Kyler Murray isn’t picky.

The uber-athletic Arizona Cardinals quarterback won a Heisman trophy in part because of his ability to improvise. But now, his head coach Kliff Kingsbury wants to hear what he actually likes to run during games.

“It’s like pulling teeth with him trying to [get him to] tell me that ‘I don’t like a play’ because he wants to make them all work and that’s his attitude,” Kingsbury told ESPN. “But there’s good conversations and after today, walking off the practice field, I’ll try to get, ‘Hey, what don’t you like?’ and he’ll say, ‘I love it all’ and we’ll move forward. That’s how he is.”

Murray disagreed with his coach’s assessment of his temperament, and said he tells him when he doesn’t like a play.

Regardless, having a quarterback who’s seemingly comfortable in a variety of play designs should be a massive plus for the Cardinals who won just three games in 2018.

And Murray, who was first introduced to Kingsbury’s “Air Raid” offense in the eighth grade, seems to have a leg up on his new coach’s system.

“It’s not like he’s coming in here trying to learn Chinese as a lot of those first-year quarterbacks are,” Kingsbury said “Therein lies a little bit of comfort level that maybe some of those other guys didn’t have going into Week 1 having to be starters.”

The Cardinals play host to the Lions this Sunday in their season-opener.