The Arizona Cardinals have “their guy” in quarterback Kyler Murray. However, for the nation to truly soak that in, they may need to surround him with weapons. While offensive line remains the top priority, wide receiver is up there, especially with the incoming — probable — retirement of Larry Fitzgerald.

If Arizona figures out a way to revamp their line before the draft, there should be one name, in particular, on top of their draft board: Oklahoma wide receiver CeeDee Lamb.

The Cardinals, under Kliff Kingsbury, are looking for dominance through the air. What better way to do that than give their uber-promising quarterback a wide-out comparable to DeAndre Hopkins.

Even better: Lamb and Murray played together in 2018, with the wide-out being the quarterback's No. 2 option behind Marquise Brown. The two have a pre-built rapport playing in a Lincoln Riley Air Raid offense comparable to Kingsbury's.

In 2018, with Murray throwing him passes (before blowouts), Lamb hauled in 65 receptions for 1,158 yards and 11 touchdowns — all while playing as the second option in a vaunted offense. In 2019, he is on pace to blow out those numbers.

In nine games (DNP vs. Baylor), Lamb has 44 receptions for 983 yards and 13 touchdowns. Over a 14-game season (which he played in 2018), he would have 68 catches for 1,529 yards and 20 touchdowns — mind-boggling numbers.

However, Lamb doesn't need numbers to convince anyone of his outstanding skill-set. His game does all the talking. And the Cardinals need to listen.

Stated previously, Lamb is comparable to two-time All-Pro DeAndre Hopkins. He carries a similar frame (6-2, 195) and style of play. Like “Nuk,” Lamb is at his best when attacking the ball, as he has incredibly consistent hands and a catch radius that can engulf a gridiron.

Lamb isn't just a gifted set of hands. His body control, physicality, and concentration make him a nightmare to defend at the catch point. He is the master of the “toe-drag-swag.” Then, there is the before and after.

Before receiving the ball, Lamb can manipulate cornerbacks with his releases, route-tree, route breaks and physicality to will himself open. Even if a cornerback can keep up with him, however, his hands make him open on seemingly every play.

After receiving the ball, Lamb's aggression, creativeness as a runner and field vision will create yards after the catch in bunches. There is no staying in front of him.

Lamb is not exceptionally fast, nor does he have the biggest route-tree in the world. He is, though, one of the NFL Draft's premier prospects and has superstar written all over him. If the Cardinals stick around the top-10 come April, pairing Lamb up with his old quarterback may be too enticing to pass up.