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OVERALL SUMMARY:
The Dolphins played a wild game against a tough foe on Sunday,
but with the help of some Dan Marino heroics, they won the game in the
final minute of play, keeping themselves in competition for the lead
in the AFC East.
Overall, the defense had a mixed game, but made some serious
errors that cost them a lot of points. The offense was inconsistent
early in the game, but exploded for 23 points in the 4th quarter,
including the winning touchdown with just 27 seconds left on the
clock.
This was about as good a comeback game as the Dolphins have
played since the great "Clock Play" game against the Jets back in
1994. And like that game, this one was driven by Dan Marino.
The game started at 4:15 in the RCA Dome with Cecil Collins
getting his first start at running back for the Dolphins. Other major
changes to the Dolphins lineup included Kevin Gogan starting for Mark
Dixon and Brent Smith starting for Richmond Webb. On defense, Rich
Owens started for Kenny Mixon.
For the Colts, the biggest change was starting Jerome Pathon
instead of EG Green at receiver. Inactive for the game for the
Dolphins were LB Anthony Harris, C Grey Ruegamer, DE Kenny Mixon, RB
Karim Abdul-Jabbar, OT Richmond Webb, OG Mark Dixon, and WR Yatil
Green. QB Jim Druckenmiller was the emergency inactive quarterback.
The game started with the Colts getting the ball first and
using imaginative play calling to free up receivers, they moved well
on their first series and drove to the Dolphins' 24 before they
stalled and had to settle for a field goal. The Dolphins responded
after a decent kickoff return by going 3 and out on their first
series. Cecil Collins had 2 good runs, but on 3rd and 1, the Colts
stuffed Rob Konrad at the line of scrimmage.
On their 2nd series, the Colts again moved well using the pass
and, aided by a blatant pass interference penalty on Derrick Rodgers
in the endzone, they were done to the Miami 1 yard line. On 1st and
goal, Manning handed off to Edgerrin James, who started for the left
side of his line. Knifing through from the middle, Zach Thomas met
James in the backfield, slamming him to the ground and knocking the
ball loose in the process.
Daryl Gardener picked up the loose ball and rambled back to
the Dolphins' 35 before being cut down by a diving Peyton Manning.
Marino took over there and drove down the field with passes to just
about everyone, until the Dolphins stalled at the Colts' 19. On the
last 2 plays of this drive, Dan threw one questionable and one bad
pass and was almost picked off twice. However, the Colts' defenders
couldn't hold on to the ball and the Dolphins kicked a field goal to
tie the game 3-3.
The Dolphins then tried one of Olindo Mare's special onsides
kick and recovered the ball at their own 49, but promptly went 3 and
out, not capitalizing on their special teams' execution. The Colts
returned the favor by also going 3 and out and the Dolphins got the
ball back after OJ McDuffie had a nice punt return to the Colts' 29.
Unfortunately, the Dolphins couldn't find the endzone again
and sputtered at the Colts' 9, settling for a field goal and a 6-3
lead. Following the kickoff, the Colts drove to the Miami 33 and when
Terrell Buckley went out with a sprained ankle, Marvin Harrison caught
a straight 33 yard touchdown pass while being (sort-of) covered by CB
Ray Hill. The Dolphins elected to replace T-Buck for that one play
with Hill, which turned out to be a mistake. T-Buck did return to
the game later, however.
The score gave the Colts a 10-6 lead. The Dolphins had good
field position after the kickoff and after a 40 yard sideline pass to
Tony Martin, the Dolphins had a first and goal at the Colts' 3.
However, after 2 passes and 1 run netted just 2 yards, the Dolphins
kicked a field goal on 4th and 1 to cut the lead to 10-9 in favor of
the Colts. The Colts then knelt down to end the first half.
At the half, the Dolphins were not running the ball well and
were having trouble with short yardage plays and inside the red-zone.
The Dolphins had been inside the 10 yard line twice in the first half
and had come away with no touchdowns.
To open the 2nd half, the Dolphins went 3 and out on their
first series. Following the punt, the Colts responded by driving 83
yards and scoring a touchdown on a very nicely executed rollout pass
by Peyton Manning to Marcus Pollard at the back of the endzone.
Pollard was the Colts' backup tight end and apparently the
Colts' game plan was to use their backups a lot more and it worked
very well. This drive was spurred on by a 43 yard catch and run by
Terrence Wilkins, who is a very fast receiver and kick returner for
the Colts.
With the Colts up 17-9, the Dolphins responded by taking the
kickoff and driving to the Colts' 3 yard line, mostly on a 62 yard
pass and run from Marino to Oronde Gadsden on the left. However,
after 4 Cecil Collins runs, the Dolphins had not scored a touchdown
and the ball went over to the Colts on downs.
Here is where the real game controversy started. On third and
goal from the 3, the Dolphins ran Collins on the toss-sweep to the
left. Collins was stopped right at the goal line and the referees
ruled that he didn't get in. However, instant replay on the TV seemed
to show that Collins might have gotten the ball across the plane of
the goal and that should have been a touchdown. The Dolphins (even
though I was screaming for a challenge) did not challenge the call at
the time and the fourth down play was run, with Cecil getting
stuffed.
Following the 4th down play, JJ claimed that he had tried to
challenge the 3rd down call and force a review to see if Collins got
over the goal line, but that he was ignored. The referees claimed
that they didn't get the page that would have signaled a challenge and
ruled on the field that since the play was not challenged before the
next play was run, the Dolphins could not challenge it.
In my opinion, having watched the replay several times now,
Collins did break the plane of the goal line and that should have been
a touchdown.
The Colts took over at the 1 and moved out to the 28 before
Manning was sacked twice, forcing the Colts to punt at the beginning
of the 4th quarter. Following a short punt, the Dolphins started at
the 50 and moved to the Colts' 28, where Marino found Tony Martin on a
deep slant and put the ball into his hands perfectly for a touchdown.
Following a failed 2 point conversion attempt. the Dolphins trailed
17-15.
On the kickoff, the Colts' Terrence Wilkins ran right up the
middle of the Dolphins' kickoff coverage team and after 3 of the
Dolphins' coverage players blew their assignments, he raced untouched
to the endzone to put the Colts up by the score of 24-15.
The Dolphins took the kickoff at their 32 and drove to the
Colts' 25 using Tony Martin again and Rob Konrad. At the Colts' 25,
Marino gave the ball to Cecil Collins, who raced around right end and
outran the Colts defenders for 25 yards to the endzone. This cut the
Colts' lead to 24-22.
Following the kickoff, the Colts came right back and after two
excellent runs by Edgerrin James netted 35 yards, Manning again found
Marcus Pollard open and he ran through the Dolphins defense for
another touchdown that pushed the Colts' lead to 31-22.
After yet another kickoff, the Dolphins again moved the ball
well, down to the Colts' 26, but when JJ Johnson slipped and fell on
3rd down, the Dolphins were forced to choose to go for it on 4th and 1
or to kick the field goal. Since they needed 2 scores to take the
lead, the Dolphins elected to go for the field goal. It was good and
cut the lead to 31-25.
Now, with 3:20 left to play in the game, the Colts took over
at their 20 after Mare's kickoff sailed out of the endzone. Two runs
by James appeared to get the Colts a first down, but a pretty blatant
holding call on the Colts moved them back to their 13 and after Zach
tackled James in the backfield, the 2 minute warning was sounded.
Now, the Colts faced 4th and 18 from their 12. Rather than
punt from their 12, the Colts had Peyton Manning run out of the
endzone and take a safety. This kicked the score up to 31-27 in favor
of the Colts, but they got a free kick from their 20 instead of trying
to punt from the 12.
The Dolphins took the ball at their 36 after a nice return by
OJ and two quick passes to Martin moved the ball to the 50. Now, with
1:22 remaining, Marino dropped back to pass and couldn't find anyone
while the pocket collapsed around him. He ran forward from the pocket
and was hit from his right by Shawn King of the Colts.
Now comes the second controversy of the game. Marino pulled
the ball up to his chest and pushed it away from him with both hands,
like a basketball foul shot, as he was being hit. The ball sailed up
in an arc and came down in front of Rob Konrad, but was pounced on by
a Colts' player.
At first, the referees ruled that it was a fumble that the
Colts had recovered because the ball was hit by the defensive lineman
as Dan was drawing it back to toss it and it wasn't exactly a classic
pass. However, after it was challenged, the referees reversed their
ruling and ruled that it was an incomplete pass.
The basis of the ruling was the observation that Marino was
pretty clearly trying to shovel it forward to Konrad. The real
question was whether it was knocked loose before he started to push it
forward.
In my opinion, the ball was knocked loose from Dan's hand as
he was drawing it back to his chest. However, I also think that even
though he didn't have total control over it, he did manage to shove it
forward from his chest deliberately. I don't believe that it bounced
from his helmet or chest forward as a loose ball.
Does that constitute an incomplete pass or a batted fumble?
Given that the benefit of the doubt always goes to the quarterback,
I'd have to call it an incomplete pass. But, boy, it was a very close
call.
Anyway, after that controversial play, Marino now had 1:16
left to play, but threw 2 incomplete passes and ended up with a 4th
down and 10 at the 50. On 4th down, Marino told Oronde Gadsden in the
huddle that he expected a cornerback blitz and if the cornerback did
blitz, that Gadsden was not to break off his pattern early, but to
continue straight up the field.
When the ball was snapped, the cornerback on Gadsden blitzed
and Gadsden ran straight up the field on the right sideline. Marino
then lofted the ball deep down the right sideline and Gadsden gathered
it in, fighting his way down to the Colts' 2 yardline.
Now, with 34 seconds left, Marino threw the ball away on 1st
down, finding no one open. On 2nd down, Marino tossed the fade pass
to Gadsden on the left and Gadsden made a terrific leaping catch on
the side of the endzone. He got one foot down and was then shoved out
of bounds, but it was ruled that he was pushed out of bounds and the
touchdown was good. This put the Dolphins ahead 34-31.
After careful kickoff coverage held the Colts at their 26 and
a false start pushed them back to their 21, Manning tried to hit
Marvin Harrison as he ran straight up the field from the slot
position. However, Patrick Surtain had him blanketed and knocked the
pass up in the air, where T-Buck made a diving catch for the
interception that ended the game.
Overall, it was a game that had just about everything - some
tough defense, some sloppy defense, some running, a lot of passing and
even special teams fireworks. And what game in the NFL would be
complete these days without a genuine controversial referees call?
This time, the Dolphins' offense, led by Dan Marino, bailed
out the special teams and the defense, instead of the other way
around. It showed what this team is capable of, if they could just
put all the pieces together in one game.
GOOD STUFF:
The passing game, in particular, stood out as the best thing
the Dolphins did on Sunday. Marino found Tony Martin 10 times for 166
yards and Oronde Gadsden 4 times for 123 yards. They proved that they
can pass even when OJ McDuffie doesn't get a lot of passes.
The offensive line didn't allow Marino to be sacked, but that
was only by the grace of Marino's quick release, because he was
pounded regularly by the Colts' defense. Tim Ruddy did do a good job
calling the blocking, although he had some problems in other areas.
The defense did not have a great game overall, but they did a
pretty good job on Edgerrin James for most of the game.
Unfortunately, they gave up a couple of big runs late, but they were
expecting the pass at that point.
And, except for the big touchdown play where T-Buck was on the
sidelines, they did manage to keep Marvin Harrison from exploding too
much. He only caught 3 passes in this game.
Special teams did a fair job, getting some good returns on
kickoffs and punts.
The play calling and coaching was improved this week, with the
Dolphins keeping up a decent run-pass balance, considering the
circumstances. Also, Kippy Brown did put Tony Martin in motion a lot
more to get him out of double-coverage and that paid off in a big
way.
And the team's attitude was great, right through the end of
the game. They never quit and never stopped playing hard, no matter
how poorly things were going. They're going to need that resolve
later in the year.
THINGS TO WORK ON:
The defense gave up way too many long pass plays, especially
to tight end Marcus Pollard. They didn't adjust well to what the
Colts were doing for most of the game. If the Colts hadn't gone
conservative on their last series, it's not clear if the Dolphins
would have won.
The problem with the pass defense was a combination of a lack
of a pass rush and coverage problems. JJ started the game playing
more zone coverages than they were used to and that is not a good
choice for this defense in any circumstances. This is not a
zone defense team.
The pass rush picked up later in the game, but the problems
with coverage on the tight end and on the deep plays continued.
On offense, the repeated failures in short yardage situations
were pretty bad. It's hard to tell how much of that was due to the
lack of Richmond Webb and Mark Dixon, but it doesn't really matter.
If Brent Smith is the future at left tackle and Kevin Gogan is this
super-nasty Pro-Bowler, they should be playing better on the left
side.
The special teams had a major breakdown on the kickoff return
and almost gave up another big play. When your kicker has a special
teams tackle in the stats, then your coverage men aren't doing their
jobs.
INDIVIDUAL PERFORMANCES:
Dan Marino embarrassed his detractors and added to his legend on
Sunday, throwing for 393 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions.
He could have had 2 picks early in the game, but otherwise he had a
fine day. He stood in the pocket in the face of a pass rush that
knocked him to the ground many times, but always managed to get the
ball off. He directed the offense to 23 4th quarter points in as
stunning a comeback win as I can remember seeing.
Cecil Collins got his first start at running back and gained
76 yards on 21 carries. More importantly, he didn't fumble. He
looked pretty good and only had 2 plays that went for losses, but his
best play was the 25 yard touchdown run. The bad side was his failure
in short yardage, but those were mostly offensive line problems and he
might have been awarded one more touchdown if that play had been
reviewed. He still needs work on blitz pickups, but he didn't have
any terrible failures in that regard.
Rob Konrad ran just once and failed to pick up a first down on
3rd and short, but had no place to run. He also caught 4 passes for
33 yards, continuing to do a good job out of the backfield.
Stanley Pritchett ran once for 1 yard on a busted 3rd down
play from the shotgun, and made 2 nice catches late in the game for 18
yards.
Tony Martin exploded, catching 10 passes for 166 yards,
including a touchdown and getting open regularly. He also surprised
me with the way he sometimes broke tackles, although he's still not a
tough guy like Oronde Gadsden
Oronde Gadsden had "only" 4 catches, but they were 4 of the
most crucial catches of the game for 123 yards. He caught a 62
yarder and the last two passes of the game that converted a 4th down
and scored the winning touchdown.
OJ McDuffie was pretty quiet, catching 4 passes for 42 yards,
but he diverted attention from Martin and Gadsden.
Troy Drayton caught 1 pass for 11 yards and was pretty quiet
otherwise.
The offensive line did not have a good game. Both Brent Smith
and Kevin Gogan had trouble with their assignments and let Dan get hit
a lot. Also, Tim Ruddy had a crucial missed block at the 1 yard line
that allowed Collins to get nailed in the backfield.
On defense, Zach Thomas led the team in tackles for the 4th
straight game - in fact, every game this year. He had 10 tackles,
knocked down a pass and, most importantly, forced an Edgerrin James
fumble early in the game that prevented a touchdown at the Dolphins' 1
yard line.
Robert Jones was 2nd in tackles, but following a Colts' fumble
on a kick return, he tried to pick up the ball instead of falling on
it. As a result, the Colts recovered. He played solidly, but didn't
distinguish himself with any big plays.
Sam Madison was third in tackles and played cornerback well
enough to keep Manning from throwing his way.
Daryl Gardener had 4 tackles and was his usual self, locking
up the middle and pressuring Manning. He also recovered an Edgerrin
James fumble and returned it 33 yards.
Rich Owens had a mixed game, getting in on 4 tackles and
making a nice sack in the second half.
Brock Marion had 3 tackles, but had what he himself called
his worst game as a Dolphin. He was out of position on a number of
big Colts' plays and had coverage problems all night.
Jason Taylor had 3 tackles, but was pretty quiet except for
one nice stop of Edgerrin James at the line of scrimmage.
Trace Armstrong had 2 tackles and one nice sack where he blew
past the guard and made a sure tackle of Manning.
Tim Bowens had 2 tackles and was pretty invisible most of the
game, but was constantly double-teamed in the middle and didn't get
many opportunities to do anything.
Terrell Buckley also had two tackles and was not seriously
beaten on any big plays that I saw. He also didn't draw any pass
interference penalties. He had the only interception of the game,
but he had Patrick Surtain to thank because Surtain knocked the ball
up into the air.
Surtain was also pretty quiet, but was not beaten badly that I
saw and made a terrific play on the last Colts pass when he was
covering Marvin Harrison and knocked the ball up to Terrell Buckley.
He sealed the victory.
Shawn Wooden had 2 tackles and knocked a pass down, including
one nice backfield stop.
Derrick Rodgers had 2 tackles and a terrible mistake in the
endzone when he got beaten badly and was forced to knock the receiver
down to prevent a catch. He was flagged for pass interference on that
play, but it turned out OK, because Zach caused a fumble on the next
play that saved the touchdown. He had trouble in coverage for a lot
of the game.
Ray Hill was in for T-Buck on the pass to Marvin Harrison and
he was beaten badly after he let Harrison run by him at the line of
scrimmage.
Calvin Jackson started the game at strong safety, but he was
completely invisible, having no tackles and no passes defensed.
Dwight Hollier, Larry Izzo, Nate Jacquet, Greg Jeffries and
Olindo Mare' all had tackles on special teams. Izzo forced a fumble
with his tackle, but it was recovered by the Colts.
Olindo Mare' hit all 4 of his field goals and did a pretty
good job on kickoffs. He has now hit 4 field goals in each of the
last 3 games.
INJURIES:
The only injury of note was to Terrell Buckley, who sprained
his ankle in the 2nd quarter, but played the rest of the game. He is
expected to be available for the Patriots game.
My Comments:
These are the kinds of games that I hate. The defense wasn't
playing well, offensive players were making mistakes and the special
teams gave up that huge play in the 4th quarter. Every time it
looked like the Dolphins were about to come back, the Colts would
score again.
The game looked a lot like some of the other Colts' games that
we've suffered through in the past. You know the ones I mean.
Still, the Dolphins never gave up and fought right down to the
end, which is why they won.
That and the fact that they still have Dan Marino at the helm.
Speaking of which, Dan certainly put the lie to the idea that
he is washed up and can't play anymore. The problem with that, of
course, is that now some people will expect him to play great every
week.
But that's the price you pay for fame - especially fame as
big as Dan Marino's. No matter what he does, he'll be under the
microscope and scrutinized.
But the victory over the Colts did more than just add to the
story of Dan Marino. It verified that the Dolphins finally do have a
very dangerous passing game based on someone other than OJ
McDuffie. Tony Martin did exactly what he was hired to do on Sunday
and has justified JJ's faith in him.
Unfortunately, the Colts game also showed that the Dolphins
aren't going to have much of a running gamee until Mark Dixon comes
back. Of course, he doesn't guarantee an effective running game, but
he clearly adds a dimension that makes a huge difference. The latest
word is that he'll return to practice this week.
Up next are the Patriots and they have a lot in common with
the Colts. They rely mainly on their passing game and have a big play
receiver who is playing very well. They have a running game that must
be respected, but that isn't overwhelming.
The biggest difference that they have is that the Patriots'
defensive unit is more dangerous than the Colts', although the Colts'
defense has improved from last year.
The Dolphins have shown that they have all the pieces in place
to beat the Patriots, but they have to put it together next week in
New England.
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