By all
measures, the Miami Dolphins exceeded expectations over the first half of the
season.
A team
expected to have a losing record ended with a .500 record, which could have easily
been a 6-2 record and first place in the AFC East if not for a few bad breaks.
A team
expected to slog away on offense found rhythm and was benefitted, not hindered,
by the development of rookie QB Ryan Tannehill.
A team
expected to fall back on defense appeared not to miss a beat.
A rookie
coach expected to go through learning pains and bungled games showed a mostly steady
hand and earned respect from players and colleagues alike.
Most
importantly, fans were beginning to see this team in a fresh new way: a team on
the way up, building legitimacy and hope behind a real deal QB. There was a
sense that a tipping point was fast approaching, where fans would come out of
the shadows and return to Sun Life Stadium.
Yes, it
seemed like happy times were on the way back.
Unfortunately,
in the span of just five days last week, all of that goodness was frustratingly
washed way.
The second
half of the season started out horribly wrong with a historic 37-3 blowout versus
Tennessee, the worst home loss for the Miami Dolphins in 44 years. That�s
basically a lifetime, and as nightmarish a disaster as this team could have experienced.
They were flat and consequently crushed by the desperate Titans, who feature
one of the worst defenses in the NFL.
Three hours
of carelessness by the players all but snuffed out the hope and goodwill that
had been built up over the past four months. That aggravating and tired pall of
skepticism that has plagued this franchise for ten seasons returned.
Then the
Dolphins flew to Buffalo and continued their offensive ineptitude five days
later in a 19-14 defeat. 7 of the team�s 14 points came on a 96 yard kickoff
return for a TD by Marcus Thigpen. Most of the effort was utterly unwatchable,
which is doubly bad when it is a nationally televised game.
Eight
quarters of football, ten lousy offensive points scored, and 56 points
surrendered. And that, friends, is how the Dolphins are back to last place in
the division with a 4-6 record and a host of questions about the identity of
their team.
How did it
all go so wrong so fast? That�s a question which has puzzled team watchers.
Offensive
coordinator Mike Sherman said the team looked like they hadn�t practiced one
single day. Others pointed at the need for better effort. Still some wanted to
dismiss the losses to a bad patch.
Whatever.
Three things
are very apparent to yours truly.
The first is
that the offense doesn�t have confidence in what they are doing right now. It isn�t
that they don�t believe in the system or their coaches, it�s that they don�t believe
in themselves. Their body language betrays this and it doesn�t help that their
leader (Tannehill) is a rookie mired in his own struggles. They are essentially
rudderless.
The second is
that the offense is very limited in what they can do well. Opposing defenses
have now identified those things and have been daring the Dolphins to fall back
on their weaknesses. Not surprisingly, the offense has struggled. Most apparent
is that defenses are determined not to let RB Reggie Bush beat them, essentially
daring Tannehill to try. Not surprisingly he just isn�t ready yet for that
responsibility. Opposing defensive coordinators know this and have feasted.
The third issue
is a thin defense. Karlos Dansby is not 100%, not even close, and losing CB
Richard Marshall has been a major blow. The depth in the secondary is appallingly
bad. This has messed up the pass defense with players out of position and continuity
lost. With consistency at free safety also an ongoing issue, opposing offenses have
been able to take easy advantage, especially when the front seven doesn�t generating
enough pressure. Frankly speaking, the loss to Tennessee is largely the fault
of the defense for failing to pressure QB Jake Locker and get him on the
ground.
One
disturbing thing jumped out at me from the Tennessee game. Standing just
outside the Dolphins� locker room at the start of the game, I was afforded an
unvarnished view of the players as they came out and walked to the tunnel. They
weren�t hungry or eager. They were flat. No emotion, no excitement, no energy
was apparent. They looked like kids who were roused from bed early by their
moms. And the fact is, they haven�t looked like the first half of the season Dolphins
since the moment I saw them shuffling out of that locker room.
Whatever was
wrong that day, especially with the offense, five days clearly wasn�t enough
for Coach Joe Philbin and his staff to fix it. Thus the loss in Buffalo.
The big
question now is if they can get the players sorted out and back to their first
half fighting form. Which Dolphins team is the real version, the one that could
have been 6-2 and in first place, or the lost boys of the past two games?
As I�ve
always said, Dolfans are among the most educated fans in the NFL. They know
what a real contender looks like and have the trophies and records to prove it.
Sadly they also know what a fraud looks like, having been taught by the likes
of Dave Wannstedt, Rick Spielman, Nick Saban, Randy Mueller, Cam Cameron, Bill
Parcells, Tony Sparano, and Jeff Ireland. Only the most serious Dolfans will look
past a bad product no matter what. The rest don�t want their time wasted any
more.
So now the
Dolphins must decide what they want 2012 to be: a bridge to the future or
another wasted losing effort. More of the same or a fresh new future? They have
six games to make the case to the faithful.