Week nine Sunday November 6th. Miami's Dolphins beat the visiting NY Jets 27 - 23. On the following week Adam Gase' 2016 team traveled to San Diego and won! It was the first time in 31 tries that the Dolphins won versus an opponent that followed a Miami win against their New York Jets rival!
On Week fifteen the Dolphins traveled north to Metlife Stadium and not a single murmur of J E T S, Jets, Jets, Jets was prompted via the play of the visiting Miami's 34 points nor the home teams 13.
After allowing a J E T S opening 7 play, 75 yard touchdown drive. The Dolphins shoved a cork in each end of the pre-week, diarrhea spewing Brandon (Bowel-Movement) Marshall as rookie Xavien Howard and others had their way. (BM wiped one single ply catch for 16 yards), take that BITCH!!
Second year receiver turned starting corner back had two more interceptions with his team leading third and fourth on the season. Miami started the season slow via interceptions, but now with three more tonight they reside amongst the league's top three with 16 picks, and everyone is getting their hands on a share.
Even Cameron Wake had a pick in coverage tonight with a sack too, and a forced fumble while the defensive line was beastly in producing relentless backfield havoc on the Jets tarmack. Ndamukong Suh led the team in tackles and (met at the quarterback) with Wake as the quarterbacks lower body was nearly separated from his upper half.
Special teams stud Walt Aikens (for a second consecutive week) made huge plays throughout which included a Hat-Trick blocked punt, recovery, scoop and score Touchdown jog.
Miami second year running back/first year starter Jay Ajayi rushed for 50 yards while thrusting his engines beyond mach-one and/or 1000 rushing yards for the season!
For the first time in 77 games the Miami Dolphin entire roster was given a clean bill of health for a game, (other than those on IR), and five year Iron Man Ryan Tannehill.
Matt Moore started in place of the first time injured Tannehill this week. He did not disappoint! He completed 12 of 18 passes for 236 yards with a pick while a third of those completions went for (4) Touchdowns (a career high)!
Moore's first Touchdown went to tight end Dion Sims (a great pass and catch) from one yard out to get on the second quarter 6 - 7 scoreboard after an extra point miss. The wily vet hit Kenny Stills for a 52 yard score two series later for a 13 - 10 halftime lead following an NY field goal.
Matt's one pick came on the third quarters opening series with an attempted bomb to the Jets thirty.
Four plays later Walt Aikens had his Hat-Trick for a Miami advantage of 20 - 10. On the home teams next offensive play Tony Lippett got his first pick on the day. Later in the day the receiver turned corner back ended the game with his second interception, this one in the endzone on the jets last "ditch/ crash".
Matt Moore hit Dion Sims for the duo's second one yard Touchdown of brilliance five plays and 60 yards later for the 27 - 10 score.
After a jets three and out. On the first play Moore hit a short pass to Jarvis Landry who (eclipsed the 1000 yard mark for the season) on the play by taking it 66 for six final third quarter & game points. By a road winning score of 34 - 13, The Miami Dolphins Team Earned A Ninth Victory!!
Among numerous other unmentionable accomplishments that the Miami Dolphins have a great shot at producing next week.
Can Adam Gase' 2016 Dolphins (for a second time in one year) beat the opponent that follows a Miami Victory over New York's jets?
A feat not attained one single time in the teams 31 previous attempts before 2016's Adam Gase!!
It's a dirty job but somebodies gotta do it!!
Time to sweep Buffalo spewage on Christmas Eve!!
YEEE-HAAA-GIGGITTY
GOFINS!!
Showing posts with label Brandon Marshall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brandon Marshall. Show all posts
9 - 5 Miami Dolphins Sweep Jets
at
Sunday, December 18, 2016
Posted by
KennyV (13kvFINS) Nicholas
9 - 5 Miami Dolphins Sweep Jets
2016-12-18T03:12:00-05:00
KennyV (13kvFINS) Nicholas
Adam Gase|Brandon Marshall|Cam wake|Dion Sims|Jarvis Landry|Kenny Nicholas|Kenny Stills|Matt Moore|Miami Dolphins|Ndamukong Suh|New York Jets|Tony Lippett|Xavien Howard|
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Miami Dolphins Team Tames Aggressive Bears.
at
Monday, October 20, 2014
Posted by
KennyV (13kvFINS) Nicholas
The fish out of water Dolphins went into the black bear infested hills of Chicago on week seven of the 2014 season. Miami's Defense tracked down and declawed the viciously aggressive Bear Offensive while Dolphin quarterback Ryan Tannehill shredded the remaining carcass. Their trophy was a giant Bear hide shaped W strapped across the hood of their plane ride home to Miami, and satisfaction of putting together an entire sixty minute TEAM EFFORT!
Miami had played from behind in all previous 2014 games while declining to accept the opening kickoffs. That strategy had not been working as the opposition was scoring first with consistency and was putting the Dolphin offense in immediate desperation mode. The Dolphins won the coin flip off of Da'Bears logo, accepted the ball, and upon the first snap a groan of ""game over"" could be heard far and wide as Tannehill was sacked. Miami went three & out for 8 yards with Ryan going one for one for 10 yards on 3rd and 12, punted the ball away, and another well intended Dolphin strategy seemed to go awry.
But Wait. It's a team game and the Dolphin defense had to come onto the field at some point. Chicago went three & out for 9 yards on their first possession, and gained just forty four yards on eighteen plays with zero points over the entirety of the first half. Miami defensive lineman Derrick Shelby had a sack of the Bear gunslinger Jay Cutler on 3rd and 15 during Chicago's second possession of six plays for 7 yards. Dolphin safety duo Louis Delmas had a sack, and Rashad Jones returned an interception 50 yards which ended the Bears third series of 23 yards on six plays. Da'Bears went 3 & out for five yards on their final first half possession.
The Miami Dolphin Offense kept their own defense off of the field for 19 plus minutes of the 30 minute first half. For a second time in the last three games, the too often maligned Miami quarterback Ryan Tannehill completed fourteen consecutive pass attempts. On this day he started hot with his first 14 attempts being completed, (the best start of any NFL quarterback for the 2014 season)! A good for a first down and 15th successive completion was called back due to penalty.
Following the initial three and out possessions of each team the Dolphins offense went to work toward their second series which totaled eighty one yards, and seven points in eight plays. The drive started with two consecutive key to the game plan quarterback keeper read options of fourteen and one yards, Tannehill followed up with passes to Clay (25 yards), Wallace (4), and Jarvis Landry for 13 yards. Lamar Miller rushed for eleven yards on the next two plays and gave the Dolphins a first and ten at the Chicago thirteen yard line. Charles Clay got wide open and caught his first TOUCHDOWN of the 2014 season for a 7 - 0 Miami Dolphin lead.
On Miami's third possession Tannehill tossed the ball for 50 total yards on four of four to three different receivers (Landry for fifteen on first and ten), Daniel Thomas (8, 15), and Clay for twelve yards. The Dolphins rushed the ball five times for ten yards and Tannehill was sacked twice which forced a missed field goal attempt of 50 yards. The possession garnered only 52 net yards on twelve plays but ran 7:20 off the clock.
The Dolphins fourth series started at Chicago's twenty three yard line after the previously mentioned Rashad Jones 50 yard interception return. A first and ten 15 yard pass to Brian Hartline and a Lamar Miller 3 yard run followed by a false start penalty put Miami at the Bears ten on second down. Hutt Huttt Hike, Ryan Tanne-Thrill scanned through his first three pass options, threw the ball previous to his fourth reads final cut and perfectly placed the ball into the hands of Mike Wallace for a Miami Dolphins TOUCHDOWN and 14 - 0 lead.
Ryan Tannehill completed his first four passes of Miami's final first half drive of (25 yards on 8 plays) prior to his first incompletion of the game. His fifth of five attempts on the drive was completed to Lamar Miller for 22 yards to the Bears 12 but was called back due to a penalty, and (out of reasonable field goal range considering the situation). Tannehill finished the half with completions on fourteen of fifteen pass attempts for 176 yards, two touchdowns, and a Miami Dolphin lead of 14 - 0 in Chicago.
Chicago took the third quarter kickoff 81 yards on 12 plays in 7 minutes to climb within 7 - 14 on a Cutler to running back Matt Forte touchdown, and the cry's of ""game over mann we're up crap creek without a paddle"" were once again billowing through the airwaves.
Miami wasn't listening as their quarterback led offense responded with a march of eighty three yards on 13 plays in 7 plus minutes. Tannehill went five of six for 32 yards to five different receivers, (Miller, Sims, Hartline, Wallace, and Clay). The quarterback also executed a 30 yard run on a 4th and one read/option play from the Bears 39 yard line, Ryans 20 MPH of momentum carried two defenders over the last 10 yards. Lamar Miller rushed the ball six times for 21 yards including the drives final two plays of one carry for seven yards from the nine as well as one for a two yard Miami Dolphin TOUCHDOWN and 21 - 7 scoreboard advantage with 31 third quarter seconds remaining.
Upon the Bears third play of the following series on second and twenty from Chicago's 24 yard line, Miami's star defensive end Cam Wake executed the hat trick of a sack, forced fumble, and recovery at Derr'Bears 16 yard line. The Dolphins in protecting a 14 point lead with less than a quarter of football left chose the conservative route at this point and kicked a 33 yard field goal for a 24 - 7 lead.
Miami kicks off to Chicago. The Dolphin defense again rewards their offensive team mates (for keeping them off the field and fresh) with a Courtland Finnegan forced fumble upon the Bears second play which was a completion for a first down. The fumble was recovered by Miami's Randy Starks at the Chicago 35 yard line with 13:13 remaining in the fourth quarter.
Miami threw the ball on their first 3 plays for 12 yards and a first down with Ryan connecting to running back Damien Williams on the first two of three pass attempts. On the next play Daniel Thomas ran for eleven yards and "another Miami Dolphin first down". Thomas carried the ball two more times for 3 net yards followed by a Tannehill incompletion/intentional grounding penalty under duress, and the Dolphins settled for a 37 yard field goal attempt that was blocked which kept the score at 24 - 7 Miami.
Aided with a 39 yard pass interference call on an uncatchable ball, Chicago drove 73 yards on six plays in two minutes for a touchdown on their next possession to pull within ten points at 24 - 14.
With 7:38 remaining the Dolphins ran 5:25 off the clock to go 65 yards on 12 plays for a 19 yard field goal and 27 - 14 advantage. Ryan Tannehill completed four of five for 57 yards to 3 different receivers (Wallace for 8 & 12, Dion Sims for 26, and Landry for eleven). Lamar Miller had five attempts for 16 yards which doesn't include a four yard touchdown run that was called back due to penalty.
Da'Bears possessed the ball for one of the final two minutes with 10 plays for 35 yards, including two fourth down plays with the second failing, and turned the ball over on downs to The Miami Dolphins for a Victory formation final score of 27 - 14.
The Dolphins had a time of possession advantage of 37:22 to 22:38.
Miami accrued a net number of 393 total yards (137 rushing & 256 through the air) via 69 plays to Chicago's 224 (52 & 172) on 51 plays.
Tannehill went 25 of 32 for 277 yards with two touchdowns for a quarterback rating of 93.9, and an overall grade of 123.6 along with six carries for 48 yards.
Jay Cutler went 21 of 34 for 190 yards with one touchdown, one interception, a QBR of 19.3, and an overall 74.4.
Lamar Miller had 18 carries for 61 yards and one logged touchdown.
Matt Forte carried the ball 12 times for 49 yards and one touchdown.
Charles Clay led the Dolphins in receiving yards with 58 on four catches and a touchdown while Mike Wallace led the team in receptions with five for 46 yards and a touchdown.
Matt Forte (Chicago's running back) was also the Bears receiving leader with six catches for sixty yards and a touchdown while two of the leagues elite receivers in Brandon Marshall and Ashlon Jeffery combined for a total of only 57 yards on eight catches.
Miami sacked Cutler three times (Delmas, Shelby, Wake), forced four fumbles (3 via Da'Bears quarterback) while recovering two overall, and had a Rashad Jones interception of the locked and loaded with heavy artillery gunslinger.
Chicago sacked Tannehill four times, and forced zero Miami Dolphin turnovers.
Thank You for an Open Minded read, and we look forward to your angle of view!!
Beat Da'Jags!!
GOFINS!!!
Miami had played from behind in all previous 2014 games while declining to accept the opening kickoffs. That strategy had not been working as the opposition was scoring first with consistency and was putting the Dolphin offense in immediate desperation mode. The Dolphins won the coin flip off of Da'Bears logo, accepted the ball, and upon the first snap a groan of ""game over"" could be heard far and wide as Tannehill was sacked. Miami went three & out for 8 yards with Ryan going one for one for 10 yards on 3rd and 12, punted the ball away, and another well intended Dolphin strategy seemed to go awry.
But Wait. It's a team game and the Dolphin defense had to come onto the field at some point. Chicago went three & out for 9 yards on their first possession, and gained just forty four yards on eighteen plays with zero points over the entirety of the first half. Miami defensive lineman Derrick Shelby had a sack of the Bear gunslinger Jay Cutler on 3rd and 15 during Chicago's second possession of six plays for 7 yards. Dolphin safety duo Louis Delmas had a sack, and Rashad Jones returned an interception 50 yards which ended the Bears third series of 23 yards on six plays. Da'Bears went 3 & out for five yards on their final first half possession.
The Miami Dolphin Offense kept their own defense off of the field for 19 plus minutes of the 30 minute first half. For a second time in the last three games, the too often maligned Miami quarterback Ryan Tannehill completed fourteen consecutive pass attempts. On this day he started hot with his first 14 attempts being completed, (the best start of any NFL quarterback for the 2014 season)! A good for a first down and 15th successive completion was called back due to penalty.
Following the initial three and out possessions of each team the Dolphins offense went to work toward their second series which totaled eighty one yards, and seven points in eight plays. The drive started with two consecutive key to the game plan quarterback keeper read options of fourteen and one yards, Tannehill followed up with passes to Clay (25 yards), Wallace (4), and Jarvis Landry for 13 yards. Lamar Miller rushed for eleven yards on the next two plays and gave the Dolphins a first and ten at the Chicago thirteen yard line. Charles Clay got wide open and caught his first TOUCHDOWN of the 2014 season for a 7 - 0 Miami Dolphin lead.
On Miami's third possession Tannehill tossed the ball for 50 total yards on four of four to three different receivers (Landry for fifteen on first and ten), Daniel Thomas (8, 15), and Clay for twelve yards. The Dolphins rushed the ball five times for ten yards and Tannehill was sacked twice which forced a missed field goal attempt of 50 yards. The possession garnered only 52 net yards on twelve plays but ran 7:20 off the clock.
The Dolphins fourth series started at Chicago's twenty three yard line after the previously mentioned Rashad Jones 50 yard interception return. A first and ten 15 yard pass to Brian Hartline and a Lamar Miller 3 yard run followed by a false start penalty put Miami at the Bears ten on second down. Hutt Huttt Hike, Ryan Tanne-Thrill scanned through his first three pass options, threw the ball previous to his fourth reads final cut and perfectly placed the ball into the hands of Mike Wallace for a Miami Dolphins TOUCHDOWN and 14 - 0 lead.
Ryan Tannehill completed his first four passes of Miami's final first half drive of (25 yards on 8 plays) prior to his first incompletion of the game. His fifth of five attempts on the drive was completed to Lamar Miller for 22 yards to the Bears 12 but was called back due to a penalty, and (out of reasonable field goal range considering the situation). Tannehill finished the half with completions on fourteen of fifteen pass attempts for 176 yards, two touchdowns, and a Miami Dolphin lead of 14 - 0 in Chicago.
Chicago took the third quarter kickoff 81 yards on 12 plays in 7 minutes to climb within 7 - 14 on a Cutler to running back Matt Forte touchdown, and the cry's of ""game over mann we're up crap creek without a paddle"" were once again billowing through the airwaves.
Miami wasn't listening as their quarterback led offense responded with a march of eighty three yards on 13 plays in 7 plus minutes. Tannehill went five of six for 32 yards to five different receivers, (Miller, Sims, Hartline, Wallace, and Clay). The quarterback also executed a 30 yard run on a 4th and one read/option play from the Bears 39 yard line, Ryans 20 MPH of momentum carried two defenders over the last 10 yards. Lamar Miller rushed the ball six times for 21 yards including the drives final two plays of one carry for seven yards from the nine as well as one for a two yard Miami Dolphin TOUCHDOWN and 21 - 7 scoreboard advantage with 31 third quarter seconds remaining.
Upon the Bears third play of the following series on second and twenty from Chicago's 24 yard line, Miami's star defensive end Cam Wake executed the hat trick of a sack, forced fumble, and recovery at Derr'Bears 16 yard line. The Dolphins in protecting a 14 point lead with less than a quarter of football left chose the conservative route at this point and kicked a 33 yard field goal for a 24 - 7 lead.
Miami kicks off to Chicago. The Dolphin defense again rewards their offensive team mates (for keeping them off the field and fresh) with a Courtland Finnegan forced fumble upon the Bears second play which was a completion for a first down. The fumble was recovered by Miami's Randy Starks at the Chicago 35 yard line with 13:13 remaining in the fourth quarter.
Miami threw the ball on their first 3 plays for 12 yards and a first down with Ryan connecting to running back Damien Williams on the first two of three pass attempts. On the next play Daniel Thomas ran for eleven yards and "another Miami Dolphin first down". Thomas carried the ball two more times for 3 net yards followed by a Tannehill incompletion/intentional grounding penalty under duress, and the Dolphins settled for a 37 yard field goal attempt that was blocked which kept the score at 24 - 7 Miami.
Aided with a 39 yard pass interference call on an uncatchable ball, Chicago drove 73 yards on six plays in two minutes for a touchdown on their next possession to pull within ten points at 24 - 14.
With 7:38 remaining the Dolphins ran 5:25 off the clock to go 65 yards on 12 plays for a 19 yard field goal and 27 - 14 advantage. Ryan Tannehill completed four of five for 57 yards to 3 different receivers (Wallace for 8 & 12, Dion Sims for 26, and Landry for eleven). Lamar Miller had five attempts for 16 yards which doesn't include a four yard touchdown run that was called back due to penalty.
Da'Bears possessed the ball for one of the final two minutes with 10 plays for 35 yards, including two fourth down plays with the second failing, and turned the ball over on downs to The Miami Dolphins for a Victory formation final score of 27 - 14.
The Dolphins had a time of possession advantage of 37:22 to 22:38.
Miami accrued a net number of 393 total yards (137 rushing & 256 through the air) via 69 plays to Chicago's 224 (52 & 172) on 51 plays.
Tannehill went 25 of 32 for 277 yards with two touchdowns for a quarterback rating of 93.9, and an overall grade of 123.6 along with six carries for 48 yards.
Jay Cutler went 21 of 34 for 190 yards with one touchdown, one interception, a QBR of 19.3, and an overall 74.4.
Lamar Miller had 18 carries for 61 yards and one logged touchdown.
Matt Forte carried the ball 12 times for 49 yards and one touchdown.
Charles Clay led the Dolphins in receiving yards with 58 on four catches and a touchdown while Mike Wallace led the team in receptions with five for 46 yards and a touchdown.
Matt Forte (Chicago's running back) was also the Bears receiving leader with six catches for sixty yards and a touchdown while two of the leagues elite receivers in Brandon Marshall and Ashlon Jeffery combined for a total of only 57 yards on eight catches.
Miami sacked Cutler three times (Delmas, Shelby, Wake), forced four fumbles (3 via Da'Bears quarterback) while recovering two overall, and had a Rashad Jones interception of the locked and loaded with heavy artillery gunslinger.
Chicago sacked Tannehill four times, and forced zero Miami Dolphin turnovers.
Thank You for an Open Minded read, and we look forward to your angle of view!!
Beat Da'Jags!!
GOFINS!!!
Miami Dolphins Team Tames Aggressive Bears.
2014-10-20T02:20:00-04:00
KennyV (13kvFINS) Nicholas
Ashlon Jeffrey|Brandon Marshall|Cameron Wake|Charles Clay|Chicago Bears|Derrick Shelby|Jarvis Landry|Jay Cutler|Kenny Nicholas|Louis Delmas|Miami Dolphins|Mike Wallace|Rashad Jones|Ryan Tannehill|
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The Value of Philbin's Values for The Miami Dolphins
at
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Posted by
Patrick Tarell
Joe Philbin’s decision to divest himself of troubled players like Brandon Marshall, Vontae Davis and Chad Johnson may have placed Miami on shaky ground when building the roster. Athletes at this level have plenty of documented issues, but many times those same players have game changing talent. The value placed on character could be critical to the Dolphins finally making it back to the top of the NFL.
Can the Dolphins afford to cast aside troubled children to fit the Philbin mold? What value do Dolphin fans place on character? Is the Miami criterion too strict? Will it lead to an unremarkable roster? How does it affect free agency and the draft? These are the questions that will shape the future in Miami.
Looking at the dismissed players can define a set of values deemed unwanted on the roster. A “me first” attitude is at the top of the list. The one trait all three players shared was a complete self-centric view of life. This trait often leads to off-the-field issues as well as problems with teammates in the locker room, on the practice field and during games.
These behaviors frequently interconnect and create a personality profile. “Me first” in a personal relationship outside of football causes issues when the other person in the relationship does not agree. It becomes a test of wills leading to high profile altercations unrelated to football. When the volatile mixture of alcohol or drugs is introduced, better judgment is impaired and only bad things will happen in “me first” relationships. The second important value trait would then be sobriety.
Sobriety is not easy in the NFL for many players. The temptation is too great to use performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) to gain an edge. The league will allow players to take shots of Toradol to be able to tolerate the pain of playing the game, while drug testing for other substances. The expectation to play with pain, is the rite of passage in the NFL. Pain meds are acceptable in the locker room, but mix those same pain meds with alcohol at a club and foolish decisions are certain to follow. Staying away from the clubs during the season and certainly before practice days, eliminates potential issues. So a third criterion would be to avoid being a celebrity. With all the temptations, it can only lead to trouble.
The old adage, “nothing good happens after midnight,” isn’t only true for NFL players; it is true for everyone. As the night wears on the folks with better sense have gone home and police are well aware. Even though the NFL provides free taxi service to any player at any time, some will still choose to get behind the wheel. Obviously, they know calling a taxi at two o’clock in the morning through team sources will mean the team knows someone has been a bad boy. Which leads to the next criterion, beware the witching hour. Getting off the streets before midnight is a simple way to avoid trouble with the law.
These are the four traits Joe Philbin would like to avoid.
1. Me first attitude
2. Alcohol and drug abuse
3. Celebrity football players
4. After midnight
These traits must be measured against the questions asked above:
What value do Dolphin fans place on character?
The majority of Dolphin fans had grown tired of Brandon Marshall’s me-first antics. There were whispers that Marshall had more than a little to do with Chad Henne never gaining the confidence to break out as an NFL QB. The other side of that coin would be, if Henne could not handle Marshall’s harassment in the huddle, he would probably not make it in the NFL anyway. Having experienced the volatile mixture of Marshall and Henne, it was probably an easy decision to trade Marshall, even if doing so left Miami without a top-flight receiver.
This exemplifies the proper sequence, rookie Ryan Tannehill should gain control of the team and be comfortable in that role prior to being asked to handle a personality like Brandon Marshall. In other words, an established leader like Tom Brady can handle a me-first personality, but placing that burden on a young QB is adding to an already pressure packed position. Bill Parcells is known for preaching that QB toughness is garnered by placing those players in difficult situations, but Parcells truly only ever groomed one decent QB, Phil Simms. Has anyone ever heard Simms speak to or be seen around Parcells? Simms was the exception, not the rule. Parcells built a philosophy based on an anomaly and that is why he was unable to duplicate it.
Is the Miami criterion too strict?
Vontae Davis obviously had issues with alcohol and perhaps other substances the public is unaware of. Davis did not perform well in practice because he was often hung over from partying the night before. Joe Philbin comes off as a very up-front type of coach, a player’s coach who will say what needs to be said. By doing this, Philbin does not keep players guessing what he is thinking and does not have to remain aloof because what he thinks is unclear. Therefore, it is logical from the outside, to assume Philbin told Davis exactly what was expected of him and what Joe thought was unacceptable. Clearly, Vontae did not take heed to what Philbin expected.
Anyone who has ever stepped in a football locker room knows this is a land of Alpha Males dominated by “A” personalities. Coaches walk a fine line when they are considered player friendly because player friendly is often misconstrued as a sign of weakness. In a locker room, a coach must remain the one voice and when he speaks the players must listen. If a player breaks this rule and is allowed to get away with it, as Miami fans saw with Cam Cameron, the hierarchy of the locker room is broken. Davis did not listen and if the situation had not been resolved, Philbin could have lost the locker room. This means the strictness, the code, must not be broken or it will lead to 1-15 seasons. Losing Davis hurt the Dolphins in the short term, but keeping him would have been far worse in the long term.
Will it lead to an unremarkable roster?
Having a celebrity like Chad Johnson can add a name, but does not make a roster more valuable. Johnson falls into a category where his presence in the locker room was not conflicting with his coach, but once out the door the team was no longer as important as his own celebrity. Jason Taylor was a celebrity in Miami but not for the wrong reason. This is a criterion where Philbin must not allow his small town nature to dictate his roster. Michael Jordan was a celebrity but he was also the greatest basketball player of all time. Payton Manning and Tom Brady are celebrities, but they would be welcome in Miami.
This rule cannot be cut and dry, Miami needs the face of a player as the signature of the team. The problem is when the wrong player becomes the face of the franchise, as was the case with Chad Johnson. When Johnson’s antics become how the football world views the Dolphins, serious issues will soon follow, as they did before Johnson’s release. The perception of Chad Johnson could easily become the perception of the Miami Dolphins. There is a fine line when dealing with celebrity players and the line is drawn by one rule of thumb, the team must be more important to the player than stardom. In the case of Chad Johnson, the team came second or more specifically, Johnson’s value to the team was not great enough to tolerate his celebrity.
How does it affect free agency and the draft?
In review of the three questions already asked and by relating them to actual players, the value of having values is clear. Over the long term, adhering to the values will create a harmonious team from which stars will rise. The effect of not following the values leads to poor long-term personnel decisions. Knowing Brandon Marshall is a borderline personality but trading two 2nd round picks for him, led to dumping him for two 3rd round picks. Drafting Vontae Davis in the first round when he slipped in the draft due to maturity concerns led to dumping him for a 2nd round pick.
The net value was a loss for both players. When considering a player like Percy Harvin, take a look at the mistakes already made and resist the temptation to allow talent to override values. Following the value rules when dealing with players could mean a player like Ray Lewis is left on the table, but players like Lewis are few and far between. Lewis would not be considered a problem child now and he was not considered one when he was drafted. Lewis is an exception, just like Simms was an exception and exceptions should be treated with flexibility but should never be the principles that create strategic rules.
When strategic personnel rules are guided by values there is a greater chance for success in the long term. When these rules are disregarded it rarely leads to a good end. This can easily be seen when a team Like the Philadelphia Eagles dismisses its values and brings in players that do not fit the mold in the quest for a Super Bowl. The coach is fired, there is no longer a structure in the locker room and the team is in total disarray.
Patience Dolphin fans... It takes time to build from the bottom into champions. It starts with placing the proper value on values.
Can the Dolphins afford to cast aside troubled children to fit the Philbin mold? What value do Dolphin fans place on character? Is the Miami criterion too strict? Will it lead to an unremarkable roster? How does it affect free agency and the draft? These are the questions that will shape the future in Miami.
Looking at the dismissed players can define a set of values deemed unwanted on the roster. A “me first” attitude is at the top of the list. The one trait all three players shared was a complete self-centric view of life. This trait often leads to off-the-field issues as well as problems with teammates in the locker room, on the practice field and during games.
These behaviors frequently interconnect and create a personality profile. “Me first” in a personal relationship outside of football causes issues when the other person in the relationship does not agree. It becomes a test of wills leading to high profile altercations unrelated to football. When the volatile mixture of alcohol or drugs is introduced, better judgment is impaired and only bad things will happen in “me first” relationships. The second important value trait would then be sobriety.
Sobriety is not easy in the NFL for many players. The temptation is too great to use performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) to gain an edge. The league will allow players to take shots of Toradol to be able to tolerate the pain of playing the game, while drug testing for other substances. The expectation to play with pain, is the rite of passage in the NFL. Pain meds are acceptable in the locker room, but mix those same pain meds with alcohol at a club and foolish decisions are certain to follow. Staying away from the clubs during the season and certainly before practice days, eliminates potential issues. So a third criterion would be to avoid being a celebrity. With all the temptations, it can only lead to trouble.
The old adage, “nothing good happens after midnight,” isn’t only true for NFL players; it is true for everyone. As the night wears on the folks with better sense have gone home and police are well aware. Even though the NFL provides free taxi service to any player at any time, some will still choose to get behind the wheel. Obviously, they know calling a taxi at two o’clock in the morning through team sources will mean the team knows someone has been a bad boy. Which leads to the next criterion, beware the witching hour. Getting off the streets before midnight is a simple way to avoid trouble with the law.
These are the four traits Joe Philbin would like to avoid.
1. Me first attitude
2. Alcohol and drug abuse
3. Celebrity football players
4. After midnight
These traits must be measured against the questions asked above:
What value do Dolphin fans place on character?
The majority of Dolphin fans had grown tired of Brandon Marshall’s me-first antics. There were whispers that Marshall had more than a little to do with Chad Henne never gaining the confidence to break out as an NFL QB. The other side of that coin would be, if Henne could not handle Marshall’s harassment in the huddle, he would probably not make it in the NFL anyway. Having experienced the volatile mixture of Marshall and Henne, it was probably an easy decision to trade Marshall, even if doing so left Miami without a top-flight receiver.
This exemplifies the proper sequence, rookie Ryan Tannehill should gain control of the team and be comfortable in that role prior to being asked to handle a personality like Brandon Marshall. In other words, an established leader like Tom Brady can handle a me-first personality, but placing that burden on a young QB is adding to an already pressure packed position. Bill Parcells is known for preaching that QB toughness is garnered by placing those players in difficult situations, but Parcells truly only ever groomed one decent QB, Phil Simms. Has anyone ever heard Simms speak to or be seen around Parcells? Simms was the exception, not the rule. Parcells built a philosophy based on an anomaly and that is why he was unable to duplicate it.
Is the Miami criterion too strict?
Vontae Davis obviously had issues with alcohol and perhaps other substances the public is unaware of. Davis did not perform well in practice because he was often hung over from partying the night before. Joe Philbin comes off as a very up-front type of coach, a player’s coach who will say what needs to be said. By doing this, Philbin does not keep players guessing what he is thinking and does not have to remain aloof because what he thinks is unclear. Therefore, it is logical from the outside, to assume Philbin told Davis exactly what was expected of him and what Joe thought was unacceptable. Clearly, Vontae did not take heed to what Philbin expected.
Anyone who has ever stepped in a football locker room knows this is a land of Alpha Males dominated by “A” personalities. Coaches walk a fine line when they are considered player friendly because player friendly is often misconstrued as a sign of weakness. In a locker room, a coach must remain the one voice and when he speaks the players must listen. If a player breaks this rule and is allowed to get away with it, as Miami fans saw with Cam Cameron, the hierarchy of the locker room is broken. Davis did not listen and if the situation had not been resolved, Philbin could have lost the locker room. This means the strictness, the code, must not be broken or it will lead to 1-15 seasons. Losing Davis hurt the Dolphins in the short term, but keeping him would have been far worse in the long term.
Will it lead to an unremarkable roster?
Having a celebrity like Chad Johnson can add a name, but does not make a roster more valuable. Johnson falls into a category where his presence in the locker room was not conflicting with his coach, but once out the door the team was no longer as important as his own celebrity. Jason Taylor was a celebrity in Miami but not for the wrong reason. This is a criterion where Philbin must not allow his small town nature to dictate his roster. Michael Jordan was a celebrity but he was also the greatest basketball player of all time. Payton Manning and Tom Brady are celebrities, but they would be welcome in Miami.
This rule cannot be cut and dry, Miami needs the face of a player as the signature of the team. The problem is when the wrong player becomes the face of the franchise, as was the case with Chad Johnson. When Johnson’s antics become how the football world views the Dolphins, serious issues will soon follow, as they did before Johnson’s release. The perception of Chad Johnson could easily become the perception of the Miami Dolphins. There is a fine line when dealing with celebrity players and the line is drawn by one rule of thumb, the team must be more important to the player than stardom. In the case of Chad Johnson, the team came second or more specifically, Johnson’s value to the team was not great enough to tolerate his celebrity.
How does it affect free agency and the draft?
In review of the three questions already asked and by relating them to actual players, the value of having values is clear. Over the long term, adhering to the values will create a harmonious team from which stars will rise. The effect of not following the values leads to poor long-term personnel decisions. Knowing Brandon Marshall is a borderline personality but trading two 2nd round picks for him, led to dumping him for two 3rd round picks. Drafting Vontae Davis in the first round when he slipped in the draft due to maturity concerns led to dumping him for a 2nd round pick.
The net value was a loss for both players. When considering a player like Percy Harvin, take a look at the mistakes already made and resist the temptation to allow talent to override values. Following the value rules when dealing with players could mean a player like Ray Lewis is left on the table, but players like Lewis are few and far between. Lewis would not be considered a problem child now and he was not considered one when he was drafted. Lewis is an exception, just like Simms was an exception and exceptions should be treated with flexibility but should never be the principles that create strategic rules.
When strategic personnel rules are guided by values there is a greater chance for success in the long term. When these rules are disregarded it rarely leads to a good end. This can easily be seen when a team Like the Philadelphia Eagles dismisses its values and brings in players that do not fit the mold in the quest for a Super Bowl. The coach is fired, there is no longer a structure in the locker room and the team is in total disarray.
Patience Dolphin fans... It takes time to build from the bottom into champions. It starts with placing the proper value on values.
The Value of Philbin's Values for The Miami Dolphins
2013-02-13T20:08:00-05:00
Patrick Tarell
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Chad Johnson|Joe Philbin|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Patrick Tarell|Vontae Davis|
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Philbin Deserves the Gatorade Shower in Miami
at
Monday, September 17, 2012
Posted by
Patrick Tarell
Joe Philbin's Gatorade shower signified the transformation taking place in
the Miami Dolphin locker room. The last regime found Tony Sparano dreaming up the
wildcat after losing 31-10 to Arizona in his second game. Cam Cameron
was wondering how far
forward he would have to fall fast before he finally felt the respect
of his locker room. There’s a different feeling growing in Miami and the Gatorade shower is an indication, the players are buying
in.
Brandon Marshall torched Vontae Davis last week, and the repercussions of Philbin giving Jeff Ireland the go ahead to trade Davis were finally understood in the locker room. Brandon Marshall's dropped passes in the endzone for the Bears this week made the reason for trading him crystal clear.
Brandon Marshall torched Vontae Davis last week, and the repercussions of Philbin giving Jeff Ireland the go ahead to trade Davis were finally understood in the locker room. Brandon Marshall's dropped passes in the endzone for the Bears this week made the reason for trading him crystal clear.
Players that did not step up, in critical situations or did not take practice seriously would not be tolerated. With Joe Philbin in the house, players are held accountable for their behavior, because winning starts with having the character to win in the most difficult situations.
It didn’t matter whether Marshall caught 21 balls in a game, what mattered was… The one he dropped that would have won it.
It didn’t matter if Vontae Davis was the most gifted athlete in the defensive back field… It mattered when the game winning touchdown was scored by the receiver he failed to cover.
Marshall and Davis are losers… Marshall couldn’t show up in critical situations and Davis was too immature to practice being in the right place, when the game was on the line.
The initial reaction to the release of these players was that Miami would not have the talent needed to compete, that the Dolphins had gutted the most talented players on the team. Perhaps principles were more important than the product on the field, but what both Sparano and Cameron never understood was, teams are made up of individuals, but individuals do not make up teams.
There is a subtle difference and it showed when Sparano failed to address both Davis and Marshall until it was too late. When the team bus finally left Davis behind last year, the Dolphins finally won. When it became obvious Marshall could not be depended on, Miami continued to win by throwing to Bess and Fasano in the red zone.
Cam Cameron never caught on to Joey Porter undermining his authority until it had gone viral in his locker room. Joe Philbin picked out the personalities that would do more to hinder his team’s progress than to help it. He knew before the pre-season that Brandon Marshall would not be a good mixture with his rookie QB.
He knew Vontae Davis could negatively influence his secondary because his athleticism demanded he be on the field, while his attitude demanded he be on the bench. On the bench, Davis would be a disruption because other players would agree he was the most talented DB. Keeping these players around is what causes the disruption.
Chad Johnson - Ocho Cinco, showed us one thing that is important to understand about Joe Philbin, he is not Nick Saban. He is not a college coach coming in to coach professional men and not understanding the difference. There are similarities in that both men are disciplinarians, but their approach to enforcement is completely different.
Philbin will bring in a Chad Johnson and allow Johnson to make a commitment to the team and to himself. Johnson is therefore responsible to prove he is capable of being true to the commitment he set for himself. Saban would have laid down the law for Johnson and then Saban would have been responsible for making sure Johnson followed his rules. Men are responsible for their own decisions that lead to their own actions, the same cannot be expected of college kids.
Saban wanted to control every aspect of his team, Philbin is the same, but Philbin knows, it’s more important in professional football to have the right personalities than to try to change them. Only players with the proper attitude can still be coached in the NFL, the authoritarian Saban did not have the patience to deal with millionaires.
Joe Philbin’s personality is perfectly suited for the NFL because he truly is in the game to win, money and power are secondary issues. The amount of money a player makes is of little consequence to Philbin, that’s between the player and Jeff Ireland. Once the contract is signed and the player is on the field, then the player’s future (at least in Miami) belongs to Philbin.
In today’s NFL this is how it should be; when the coach becomes involved in the monetary end of the game, it creates a dynamic between the player and the coach not relative to the football field. If the coach is responsible for a player not living up to a contract, than performance on the football field is compromised because the coach must now justify why he signed the player.
More importantly, the locker room is compromised; the other players in that locker room know who is performing, who is on the field playing with abandon and who is on the field playing for the money. If the coach can look past the money and make performance based decisions, he earns the respect of the players. Sparano and Cameron did not look past the money or did not think they had the power to.
This is the reason Parcells was not successful later in his career. He wanted to buy the groceries and it got in the way of the menu, because he could not throw out what looked great in the package but was full of fat once out of the wrapper.
Children are intimidated by adults that yell and bully to make an impression, but adults are much more complex and many will not respond to coercion. The job of a head coach requires much more than a one button manager, it requires a man with the perception to know when to positively reinforce and when to negatively reinforce.
The guidelines are set forth for what is expected of the player on the grand scale, professionalism, integrity and making decisions with the understanding of how those choices effect the team, in other words, placing the team before the individual.
It’s too early to place the halo over Joe Philbin or anoint him the next great Dolphin coach, but the signs are there. There’s nothing fancy about Joe Philbin, he has the rare ability to satiate the truly rich folks in the NFL, the ones signing the paychecks and the ability to motivate the players on a level they understand.
Here's to the Dolphins finally making the long climb back into relevance in the National Football League!
Philbin Deserves the Gatorade Shower in Miami
2012-09-17T20:18:00-04:00
Patrick Tarell
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Jeff Ireland|Joe Philbin|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Patrick Tarell|Vontae Davis|
Comments
Joe Philbin is the Real Leader in Miami
at
Monday, August 27, 2012
Posted by
Patrick Tarell
Stephen Ross has obviously given Joe Philbin control over the
players he wants on his football team and left Ireland to make the deals. It
means when Philbin was hired, there was an understanding that Ireland did not
have ultimate control over personnel. Regardless
of how it came about, Philbin has the keys to who stays and who goes on this
football team, whether good or bad, time will tell.
Brandon Marshall - Ireland
trades two second rounders, Philbin sends him packing, getting only two third rounders
in return. Chad Johnson - Ireland goes out on a limb to bring in the troubled wide receiver, Philbin bounces him in front of the world on Hard Knocks. Vontae Davis - Ireland uses
the twenty-fifth pick in the draft, Philbin shows him the door for second and
sixth round picks.
What
all these moves point to is, while the Dolphins do not claim to be rebuilding,
they are certainly getting rid of personnel that Joe Philbin does not think
will blend well in his mix. The question that begs to be
answered is, will a player like Brandon Marshall ever be a leader on a Super
Bowl caliber team? Will Chad Johnson ever possess the veteran leadership a
coach wants other players to emulate? Is Vontae Davis the type of player to
lead a secondary?
Once
these questions are presented, it becomes obvious where the Dolphins are going,
and it is going to take some time to get there. The one thing these players have
in common is they are all completely self-centered. They place themselves
above the concept of team, while claiming to embrace the team, their actions
speak much louder than their words.
Players
who do not come to work as a team may as well start thinking of a new
city because Philbin is not going to tolerate it. The indictment against
Ireland is, what led him to draft, sign or trade for these players? But it
should be pointed out that Ireland does not make any of these transactions in a
vacuum, therefore Sparano and Parcells had input in trading for Marshall and
drafting Davis.
As
Ireland said, "We know a lot about our players, some of that includes
things you don't know about them or isn't seen by the public ..." Coaches
many times think they have a magic power over players and can change the
attitude and actions through their ability to communicate. Most likely, Ireland
was aware of the physical gifts of these players, but also informed the coaches
there were attitude issues.
Brandon
Marshall was not drafted until the fourth round because his personal issues overrode
his ability. Vontae Davis fell to the twenty-fifth pick because there were
concerns about his attitude. Cincinnati let Chad Johnson go because his
performance no longer overshadowed his eccentric personality. It all means that
Sparano and Parcells, like many other coaches and czars think they can change a
spade to a diamond. Sometimes they can, but not very often and not over the
long term.
In
a sense, the Dolphins are rebuilding, they are rebuilding the personality from
a team led by individuals to a team led by players that embrace the team
concept. It means there will be no trades for disgruntled players, no high draft
picks on falling problem children and no chances taken on eccentric personalities. Joe
Philbin is not trying to rebuild the roster; he is trying to change the culture.
For
Miami Dolphin fans it could be a long season, but once a team starts to play
like one, players will emerge. Great teams are not built through trades or
free agents. Great teams are built from an attitude that together we stand taller than any individual among us...
Right now, it is Joe Philbin and the Miami Dolphins against the world.
Joe Philbin is the Real Leader in Miami
2012-08-27T20:20:00-04:00
Patrick Tarell
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Chad Johnson|Jeff Ireland|Joe Philbin|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Patrick Tarell|Vontae Davis|
Comments
Brandon Marshall Traded to the Chicago Bears
at
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Posted by
Paul Smythe
The Miami Dolphins have agreed to trade Brandon Marshall to the Chicago Bears for two 3rd-round draft picks, per Jay Glazer.
I know that a good number of you will agree with this move, but I have to say that I am very angry that they did this. This is a bad move, especially because of what they got for him. We need a number one receiver, and I feel like Marshall is better than any other receiver on the market.
So now Miami has a need for a receiver. We will likely be hearing about them signing one soon. Vincent Jackson, maybe? Brandon Lloyd? Reggie Wayne?
Honestly though, Marshall will probably be happy with this move. He gets to play with Jay Cutler again, who he has a great history with.
We will see. I am keeping this short. We will have more news likely coming soon.
I know that a good number of you will agree with this move, but I have to say that I am very angry that they did this. This is a bad move, especially because of what they got for him. We need a number one receiver, and I feel like Marshall is better than any other receiver on the market.
So now Miami has a need for a receiver. We will likely be hearing about them signing one soon. Vincent Jackson, maybe? Brandon Lloyd? Reggie Wayne?
Honestly though, Marshall will probably be happy with this move. He gets to play with Jay Cutler again, who he has a great history with.
We will see. I am keeping this short. We will have more news likely coming soon.
Brandon Marshall Traded to the Chicago Bears
2012-03-13T16:08:00-04:00
Paul Smythe
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|NFL|
Comments
Tags:
AFC East,
Brandon Marshall,
Miami Dolphins,
NFL
Brandon Marshall Wins 2012 Pro Bowl MVP
at
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Posted by
Paul Smythe
Brandon Marshall has been named the 2012 Pro Bowl MVP. He had 177 receiving yards and 4 touchdowns.
Check out the video of his third, and definitely coolest, touchdown of the game.
Thanks for stopping by, and be sure to leave your reactions.
Tweet

Check out the video of his third, and definitely coolest, touchdown of the game.
Thanks for stopping by, and be sure to leave your reactions.
Tweet

Brandon Marshall Wins 2012 Pro Bowl MVP
2012-01-29T22:50:00-05:00
Paul Smythe
2012 Pro Bowl|AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Paul Smythe|
Comments
Luck Train Falls Off the Track
at
Sunday, November 06, 2011
Posted by
Patrick Tarell
Sorry all you Luck suckers, today the Miami Dolphins’ Luck train will officially jump the tracks and we can thank Vontae Davis for the inspiration. By disciplining Davis, Tony Sparano finally showed he has a backbone. The rigid spine will reverberate all the way through the locker room.
We will find out at some point what the altercation was about, but the speculation here is that Marshall told Davis to be a man and get on the field. It’s natural, Davis would take exception to these remarks considering the source is allergic to the end zone, but in the big picture, it was Sparano’s action that will change the tide.
Sparano should have told Marshall to sit after single handedly losing the Jets game by mysteriously running out of bounds, but Tony only made lame excuses. Jason Taylor has been virtually invisible this season, but is still acting like he is some kind of team leader, when Sparano should have told him to put his play where his mouth is, he did nothing.
When Sparano should have tried anything to get Mark Columbo off the field, he told us Columbo was playing well. It was like telling the entire Dolphin Nation that we are clueless and this guy is actually good… Earth to Tony, Columbo sucks! It’s like when he told us Gibril Wilson was playing well, or the wildcat was the next big thing to sweep the NFL.
It did a sweep all right; it swept the Dolphins in a vortex right down the toilet and out into the Atlantic Ocean. Tony actually showed a spine and the Dolphin players will follow suit, funny how that works, coach makes excuses for his team losing and the team keeps losing. Coach steps up and disciplines a player for not playing through an injury and the team steps up.
I expect the Dolphins to win this game, I have said this earlier in the season, but this time I feel there is a reason other than my wishful thinking. The Luck train stops here…
Go Fins!!!
We will find out at some point what the altercation was about, but the speculation here is that Marshall told Davis to be a man and get on the field. It’s natural, Davis would take exception to these remarks considering the source is allergic to the end zone, but in the big picture, it was Sparano’s action that will change the tide.
Sparano should have told Marshall to sit after single handedly losing the Jets game by mysteriously running out of bounds, but Tony only made lame excuses. Jason Taylor has been virtually invisible this season, but is still acting like he is some kind of team leader, when Sparano should have told him to put his play where his mouth is, he did nothing.
When Sparano should have tried anything to get Mark Columbo off the field, he told us Columbo was playing well. It was like telling the entire Dolphin Nation that we are clueless and this guy is actually good… Earth to Tony, Columbo sucks! It’s like when he told us Gibril Wilson was playing well, or the wildcat was the next big thing to sweep the NFL.
It did a sweep all right; it swept the Dolphins in a vortex right down the toilet and out into the Atlantic Ocean. Tony actually showed a spine and the Dolphin players will follow suit, funny how that works, coach makes excuses for his team losing and the team keeps losing. Coach steps up and disciplines a player for not playing through an injury and the team steps up.
I expect the Dolphins to win this game, I have said this earlier in the season, but this time I feel there is a reason other than my wishful thinking. The Luck train stops here…
Go Fins!!!
Luck Train Falls Off the Track
2011-11-06T09:25:00-05:00
Patrick Tarell
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Patrick Tarell|Tony Sparano|Vontae Davis|
Comments
The Miami Dolphin Suck-for-Luck Campaign
at
Friday, October 21, 2011
Posted by
Patrick Tarell
Boss Ross holds a team meeting and in his best Knute Rockne voice says… “I know you enjoy your fancy cars and all the fun on South Beach, but I need you to take one for the team! You’re stinking up the league and we need to draft this kid out of Stanford. For the future of the Miami Dolphins, you must get out on that field and SUCK! I need you to roll over and make this community proud by giving it a franchise QB! Do it for the fans, do for all the little kids who can no longer watch your pathetic play, do it for a once great franchise I have run into the ground!
“SUCK-FOR-LUCK!”
Jason Taylor stands up, “guys, I know I’ve been invisible on the field, but I’m going to take it to a new level. I want to see every one of you getting knocked ten yards off the ball. I want you, Mark Columbo, to bring a cape and wave it at the rushers as they go by, OLE! Daniel Thomas, you need to get with the program and step it down, this running hard must stop. Reggie, just take it between the tackles a few more times and we’ll come visit you in the hospital.”
Before Taylor has a chance to finish, Brandon Marshall jumps up, “I can drop it, I can drop it, I can run out bounds, I can get manhandled by a guy half my size. Come on Jason all you have to do is get me the damn ball and I’ll fumble it. Look, I can show you guys how to play like crap, it’s easy, shoot off your mouth, piss off the other team and then don’t show up!”
Sparano walks in, “now wait a minute guys, why do I have to micromanage everything around here? I want the DBs doing interception dropping drills. Backs we will begin fumbling drills after you fully understand how to allow a blitzer to get a free shot at the QB. O-line I have set up dummies, each represents a defensive lineman, your job is to avoid blocking them at all cost. Defensive line and linebackers, continue what you’ve been doing, the arm tackling dummies are in the bubble. Matt Moore, we will have four receivers going into routes, if I see your eyes move off the primary one time you will owe the team fifty wind sprints. Any receiver who catches the ball will join Moore doing sprints Now let’s go!”
“Coach, coach…”
“What do you want NOW Carpenter? Can’t you see I don’t have time for a kicker!”
“But coach, the only thing we’ve been able to do this season is kick fieldgoals. I don’t feel like I’m doing my part in the Suck-for-Luck campaign. It’s about time you allowed me to shank a few, I feel like I’m letting the team down, and you, and Boss Ross as well.”
“Carpenter, how the hell am I going to do a fist pump and make it look like this team is actually playing if you start shanking fieldgoals?”
“It’s not fair coach, everyone else is stinking up the field and I have to go out and ruin it for everyone. Can’t we just have a botched the snap, I’ll slap the ball up in the air right to a defender then miss the tackle.”
“Carpenter, I like your spirit, but we all have to make sacrifices to Suck-for-Luck and yours is to continue making fieldgoals. Look, by the end of the season, you will have broken the NFL points record and we can trade you for a seventh round draft pick. I’ll talk to the holder, maybe just once he can allow the ball to hit him in the face instead of catching it. Will that make you feel better?”
“Thank you coach,” Carpenter says while stubbing his kicking toe on the doorstop…
“And tell that punter I want to see him in my office, these kicking teams have been performing too well and it’s high time I put an end to it.”
And so, with absolutely no fanfare, the Dolphins begin the Suck-for-Luck campaign.
“SUCK-FOR-LUCK!”
Jason Taylor stands up, “guys, I know I’ve been invisible on the field, but I’m going to take it to a new level. I want to see every one of you getting knocked ten yards off the ball. I want you, Mark Columbo, to bring a cape and wave it at the rushers as they go by, OLE! Daniel Thomas, you need to get with the program and step it down, this running hard must stop. Reggie, just take it between the tackles a few more times and we’ll come visit you in the hospital.”
Before Taylor has a chance to finish, Brandon Marshall jumps up, “I can drop it, I can drop it, I can run out bounds, I can get manhandled by a guy half my size. Come on Jason all you have to do is get me the damn ball and I’ll fumble it. Look, I can show you guys how to play like crap, it’s easy, shoot off your mouth, piss off the other team and then don’t show up!”
Sparano walks in, “now wait a minute guys, why do I have to micromanage everything around here? I want the DBs doing interception dropping drills. Backs we will begin fumbling drills after you fully understand how to allow a blitzer to get a free shot at the QB. O-line I have set up dummies, each represents a defensive lineman, your job is to avoid blocking them at all cost. Defensive line and linebackers, continue what you’ve been doing, the arm tackling dummies are in the bubble. Matt Moore, we will have four receivers going into routes, if I see your eyes move off the primary one time you will owe the team fifty wind sprints. Any receiver who catches the ball will join Moore doing sprints Now let’s go!”
“Coach, coach…”
“What do you want NOW Carpenter? Can’t you see I don’t have time for a kicker!”
“But coach, the only thing we’ve been able to do this season is kick fieldgoals. I don’t feel like I’m doing my part in the Suck-for-Luck campaign. It’s about time you allowed me to shank a few, I feel like I’m letting the team down, and you, and Boss Ross as well.”
“Carpenter, how the hell am I going to do a fist pump and make it look like this team is actually playing if you start shanking fieldgoals?”
“It’s not fair coach, everyone else is stinking up the field and I have to go out and ruin it for everyone. Can’t we just have a botched the snap, I’ll slap the ball up in the air right to a defender then miss the tackle.”
“Carpenter, I like your spirit, but we all have to make sacrifices to Suck-for-Luck and yours is to continue making fieldgoals. Look, by the end of the season, you will have broken the NFL points record and we can trade you for a seventh round draft pick. I’ll talk to the holder, maybe just once he can allow the ball to hit him in the face instead of catching it. Will that make you feel better?”
“Thank you coach,” Carpenter says while stubbing his kicking toe on the doorstop…
“And tell that punter I want to see him in my office, these kicking teams have been performing too well and it’s high time I put an end to it.”
And so, with absolutely no fanfare, the Dolphins begin the Suck-for-Luck campaign.
The Miami Dolphin Suck-for-Luck Campaign
2011-10-21T20:06:00-04:00
Patrick Tarell
AFC East|Boss Ross|Brandon Marshall|Dan Carpenter|Jason Taylor|Matt Moore|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Patrick Tarell|Suck for Luck|Tony Sparano|
Comments
Brandon Marshall is a Cancer
at
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Posted by
Patrick Tarell
Brandon Marshal has become a detriment to the Miami Dolphins. No matter how good his intentions may be, no matter how much potential he may possess, no matter how well he may have played in the past, Marshall is not good for the Miami Dolphins.
Marshall cannot be so unaware of his position on the field he runs out of bounds, when there is nothing in front of him but the endzone. He cannot call himself an elite receiver when he allows a catchable pass to slip through his hands in the endzone. He cannot be the monster he claims when a defensive back forces him off his route and jumps him for a pick 6 from the endzone. He cannot be a go-to receiver when he allows a smaller man to establish position and repeatedly knock the ball away in the endzone.
Marshall told the press he was going to play with reckless abandon and not make halftime. Instead, Marshall took the Dolphins out of the game, not by his passion, not by his play being so exceptional it forced the Jets to fight, he took the Dolphins out of the game by not living up to the ridiculous expectations his compulsive personality set for himself. It was clear the Dolphin game plan was to feed the beast and the coaches should be ashamed of themselves.
What do the rest of the players on the team think when the coaching staff designs a game plan exclusively around a man who claims he will abandon them before the first half is over? What do the players think when the GM signs this borderline personality to a mega-contract? The Dolphins ignored Devon Bess who has established himself as one of the best 3rd down receivers in the NFL. The Dolphins ignored Anthony Fasano who has been finding openings in the seams. The Dolphins ignored Brian Hartline who may have the best hands on the team.
The Dolphins are playing like a diseased team and the cancer is wearing number 19. The coaching staff allowed Marshall to take over the head of a quarterback who was starting his first game with Miami. They placed the cancer in front of every other player on the squad and the disease spread to every corner of the field. The defense held up its bargain until it was clear there was no cure for the cancer on offense.
Marshall warranted a suspension when he said he would not make it till halftime. Waltzing out of bounds should have landed him on the bench the rest of the game. Removal is the only option when one man’s borderline personality takes over a team. The cost is irrelevant because Marshall is done with the Dolphins the moment another coach steps in the locker room.
The only way to regain some respect in the locker room is to cut Marshall. A trade may have been possible but the Dolphin’s GM could not see the blight staring at him and allowed the trade deadline to pass. Choosing to make a game plan around Marshall simply shows the ineptitude of the entire organization, from the GM who traded for him to the coach who staked his career on him.
Brandon Marshall is a cancer… Tony Sparano and Jeff Ireland will find that out soon enough when they are looking for another job. Meanwhile, some of the most loyal fans in the NFL will continue dropping off, one after another…
Marshall cannot be so unaware of his position on the field he runs out of bounds, when there is nothing in front of him but the endzone. He cannot call himself an elite receiver when he allows a catchable pass to slip through his hands in the endzone. He cannot be the monster he claims when a defensive back forces him off his route and jumps him for a pick 6 from the endzone. He cannot be a go-to receiver when he allows a smaller man to establish position and repeatedly knock the ball away in the endzone.
Marshall told the press he was going to play with reckless abandon and not make halftime. Instead, Marshall took the Dolphins out of the game, not by his passion, not by his play being so exceptional it forced the Jets to fight, he took the Dolphins out of the game by not living up to the ridiculous expectations his compulsive personality set for himself. It was clear the Dolphin game plan was to feed the beast and the coaches should be ashamed of themselves.
What do the rest of the players on the team think when the coaching staff designs a game plan exclusively around a man who claims he will abandon them before the first half is over? What do the players think when the GM signs this borderline personality to a mega-contract? The Dolphins ignored Devon Bess who has established himself as one of the best 3rd down receivers in the NFL. The Dolphins ignored Anthony Fasano who has been finding openings in the seams. The Dolphins ignored Brian Hartline who may have the best hands on the team.
The Dolphins are playing like a diseased team and the cancer is wearing number 19. The coaching staff allowed Marshall to take over the head of a quarterback who was starting his first game with Miami. They placed the cancer in front of every other player on the squad and the disease spread to every corner of the field. The defense held up its bargain until it was clear there was no cure for the cancer on offense.
Marshall warranted a suspension when he said he would not make it till halftime. Waltzing out of bounds should have landed him on the bench the rest of the game. Removal is the only option when one man’s borderline personality takes over a team. The cost is irrelevant because Marshall is done with the Dolphins the moment another coach steps in the locker room.
The only way to regain some respect in the locker room is to cut Marshall. A trade may have been possible but the Dolphin’s GM could not see the blight staring at him and allowed the trade deadline to pass. Choosing to make a game plan around Marshall simply shows the ineptitude of the entire organization, from the GM who traded for him to the coach who staked his career on him.
Brandon Marshall is a cancer… Tony Sparano and Jeff Ireland will find that out soon enough when they are looking for another job. Meanwhile, some of the most loyal fans in the NFL will continue dropping off, one after another…
Brandon Marshall is a Cancer
2011-10-18T18:53:00-04:00
Patrick Tarell
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Jeff Ireland|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Patrick Tarell|Tony Sparano|
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Brandon Marshall: "Hopefully I get kicked out in the second quarter"
at
Friday, October 14, 2011
Posted by
Paul Smythe
Wait, did he really just say that? Did Brandon Marshall just say that he hopes that he will be kicked out of the Miami Dolphins game against the New York Jets in the second quarter?
During his first public comments since the Dolphins lost to the Chargers, Marshall had all of this to say courtesy of Manny Navarro of the Miami Herald (I am just going to post all of his comments up for you, because you really need to see what he said).
What are your thoughts? This seems really absurd to me, but then again, what about Marshall hasn't been absurd so far this year?
Oh, and he also wants to be known as the monster and not the beast anymore. Something about monsters only scare you and don't hurt you, but beasts do hurt you. Who knows.
Thanks for stopping by. Be sure to like us on Facebook and follow me on twitter @PaulDSmythe.

During his first public comments since the Dolphins lost to the Chargers, Marshall had all of this to say courtesy of Manny Navarro of the Miami Herald (I am just going to post all of his comments up for you, because you really need to see what he said).
"I think the past four games have been tough for me, trying to control some things, and, hey man, I'm just going to let it out"
"I don't care if I have two, three cameras on me. I don't care if I have penalties. It doesn't matter; I'm going to let it all out. I don't care what you guys write or what the commentators say. I'm just going to play football. That's what I’m best at. I'm best when I play emotional. I'm best when I play with passion. You guys are going to see that on Monday Night Football. I don't know if it's throwing a football 15 yards in the bleachers, or getting a 15-yarder [penalty], or punting the ball and getting thrown out of the game. But something is going to happen. I'll probably get kicked out after the second quarter."
"I'm not joking. I'm serious. They want to fine me, hit me with a $50,000 fine. I'm going to play. The quarter and a half I'm out there, I'm going to play like a monster. I might get into a fight with Bart Scott, Cromartie, we pretty much matured our relationship a little bit. We used to fight in Denver and San Diego. If that happens, it happens. We'll see."Um, what? I really hope that he doesn't actually get kicked out. That would be really, really annoying. I understand that he is trying to figure out why he isn't playing like he used to, but getting kicked out won't help anything.
What are your thoughts? This seems really absurd to me, but then again, what about Marshall hasn't been absurd so far this year?
Oh, and he also wants to be known as the monster and not the beast anymore. Something about monsters only scare you and don't hurt you, but beasts do hurt you. Who knows.
Thanks for stopping by. Be sure to like us on Facebook and follow me on twitter @PaulDSmythe.

Brandon Marshall: "Hopefully I get kicked out in the second quarter"
2011-10-14T11:14:00-04:00
Paul Smythe
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Paul Smythe|
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Who's the Face of the Dolphins Franchise?
at
Tuesday, August 09, 2011
Posted by
Anonymous
Hello Dol-Fans!
With the whirlwind of roster changes in Miami (and every other NFL franchise) this year, my lovely bride asked me, “who will be the ‘Face of the Franchise’ for the Dolphins now?” I have to admit… that’s a great question, and deserves to be addressed, Here goes...
Key veteran departures of RB’s Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams leaves an obvious franchise marketing void, and this wasn’t addressed through electric FA acquisitions, or a sexy First Round Draft pick. So who will be “that guy” now?
Before I proceed… please allow me to go on the record by clarifying that I firmly believe in drafting the “best player available”, and I applaud Miami for selecting OL Mike Pouncey for that very reason. I simply don’t believe he’s worthy of such a high profile honor at this point.
Logic would dictate that an easily recognizable figure like newly acquired RB Reggie Bush, Miami’s prodigal son DE/OLB Jason Taylor (“J.T.”), Pro Bowler OLB Cameron “Earthquake” Wake, high profile WR Brandon Marshall, or even Defensive leader ILB Karlos Dansby could potentially assume the part, but would that be prudent for the Dolphins Organization? Do they want fans to cling to the ghosts of seasons past (“J.T.”), unproven commodities of the present (Bush), or boldly leapfrog into the future(Pouncey)?
Many NFL franchises splatter the image of their sexy First Round Draft selections all over the media, as to boldly announce… this is our future! Stereotypically, these are Heisman Trophy winning QB’s (i.e. Cam Newton) or RB’s (i.e. Mark Ingram) that franchises mortgage their futures against, hoping to boost ticket and merchandise sales. Rarely do you see a franchise market an Offensive or Defensive Lineman as their representing “face” (aside from the Detroit Lions of course). If Miami were to use a Lineman, wouldn’t it make sense to use back-to-back Pro Bowler OT Jake Long? Nah, Jake’s not that kind of player; he’s a blue collar kind of guy – thank God!
So who will hail as face of South Beach football? If it were up to me… I’d pick a motivated, fearless, team-first player like WR Davone Bess, FB Lousaka Polite, or CB Vontae Davis. Thank goodness I’m not the Head of Dolphins Marketing and Sales huh’!
What’s your take?
With the whirlwind of roster changes in Miami (and every other NFL franchise) this year, my lovely bride asked me, “who will be the ‘Face of the Franchise’ for the Dolphins now?” I have to admit… that’s a great question, and deserves to be addressed, Here goes...
Key veteran departures of RB’s Ronnie Brown and Ricky Williams leaves an obvious franchise marketing void, and this wasn’t addressed through electric FA acquisitions, or a sexy First Round Draft pick. So who will be “that guy” now?
Before I proceed… please allow me to go on the record by clarifying that I firmly believe in drafting the “best player available”, and I applaud Miami for selecting OL Mike Pouncey for that very reason. I simply don’t believe he’s worthy of such a high profile honor at this point.
Logic would dictate that an easily recognizable figure like newly acquired RB Reggie Bush, Miami’s prodigal son DE/OLB Jason Taylor (“J.T.”), Pro Bowler OLB Cameron “Earthquake” Wake, high profile WR Brandon Marshall, or even Defensive leader ILB Karlos Dansby could potentially assume the part, but would that be prudent for the Dolphins Organization? Do they want fans to cling to the ghosts of seasons past (“J.T.”), unproven commodities of the present (Bush), or boldly leapfrog into the future(Pouncey)?
Many NFL franchises splatter the image of their sexy First Round Draft selections all over the media, as to boldly announce… this is our future! Stereotypically, these are Heisman Trophy winning QB’s (i.e. Cam Newton) or RB’s (i.e. Mark Ingram) that franchises mortgage their futures against, hoping to boost ticket and merchandise sales. Rarely do you see a franchise market an Offensive or Defensive Lineman as their representing “face” (aside from the Detroit Lions of course). If Miami were to use a Lineman, wouldn’t it make sense to use back-to-back Pro Bowler OT Jake Long? Nah, Jake’s not that kind of player; he’s a blue collar kind of guy – thank God!
So who will hail as face of South Beach football? If it were up to me… I’d pick a motivated, fearless, team-first player like WR Davone Bess, FB Lousaka Polite, or CB Vontae Davis. Thank goodness I’m not the Head of Dolphins Marketing and Sales huh’!
What’s your take?
Who's the Face of the Dolphins Franchise?
2011-08-09T22:04:00-04:00
Anonymous
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Cameron Wake|Davone Bess|Jake Long|Jason Taylor|Karlos Dansby|Lousaka Polite|Miami Dolphins|Mike Pouncey|NFL|Reggie Bush|Richard Anderson|Vontae Davis|
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How Does Miami Dolphins WR Brandon Marshall's Personality Disorder Affect Your Opinion Of Him?
at
Monday, August 01, 2011
Posted by
Paul Smythe
By now I'm sure most of you have heard, and if not I will give you the basics. Miami Dolphins WR Brandon Marshall has been diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), which (from what I gather) is a behavioral problem and is the "reason" that Marshall will get so angry.
Here is a little more in-depth description of the disorder that was found by the Palm Beach Post and is originally from the National Institutes of Health:
I, honestly, like what Marshall is doing. He is bringing awareness to a disorder that is quite common. He has offered to become the new face of BPD, and I find that admirable. Why not use your fame to help others?
He is also filming a documentary, which I believe is going to be about his struggles with BPD. Here is a trailer for it:
I also like that he has started to understand his emotions more. With that understanding of his emotions will come the ability to control them, and that is something we desperately need him to learn how to do. That control over his emotions will end up helping him on the football field.
My only concern is that he will use his disorder as an excuse whenever he acts up. I don't think he will do it, but there is always that possibility.
Here is a little more in-depth description of the disorder that was found by the Palm Beach Post and is originally from the National Institutes of Health:
BPD is a condition in which people have long-term patterns of unstable or turbulent emotions, such as feelings about themselves and others. These inner experiences often cause them to take impulsive actions and have chaotic relationships.What I want you guys to tell me is does this affect your opinion about Marshall in any way? What exactly does it make you think about him now? How do you think this will affect him on the football field?
I, honestly, like what Marshall is doing. He is bringing awareness to a disorder that is quite common. He has offered to become the new face of BPD, and I find that admirable. Why not use your fame to help others?
He is also filming a documentary, which I believe is going to be about his struggles with BPD. Here is a trailer for it:
I also like that he has started to understand his emotions more. With that understanding of his emotions will come the ability to control them, and that is something we desperately need him to learn how to do. That control over his emotions will end up helping him on the football field.
My only concern is that he will use his disorder as an excuse whenever he acts up. I don't think he will do it, but there is always that possibility.
How Does Miami Dolphins WR Brandon Marshall's Personality Disorder Affect Your Opinion Of Him?
2011-08-01T12:45:00-04:00
Paul Smythe
AFC East|BPD|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Paul Smythe|
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Is the Brandon Marshall Experiment a Failure for Miami?
at
Monday, July 25, 2011
Posted by
Anonymous
Hello Dol-Fans!
On the cusp of a new season, we need to examine the personnel risk vs. reward the Miami Dolphins are experimenting with. Are we really on the right path, or are more player tweaks necessary to push us over the hump, and into the 2011 contention?
With that, I’ll ask my first Dolphins personnel question of 2011 season. Is the Brandon Marshall experiment really worth it to South Beach? He carries a very hefty price tag for a player with legitimate character concerns, personal and legal problems, strained teammate relationships, and medical concerns. In his lone year with the Dolphins, he’s already had at least three police involved domestic situations, and been stabbed by his wife (Michi), allegedly in self-defense! His dark history of assault and battery with women (before his marriage to Michi) should’ve raised red flags as well. Additionally, his attitude has always been an area of concern, and his strained relationship with (for now) starting QB Chad Henne, is bad for unit morale and cohesiveness. His recent surgically repaired hip should also pose durability concerns. So, can Miami really afford to keep a player with all of these risks?
In my opinion… sadly, no. The risk vs. reward is too high.
Don’t get me wrong… this young man is about as talented as they come at his position; a perennial Pro Bowler! He possesses all of the tangibles that make OC’s drool, and causes DC’s to suffer from insomnia, chronic tension headaches, and anger management issues. He led the team in both receptions (86) and receiving yards (1,014) last season, despite missing two games. Statistically speaking, the guy’s a stud; nonetheless, his personal life is in shambles and none of us fully knows how much his attitude negatively impacts the team's psyche.
This is a real problem that requires real attention and real solutions. Not just the best interest of the team, but also that of Brandon Marshall as well.
As much as I would hate to lose his on-field productivity, his off-field concerns should weigh heavily in this decision. Marquee players are hard to find, especially those with the talents of Brandon Marshall, but NFL Championships are won by teams not individuals. Remember Dol-Fans, the last time Miami won the Super Bowl, it was with the “No Name Defense” leading the way.
I wish Brandon Marshall the best whether he remains a part of the Miami Dolphins, or not. I'm sure the Dolphins Organization will do the right thing in the end.
On the cusp of a new season, we need to examine the personnel risk vs. reward the Miami Dolphins are experimenting with. Are we really on the right path, or are more player tweaks necessary to push us over the hump, and into the 2011 contention?
With that, I’ll ask my first Dolphins personnel question of 2011 season. Is the Brandon Marshall experiment really worth it to South Beach? He carries a very hefty price tag for a player with legitimate character concerns, personal and legal problems, strained teammate relationships, and medical concerns. In his lone year with the Dolphins, he’s already had at least three police involved domestic situations, and been stabbed by his wife (Michi), allegedly in self-defense! His dark history of assault and battery with women (before his marriage to Michi) should’ve raised red flags as well. Additionally, his attitude has always been an area of concern, and his strained relationship with (for now) starting QB Chad Henne, is bad for unit morale and cohesiveness. His recent surgically repaired hip should also pose durability concerns. So, can Miami really afford to keep a player with all of these risks?
In my opinion… sadly, no. The risk vs. reward is too high.
Don’t get me wrong… this young man is about as talented as they come at his position; a perennial Pro Bowler! He possesses all of the tangibles that make OC’s drool, and causes DC’s to suffer from insomnia, chronic tension headaches, and anger management issues. He led the team in both receptions (86) and receiving yards (1,014) last season, despite missing two games. Statistically speaking, the guy’s a stud; nonetheless, his personal life is in shambles and none of us fully knows how much his attitude negatively impacts the team's psyche.
This is a real problem that requires real attention and real solutions. Not just the best interest of the team, but also that of Brandon Marshall as well.
As much as I would hate to lose his on-field productivity, his off-field concerns should weigh heavily in this decision. Marquee players are hard to find, especially those with the talents of Brandon Marshall, but NFL Championships are won by teams not individuals. Remember Dol-Fans, the last time Miami won the Super Bowl, it was with the “No Name Defense” leading the way.
I wish Brandon Marshall the best whether he remains a part of the Miami Dolphins, or not. I'm sure the Dolphins Organization will do the right thing in the end.
Is the Brandon Marshall Experiment a Failure for Miami?
2011-07-25T19:19:00-04:00
Anonymous
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Richard Anderson|
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Apostrophe or Catastrophe - 2011 Miami Dolphins Offense
at
Monday, July 25, 2011
Posted by
Anonymous
Hello Dol-Fans!
As some of you may know, I’m extremely excited with the prospects of our beloved Miami Dolphins this season. There’s a lot to be optimistic about! The hiring of OC Brian Daboll and his implementation of the proven West Coast Offense, drafting quality cornerstone players (i.e. C Mike Pouncey, RB Daniel Thomas, and FB/TE Charles Clay), and the second consecutive year of DC Mike Nolan’s Defense. Seems perfectly reasonable and logical to be optimistic, wouldn’t you say?
Which brings me to my question, with all of this optimism… will the Dolphins’ Offensive season be filled with positive statistics (apostrophes), or repeated catastrophes (a la 2010)? Only time will tell, but as a glass-half-full kinda guy I’ll go with the apostrophe side, and here’s why:
Newly implemented Offensive Systems will experience some lumps in the beginning, but opponents haven’t seen this from Miami before, and will get burned at times (advantage - Dolphins).
With Mike Pouncey at Center, C/G Richie Incognito will be able to move back to his natural position at Guard, solidifying the O-Line, and creating better opportunities for both the running and passing games (advantage – Dolphins).
Replacing aging RB Ricky Williams and injury prone RB Ronnie Brown with a fresh, young RB like Daniel Thomas will also help. The slashing, powerful, hungry runner, baring a chip on his shoulder is never a bad thing (advantage – Dolphins).
Adding another solid piece in rookie hybrid FB/H-Back/TE Charles Clay will present match-up problems for opposing Defenses similar to that of the Colts’ H-Back/TE Dallas Clark (advantage – Dolphins).
Adding a blazer like WR Edmond Gates (4.31 sec./40) will open the underneath, short, and intermediate routes for Brandon Marshall, Davone Bess, and Brian Hartline. Not to mention… all you have to do is hit this kid with a decent pass once on the fly, and he’s likely to go the distance (advantage – Dolphins).
Call me crazy, but these changes could really boost the Offense and push them over the top!
All I can say is, Go ‘Fins Go!
As some of you may know, I’m extremely excited with the prospects of our beloved Miami Dolphins this season. There’s a lot to be optimistic about! The hiring of OC Brian Daboll and his implementation of the proven West Coast Offense, drafting quality cornerstone players (i.e. C Mike Pouncey, RB Daniel Thomas, and FB/TE Charles Clay), and the second consecutive year of DC Mike Nolan’s Defense. Seems perfectly reasonable and logical to be optimistic, wouldn’t you say?
Which brings me to my question, with all of this optimism… will the Dolphins’ Offensive season be filled with positive statistics (apostrophes), or repeated catastrophes (a la 2010)? Only time will tell, but as a glass-half-full kinda guy I’ll go with the apostrophe side, and here’s why:
Newly implemented Offensive Systems will experience some lumps in the beginning, but opponents haven’t seen this from Miami before, and will get burned at times (advantage - Dolphins).
With Mike Pouncey at Center, C/G Richie Incognito will be able to move back to his natural position at Guard, solidifying the O-Line, and creating better opportunities for both the running and passing games (advantage – Dolphins).
Replacing aging RB Ricky Williams and injury prone RB Ronnie Brown with a fresh, young RB like Daniel Thomas will also help. The slashing, powerful, hungry runner, baring a chip on his shoulder is never a bad thing (advantage – Dolphins).
Adding another solid piece in rookie hybrid FB/H-Back/TE Charles Clay will present match-up problems for opposing Defenses similar to that of the Colts’ H-Back/TE Dallas Clark (advantage – Dolphins).
Adding a blazer like WR Edmond Gates (4.31 sec./40) will open the underneath, short, and intermediate routes for Brandon Marshall, Davone Bess, and Brian Hartline. Not to mention… all you have to do is hit this kid with a decent pass once on the fly, and he’s likely to go the distance (advantage – Dolphins).
Call me crazy, but these changes could really boost the Offense and push them over the top!
All I can say is, Go ‘Fins Go!
Apostrophe or Catastrophe - 2011 Miami Dolphins Offense
2011-07-25T19:16:00-04:00
Anonymous
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Brian Daboll|Brian Hartline|Charles Clay|Daniel Thomas|Davone Bess|Edmond Gates|Miami Dolphins|Mike Pouncey|NFL|rich anderson|Richie Incognito|
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Fantasy Football: Which Miami Dolphin Would You Want The Most?
at
Saturday, July 09, 2011
Posted by
Paul Smythe
I am in a Fantasy Football mood today, so I figured why not turn that into a post on the Miami Dolphins?
What I want you guys to tell me is what player on the Dolphins would you most want to have on your fantasy team? Would you rather Brandon Marshall, Daniel Thomas, Edmond Gates, Chad Henne, Dan Carpenter, or another?
Keep in mind that players like Marshall and Thomas will likely be taken somewhere between the 3rd and 5th rounds, and a player like Carpenter will be available in the very last round, so answer accordingly.
I have to say that I would take Marshall if he is available in the late 4th or early 5th round. I think he will have a bounce back season, but I don't want to take him too early and have him cost me like he did last year when I drafted him in the 2nd.
Now let me hear your thoughts. Thanks for stopping by.

What I want you guys to tell me is what player on the Dolphins would you most want to have on your fantasy team? Would you rather Brandon Marshall, Daniel Thomas, Edmond Gates, Chad Henne, Dan Carpenter, or another?
Keep in mind that players like Marshall and Thomas will likely be taken somewhere between the 3rd and 5th rounds, and a player like Carpenter will be available in the very last round, so answer accordingly.
I have to say that I would take Marshall if he is available in the late 4th or early 5th round. I think he will have a bounce back season, but I don't want to take him too early and have him cost me like he did last year when I drafted him in the 2nd.
Now let me hear your thoughts. Thanks for stopping by.

Fantasy Football: Which Miami Dolphin Would You Want The Most?
2011-07-09T12:45:00-04:00
Paul Smythe
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Fantasy Football|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Paul Smythe|
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Why Do The Miami Dolphins Not Give Tyler Thigpen More Of A Chance?
at
Sunday, June 12, 2011
Posted by
Paul Smythe
I am constantly getting the impression that the Miami Dolphins are not giving Tyler Thigpen a fair opportunity for the starting spot.
That really disappoints me because I believe that Thigpen could be a great quarterback for Miami, and I am very confident that he can be much better than Chad Henne.
Why? You ask. Well, he does not get scared and he is confident in his abilities. Two things that Chad Henne cannot say about himself. Thigpen is ten times the playmaker that Chad Henne is. Thigpen could actually bring some life to the Dolphins football team.
Do any of you remember the Week 10 game against Tennessee? Thigpen played great. He made things happen with his feet, and he ended up with a 141.7 passer rating. Thigpen was awesome that game, but he didn't seem to get enough credit for it. What people remember is the following game against Chicago where the Thigpen-lead Dolphins were unable to score a single point and were shut out.
The game against the Bears was not even close to Tyler Thigpen's fault. It was the fault of the Miami Dolphins injury-plagued offensive line. Thigpen didn't even have an opportunity to make a play because they were constantly being blitzed and he had no time to do anything. Chad Henne would have been even worse because he has no legs at all. I want you guys to try and imagine how he would have been. Not good, right?
If Michael Vick were starting for Miami against the Bears he wouldn't have been able to do anything with that line either, and that's saying something because he plays behind a below average line already.
Want more proof that Thigpen deserves a fair opportunity for the starting spot? Here is a quote from him recently on Omar Kelly's radio show that I just love to hear:
One last thing that I like about Thigpen is that he realizes how good of a receiver Anthony Fasano is. Fasano was a top scoring TE when Chad Pennington was his quarterback. His numbers only dropped when Chad Henne became the starter. Thigpen realizes the weapon that he has even more than the Dolphins coaches do, and I know he would be ready to use Fasano successfully instead of sparsely like Henne.
That's all I've got. Let me hear what you guys think about Tyler Thigpen and if you think he deserves and/or is getting a fair shot.
Thanks for reading.

That really disappoints me because I believe that Thigpen could be a great quarterback for Miami, and I am very confident that he can be much better than Chad Henne.
Why? You ask. Well, he does not get scared and he is confident in his abilities. Two things that Chad Henne cannot say about himself. Thigpen is ten times the playmaker that Chad Henne is. Thigpen could actually bring some life to the Dolphins football team.
Do any of you remember the Week 10 game against Tennessee? Thigpen played great. He made things happen with his feet, and he ended up with a 141.7 passer rating. Thigpen was awesome that game, but he didn't seem to get enough credit for it. What people remember is the following game against Chicago where the Thigpen-lead Dolphins were unable to score a single point and were shut out.
The game against the Bears was not even close to Tyler Thigpen's fault. It was the fault of the Miami Dolphins injury-plagued offensive line. Thigpen didn't even have an opportunity to make a play because they were constantly being blitzed and he had no time to do anything. Chad Henne would have been even worse because he has no legs at all. I want you guys to try and imagine how he would have been. Not good, right?
If Michael Vick were starting for Miami against the Bears he wouldn't have been able to do anything with that line either, and that's saying something because he plays behind a below average line already.
Want more proof that Thigpen deserves a fair opportunity for the starting spot? Here is a quote from him recently on Omar Kelly's radio show that I just love to hear:
"If I was given opportunity to be starter, I could help (Brandon Marshall) get back to being an All-Pro again"That is something that Chad Henne would never say in a million years, because I don't think he would be able to do it. Thigpen can, and he has the confidence to do it as well, another thing Henne doesn't have.
One last thing that I like about Thigpen is that he realizes how good of a receiver Anthony Fasano is. Fasano was a top scoring TE when Chad Pennington was his quarterback. His numbers only dropped when Chad Henne became the starter. Thigpen realizes the weapon that he has even more than the Dolphins coaches do, and I know he would be ready to use Fasano successfully instead of sparsely like Henne.
That's all I've got. Let me hear what you guys think about Tyler Thigpen and if you think he deserves and/or is getting a fair shot.
Thanks for reading.

Why Do The Miami Dolphins Not Give Tyler Thigpen More Of A Chance?
2011-06-12T11:50:00-04:00
Paul Smythe
AFC East|Anthony Fasano|Brandon Marshall|Chad Henne|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Paul Smythe|Tyler Thigpen|
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Miami Dolphins Brandon Marshall Has Already Resumed Workouts
at
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Posted by
Paul Smythe
Apparently Miami Dolphins WR Brandon Marshall has already been working out for the past two weeks. According to Omar Kelly of the Sun Sentinel, Marshall resumed his workouts with Fit Speed Inc. two weeks ago.
This is good news, because we want him to be able to return to as good, if not better shape, than he was before he was stabbed. Fit Speed has been good for him in the past, and I am glad that he has been able to get back to them again.
Marshall has mentioned on his twitter that they have him doing exercises that speed up his reaction time, which will be helpful for catching the ball. He never said what the exercise actually was, but I am confident that it will help him.
Thank you guys for reading, and hopefully this means he will get to working out with the other group of Dolphins players that have already been working together.
Let me know what you think about all of this below with a comment.

This is good news, because we want him to be able to return to as good, if not better shape, than he was before he was stabbed. Fit Speed has been good for him in the past, and I am glad that he has been able to get back to them again.
Marshall has mentioned on his twitter that they have him doing exercises that speed up his reaction time, which will be helpful for catching the ball. He never said what the exercise actually was, but I am confident that it will help him.
Thank you guys for reading, and hopefully this means he will get to working out with the other group of Dolphins players that have already been working together.
Let me know what you think about all of this below with a comment.

Miami Dolphins Brandon Marshall Has Already Resumed Workouts
2011-05-25T10:56:00-04:00
Paul Smythe
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Paul Smythe|
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Brandon Marshall Not Cooperating With Attorney's Office About Stabbing
at
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Posted by
Paul Smythe
According to Omar Kelly of the Sun Sentinel, Miami Dolphins WR Brandon Marshall has not been cooperating with the Broward State Attorney's office regarding his stabbing just over a month ago.
On April 22 Marshall's, Michi Nagomi-Marshall, wife was charged with stabbing the Dolphins receiver. Apparently Michi had a no-contact order placed on her at her bond hearing, which prohibits her from having any contact with Marshall.
Brandon Marshall's attorney said that Brandon didn't want the no-contact order placed on his wife, and when it was removed he would be more cooperative.
I don't really like the idea of Marshall not cooperating with the Attorney's office, but I don't really think it is that big of a deal. I don't like the idea of his wife being a distraction during the season, but I don't think this is very significant.
My real hope is that he gets back to work soon. The Dolphins are going to need him this year if they want to get anywhere far. Whatever quarterback Miami finally ends up with will need some time to work with Marshall.
What would be great is if he comes back really soon and is able to work out with Chad Henne and whatever other Dolphins have been working out on their own. I'm still not in favor of Chad Henne starting for Miami next season, but he is showing that he's willing to work hard for the starting spot, and I have to respect that.
Thank you guys for reading, and I am sorry to post boring news like this, but it is the offseason and I am struggling to find content to put up.

On April 22 Marshall's, Michi Nagomi-Marshall, wife was charged with stabbing the Dolphins receiver. Apparently Michi had a no-contact order placed on her at her bond hearing, which prohibits her from having any contact with Marshall.
Brandon Marshall's attorney said that Brandon didn't want the no-contact order placed on his wife, and when it was removed he would be more cooperative.
I don't really like the idea of Marshall not cooperating with the Attorney's office, but I don't really think it is that big of a deal. I don't like the idea of his wife being a distraction during the season, but I don't think this is very significant.
My real hope is that he gets back to work soon. The Dolphins are going to need him this year if they want to get anywhere far. Whatever quarterback Miami finally ends up with will need some time to work with Marshall.
What would be great is if he comes back really soon and is able to work out with Chad Henne and whatever other Dolphins have been working out on their own. I'm still not in favor of Chad Henne starting for Miami next season, but he is showing that he's willing to work hard for the starting spot, and I have to respect that.
Thank you guys for reading, and I am sorry to post boring news like this, but it is the offseason and I am struggling to find content to put up.

Brandon Marshall Not Cooperating With Attorney's Office About Stabbing
2011-05-25T00:12:00-04:00
Paul Smythe
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|NFL|Paul Smythe|Stabbing|
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Adding Mike Sims-Walker Isn't Exactly A Necessary Move For The Miami Dolphins
at
Thursday, May 19, 2011
Posted by
Paul Smythe
Talk of Mike Sims-Walker joining Brandon Marshall in Miami to play for the Dolphins has come up again.
While it would sound like an exciting combination to have Brandon Marshall, Mike Sims-Walker, Davone Bess, Brian Hartline, and Edmond Gates, I don't think that signing Sims-Walker is necessary, and especially for the price tag he will come with.
Would I mind having Sims-Walker with the Miami Dolphins? Absolutely not, but I don't think it is worth using up cap space for a position that doesn't need any more help. Why not add another offensive guard or a quarterback?
I want to leave the rest of the discussion up to you guys for today. I'm sorry for the short post, but I am in a hurry and need to finish now.

While it would sound like an exciting combination to have Brandon Marshall, Mike Sims-Walker, Davone Bess, Brian Hartline, and Edmond Gates, I don't think that signing Sims-Walker is necessary, and especially for the price tag he will come with.
Would I mind having Sims-Walker with the Miami Dolphins? Absolutely not, but I don't think it is worth using up cap space for a position that doesn't need any more help. Why not add another offensive guard or a quarterback?
I want to leave the rest of the discussion up to you guys for today. I'm sorry for the short post, but I am in a hurry and need to finish now.

Adding Mike Sims-Walker Isn't Exactly A Necessary Move For The Miami Dolphins
2011-05-19T11:19:00-04:00
Paul Smythe
AFC East|Brandon Marshall|Miami Dolphins|MIke Sims-Walker|NFL|Paul Smythe|Rumors|
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