent of the time outside the right tackle, in this case Jonah Williams.
\-- The last Packers visit to Arizona was the infamous Thursday night game in which the Cardinals were trying to go 8-0 and looked like they would – but wide receiver A.J. Green didn't turn around in the end zone on a Murray pass, and Rasul Douglas made the interception to end the 24-21 loss.
\-- I know some fans were upset with Emari Demercado a couple weeks ago. But with Demercado out Sunday because of an ankle injury, the Cardinals lose a key third-down back and pass protector, and are frighteningly thin at running back. Michael Carter and Bam Knight are now the main two options, and they will certainly bring someone up from the practice squad.
\-- The Cardinals are the only team to have every game decided by seven or fewer points.
\-- Budda Baker lamented his interception that wasn't in Indy, a play that would've saved the Cardinals a field goal against and _might_ have gone for six the other way.
"Anytime the ball touches my hands I should catch it," Baker said. "You don't get many opportunities to get the football like that. I used my body. Gotta use my hands. Gotta catch those. … I have to catch those. Feel a type of a way when it happens, like 'Oh sh\*t no,' but it's the next play mentality."
Baker did say he made sure to get more work on the JUGS machine this week.
\-- This is a reunion of the second-oldest matchup in NFL history. Only the Cardinals-Bears is (barely) older. Sunday will mark the 103 years, 10 months and 29 days from the first time the Cardinals and Packers played, a scintillating 3-3 tie in front of about 2,000 at Chicago's Normal Park on Nov. 20, 1921.
\-- Tight end Trey McBride, if he makes at least five catches this week, will join Mike Ditka and Zach Ertz as the only tight ends in NFL history to do such a thing in the first seven games of the season.
\-- Calais Campbell will play his 79th game at State Farm Stadium on Sunday. The only one with more is Larry Fitzgerald, with 121.
Last year, cornerback [Max Melton wasn’t sure if he’d match up with brother Bo,](https://www.azcardinals.com/news/lambeau-reunion-has-brothers-max-and-bo-melton-hyped-cardinals-packers) a wide receiver for the Packers, on anything but special teams. This year, that's the only way it can happen, since Bo moved to cornerback in the offseason (and changed his number to 16, just like Max.)
"He's doing good," Max Melton said. "He hasn't really asked me too much, so I take it that's he's been doing good. And I've heard that from a couple players. It's rare that that happens, so I'm proud of him."
Melton said he had to get "between 20 and 30 tickets" for family and friends for the game. Bo was on the hook last year in Green Bay, so Max had to make the commitment this season.
\-- The last word goes to, who else, veteran and wise soul Campbell, on the four-game losing streak:
"We're kind of at a crossroads. If we use this as a steppingstone for us to get better and we figure out how to close out these close games, it'll pay off for us in the long run and make us a better team. Which is what I am expecting to happen. But it is hard when you lose four in a row.
Emotionally you are like, 'What is going on. Can we win ballgames?' You have to remind yourself, 'Yes we can.'"