David Hyde Says Phins ‘Awful’… But Go 8-8?

Would an ‘awful team’ go 8-8 in 2019?

I’m a big fan of Sun Sentinel’s David Hyde. I enjoy reading his articles and he’s one of the beat writers I’d like to meet in person. He has little pretense and there’s the hint of a fan’s suffering in his coverage. Maybe it’s a bit more than a job for him. After 30 years of covering a team, it seems the Phins have strings to his heart.

I’d classify him as a lunch-pail writer with little pretense (if there is such a thing). That kinda’ genuine persona gets him rated as a ‘fav’ in my book.

In his July 21st column, David Hyde wrote about being perplexed, near despondent, over how to cover the ‘awful’ 2019 Dolphins. The long and the short of it was the Phins were too good to flop to get a top quarterback in the 2020 Draft and not good enough to make hay in the Post Season—much less even get there. By his estimations, 7-9 through 9-7 was the win/loss range for this season. His 2019 prediction for Miami’s record was a ‘mediocre’ 8-8. The ‘awful’ team he wrote about seemed to extend past this year and include the perpetual ‘blah’ that is the Dolphins consistency in mediocrity.

Exceptional coaching and talent evaluation will rise from mediocrity

First, I’m not bashing David Hyde at all. I understand his frustration completely, especially over these last 4 years.

I’ve been a fan of the Dolphins since 1978, but have only been writing ‘sports articles’ about them since midway through the ‘Queasy Era’. Let me tell you this: If you think watching the Phins lose is painful, try having to write about it. Now with that said, the flip side is that writing about a win is a sweet, sweet cherry on top.

Unfortunately, the good times have been lean. There have been few ‘sweet cherries’ for Hyde over the last 25 years, who is doing his thing on the grand stage. So, I have a ton of empathy.

David Hyde is like so many fans whose comments I read on the Phinsnews boards: in a painful love affair with the Miami Dolphins…

not sure if the good days will ever return.

David Hyde and Dolphins fans must resist their passion and focus on a few maxims to put this season in focus:
  • One player or one personnel move will not make a winner
  • In the NFL you don’t ‘fake it till you make it’
  • Desperate moves come from desperate men who end up making a disaster of things

The great Don Shula made one of the best personnel moves to acquire one of the greatest players in NFL history in Dan Marino… and it netted him zero championships. The reason was that as a personnel evaluator, Shula missed too much. He was always a top-notch coach, but Shula proved undoubtedly that it takes a lot more than a great quarterback on the roster to have a championship team.

An incomplete brain trust will get exposed

Adam Gase came in with airs of being a Head Coach. In 2016 he made some bold moves that made it appear he was the genuine article. But the reality was something else. Gase’s favoritism of ‘his guys’, lack of focus beyond the offense, trading verbal jabs with players in practice, and inability to critique himself revealed he was nothing more than a glorified Offensive Coordinator.

And then there was Mike Tannenbaum. To paraphrase a Denny Greenism, ‘He was who we thought he was.”

Quality regimes like the Saints, Chiefs, Patriots, Seahawks, Steelers, and Ravens draft AND coach better than the rest of the league. Notice the ‘and’ and put an exclamation on it!

The 2019 Season is ALL about the talent level of Brian Flores AND Chris Grier

Maybe Hyde is right that this 2019 roster is ‘awful’. But let’s add context and focus on this statement. Flores is taking over a 7 win team that was maxed out in Cap space and was more like a 4-5 win team if not for a few last-minute miracles. With this team, Grier freed at least $90 million in 2020, has 12 picks for the draft, and acquired a former Top 10 pick at QB for a song and dance. Also, the best bookie software sites and Vegas are giving Miami 5 wins for the season.

If this team can beat the money men, outdo Gase’s team against a tougher schedule with 8 wins, then Miami might have an ‘awful’ roster and miss the QB sweepstakes, but they will have shown to have an excellent staff and talent evaluators.

Quality teams are built on the accumulation of good decisions, not big hits surrounded by a ton of misses.

Overview of a winning NFL process for team building
  • Finding production from cheap FAs, UDFAs, and back-end picks
  • Discipline, smart schemes, play calls, and half time adjustments
  • Cap responsibility
  • The number #1 attribute: consistency in the above
Let’s put it another way to wrap this article up

Picture the Twilight Zone intro and pretend instead of Grier and Flores that Miami hired one of the brain trusts from the elite teams mentioned above with the exact roster. Don’t you think they’d elevate the squad to more than expected wins and miss out on the Top QBs in 2020? And wouldn’t they, despite this ‘setback’, with their high-level talent evaluation and coaching, along with 12 picks next year, have Miami contending soon?

Patriots nabbed Brady in the 6th Round. Raven picked up Flacco and Jackson with a mid and late 1st Rounder. Seahawks found Wilson in the 3rd Round. Brees was a 2nd Rounder signed as an FA that the Dolphins passed on. Ben Roethlisberger took only the 11th overall pick. And the Chiefs spent the highest blue chip of the bunch to get their QB in Mahomes with the 10th Pick!

All of these star quarterbacks were in the range of the Dolphins… if they wanted them. Every one of these QBs took more capital to get than Ryan Tannehill who was pick 9th Overall.

Miami doesn’t need the 1st Overall pick to escape this mediocrity hell! What they need in top-shelf coaching and talent evaluation… in combination. The surest sign of these qualities is patience and consistency in making good decisions. In time, these qualities will pile up and that’s when the magic happens.

The crux of the situation and the real focus for 2019

Gase went 9-7 on a weak schedule with a team geared up to win. If Flores gets to 8 wins with a stripped-down team on a tough schedule, then he has coached up back-end picks and players off the scrap heap. Think what will be after a few years of this?

My early-bird signpost for hope is a minimum of 6 wins this season.

If Miami nabs the top overall pick with the worst record in the NFL, they may find the right QB… but they’ll likely need to go fish for another regime down the road.

I don’t know if Flores and Grier are the right men for the job. We’ll start digging into the meat of that investigation tomorrow. I look forward to reading Hyde’s thoughts on it in the days and weeks ahead. BUT, what I’m 100% sure is that Grier and Flores’ quality—or lack thereof—is far more important of a factor to turning this franchise around than whatever pick they have in the 2020 Draft. And the more wins they get this season, the better the indication is that Phins fans and Steven Ross have found what they’ve been looking for. Go Phins!


 

9 comments

  • Steve

    Owner/Management/Coaching/Players: One team, one family, one fight. Everyone just do there job is the key to getting back to the Supper Bowl.

    With the Dolphins’ combined records of 17–0 and 15–2 over the course of their 1972 and 1973 seasons, the Dolphins posted a 32–2 total record over 2 years, for a winning percentage of .941.

    The 1980 Miami Dolphins season was the 15th year of existence for the Miami Dolphins franchise. Quarterback Bob Griese retired after the season, following a 14-year career with the Dolphins. However, in Griese’s final season the Dolphins would only play mediocre football finishing in third place with an 8-8 record.

    The Dolphins sought to build on a spectacular 1983 season where they went 12–4 with rookie quarterback Dan Marino, only to be upended by the Seattle Seahawks in the playoffs.

    2018–7-9 Gase
    2017–6-10
    2016–10-6
    2015–6-10 Gase
    2014–8-8–Joe Philbin
    2013 8-8
    2012–7-9
    2011–12-9 Tony Sparano
    2010–7-9
    2009—-7-9
    2008 11-5
    2007–1-15 Cam Cameron
    2006–6-10–Nick Saban
    2005–9-7
    2004–1-8 Dave Wannstedt
    2003–10-6
    2002–9-7
    2001–11-5
    2000–11-5
    1999–9-7
    1998–10-6 Jimmy Johnson
    1997–9-7
    1996–8-8
    1995–9-7 Don Shula
    1994–10-6
    1993–9-7
    1992–11-5
    1991–8-8
    1990–12-4
    1989–8-8
    1988-6-10
    1987–8-7
    1986–8-8
    1985–12-4
    1983–12-4
    1982–7-2
    1981–11-4-1

    Remember Mediocre QB’s will not get us to a Supper Bowl. We need Fitzpatrick and Rosen and we need to Draft more top talent QB in the 1st round. We cannot play around.

    • Steve

      Many Fans hated Dave Wannstedt but he gave the Fins playoffs chances, other than that 1-8 season when Ricky left the team he coach well, the 2003 was a 10-6 season and that was not enough to make the playoffs that season. Other than that he would have had 3 playoff seasons out of 5 seasons??? But Dolphins Fans were haters then.

      2004–1-8 Dave Wannstedt
      2003–10-6 Dave
      2002–9-7 Dave
      2001–11-5 Dave
      2000–11-5 Dave Wannstedt

      • admin

        Wannstedt was solid, but he had average written all over his face and he got the job through Jimmy and Jimmy might have drafted some very good players, but he ultimately shafted both Shula and Marino.

  • Steve

    Dolphins history dictates After Shula,Johnson and Wannstedt:
    We did not support Nick Saban enough to keep him here? Sparano got us a Division Title. Bottom line some where between Dave Wannstedt departure the Fins failed to invest in a Coach!

    We have a Great Coaching staff this season. I really like what we have in the two Quarterbacks and we must draft the best QB next draft regardless how the season turns out? Reality is we are rebuilding and it will take a minute.

  • Van

    I agree with these items being keys to building a cost effective football team but I don’t think fans need to consider the hows as much as they must consider the entertainment value of the cost.

    1. Finding production from cheap FAs, UDFAs, and back-end picks: These cheap finds usually add depth to the bench. they can be very important for special teams and games in November and December.

    2. Discipline, smart schemes, play calls, (time management) tossing the red flag and half time adjustments: These factors equate to good coaching! A bad coach negates most of what players can do on the field unless they are a superstar; maybe even then.
    3. Cap responsibility: This is important but is not a fan concern. Instead: Fans want to win. Fans want to see big plays! Fans want access to players. Fans want to dominate in their conference and make the playoffs. The playoffs are a second season full of hope that anything can happen. Fans love this!
    4. The number #1 attribute: consistency in the above. If you consider what I added, I won’t argue this point.
    5. You must add the cost of being a fan. What is the Dolphins price point? Not just the price of admission, but the cost of parking, confessions and souvenirs. Consider that the average total expense for one person attending 1 game is around $130.00 or $1040.00 for 8 games (no preseason). So if you take someone with you it’s about $2080.00 (t-shirts are extra!)

    No one should be expected to pay full price for a team that saved $90 million and expected to win 5 games this year. No one should spend money to watch assistant coaches learn the art of head coaching! It will be hard for true Dolphfans to watch these games on TV. Steven Ross gave $200,000,000.00 to the University of Michigan for a Business school. His market isn’t Ann Arbor – its Miami! The renovations he made tot he stadium are nice but who cares if you are watching the Ross Flop Follies?

    What player would want to be a Dolphin? You have to Win! You have to win year in and year out! You have to have a team that is not controversial and is accessible to the fans. Ross has CONSISTENTLY ignored the fans!

    • admin

      Agree on the fan part, but Miami has tried to buy a winner to please the fans and all it gets is short term mediocrity and long term suffering. This has to be built right… on the downside if this staff are pretenders we will suck because the right way breaks anything less than good. This will be very interesting… hopefully not very ugly. Odds aren’t good though. most regimes are average.

  • I think the Dolphins will be hard pressed to get even 1 win this year. However, 3-13 feels about right. I think Rosen is a bust (hope I’m wrong) and I think the O-Line is and will be awful.
    As far as defense goes, teams will throw away from Howard but unless Wilkins dominates the front, teams will probably run on them. 3-13 with an outside shot at 4-12

    • admin

      I hope not, JD. I think if this staff is good, they outdo projections. Of course, with 1 win we could find an elite QB who could outlast a bad regime… time will tell, sir.