The Arizona Cardinals seem to have a decision on the future of incumbent franchise quarterback Josh Rosen.

After rookie coach Kliff Kingsbury and general manager Steve Keim offered tepid support for the 2017 first-round pick in recent weeks, NFL Network's Charley Casserly said on Tuesday that the Cardinals have begun shopping Rosen to potentially interested teams.

NFL Network reporter James Palmer first reported the news.

The UCLA product certainly didn’t establish himself as a future star his rookie season, throwing for 2,278 yards, 11 touchdowns, 14 interceptions, and completing just 55.2 percent of his passes.

Yet it’s not like Rosen was put in the best position to succeed, either, playing behind perhaps the league’s most porous offensive line with an aging caliber of playmakers at his disposal.

Kingsbury made waves in February by saying that Rosen is “our guy.” Conventional wisdom had been that the Cardinals would at least considering drafting a quarterback with the number one overall pick, especially given Kingsbury's known affinity for Kyler Murray.

Last fall, the first-year coach, then with Texas Tech, said he would “take [Murray] with the first pick in the draft if I could.”

Keim expressed similar confidence in Rosen's status last week. Asked at the NFL combine if the second-year pro is Arizona's quarterback, Keim responded, “He is right now, for sure.”

It's unclear what Rosen might fetch on the trade market.

Less than a year ago he was considered by some as the top quarterback prospect in a class that included the Cleveland Browns' Baker Mayfield, Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson, and New York Jets' Sam Darnold, among others.

The Washington Redskins are currently considered the betting favorite to land Rosen, with the Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, New York Giants, and Los Angeles Chargers also garnering interest from the oddsmakers.