May 25, 2013

2011 Pro Bowl Roster

AFC


Offense

Position Player(s)
Quarterback * Tom Brady, New England
Philip Rivers
, San Diego
Peyton Manning
, Indianapolis
Running back * Maurice Jones-Drew, Jacksonville
Arian Foster
, Houston
Jamaal Charles
, Kansas City
Fullback * Vonta Leach, Houston
Wide receiver * Andre Johnson, Houston
* Reggie Wayne, Indianapolis
Brandon Lloyd
, Denver
Dwayne Bowe
, Kansas City
Tight end * Antonio Gates, San Diego
Marcedes Lewis
, Jacksonville
Tackle * Jake Long, Miami
* Joe Thomas, Cleveland
D’Brickashaw Ferguson
, N.Y. Jets
Guard * Kris Dielman, San Diego
* Logan Mankins, New England
Brian Waters
, Kansas City
Center * Nick Mangold, N.Y. Jets
Maurkice Pouncey
, Pittsburgh
Defense
Position Player(s)
Defensive end * Dwight Freeney, Indianapolis
* Robert Mathis, Indianapolis
Jason Babin
, Tennessee
Interior linemen * Haloti Ngata, Baltimore
* Vince Wilfork, New England
Richard Seymour
, Oakland
Outside linebacker * James Harrison, Pittsburgh
* Cameron Wake, Miami
Terrell Suggs
, Baltimore
Inside/mid linebacker * Ray Lewis, Baltimore
Jerod Mayo
, New England
Cornerback * Nnamdi Asomugha, Oakland
* Darrelle Revis, N.Y. Jets
Devin McCourty
, New England
Free safety * Ed Reed, Baltimore
Brandon Meriweather
, New England
Strong safety * Troy Polamalu, Pittsburgh
Special teams
Position Player(s)
Punter Shane Lechler, Oakland
Placekicker Billy Cundiff, Baltimore
Kick returner Marc Mariani, Tennessee
Special teamer Montell Owens, Jacksonville

NFC


Offense

Position Player(s)
Quarterback * Michael Vick, Philadelphia
Matt Ryan
, Atlanta
Drew Brees
, New Orleans
Running back * Michael Turner, Atlanta
Adrian Peterson
, Minnesota
Steven Jackson
, St. Louis
Fullback * Ovie Mughelli, Atlanta
Wide receiver * Roddy White, Atlanta
* Calvin Johnson, Detroit
DeSean Jackson
, Philadelphia
Greg Jennings
, Green Bay
Tight end * Jason Witten, Dallas
Tony Gonzalez
, Atlanta
Tackle * Jason Peters, Philadelphia
* Jordan Gross, Carolina
Chad Clifton
, Green Bay
Guard * Jahri Evans, New Orleans
*Chris Snee, N.Y. Giants
Carl Nicks
, New Orleans
Center * Andre Gurode, Dallas
Shaun O’Hara
, N.Y. Giants


Defense
Position Player(s)
Defensive end * Julius Peppers, Chicago
* John Abraham, Atlanta
Justin Tuck
, N.Y. Giants
Interior linemen * Ndamukong Suh, Detroit
* Jay Ratliff, Dallas
Justin Smith
, San Francisco
Outside linebacker * Clay Matthews, Green Bay
* DeMarcus Ware, Dallas
Lance Briggs
, Chicago
Inside/mid linebacker * Patrick Willis, San Francisco
Brian Urlacher
, Chicago
Cornerback * Asante Samuel, Philadelphia
* Charles Woodson, Green Bay
DeAngelo Hall
, Washington
Free safety * Nick Collins, Green Bay
Antrel Rolle
, N.Y. Giants
Strong safety * Adrian Wilson, Arizona
Special teams
Position Player(s)
Punter Mat McBriar,Dallas
Placekicker David Akers, Philadelphia
Kick returner Devin Hester, Chicago
Special teamer Eric Weems, Atlanta

Sounds of 2010 NFL Season

*Dolphins fans keep an eye out for our very own Papa Pump; he’s towards the end!



Magic City Rolling Hard- Week 14

This ain’t no Ralph Wilson Stadium baby.

Joe Robbie to the Legendary Orange Bowl-this here is the “Magic City”. Home of the MIAMI DOLPHINS!


Miami Dolphins (7-6)

Buffalo Bills (3-10)


When the Dolphins played Buffalo in week 1, Miami’s defense coordinator Mike Nolan still had kinks to work out even with a 15-10 win over the Bills. Since then both the Dolphins and the Bills have gone through positional transitions, injuries, and new starters. As a result, week 14 will be a whole new ball game.

{Bills Position Changes}

Week 1 starting quarter back Trent Edwards was waived to the Jacksonville Jaguars. Now the starting quarter back is Ryan Fitzpatrick.

-QB Ryan Fitzpatrick:

Threw a touchdown pass in his 14th straight game against the Browns last Sunday during a 13-6 victory at home. Fitzpatrick is only four shy of matching Hall of Fame QB Jim Kelly’s team record for consecutive games with a TD pass; 2,526 yards at 85% passing rating.

Eric Wood transitioned from right guard to center when Geoff Hangartner suffered a mid game knee injury during week 13.

-Eric Wood will be matching up, out of his normal position against Soliai. The weight difference may be to the Dolphins advantage considering that Wood’s is 40 pounds lighter and is just filling in for now; we’ll see.

Outside linebacker Chad Rinehart and Cordaro Howard will be splitting time at Woods’ position at right guard.

*Side Note – Rinehart has 4 NFL starts at guard coming off his 2 year stint with the Washington Redskins.

Key Players to watch:

Young buck wide receiver Steve Johnson, Buffalo’s 7th round pick in 2008,  was named starting 2nd receiver in 2010. Johnson has flourished in his new role, including an eight reception game for 137 yards and three touchdowns against the Cincinnati Bengals. Although he “did” drop the winning touchdown against the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Bills still seem to have faith that he can redeem himself.

Running backs:

-Four time seasoned veteran Fred Jackson and first round pick,  rookie C.J. Spiller will both be a threat to the Dolphins defense.

-Spiller’s sub 4.4 speed allows him to threaten the edges and then, you have to watch him on punt returns!

-Against the Browns, Fred Jackson rushed for 112 yards on 29 carries.



Buffalo Injury Report:

Lee Evans WR Ankle Did Not Participate In Practice Out
Geoff Hangartner C Knee Did Not Participate In Practice Out
Demetrius Bell T Knee Full Participation in Practice Probable
Drayton Florence CB Fibula Full Participation in Practice Probable
Chris Kelsay LB Knee Full Participation in Practice Probable
Andy Levitre G Knee Full Participation in Practice Probable

Miami Dolphins Injury Report:

Joe Berger C Ankle Full Participation in Practice Probable
Nolan Carroll CB Knee Full Participation in Practice Probable
Reshad Jones S Rib Full Participation in Practice Probable
Sean Smith CB Ankle Full Participation in Practice Probable

The Dolphins run on average 3.7 yards per attempt for 106 yards per game. Chad Henne has not been reading his check downs during his progressions, not throwing the ball away when pressured, and still not showing signifigant improvement over all. After praying to the football god’s; “please help that man find his way”, Henne is not much better.

Henne gives me relentless chest pain. Now it seems, he makes on average one to two check downs per game when he see’s a wide open option and instead of getting sacked he plays like a “frightened Ted Ginn” in the pocket; dump, dump, dump. After a sloppy, embarrassing defeat over the Jets, Henne has now learned to just “throw the ball away.” However, now he is dumping the ball too often, where I would like to see him check for options while alluding rushers and stretching the pocket-maybe too much to ask for!

They say having home field advantage helps, but that hasn’t been the case this year for Miami. Week 13 is crunch time and with the Jets loosing two in a row and facing the vaunted Steelers, the Dolphins could, by the skin of their teeth and with a lot of help from division foes, make this years wild card spot.

Fitzpatrick extended his streak of TD passes to 14 straight games, moving into second place on the Bills list. Hall-of-FamerJim Kelly holds the record of 18, set over the 1986-87 seasons. … Fitzpatrick has 21 touchdowns passing this season, the most by a Bills player since Drew Bledsoe had 24 in 2002.

~Referenced stats by STATS LLC and The Associated Press

Dolphins Roster:

Quarterback: Chad Henne, Tyler Thigpen (2nd)

FullBack: Lousaka Polite
Wide Receiver 1: Brandon Marshall, Davone Bess (2nd)
Wide Receiver 2: Brian Hartline, Marlon Moore (2nd)
Tight End: Anthony Fasano (probable), Jeron Mastrud (back up)
Left Offensive Tackle: Jake Long (probable), Lydon Murtha (back up)
Left Offensive Guard: Richie Incognito, Cory Procter (2nd)
Center: Joe Berger
Right Offensive Guard: John Jerry, Pat McQuiton (2nd)
Right Offensive Tackle: Vernon Carey
Left Defensive End: Kendall Langford, Tony McDaniel (2nd)
Nose Tackle: Paul Soliai
Right Defensive End: Randy Starks, Ryan Baker (2nd)
Left Outside Linebacker: Koa Misi, Ikaika Alama-Francis (2nd)
Left Inside Linebacker: Channing Crowder, Tim Dobbins (2nd)
Right Inside Linebacker: Karlos Dansby
Right Outside Linebacker: Cameron Wake
Left Cornerback: Vontae Davis, Benny Sapp (2nd)
Right Cornerback: Sean Smith, Nolan Carroll (2nd)
Strong Safety: Yeremiah Bell, Tyrone Culver (2nd)
Free Safety: Chris Clemons, Rashad Jones (2nd)
Special Teams:
Kicker: Dan Carpenter
Punter: Brandon Fields
Long Snapper: John Denney
Kick Returner: Patrick Cobbs, Nolan Carroll (2nd)
Punt Returner: Davone Bess, Brain Hartline (2nd)
Holder: Brandon Fields

Nick Lowery, Making His Destinyi

This past weekend I had planned to attend the Dolphins away game in Cincinnati, however the opportunity to interview one of NFL’s most distinguished and notable place kickers popped up.  I hopped on a flight from sunny south Florida and flew to a 38 degree freezing, windy, nose biting cold New Hampshire where place kicker Nick Lowery was attending his alma mater’s homecoming game; Dartmouth verses Harvard.

In the past, Mr. Lowery and I have discussed many topics in regards to football: NFL’s lack of kickers in the Hall of Fame, the controversial lock out, and the massive attention NFL referees are getting on recent calls. However, I had never heard the full story on his relentless determination to make his dream of kicking in the NFL come true. So with a pen in hand and apparently not enough layers of clothing, my frost bitten toes followed him around the entire weekend to meet several of his Dartmouth classmates and friends.

Nick Lowery graduated from “Big Green” in 1978 and went undrafted. With a strong will to follow his dream and live by his motto to “never give up”, Lowery decided to take a chance and try out for the New York Jets. He made it through pre-season with the Jets, but when he missed 2 field goals against the Chargers in their 3rd pre-season game he was cut.

Lowery went to work as a waiter at Bulls Eye Restaurant, but still had the itch to make a debut in the NFL. With his motto in mind and the determination Lowery decided to keep trying, and boy did he try.

Lowery tried out for 11 teams over two years; Oakland Raiders, Tampa Bay, Baltimore, Bengals, Red =skins, Browns, Falcons, Cardinals, Patriots, and the Chiefs. When he told me this I was blown away; “Oh my God, seriously, I don’t think I would have kept at it.” “Jillian, I didn’t want to be that guy saying I was in training camp and I coulda woulda”, not that “couch potato”. Nick wanted to confront the fear of not knowing if he “coulda woulda”, and that I could definitely identify with and respect.

I think of the whole interview, the funniest and most memorable part of interviewing him was the humor in which he told me about his short stint with the Falcons. Lowery played with the Falcons in 1979, but once again was cut; he missed their 3rd preseason 23 yarder. Lowery was cut on that Monday and by Friday of the same week, he was asked to sign a day contract for the Falcons pre-season game 4. Nick had missed practice that entire week and just shows up on game day when players all stared and Joe Lavender says, “Man, this guy’s got it down. We practice all week and he just shows up for the damn game.” I about died laughing listening to him mimic Lavender’s voice, about hit the floor in tears.

Lowery see’s me cracking up and said, Jillian that’s not as funny as when he tried out for the Chiefs.

After his day contract was up, Lowery was flown out by the Redskins, but once in General Manager Dick Nolan found out Garo Yepremian was cut by the Dolphins the Redskins went in that direction. Then he headed to Arizona and went 3-6 against Mike Woods 0-6 kicking into 40 mph wind, but the Cardinals went with Woods. After that the NY Jets flew him out where he was just 1 ½ before. Lowery out kicked Carson Long the whole pre-season, but it’s like Lowery said “the idiot was dumb enough to go with him just because I was there a year and a half earlier”.

After two years and 11 teams, Lowery went to work with the Senate Commerce Committee, working with aviation. He just started working as the only non lawyer on staff with Senator Chafee, when one evening he received a phone call at his parents’ house from Chiefs President Jim Schaff. Schaff was in the hospital recovering from back surgery, and was trying to recruit Lowery to try out for the 1980 training camp, but Lowery said “no thank you” and hung without getting a number. After he hung up he called his mentor, Dick Johnson. Johnson said, “Nick needed find out what they had to offer or you’ll regret it for the rest of your life.”

Lowery hadn’t written down a number to contact Schaff at, but after calling the operator and triangulating where the closest hospital would be for back surgery in accordance with the two Schaff’s listed, he had success. Lowery call Schaff back at the research hospital and after inquiring about the offer found out he would start try outs just 4 months later for a signing bonus of 2500 dollars.

Lowery finally made his NFL dream come true that summer and I was taken by the way he explained it to me. Lowery told me that every time he was cut it was a chapter closing, another fear extinguished because each time he tried out he kept the fire of his dream alive and knew that he was not going to be that would coulda couch potato on Sundays in front of the tube. He was pursuing his dream, because he never wanted his dream to be just a dream.

That summer Lowery out kicked the only remaining player left from Super Bowl Champ (IV) team, Jan Stenerud, and went through a lot of harassment being that he was the newbie at training camp and a nobody. Lowery cracked me up with his animated account of how the pressure of him out performing Stenerud caused some waves. As a result of the pressure, the Chiefs players made Lowery the brunt of a joke, which I thought was hilarious but nauseatingly cruel. Lowery came in from practice and smelled a foul, strong putrid stench. So following the rancid smell, pulled back his sheets and there laid a pile of manure on his bed! He then opened his closet to find more manure!

Lowery started with the Chiefs in 1980 after two years and 11 tryouts. He was on a real NFL team, in a real NFL season, walking the NFL grass, smelling the official NFL air and this time he was ready.

In his first game of his first official NFL start Nick kicked 2 field goals over 50 yards setting a team record. His first attempt was at a 50 yard field goal, which he thought “screw it I’ve already been cut” before. He made the 50 yarder with a 4.6 hang time, then his 23 yarder. Later in the 4th quarter his coach sent him out with a shot to make a 57 yarder. He jogged out to the field and Efren Herrera, the Kicker from Seattle yelled “you’re crazy”, but it was worth a shot. Lowery proudly accounted the moment and mimicked the announcer Jack Patera’s report of the play; “He hit the ball so hard it looked like it coulda went through the stadium.” That was just the beginning of a long 18 year prosperous career.

Lowery retired in 1999 and was ranked number one at that time. He was selected Pro Bowl three times, All Pro 7 times, recipient of the Byron Whizzer White Award in 1993, kicked 15 game winners, played in 2 playoff games, played 262 games in his career and was nominated  for 2007 NFL Hall of Fame.

Other Noted Stats:

  • most field goals all-time (384)
  • most accurate all-time (from 1984-1997 Lowery held the all-time accuracy mark for 10 of those 12 years)
  • most 50 yard field goals
  • most games with 2 or more 50 yarders
  • Lowery also held the record for best PAT percentage since the goal posts were moved back 10 yards and PAT’s became 20 yarders, not 10 yarders.
  • Lowery kicked more than 15 game-winners during his career, including in 2 playoff games vs. the Raiders in 1992 and Steelers in 1994, and also kicked the game-winning points in all 3 Pro Bowls in 1982, 1991 and 1993.

Stats provided by: Wikipedia

Evolution of NFL Teams

Football Teams Through Time

Teams & Date

In 1933 the National Football league formed with 10 teams:
New York Giants
Chicago Bears
Green Bay Packers
Pittsburgh Steelers
Chicago Cardinals
Philadelphia Eagles
Boston Redskins
Brooklyn Dodgers
Cincinnati Reds
Portsmouth (Ohio) Spartans

In 1934

Spartmans move to Detroit and become Detroit Lions

Reds move to St. Louis and become St. Louis Gunners

1935

St. Louis Gunners disband

1937

Cleveland

1944

Boston Yanks (Expansion League)

1945

Brooklyn Dodgers disband

1946

Rams move to Los Angeles aka Los Angeles Dons

AFC is formed of their 8

Cleveland Browns
San Francisco 49ers
Los Angeles Dons
Chicago Rockets
Buffalo Bisons
Miami Seahawks
New York Yankees
Brooklyn Dodger

1947

Miami Seahawks move and become Baltimore Colts (AAC)

Buffalo Bisons become Buffalo Bills

1949

Boston Yanks move & become New York Bulldogs

Chicago Rockets change to Chicago Hornets

New York Yankees & Brooklyn Dodgers Merge as New York Brooklyn-Yankees

1950
New York Bulldogs disband
All America Conference disbands after 4 seasons
Cleveland Browns join NFL as expansion team
San Francisco 49ers join NFL as expansion team
Baltimore Colts join NFL as expansion team
New York Yanks join NFL as expansion team

1951
Baltimore Colts disband
New York Yanks disband

1952
Dallas Texans join league as expansion team

1953
Dallas Texans move to Baltimore, become Baltimore Colts

1960
Dallas Cowboys join league as expansion team
Chicago Cardinals move to St. Louis, become St. Louis Cardinals
American Football League formed with 8 team:
Dallas Texans
Los Angeles Chargers
Boston Patriots
New York Titans
Denver Broncos
Houston Oilers
Buffalo Bills
Oakland Raiders

1961
Minnesota Vikings join NFL as expansion team
Los Angeles Chargers (AFL) move to San Diego, become San Diego Chargers

1963
Dallas Texans (AFL) move to Kansas City, become Kansas City Chiefs (AFL)
New York Titans Change name to New York Jets

1966
Atlanta Falcons join NFL as expansion team
Miami Dolphins join NFL as expansion team

NFL and AFL merge. All 9 AFL teams join league. National and American Conferences are formed. Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Baltimore volunteer to join AFL. New line-up reads:

1967
New Orleans Saints join NFC as expansion team

1968
Cincinnati Bengals join AFC as expansion team

1971
Boston Yanks move to Foxboro Mass., change name to New England Patriots

1976
Seattle Seahawks join AFC as expansion team Tampa Bay Bucaneers join NFC as expansion team

1982
Oakland Raiders move to Los Angeles, become Los Angeles Raiders

1984
Baltimore Colts move to Indianapolis, become Indianapolis Colts

1988
St. Louis Cardinals move to Tempe, Arizona, become Arizona Cardinals

1995
Jacksonville Jaguars join AFC as expansion team Carolina Panthers join NFC as expansion team Los Angeles Rams move to St. Louis, become St. Louis Rams Los Angeles Raiders move back to Oakland, become Oakland Raiders again

1996
Cleveland Browns move to Baltimore, become Baltimore Ravens

1997
Houston Oilers move to Nashville, Tenn., become Tennessee Oilers


1999
Cleveland Browns join the AFC as expansion team

At the end of the 2001 season, the National Football League (31 teams) was organized as follows:

NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

San Francisco 49ers
St. Louis Rams
Atlanta Falcons
New Orleans Saints
Carolina Panthers
Chicago Bears
Green Bay Packers
Detroit Lions
Minnesota Vikings
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
New York Giants
Dallas Cowboys
Washington Redskins
Philadelphia Eagles
Arizona Cardinals

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

West
Oakland Raiders
Seattle Seahawks
San Diego Chargers
Kansas City Chiefs
Denver Broncos
Central
Cleveland Browns
Pittsburgh Steelers
Cincinnati Bengals
Jacksonville Jaguars
Tennessee Oilers
Baltimore Ravens
East
Miami Dolphins
New York Jets
Indianapolis Colts
New England Patriots
Buffalo Bills



For the 2002 season, the NFL re-aligned, adding the Houston Texans as an expansion team to the AFC, making 32 teams. The two conferences have 4 divisions:

AMERICAN FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

East
Buffalo
Miami
New England
NY Jets
North
Baltimore
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
South
Houston
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Tennessee
West
Denver
Kansas City
Oakland
San Diego

NATIONAL FOOTBALL CONFERENCE

East
Dallas
NY Giants
Philadelphia
Washington
North
Chicago
Detroit
Green Bay
Minnesota
South
Atlanta
Carolina
New Orleans
Tampa Bay
West
Arizona
St. Louis
San Francisco
Seattle


31-23 Jets over Miami; 2-1 Tied Up

rec0927-175133 play to here my hoarse voice recap and opinion.

Last nights display of both the offense and defense was down right disappointing and offensive!

Jason Allen did loose his footing on the newly acquired turf that was placed down recently following a Marlins baseball game. This error allowed for Braylon Edwards to make a 67 yard touchdown. However, keep in mind that later in the game Edwards slipped as well.

Wish Kendall Langford was able to grab that ball he batted down, but maybe next week he’ll get his as well all have seen Tom Brady take big risks on passing plays.

Brandon Marshall did get his first touchdown as a Miami Dolphin on Sunday and he and Henne were making connections. Marshall grabbed 10 passes for 166 yards and that 1 TD.

Chad Henne threw for a career high of 363 yards 26/45, 2 TD’s, and a 91.4 QB rating.

Ricky William had neuropathy of the feet, always falling down last season, and this season he keeps fumbling; but this wasn’t a fumble. Williams finished with 28yards on 7 carries and has steadily declined after rushing 62 in the first to 58 in the second.

I wish we would keep the wild cat situations in the closer to the goal line and I certainly KNOW we should have set this play on the back burner for a while. All the wild cat did was off-set the rhythm, not to mention Ronnie Browns left handed pass that was clearly read; -6 yards.

Our biggest mistake of the game was not going for it! If you were on my twitter or saw my face book blow up with me typing and retyping “go for it”, then you know what I am talking about. Also, this was the perfect time to do just that. Why not we we were 4th and goal set on the 2. At this point who really cares, it was a better choice than the FG.

Tony Sparano:

“Now, there were some good things done last night, really good things. This quarterback (Chad Henne) got better last night. He really did some good things throwing the football. I thought all the receivers contributed and played well last night during the course of this game, so there were some really positive things done. Third-down offense I thought was pretty positive against a team like that. In their last 10 wins they’re holding people to 28 percent on third down. I mean we’re at 47 percent on third down and you would figure you’re going to have a pretty decent day. But again you’ve got to finish drives and you’ve got to score touchdowns and we got down there and weren’t able to do that.”

Recap NY Jets:

First quarter Dolphins kicked off and allowed Mark Sanchez to utilize TE Dustin Keller for both touchdowns scored in the first half.

Jason Taylor made his statement to Bill Parcells when he sacked Henne late in the first quarter; that burned I am sure.

Braylon Edwards, who was sitting idle on the sideline for the first quarter from his DUI this past week brought a 67 yard touchdown back in the third quarter; this because Jason Allen slipped. Edwards did make another grab for 20 yards on the third down where Allen was called for pass interference with 4 1/2 minutes left in the game. With New York given this disappointing wrong penalty and a first down on the Miami 1, the game was sealed.

With Sanchez having almost non-existent pressure he was able to sit back in the pocket and take his time looking for options when needed. Dolphins defense needed to step up and watch the mid field and TE coverage was a joke. Tackling wasn’t there and adjustments weren’t made; Damian Woody and  pushed back and held the line hard.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING_N.Y. Jets, Tomlinson 15-70, B.Smith 3-41, Greene 10-36, Sanchez 1-(minus 1). Miami, R.Brown 11-54, Williams 7-28, Polite 1-4, Marshall 2-3, Henne 1-1, Cobbs 1-(minus 6).

PASSING_N.Y. Jets, Sanchez 15-28-0-256. Miami, Henne 26-44-1-363, R.Brown 0-1-0-0.

RECEIVING_N.Y. Jets, Keller 6-98, Tomlinson 3-18, Edwards 2-87, Cotchery 2-20, Clowney 1-22, B.Smith 1-11. Miami, Marshall 10-166, Bess 6-86, Hartline 5-84, Fasano 2-14, R.Brown 2-(minus 1), Polite 1-14.

PUNT RETURNS_N.Y. Jets, Wilson 1-8. Miami, Bess 1-18.

KICKOFF RETURNS_N.Y. Jets, B.Smith 4-150. Miami, Cobbs 6-141.


NYJ
MIA
First downs 20 24
Total Net Yards 402 436
Rushes-yards 29-146 23-84
Passing 256 352
Punt Returns 1-8 1-18
Kickoff Returns 4-150 6-141
Interceptions Ret. 1-0 0-0
Comp-Att-Int 15-28-0 26-45-1
Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 2-11
Punts 4-42.0 4-34.5
Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0
Penalties-Yards 9-81 6-52
Time of Possession 27:12 32:48

Fins Forum 2010

Fins Forum

Tonight’s Fins Forum had none other than 79’ Pro-Bowler and former Dolphins linebacker, Kim Bokamper as moderator. He opened the forum by introducing Dolphins retiree, number 89 Nat Moore and C.E.O. Mike Dee. They explained the forum and gave up the stage for Head Coach Tony Sparano and General Manager Jeff Ireland.

This forum was entertaining and amusing. There were analogies such as acorns, crumbs, and big monsters. Frankly, the best responses that have me still laughing are the ones on topics Gibril Wilson and the Jet’s.

Yes, I did ask my question and I waited to be last; “What are you going to do when Parcells contract expires next year, 2011? I mean who will replace him?” (read the post for the answer)

Responses on pre-submitted questions:

Why don’t we take more players from south Florida?

Ireland explained that they hold “a Florida day once a year. Basically, we want “good football players” but we’re not prejudice against them. We just want to put good players on our team.”

Will we see the “wildcat” with Brandon Marshall?

Sparano: “Gonna have Ronnie and Ricky clearly involved. That’s how it started with Ronnie, Ricky, and Cobbs. And I’d say Brandon Marshall will be out there too.”

How has the NFL become more competitive and what team do you respect the most?

Ireland: “I’ll answer the second question first. I respect them all equally. It’s so much competition out there and for the most part only played in the U.S. and trying to find players that fit your system is complicated. The league is trying to find parity and the NFL is trying to even the playing field.” So finding anyway to maintain a competitive edge is useful to the Dolphins success. One way of being competitive is “by maintaining a private organization, we are set up to be as competitive as possible.” This is done by keeping plays, trades and other transactions in the war room, locker room and private.

Tony Sparano: “The offensive side of the ball has gone through a lot of changes in the past several months
You have to look at the growth of our quarterback. You have to look at the way Brian Hartline has come along . You start to look at our skilled players … And do believe there’s room for improvement in their futures.”

Ireland’s response on what happened with FS Gibril Wilson: “It is my personal opinion he’s a very capable good player in the future and u never wanna throw a player under the bus. He is gonna be a good player somewhere in the future, but I didn’t finish the statement just not with us. “He’s more of a strong safety. Strong player, just not for us.”

What are you going do about the 4 quarterbacks currently on the roster?

Sparano: Four quaterback’s on roster….Thigpen and White can run the ball, both good bright young quarterbacks.” Gonna have them go to practice work hard. “Let em go out to pick up the crumbs and see what’s out there. A little bit different mechanics going into spring training, but we already have 2 good runners out there (Ronnie and Ricky)”and “Tyler’s a guy who’s done this already in Kansas city.” “They won’t be the best 53 players but they’ll be the right 53 players.”

Ireland on the Dolphins chemistry as a team: “We do a lot of due diligence…  A lot of character and team building” When selecting players you have to find ones with a “big character, make up” and find out “what’s gonna make them a good team.” Lastly you have to have “smart, tough, and disciplined enough” player because “if you’re missing one thing it’s a margin for failure.”

Sparano on creating chemistry: “You get players that are leaders. All our draft picks were captains and that was by no coincidence. I have 81 players now and need 80 to start summer training camp. So by creating team chemistry and making them practice hard you pull leadership qualities out of them. Your gonna be proud when you see our 53 match up against Buffalo, whether or not it equals a Super Bowl.”

How are we going stop the passing game?

“Nolan’s area of expertise is in the back end. Davis, Smith, and Clemmons experience will help us. Bell coming off pro-bowl will help us too! Jones and Carroll will gain experience in time too.”

What are we doing as far as trades within the free agency?

We will see “what acorns fall off the tree.” Right now Ferguson and Pennington will be back” and as you know Porter and Jason are gone. Having Pennington back is great whether he’s starting or not he provides leadership for our team.

“Who is the most consistent play maker?”

Sparano: “Not just one player, but amongst different areas. You have Starks, he was a dominant player in the front, but we are gonna move him to nose tackle. ILB we have Dansby and he’s made big plays. Channing, Bell, Will Allen; I feel they will step up.

Sparano on not having a dominate full safety:

“Our first year Bell did a good job and he’s getting better. The FS doesn’t have to be dynamic but has to be a playmaker. One thing that happens at the end of the year is I give my coaches time off then we do quality control work. What our efficiency is, shortages, yards, we go through all film and look at top teams in the NFL, top rush top defense, and a lot of homework on “chunk plays”; trying to manage the red areas.”

What are we gonna do about the Jets?

Ireland: “Can’t do any better than beating em’ twice last year.”
Sparano: “Our football team got better this off season. We’ll see whose better that day. First we need to take care of our division, and then we worry about that pie down the road.”

What are you going to do to prepare for next year’s draft?

Ireland: “That sounds like a Parcells question. Parcells asks me right after the draft” and I have learned that need to know who the “next top 50 are for next yrs draft.” “We have scouts that are working on next year’s draft, last December til’ now; height, weight, speed. We spend the summer looking at these kids; we work at it diligently.”

Sparano on Brandon Marshall:

“When the ball is in the air it is his. Very strong, almost like a basketball player.”

Ireland: Let me tell you a quick story. We (Sparano and Ireland) were in Orlando at a camp and this “big monster of a guy comes walking by us and we gawked at him.” Sparano asks me who is that? I said that’s Brandon Marshall. So I put together a reel that consisted of all his highlights and plays; it was 280 plays long. So looking at the tape of him I said “Coach I just sent you something and I need you to take a look at it.” Then I get this phone call “Jeff, Jeff, we gotta get this guy!”

Sparano on mini-camp:

Most rookies look “exactly like what we thought they’d be”. I call them Football heads, because “when I blow the whistle they are like that’s all you got?” “They enjoyed being out there and we’ll see how they mix with the veteran players.”

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I did ask my question when I had the privilege to meet Coach Sparano. I asked “What are you going to do when Parcells contract expires next year, 2011? I mean who will replace him?”  Sparano kind of avoided the inevitable but did answer me “He’s working still. We’re working still and that’s what our focus is: working.”

Ok so there you have it. That was a night at the Sun Life Stadium and another Fins Forum experience.

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