Miami Dolphins
Offense Defense
WR 86 M.Booker LE 93 K.Carter
LT 77 D.McIntosh NT 94 K.Traylor
LG 78 J.James DT 91 V.Holliday
C 68 S.McKinney RE 99 J.Taylor
RG 66 R.Hadnot WLB 52 C.Crowder
RT 72 V.Carey MLB 54 Z.Thomas
TE 81 R.McMichael SLB 55 J.Seau
WR 84 C.Chambers LCB 25 R.Howard
QB 11 G.Frerotte RCB 29 S.Madison
RB 23 R.Brown SS 24 T.Jones
TE 87 L.Diamond FS 30 L.Schulters
Notes: Rookie Channing Crowder started in place of veteran Donnie
Spragan at weakside linebacker, while Lance Schulters took over for
Yeremiah Bell at free safety.
The Dolphins opened their season with a 34-10 victory over the
Denver Broncos on Sunday, surprising even the most faithful fans with
their almost complete domination of Denver on both sides of the ball.
The offense, while still making stupid mistakes . they committed five
false starts in the first half . had a good game, overall. Innovative
play calling, backed by the steady hand of Gus Frerotte racked up 426
yards for Miami along with 27 points. The defense kept the Broncos
out of the endzone until the game was out of reach, stifling Denver's
high powered running game and frustrating Jake Plummer to the point
where he completed only 46% of his passes.
It was a 1 o'clock game and the weather favored the Dolphins
with high heat and humidity. Miami, of course, wore their white
jerseys while forcing the Broncos to wear black in the South Florida
sunshine.
The first half was not very inspiring for either team, as both
defenses stopped the opponent's running games cold. With the
exception of Chris Chamber's 61 yard reverse and a 30 yard run by
Tatum Bell, neither team had any kind of running game. The Bronco's
Mike Anderson carried 4 times for 5 yards before he left with a rib
injury while the Dolphins' Ronnie Brown managed only 9 yards on 8
carries.
The Dolphins did better with their passing game in the first
half than their running game, but were still largely ineffective,
frequently stopping themselves with avoidable penalties. The Dolphins
had 5 false start penalties in the first half, two of which stopped a
decent drive in the second quarter and moved the Dolphins back from
the Denver 16 to the 26 on two successive plays. Frerotte threw for
125 yards in the first half, but also threw a pick right to Champ
Bailey that set up Denver's only first half points.
The Broncos passing game in the first half was practically
non-existent. They did manage to pick up 63 yards and Plummer was not
sacked, but he didn't complete his first pass until midway through the
second quarter. The Dolphins' pass coverage was excellent and while
they didn't sack Plummer, they did manage to get some pressure on him.
The highlight of the first half was when Denver had a first
and goal at Miami's 3 yard line and couldn't punch it into the
endzone. Zach Thomas stopped Tatum Bell 3 times for no gain and even
after Jason Taylor jumped offsides on one of the plays, the Dolphins
still kept Denver out of the endzone. When Denver elected to go for
it on 4th down, Zach Thomas and Jason Taylor stopped Tatum Bell for a
1 yard loss and the ball went over to Miami on downs.
The first half ended with Miami up 6-3. Even though the
Dolphins had controlled the game, they were not far ahead at the
opening of the second half. But the Dolphins eliminated the mistakes
that had plagued them on offense in the first half and wore the
Broncos down through the third quarter with long drives, scoring their
first touchdown on a very nicely designed short pass to Randy
McMichael. During the third quarter, Miami's offense controlled the
ball for 11:39, wearing out the Denver defense and setting them up for
the knockout in the 4th.
The Dolphins scored on their first two possessions of the
fourth quarter, first on a very nice nine yard touchdown run by Sammy
Morris and the second time on a short pass to Marty Booker that Booker
caught in stride right behind the Denver cornerback and outran him to
the endzone. The only Denver touchdown of the game occurred after Wes
Welker fumbled during a punt return at the Dolphins 26 yard line.
Following the Marty Booker touchdown, which put Miami up
27-10, the Broncos went into desperation mode and Jake Plummer threw 2
interceptions on two of the last Broncos' possessions. The game
ended, fittingly enough, when Jason Taylor stripped Jake Plummer of
the ball at the Miami 13 yard line with 4 seconds to play and returned
the fumble 87 yards for the final touchdown.
The best thing about this game was the innovative and
aggressive play calling on offense and the new schemes on defense.
Denver had no idea what the Dolphins were going to do and were not
prepared to handle either the Miami offense or to work against the
defense. The Dolphins were more than ready to handle the Denver
running attack and held the Broncos to 70 yards rushing on 20 carries.
Mike Anderson had only 5 yards on 4 carries and Tatum Bell had 47
yards on 13 carries. If you take away Bell's one 30 yard run, Bell
averaged only about 1.4 yards per carry.
On offense, the Dolphins used a variety of formations and
plays and spread the ball around to nearly every player. Eight
different players caught Gus Frerotte passes and four of them caught
four or more each.
The offensive line acquitted themselves well in pass
protection, keeping Denver's defense off of Frerotte for most of the
game. Frerotte was not sacked once and was rarely pressured.
Frerotte's receivers did a good job of getting open and, for the most
part, catching the passes thrown their way.
The best statistic the Dolphins' offense had was their 53%
conversion rate on third down. That allowed them to keep their drives
alive and keep the Denver defense on the field to the point where the
Denver players were so tired they couldn't keep up with the Dolphins'
receivers. Gus Frerotte's steady hand on the helm kept those drives
alive with timely completions to the correct receivers.
Also, the team did not stop attacking offensively until there
was no hope for the Broncos. There was no "sitting on the lead" that
past Dolphins' teams employed and Dolphins offensive coordinator Scott
Linehan was never afraid to attack the Broncos' defense.
On defense, the various schemes and constant shifting of
players kept the Broncos' offense off-balance for much of the game.
The run defense, in particular, was overwhelmingly better than last
year's. The Broncos' offense was 4th in the NFL in rushing last year,
without Mike Anderson, and the Dolphins (who were 31st in defending
the run last year) completely shut them down.
The defensive line was rock solid and immovable against the
run and did a good job collapsing the pocket around Plummer. While
Plummer was only sacked once, he was chased out of the pocket and
harassed frequently.
Pass coverage was generally solid and often kept Plummer from
finding open receivers. There were a couple of nice plays by the
defensive backs, knocking the ball away from the receivers.
Special teams kick coverage was good and Olindo Mare' made
both his field goals and all his extra points. Wes Welker did an
excellent job returning punts, averaging about 16 yards per punt
return.
Stupid penalties - especially in the first half - cost the
Dolphins a lot of good field position and stopped several drives. The
Dolphins had five false start penalties in the first half and three on
one drive. The defense also had two offsides penalties. They
steadied down in the second half, but they won't be able to afford
those penalties against better teams.
Turnovers were a problem. The Dolphins lost two fumbles and
an interception. Wes Welker fumbled during a punt return, Chris
Chambers lost the ball on the first series after a pass reception and
Gus Frerotte threw one pass right to Champ Bailey. To be fair to
Frerotte, it was obviously a miscommunication with his receiver, but
it was still an interception.
Run blocking needs to get much better. Ronnie Brown only got 9
yards on 8 carries in the first half and was met in the backfield
several times. Things improved somewhat in the second half, but while
the Dolphins ended the day with 151 rushing yards, a lot of that was
on Chris Chambers' 61 yard romp in the first half. Overall, Ronnie
Brown only averaged 2.6 yards per carry and a lot of that wasn't his
fault.
Gus Frerotte completed 24 of 36 passes for 275 yards, 2
touchdowns and 1 interception. He looked poised and in command, did
not try to force the ball where it didn't belong and had a very nice
touch on some of this passes. He was helped by the offensive line but
also did his own work in avoiding the pass rush and was not sacked.
It was a pleasantly surprising performance by the veteran, especially
considering how poorly he played in most of the pre-season games.
Ronnie Brown started at tailback. He had a better second half
than first and ended the day with 22 carries for 57 yards. He was a
little hesitent at times hitting the hole and made some mistakes
reversing direction, getting tackled for a loss more than once. But
he was powerful and determined and broke a couple of decent runs. He
had very good speed and made a nice one-handed reception.
Randy McMichael caught 6 passes for 55 yards and a touchdown.
The touchdown was interesting because McMichael lined up on the right
and on the snap, crossed behind the offensive line to the left, where
he tripped. When he got up, he was all alone and Frerotte tossed him
the ball for an easy six points.
Marty Booker caught 5 passes for 104 yards, including his 60
yard touchdown reception. On that play, he got behind the Denver
secondary and caught an easy over-the-shoulder pass, then raced to the
endzone. The Denver defensive backs were so depleted, they couldn't
keep up with him.
Chris Chambers had a very up-and-down game. He did catch 5
passes, but it was just for 40 yards, as the Broncos were obviously
keying on him. He also fumbled after a catch in the first series.
And when he ran that 61 yard reverse in the second quarter, he stepped
out of bounds at the Denver 21 with no one touching him, when he could
have carried it to the endzone.
Wes Welker made a significant contribution to the offense,
catching 4 passes for 60 yards in addition to his normal punt and
kickoff return duties. He returned 4 punts for 64 yards and 2
kickoffs for 51. It would have been an outstanding day, but he
fumbled a punt at the Miami 26 that set up the Broncos only
touchdown.
Travis Minor carried 5 times for 17 yards and caught 1 pass
for no gain.
Sammy Morris carried just twice for 14 yards, but one of those
carries was a very nice 9 yard touchdown run that put the Dolphins up
20-3 in the 4th quarter.
David Boston caught 1 pass for 8 yards, but dropped another on
a crossing route.
The offensive line was very good in pass protection, but not
so good in run blocking for most of the game. None of the offensive
line really stood out, either good or bad.
On defense, Zach Thomas put on another classic performance,
racking up a combined 14 tackles, including 3 stops of Tatum Bell at
the Miami 3 yard line during the goal line stand in the 2nd quarter.
Zach was at his best.
Jason Taylor officially had 5 tackles, 1 sack, 1 forced
fumble, 1 fumble recovery and an 87 yard fumble return for a
touchdown. He got his hands on Jake Plummer at least 2 other times,
but was unable to bring him down. He also lined up at tight end on
the touchdown play to Randy McMichael and while he didn't catch the
pass, he did draw 2 defenders away from the side where McMichael made
the catch. JT was at his best, also.
Lance Schulters, starting for the first time at free safety,
picked up 8 tackles and an interception on an overthrown pass by Jake
Plummer.
Tebucky Jones, at strong safety, also had 8 tackles, as well
as 3 tackles on special teams.
Junior Seau had 4 tackles, but most of those were downfield.
Keith Traylor, at nose tackle, had 3 stops, including a
critical one on a goal line stand in the 4th quarter. More
importantly, he took over Tim Bowens' job of clogging the middle and
keeping offensive linemen off of the linebackers. His nickname is
"the plug".
Channing Crowder, starting at weakside linebacker, had 3
tackles, including one on Mike Anderson for a loss and knocked down
one pass. However, he also had a pass interference penalty on Rod
Smith.
Sam Madison did a great job covering Denver's receivers and
had 2 tackles, one of which stopped Mike Anderson for a loss on a 3rd
down. He also knocked down 2 passes.
Reggie Howard had 2 tackles and 1 special teams tackle. He
also did a good job covering Denver's receivers.
Kevin Carter only had one tackle, but did a good job stuffing
the line of scrimmage and pressuring Jake Plummer.
Yeremiah Bell had a tackle and Jeff Zgonina had an assist.
Travis Daniels had no tackles, but did have an interception on
a desperation pass by Jake Plummer and also knocked down two passes.
Olindo Mare' hit both his field goal attempts and put most of
his kickoffs in the endzone. He had a good day.
Dan Jones did a good job substituting for Matt Turk, averaging
47.3 yards per punt.
Gus Frerotte slammed his finger against a Denver helmet in the
3rd quarter, but stayed in the game and didn't seem to have any
trouble with it. On Monday, he had it wrapped to protect it, but it
isn't serious and he should play on Sunday.
Jason Taylor had to have IVs after the game for dehydration,
but he should also be fine for the next game.
The Dolphins made a clear statement with their opening game on
Sunday - they are a different team than the one that went 4-12 last
year. A very different team.
And if one thing that happened on Sunday demonstrated that, it
was the way the Dolphins responded to adversity. After the turnovers
and the penalties in the first half, the Dolphins regrouped and played
better. Last year, the team couldn't seem to get past the mistakes
they made and the problems they had. This time, their mistakes only
seemed to make them more determined and motivated them to succeed.
The coaching in this game was first rate. The defense was
crushing the Broncos offense, so the coaches didn't change anything.
The offense, on the other hand, was having problems, so adjustments
were made and the offense improved in the second half.
Gus Frerotte impressed me more than any other player, mostly
because I expected nothing from him. I thought he was going to be
another Jay Fiedler, but he proved me wrong. Sometimes it's good to
be wrong and I was very wrong about him on Sunday. While he didn't
complete any long passes (the 60 yard touchdown was mostly Marty
Booker running away from John Lynch and Lenny Walls), he was steady,
efficient, on-target and composed. He didn't panic, he was clearly
the leader on the offense and he only made on serious mistake - which
might have been the receiver's fault.
Unfortunately, I think the player who disappointed me the most
was Chris Chambers. While he had a decent game, he is supposed to be
the guy who makes the big plays. He's supposed to be the Dolphins'
Randy Moss and he just didn't show that on Sunday. The reverse was a
big play, but he had what they call in baseball an "unforced error".
That play should have been a touchdown. Chambers only averaged 8
yards per catch, which is not what a playmaker is supposed to do.
Overall, however, it was about as good a first game as we
could even hope for, let alone expect. As fans, we're still an
awfully long way from being able to book our tickets to the next
SuperBowl. As a team, the Dolphins are still a long way from even
worrying about the playoffs.
Still, as the saying goes, the journey of 1000 miles begins
with a single step. And the Dolphins certainly got off on the right
foot as they took that first step on Sunday.