I do. I think we forced him the ball too much for lack of better options, but I think he's being paid a reasonable amount for his production.
or a personnel level. I'm sure he is very good at "knowing football" as I doubt he sleeps or has a social life but as said above his ego and consistent insistence to get rid of the most talented players because they may be harder to control is what will always get in his way. I'm not sure if he just doesn't like strong-minded black men or just anyone who has authority but he will never succeed in the NFL if he's given that power. Some OC where he just focuses on Xs and Os would probably be his absolute ceiling.
A few weeks back my wife and I saw a garage sale in our neighborhood and stopped by. Was a Polynesian family putting it on so there was a large family prescience there helping out. Saw a ton of Miami dolphins, Carolina panthers and Atlanta falcons stuff there and thought that was odd. Then saw a lot of the stuff had Solai on it. Turns out it was Paul Saloai’s house and he now is like a GA at the university of Utah trying to get into coaching. Guy is massive and I had completely forgotten about him. Side note he was still rocking his dolphins workout shorts and said he’s still rooting for us. /tweet
apparently was a 2nd rounder for #Chicago Bears which given how shitty their GM has been at drafting that may not be a good sign
Sounds right. Kid had all the measurables but between skill and effort and injuries never came close to those measurables.
Miami Dolphins Xavien Howard made the Pro Bowl in 2018 and would be the best candidate, but he has missed an average of six games per season across his four pro campaigns. Players with that sort of injury history early in their careers typically don't have the sort of lengthy peak needed to become a Hall of Famer from ESPN
The reality is that it makes good business sense for every bubble player with a contract to opt out. That year accrued for pension and benefits is huge.
LOL im not even going to link it but im seeing Omar is writing not to count out Rosen because of non-contact camp performance? Fuck right off to these writers who think they are trying to be smart. Games matter, right?
DAVIE — The Miami Dolphins completed their second of 14 training camp padded practices on Tuesday. Here is a breakdown of who performed well and who struggled Dolphins rookie cornerback Noah Igbinoghene had a solid day of breaking up passes during 1-on-1 and 11-on-11 drills. Igbinoghene jumped a route by Jakeem Grant and nearly had an interception on quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick. He also broke up several passes to DeVante Parker and receiver Ricardo Louisduring red-zone and goal-line drills, while he was also beat on a slant from receiver Isaiah Ford. Igbinoghene appears to be in an early position to own a starting job in camp alongside Byron Jones, with Xavien Howard sidelined. Stock down Michael Deiter, a former third-round pick, accounted for two fumbled snaps on offense in his new role after playing left guard for much of his rookie season The fumbles also botched two opportunities for Tua Tagovailoa. With so many new additions on the Dolphins offensive line, through free agency and the draft, Deiter cannot afford further miscues, or he will fall behind in his second season with the team. 1. DT Raekwon Davis (dominated the offensive line). 2. S Bobby McCain(intercepted Ryan Fitzpatrick. 3. G Solomon Kindley (held his own in elevated role).
Flores seemed to be really pumped when we drafted him, I’ll trust his football/scouting knowledge over mine......for now