WEBVTT - Drive Time - All 22 Review

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<v Speaker 1>Fractors are all fits, fatric throwing touchdown. What a win

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<v Speaker 1>for this Miami Dolphin team. Wow? What is up? Dolphans?

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<v Speaker 1>And welcome to the Drive Time Podcast, part of the

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<v Speaker 1>Miami Dolphins official podcast network, covering your Miami Dolphins each

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<v Speaker 1>and every day. How's it going everybody? It is a Monday.

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<v Speaker 1>I am your host, Travis Winfoeld, and as always, I

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<v Speaker 1>am here to bring you your daily dose of Miami

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<v Speaker 1>Dolphins football. And on today's show, we're gonna take a

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<v Speaker 1>look back at the All twenty two and get into

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<v Speaker 1>the nitty gritty of this game. Break it down offensively, defensively,

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<v Speaker 1>give you some interesting facts and nuggets and tidbits from

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<v Speaker 1>the game. All of that and more on this Monday,

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<v Speaker 1>September edition of the Drive Time podcastphins and supportful. Drive

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<v Speaker 1>Time is brought to you by Auto Nation. If you

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<v Speaker 1>want to sell your car or truck, Auto Nation will

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<v Speaker 1>your car and you'll get a check on the spot

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<v Speaker 1>and as fast as thirty minutes. Appraise your car now

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<v Speaker 1>at automation dot com. Let's go ahead and jump right

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<v Speaker 1>into the film from Thursday. Before we turn the page

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<v Speaker 1>and get on to the Seattle Seahawks and Brian Floors

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<v Speaker 1>and some player media availability. And I first want to

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<v Speaker 1>start offensively here and just talk about the scheme because

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<v Speaker 1>the very first play of this game, the Dolphins like

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<v Speaker 1>to go unbalanced twelve personnel to start drives to start games.

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<v Speaker 1>And that's been the case under Brian Floors now for

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<v Speaker 1>a year and three games a lot. And that's basically

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<v Speaker 1>when you have balanced, that means you have a tight

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<v Speaker 1>end to either side of the formation. Unbalanced means you

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<v Speaker 1>put both your wise your double wise into the same

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<v Speaker 1>side of the formation. But on this play they go balanced,

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<v Speaker 1>and they they motioned Smith away from the balance of

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<v Speaker 1>the formation, but they bring him back right into that

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<v Speaker 1>same spot as usual and have him kind of take

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<v Speaker 1>a couple of shuffle steps to simulate pass protection at

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<v Speaker 1>the snap. Because remember this guy had seven teen pass

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<v Speaker 1>blocking reps compared to twenty three pass target reps and

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<v Speaker 1>fifty run blocking reps in the game, So it tells

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<v Speaker 1>you where his rate is. His consistent ratio throughout his

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<v Speaker 1>career has been leaning towards staying in line to pass

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<v Speaker 1>block and to run block, compared to other tight ends

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<v Speaker 1>who almost never stay into block at times, like a

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<v Speaker 1>Mike Gasiki for instance. Then he leaks out and he's

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<v Speaker 1>already been disregarded by the coverage scheme because he was

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<v Speaker 1>initially looking like he was going to stay in to

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<v Speaker 1>pass protect. Then he leaks out into the flat and

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<v Speaker 1>the linebacker disregards him. It's an gimme seven yards, and

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<v Speaker 1>that's exactly what you want from your play design. Talk

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<v Speaker 1>about making it easy on your players. Exactly what they

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<v Speaker 1>did on that particular play. One more Durham Smith note here.

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<v Speaker 1>Then he comes back on the very next play and

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<v Speaker 1>gets back to doing what he does best and wipes

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<v Speaker 1>out the force defender on the back side with a

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<v Speaker 1>split zone. Look when Myles Gaskin bends that thing back.

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<v Speaker 1>Later in that first drive, they go back to twelve personnel,

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<v Speaker 1>but they replace Preston Williams with Jachem Grant. Obviously they're

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<v Speaker 1>exchanging some size for some speed, and this time it

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<v Speaker 1>is balanced tight ends on both sides of the formation,

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<v Speaker 1>and they go twins into the boundary two receivers to

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<v Speaker 1>the short side of the field, and they motion Grant

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<v Speaker 1>over to the field side of the formation. The wide

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<v Speaker 1>side of the field. Jacksonville is a Cover three team

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<v Speaker 1>with some Cover one looks here and there, and they

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<v Speaker 1>the look they gave you had nobody to the field

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<v Speaker 1>side of the formation until the motion. So automatically, with

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<v Speaker 1>them showing six guys bringing pressure and the cornerback over

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<v Speaker 1>there with no safety help, you automatically know that he

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<v Speaker 1>has to respect that deep third of the coverage area.

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<v Speaker 1>And so jakeem Grant sells the takeoff and sticks his

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<v Speaker 1>foot in the ground and comes right back down. Just

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<v Speaker 1>excellent play design composed to take advantage of their defense

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<v Speaker 1>by attacking their vulnerable part of the defense with the

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<v Speaker 1>player who is in conflict and stressing that conflict. And

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<v Speaker 1>also what a catch by Jachem and what a hell

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<v Speaker 1>of an effort to get up and add yard on

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<v Speaker 1>top of that after the play was looked like it

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<v Speaker 1>was over before C. J. Henderson did not touch him down.

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<v Speaker 1>In the run game, they just used Jacksonville's aggressiveness against

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<v Speaker 1>them early. You want to one gap and shoot your

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<v Speaker 1>way up the field, go ahead, We'll take you there.

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<v Speaker 1>We'll allow you to do that, and we'll talk more

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<v Speaker 1>about the performance of those guys upfront executing that game

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<v Speaker 1>plan here in just one moment. But Miami was consider

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<v Speaker 1>instantly going against the grain on those runs and it

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<v Speaker 1>created big success in the running game, in the passing game,

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<v Speaker 1>and on offense in general. We then come back to

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<v Speaker 1>the second touchdown drive with the end around to Jacheem

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<v Speaker 1>once again, and this call was absolutely perfect. They got

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<v Speaker 1>Jacksonville and a Cover one look, which is man to

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<v Speaker 1>man with a single high free safety over the top,

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<v Speaker 1>so to run the corner off that edge Parker who

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<v Speaker 1>is on the same side they want to run the

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<v Speaker 1>end around two with Jachem Grant. He takes the inside

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<v Speaker 1>release and that forces the cornerback to turn and get

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<v Speaker 1>up field in that trail technique immediately and it gets

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<v Speaker 1>us back to the play and with the fake handoff

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<v Speaker 1>to the other side of the formation, you've already gotten

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<v Speaker 1>flow to that side against the grain once more for

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<v Speaker 1>Jachem to come off the end around, and there's one

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<v Speaker 1>key block that has to get maybe it's Eric Flowers

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<v Speaker 1>climbing to the second level to wall and seal off

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<v Speaker 1>a linebacker, and he hits it perfectly and Jacheem is

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<v Speaker 1>off to the races. Another excellent call with easy yards

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<v Speaker 1>built in from the play call before the players even

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<v Speaker 1>have to execute and make moves on their own. On

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<v Speaker 1>the third possession, the fourth and one call the Fitzpatrick

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<v Speaker 1>bootley egg. They go thirteen personnel with every tight end

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<v Speaker 1>aligned to the same side. They show run action to

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<v Speaker 1>the opposite direction. It freezes the linebackers for a beat,

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<v Speaker 1>and then Fitzpatrick can then read his flood concept where

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<v Speaker 1>you bring multiple routes over to that side of the

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<v Speaker 1>field and he can then throw. He can then run.

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<v Speaker 1>He has all kinds of options, but he decides to

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<v Speaker 1>take off and run for it. It's a lot to defend,

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<v Speaker 1>a lot of stress on that defense, the individuals, the quarterback.

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<v Speaker 1>What can we really say here? Fitzpatrick was awesome. He

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<v Speaker 1>was in rhythm all night. He moved off the spot

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<v Speaker 1>when he had to. He made place with his legs

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<v Speaker 1>and some of the specifics. The touchdown throw to Preston

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<v Speaker 1>Williams was just perfect, perfect location, right on the money,

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<v Speaker 1>and that was right after the run game had stalled

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<v Speaker 1>out a bit down there, So a big time throw

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<v Speaker 1>on third down and really probably a four point throw

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<v Speaker 1>there from Fitzpatrick. His pre snap identification was stellar. Slides

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<v Speaker 1>were on point, that protection matchups were on point. He

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<v Speaker 1>did well to help keep himself protected with the calls

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<v Speaker 1>and then when it wasn't there when pressure did arrive

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<v Speaker 1>from that Jacksonville pass rush, the ability to recognize where

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<v Speaker 1>the rush was coming from, where is escape lane existed.

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<v Speaker 1>Just masterful work from the Dolphins quarterback to get away

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<v Speaker 1>from pressure when it did arrive, and good work in

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<v Speaker 1>communication between he and the offensive line to get it

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<v Speaker 1>blocked most of the night. Throughout the course of the

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<v Speaker 1>w there's a play on the third possession after a

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<v Speaker 1>holding call backs them up to first and twenty where

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<v Speaker 1>there's not pressure on the play, and this is a

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<v Speaker 1>good example of Fitzpatrick knowing where his protection can make

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<v Speaker 1>it strong and more It can be weak at times,

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<v Speaker 1>but they have a solid wall of protection as they

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<v Speaker 1>slide to the right. But the hook zone on the

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<v Speaker 1>passing concept is clogged up the area right in behind

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<v Speaker 1>the linebackers where you try to run hook up routes

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<v Speaker 1>and little dig routes and try to throw high low

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<v Speaker 1>conversions in that area. So Fits bails out to the

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<v Speaker 1>left even though there's a good pocket, a good pocket

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<v Speaker 1>for him to work from. But this forces the linebacker

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<v Speaker 1>to string it out and to really stretch the middle

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<v Speaker 1>of that defense. So he runs left. Linebacker chases him

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<v Speaker 1>and it uncovers Isaiah Ford who just and then Fits

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<v Speaker 1>them just flips it out there to Ford for a

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<v Speaker 1>pickup of eleven. You get all the penalty yards back

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<v Speaker 1>plus one. Just more brilliant work there from the Dolphins QB.

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<v Speaker 1>There's a third and six conversion that same exact drive

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<v Speaker 1>from Ryan Fitzpatrick to DeVante Parker, and to me, that

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<v Speaker 1>was the best play of the year so far for Fits.

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<v Speaker 1>The rush is right in his face, Parker hasn't even

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<v Speaker 1>come out of his break yet, and there's two receivers

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<v Speaker 1>to that side of the formation, and they're both kind

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<v Speaker 1>of running vertical. The inside the two takes a vertical route,

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<v Speaker 1>Parker runs a square and route, so he's gonna break

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<v Speaker 1>off the outside or the butt rather of that second receiver,

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<v Speaker 1>and Fits kind of drifts back away from the pressure,

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<v Speaker 1>buying that extra fraction of a second, and as he's

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<v Speaker 1>fading off, he drops the arm angle to get around

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<v Speaker 1>the pass rusher and throws the ball to a spot

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<v Speaker 1>before Parker is out of that break, and the ball

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<v Speaker 1>just hits there right on time, right on the money,

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<v Speaker 1>for a completion and a big time conversion. Just awesome,

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<v Speaker 1>awesome stuff from your QB. He comes right back a

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<v Speaker 1>few plays later with a absolute seed to Matt Brita

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<v Speaker 1>on a wheel route. A perfect throw, and I mean

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<v Speaker 1>caleban Chasm is right there with the ball is just perfect.

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<v Speaker 1>No defense for a perfect pass. And the only reason

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<v Speaker 1>it wasn't an explosive play is because Chason interfere with Brita,

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<v Speaker 1>So it actually was an explosive play. But he threw

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<v Speaker 1>the ball with a line drive on it. On this route. Typically,

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<v Speaker 1>if there's no safety help, you want to loft that

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<v Speaker 1>thing because running back against a linebacker, obviously the speed

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<v Speaker 1>matchup there goes to the running back. But the safety

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<v Speaker 1>was coming over the top, so Fitz has to drill it,

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<v Speaker 1>and boy did he. He put it right on the

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<v Speaker 1>money and it was a perfect throw. Just wows up.

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<v Speaker 1>That's all I wrote in my notes here. Then the

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<v Speaker 1>throw took a sticky one play later, again attacking c. J. Henderson,

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<v Speaker 1>similar to the throw to Jachim Grant a cover three look.

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<v Speaker 1>He takes a step to the post, does c. J.

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<v Speaker 1>Henderson following Davante Parker? Because Parker runs the post, Gasicki

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<v Speaker 1>runs the out route right and behind him and the

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<v Speaker 1>ball is perfect. One false step on it and you're

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<v Speaker 1>gonna lose. That's exactly what happened because Fitz was so

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<v Speaker 1>on point with his accuracy and his timing. So the

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<v Speaker 1>quarterback played brilliantly behind him at the running back position.

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<v Speaker 1>And of course that's really Miles Gaskins. He's the guy

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<v Speaker 1>right now. He's been the bell cow through three weeks.

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<v Speaker 1>His bread and butter, the wine back run, the bend

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<v Speaker 1>run you have on his own runs, you can either

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<v Speaker 1>bounce bang or bend. Bounces where you go outside to

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<v Speaker 1>the play side. Bang is where you go right up

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<v Speaker 1>into the middle of the line and bending it is

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<v Speaker 1>cutting it back. And his bending has been so good

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<v Speaker 1>on these runs, and he does so well to get

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<v Speaker 1>to the backside of that formation. His ability to work

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<v Speaker 1>towards the target point of the run, the initial target

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<v Speaker 1>launch or the launch point of where he wants to

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<v Speaker 1>get then shift suddenly at the last moment, but maintain

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<v Speaker 1>that speed. Man, that stuff is special. He's talked about

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<v Speaker 1>the leverage, but that really makes it tough on a

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<v Speaker 1>defensive lineman who has just worked their ass off to

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<v Speaker 1>disengage off the block. Then you have to stay step

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<v Speaker 1>for step with a player who's faster than you, because

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<v Speaker 1>again running back against defensive lineman, the running back is

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<v Speaker 1>going to be faster, and then anticipate where that cut's

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<v Speaker 1>going to be on a small target, and you look

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<v Speaker 1>at the first run of the second half and you'll

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<v Speaker 1>see exactly that he is forced to bubble. He has

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<v Speaker 1>to slip two tackles behind the line of scrimmage, and

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<v Speaker 1>he's still manages to run for five yards. That was

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<v Speaker 1>second and eleven last year. This year at second and

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<v Speaker 1>five out at wide receiver, I thought Preston Williams did

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<v Speaker 1>so well to attack the outside leverage on that touchdown match.

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<v Speaker 1>If they're gonna give you that inside release and you

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<v Speaker 1>have that six ft five frame, just take it because

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<v Speaker 1>you can't get around the back of that guy. And

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<v Speaker 1>he did touchdown Dolphins the third possession of the game.

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<v Speaker 1>I want to make a note here for Preston. It's

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<v Speaker 1>the third down and eight where Fitzpatrick scrambles for a

0:10:13.760 --> 0:10:16.520
<v Speaker 1>near first down. Williams uncovers on a dig route and

0:10:16.559 --> 0:10:19.880
<v Speaker 1>he's wide open, but because protection wasn't great, fits had

0:10:19.920 --> 0:10:22.480
<v Speaker 1>to scramble and rather than show poor body language and

0:10:22.559 --> 0:10:24.760
<v Speaker 1>become upset that you didn't get the target. He's concerned

0:10:24.760 --> 0:10:26.800
<v Speaker 1>about the potential hit to the head of his quarterback,

0:10:26.920 --> 0:10:28.480
<v Speaker 1>signing to the RAF, Hey, he might have got hit

0:10:28.559 --> 0:10:30.360
<v Speaker 1>up high. Then he goes over and helps him up.

0:10:30.520 --> 0:10:32.880
<v Speaker 1>You love to see that. Isaiah Ford had an awesome

0:10:32.960 --> 0:10:34.880
<v Speaker 1>route on a third and two on the first drive

0:10:35.120 --> 0:10:37.280
<v Speaker 1>of the second and half. Does a kind of slow start,

0:10:37.320 --> 0:10:40.240
<v Speaker 1>our step release, let's the concept develop, squares up the

0:10:40.240 --> 0:10:42.160
<v Speaker 1>defensive back and breaks it off at the sticks for

0:10:42.160 --> 0:10:44.720
<v Speaker 1>a chain mover and Parker. He just ran them out

0:10:44.720 --> 0:10:47.480
<v Speaker 1>of cover three all night, contest deep with no safety help,

0:10:47.520 --> 0:10:49.320
<v Speaker 1>and then come right back to the ball. Use that

0:10:49.320 --> 0:10:50.880
<v Speaker 1>frame to box out. They're not gonna be able to

0:10:50.880 --> 0:10:52.599
<v Speaker 1>get back through you to make a play on the

0:10:52.640 --> 0:10:55.440
<v Speaker 1>football along the offensive line. My goodness, what more can

0:10:55.480 --> 0:10:58.080
<v Speaker 1>you say? Austin Jackson did so well to close down

0:10:58.080 --> 0:11:00.400
<v Speaker 1>the edge on those wine back runs and to wipe

0:11:00.400 --> 0:11:02.240
<v Speaker 1>that thing out. And one thing I love about his

0:11:02.320 --> 0:11:05.560
<v Speaker 1>game is the patients and past protection. He almost always

0:11:05.559 --> 0:11:07.840
<v Speaker 1>forces the defender to show his hand first, and that

0:11:07.880 --> 0:11:10.760
<v Speaker 1>prevents those sloppy reps where you get out over your skates.

0:11:10.840 --> 0:11:12.920
<v Speaker 1>Maybe you get crossed over and wind up on your butt,

0:11:13.040 --> 0:11:15.480
<v Speaker 1>but he doesn't do that. Teams are throwing bullrushes at

0:11:15.559 --> 0:11:17.240
<v Speaker 1>him all the time, and I think he'd like to

0:11:17.280 --> 0:11:19.640
<v Speaker 1>anchor sooner. But he does good to get out there

0:11:19.640 --> 0:11:22.440
<v Speaker 1>eventually and drop that anchor. So great signs from the

0:11:23.000 --> 0:11:25.360
<v Speaker 1>year old. And by the way, Jackson wasn't part of

0:11:25.360 --> 0:11:28.000
<v Speaker 1>the deal, but he looks like a bona fide hit

0:11:28.200 --> 0:11:30.800
<v Speaker 1>at that left tackle position. And he wasn't part of

0:11:30.840 --> 0:11:32.880
<v Speaker 1>the Larrymie Tunsel trade as far as the draft pick

0:11:32.920 --> 0:11:35.680
<v Speaker 1>we got, but the Dolphins did get Noah Egnogamy and

0:11:35.760 --> 0:11:38.200
<v Speaker 1>Solomon Kinley as well as the first and second round

0:11:38.200 --> 0:11:40.600
<v Speaker 1>pick next year, which are currently oh and three on

0:11:40.640 --> 0:11:43.160
<v Speaker 1>the season right now and almost twenty million dollars in

0:11:43.200 --> 0:11:45.760
<v Speaker 1>cap relief because of that trade. So a hat tip

0:11:45.800 --> 0:11:49.040
<v Speaker 1>to you for that, Mr Greer. Speaking of Solomon Kindley, man,

0:11:49.080 --> 0:11:51.640
<v Speaker 1>this guy I just write down Kinley win over and

0:11:51.679 --> 0:11:53.800
<v Speaker 1>over again because he's been doing that. The first play

0:11:53.840 --> 0:11:55.960
<v Speaker 1>I noted he had an inside arm as he works

0:11:56.000 --> 0:11:58.120
<v Speaker 1>down the line of scrimmage and holds the block with

0:11:58.160 --> 0:12:01.199
<v Speaker 1>the quick feet and the power and balance absorbing that contact.

0:12:01.520 --> 0:12:04.160
<v Speaker 1>Just wow, man, taking the one gappers where they want

0:12:04.160 --> 0:12:06.120
<v Speaker 1>to go, driving them out of the play. You might

0:12:06.160 --> 0:12:08.480
<v Speaker 1>recalling Dominican sue of fears back. He would shoot up

0:12:08.520 --> 0:12:11.640
<v Speaker 1>field as the one gap attacking aggressive defensive tackle, and

0:12:11.679 --> 0:12:14.199
<v Speaker 1>sometimes teams would leverage out against him and just whaam

0:12:14.280 --> 0:12:16.839
<v Speaker 1>block him and take him out of the play. Solomonckinley

0:12:16.880 --> 0:12:19.000
<v Speaker 1>does that very well in this game. A few plays

0:12:19.080 --> 0:12:21.559
<v Speaker 1>later he latches on and just mauls his man when

0:12:21.559 --> 0:12:24.240
<v Speaker 1>he gets those big paws outside, it's over. Goodnight. Just

0:12:24.280 --> 0:12:26.320
<v Speaker 1>go ahead and call it a night. My film notes

0:12:26.360 --> 0:12:28.920
<v Speaker 1>are just turning into these wins, wins, wins for Solomon

0:12:28.960 --> 0:12:31.920
<v Speaker 1>Kinley over and over again. The Fitzpatrick touchdown run, he

0:12:31.960 --> 0:12:34.600
<v Speaker 1>turns his man out completely and creates a lane there

0:12:34.800 --> 0:12:36.559
<v Speaker 1>for his quarterback to run through for the end zone

0:12:36.600 --> 0:12:38.760
<v Speaker 1>or for a touchdown into the end zone. More work

0:12:38.760 --> 0:12:41.440
<v Speaker 1>and pass protection, and you just watch guys getting frustrated

0:12:41.480 --> 0:12:43.720
<v Speaker 1>as the game moves along against him. Because of that

0:12:43.800 --> 0:12:46.120
<v Speaker 1>sheer girth. It forces guys to come up with moves

0:12:46.120 --> 0:12:48.080
<v Speaker 1>because you're not gonna go through him. So the defensive

0:12:48.120 --> 0:12:50.040
<v Speaker 1>tackle tries to put a spin move on him on

0:12:50.080 --> 0:12:52.600
<v Speaker 1>the second drive and Kindley just stays in that squat

0:12:52.640 --> 0:12:55.320
<v Speaker 1>in that set well, aligned throws a punch when he

0:12:55.400 --> 0:12:57.439
<v Speaker 1>rolls out of that spin, he just stops him dead

0:12:57.440 --> 0:12:59.600
<v Speaker 1>in his tracks. It looks like child's play out there.

0:12:59.760 --> 0:13:01.480
<v Speaker 1>More to the time. He then comes back on the

0:13:01.559 --> 0:13:03.400
<v Speaker 1>very next rep and gets a little bit drawn out

0:13:03.400 --> 0:13:05.960
<v Speaker 1>by a stunt, but he himself uses a spin to

0:13:06.000 --> 0:13:08.719
<v Speaker 1>work back inside and get hands on the defensive end

0:13:08.880 --> 0:13:11.640
<v Speaker 1>and Josh Allen, who's crashing around and Alan has the

0:13:11.679 --> 0:13:15.319
<v Speaker 1>angle to fits, but Kiley recovers, gets contact and thwarts

0:13:15.360 --> 0:13:17.760
<v Speaker 1>that move and gives him just enough time for Fitzpatrick

0:13:17.840 --> 0:13:19.600
<v Speaker 1>to find the lane and get out of it. So

0:13:19.679 --> 0:13:22.800
<v Speaker 1>good work there from Solomon Kindley. We talked about the

0:13:22.840 --> 0:13:24.920
<v Speaker 1>both both of the guard positions really working out so

0:13:24.960 --> 0:13:27.960
<v Speaker 1>far for the Dolphins. Eric flowers ability to reach and

0:13:28.000 --> 0:13:31.000
<v Speaker 1>hook is so dang nice man that pole pat that

0:13:31.040 --> 0:13:33.000
<v Speaker 1>play where they have a play action look and he

0:13:33.040 --> 0:13:35.920
<v Speaker 1>pulls the play side and hits the outside rusher who's

0:13:35.960 --> 0:13:38.440
<v Speaker 1>coming free for a good block getting into the quarterback.

0:13:38.600 --> 0:13:40.240
<v Speaker 1>He's done that a few times now. He had a

0:13:40.320 --> 0:13:42.640
<v Speaker 1>second level seal on the Jachem Grant end around we

0:13:42.679 --> 0:13:45.360
<v Speaker 1>talked about where he wiped a linebacker. Very good day

0:13:45.400 --> 0:13:48.440
<v Speaker 1>for Eric Flowers as well. Thought. Ted Carriss's athletic ability

0:13:48.520 --> 0:13:50.840
<v Speaker 1>was on full display. He had some really nice work

0:13:50.840 --> 0:13:53.280
<v Speaker 1>in the reach blocking game, climbing to the second level.

0:13:53.480 --> 0:13:56.080
<v Speaker 1>Really nice display on the interior front for the Miami

0:13:56.160 --> 0:13:59.480
<v Speaker 1>captain and then Jordan Howard's touchdown run. Kiley pulls and

0:13:59.559 --> 0:14:02.960
<v Speaker 1>seals and buries a player and Davis and Shaheen closed

0:14:02.960 --> 0:14:05.120
<v Speaker 1>down to create a lane for Chandler Cox who plows

0:14:05.160 --> 0:14:06.839
<v Speaker 1>that thing up in there and creates a lane for

0:14:06.920 --> 0:14:09.959
<v Speaker 1>Jordan Howard to follow for the Dolphins touchdown. Nice work

0:14:10.040 --> 0:14:12.280
<v Speaker 1>down their nice work on the offensive line in this

0:14:12.320 --> 0:14:16.240
<v Speaker 1>game cumulatively Fitzpatrick, I mean damn near perfect. Davante Parker

0:14:16.240 --> 0:14:19.280
<v Speaker 1>attacking the holes in coverage. Miles Gaskins, so shifty without

0:14:19.320 --> 0:14:22.520
<v Speaker 1>losing the acceleration, Such a good reader of blocks. Solomon

0:14:22.600 --> 0:14:25.880
<v Speaker 1>Kidley another monster game. Same story for Eric Flowers. The

0:14:25.960 --> 0:14:28.960
<v Speaker 1>guard overhaul here for Chris Career. Really well done for

0:14:29.000 --> 0:14:31.600
<v Speaker 1>the Dolphin's personnel staff, Ted Carris has a hell of

0:14:31.640 --> 0:14:33.680
<v Speaker 1>a game. Durham Smith I thought had his best game

0:14:33.680 --> 0:14:36.080
<v Speaker 1>of the year, and Chan Gailey, what a game from

0:14:36.080 --> 0:14:39.720
<v Speaker 1>the Dolphins offensive coordinator on the other side defensively, speaking

0:14:39.720 --> 0:14:42.360
<v Speaker 1>of scheme and drawing it up. I got to get

0:14:42.360 --> 0:14:44.480
<v Speaker 1>the same credit for Josh Boyer on that side. They

0:14:44.560 --> 0:14:47.000
<v Speaker 1>changed things up all throughout this game, starting off in

0:14:47.040 --> 0:14:49.760
<v Speaker 1>split safety. Normally they're a single high team. They allowed

0:14:49.800 --> 0:14:52.400
<v Speaker 1>the underneath guys to gain depth at the linebacker spot,

0:14:52.400 --> 0:14:54.360
<v Speaker 1>and I saw plenty of that in this game. They

0:14:54.400 --> 0:14:57.480
<v Speaker 1>wind up and on this particular play, Minshew winds up

0:14:57.520 --> 0:14:59.440
<v Speaker 1>checking it down for a big game. But I love

0:14:59.520 --> 0:15:01.400
<v Speaker 1>the look and the communication and the coverage on the

0:15:01.440 --> 0:15:04.080
<v Speaker 1>back end because they run the receivers all off into

0:15:04.120 --> 0:15:06.480
<v Speaker 1>caps or into other players or into the boundary where

0:15:06.480 --> 0:15:08.280
<v Speaker 1>they have nowhere to go. Just have to make the

0:15:08.320 --> 0:15:10.160
<v Speaker 1>tackle on that play to get the stop for a

0:15:10.200 --> 0:15:12.720
<v Speaker 1>short gain then the third down. A few plays later

0:15:12.720 --> 0:15:15.360
<v Speaker 1>on this Jacksonville opening series, there in trips with Jamal

0:15:15.400 --> 0:15:18.080
<v Speaker 1>Perry attacking the point, and you've got Igbo and X

0:15:18.080 --> 0:15:20.800
<v Speaker 1>on inside outside combination. One guy takes the inside, the

0:15:20.840 --> 0:15:23.200
<v Speaker 1>other guy takes the outside, and Igbo does really well

0:15:23.240 --> 0:15:25.680
<v Speaker 1>as a rookie here to show I discipline to keep

0:15:25.720 --> 0:15:28.480
<v Speaker 1>his eyes on the bunch. He finds Channault who tries

0:15:28.520 --> 0:15:30.160
<v Speaker 1>to break it in and then come back out to

0:15:30.200 --> 0:15:33.120
<v Speaker 1>confuse on the switch release, and Igbo doesn't fall for it.

0:15:33.280 --> 0:15:35.000
<v Speaker 1>He's all over it. He gets in there for the

0:15:35.000 --> 0:15:38.360
<v Speaker 1>tackle to get the Jaguars offense off the field. On

0:15:38.400 --> 0:15:40.440
<v Speaker 1>the very next series, the Dolphins open up again and

0:15:40.480 --> 0:15:43.280
<v Speaker 1>split safety. This time it's Brandon Jones. The previous time

0:15:43.280 --> 0:15:45.680
<v Speaker 1>it was Eric Row and they alternated a lot between

0:15:45.680 --> 0:15:47.560
<v Speaker 1>split and single high. We saw a lot of big

0:15:47.560 --> 0:15:50.360
<v Speaker 1>defensive lines as well, Christian Wilkins, Ray Kwon Davis, and

0:15:50.440 --> 0:15:53.440
<v Speaker 1>Zach Seler in the game. With another defensive lineman like

0:15:53.480 --> 0:15:56.240
<v Speaker 1>an Emmanuel Ogba or Shack loss Him then would bring

0:15:56.280 --> 0:15:58.800
<v Speaker 1>two linebackers down on the ball as well. Just love

0:15:58.880 --> 0:16:00.800
<v Speaker 1>the mix of fronts and ridges in the back end

0:16:00.800 --> 0:16:03.000
<v Speaker 1>for the Dolphins on defense. The kudos we gave to

0:16:03.040 --> 0:16:05.640
<v Speaker 1>Gaily are deserving for Boyer and this one too. And

0:16:05.680 --> 0:16:07.600
<v Speaker 1>the sack to end the Jags drive at the end

0:16:07.640 --> 0:16:09.920
<v Speaker 1>of the half was just an awesome call. You've got

0:16:09.920 --> 0:16:12.920
<v Speaker 1>three linebackers aligned from B gap to B gap in Baker,

0:16:13.120 --> 0:16:16.360
<v Speaker 1>van Noy and Commu Gruge Hill, and both Baker and

0:16:16.440 --> 0:16:19.360
<v Speaker 1>Van Noy, Bluff and Seeler just bowls towards the center

0:16:19.360 --> 0:16:21.800
<v Speaker 1>and guard, causing some confusion both on the protection call

0:16:21.960 --> 0:16:24.440
<v Speaker 1>and knocking guys off their spot and then from their gruge,

0:16:24.600 --> 0:16:27.000
<v Speaker 1>Hill can use his speed to close on Minshew for

0:16:27.080 --> 0:16:30.120
<v Speaker 1>that big sack and the turnover. Again, just structurally on

0:16:30.160 --> 0:16:31.840
<v Speaker 1>the back end. This is kind of what I had

0:16:31.920 --> 0:16:33.920
<v Speaker 1>envisioned for this team, and I'm sure the people in

0:16:33.960 --> 0:16:37.360
<v Speaker 1>the organization that actually matter envisioned for this defense. So

0:16:37.400 --> 0:16:39.720
<v Speaker 1>it's awesome to see them staying to the rules, staying

0:16:39.720 --> 0:16:43.000
<v Speaker 1>in phase, passing off rerouting, communicating, getting after the quarterback

0:16:43.000 --> 0:16:45.160
<v Speaker 1>with stunts and twists and games. Just a great game

0:16:45.160 --> 0:16:47.520
<v Speaker 1>plan on the defensive side of the ball. And back

0:16:47.560 --> 0:16:50.560
<v Speaker 1>to the bigbo play with the tackle short of the sticks.

0:16:50.600 --> 0:16:53.600
<v Speaker 1>On that play, Emmanuel og Ball really forced Minshew into

0:16:53.640 --> 0:16:56.120
<v Speaker 1>a quick throw with a nice bull rush. I thought

0:16:56.120 --> 0:16:58.160
<v Speaker 1>og Ball's length was a problem in this game. The

0:16:58.280 --> 0:17:00.360
<v Speaker 1>right tackle really had a hard time getting his hands

0:17:00.400 --> 0:17:02.760
<v Speaker 1>on him. And the very next play he absorbs a

0:17:02.840 --> 0:17:05.240
<v Speaker 1>chip off the outside in which he prevents the key

0:17:05.240 --> 0:17:07.719
<v Speaker 1>block or the tight end from chipping and climbing. He

0:17:07.760 --> 0:17:09.840
<v Speaker 1>can't get to that second level and it forces a

0:17:09.960 --> 0:17:12.760
<v Speaker 1>tackle for loss from Eric Rowe shack loss and had

0:17:12.760 --> 0:17:15.119
<v Speaker 1>a pressure early. And then on the very next series

0:17:15.160 --> 0:17:17.000
<v Speaker 1>on a running play, he does a good job with

0:17:17.040 --> 0:17:19.800
<v Speaker 1>the eye discipline to set the tight end upfield, then

0:17:19.840 --> 0:17:22.000
<v Speaker 1>work back underneath for a run stop thought he had

0:17:22.000 --> 0:17:24.280
<v Speaker 1>a really nice pressure on the quarterback several times in

0:17:24.280 --> 0:17:26.880
<v Speaker 1>this game, especially in the middle of the third quarterback

0:17:26.880 --> 0:17:29.760
<v Speaker 1>where he won with a powerful rip off the initial placement.

0:17:29.960 --> 0:17:31.760
<v Speaker 1>That's how you get after Russell Wilson, That's how I

0:17:31.800 --> 0:17:33.600
<v Speaker 1>did it in this game. Good to see that translate

0:17:33.640 --> 0:17:36.280
<v Speaker 1>going next week into next Sunday. Love the way Christian

0:17:36.320 --> 0:17:38.560
<v Speaker 1>Wilkins holds the point against double teams and really makes

0:17:38.560 --> 0:17:40.680
<v Speaker 1>it a point to latch on to prevent that climb

0:17:40.760 --> 0:17:43.119
<v Speaker 1>to the linebacker the second level of the defense. He

0:17:43.200 --> 0:17:45.560
<v Speaker 1>takes on a lot of double teams, which means single

0:17:45.600 --> 0:17:48.280
<v Speaker 1>teams for Davis, god Show and Seiler. I really noticed

0:17:48.320 --> 0:17:50.359
<v Speaker 1>that Davis when he gets a one on one matchup,

0:17:50.440 --> 0:17:52.000
<v Speaker 1>does a good job to stand them up key the

0:17:52.080 --> 0:17:54.680
<v Speaker 1>run shed and make a stop. Zack Steeler had a

0:17:54.760 --> 0:17:57.000
<v Speaker 1>number of plays in this game, especially with that power,

0:17:57.119 --> 0:17:59.720
<v Speaker 1>those hands that pop. Middle of the third quarter, he

0:17:59.760 --> 0:18:01.920
<v Speaker 1>could himself a run stop with ray Kwon Davis where

0:18:01.920 --> 0:18:05.040
<v Speaker 1>he virtually does not move against a double such power

0:18:05.320 --> 0:18:08.800
<v Speaker 1>for Zach Seiler at linebacker. Some appreciation for Kyle Van

0:18:08.840 --> 0:18:10.840
<v Speaker 1>Noyd because this guy just gets it done over and

0:18:10.880 --> 0:18:13.280
<v Speaker 1>over again. Reset in the point of the line of scrimmage,

0:18:13.320 --> 0:18:15.920
<v Speaker 1>creating gaps at that edge, making room for other guys

0:18:15.920 --> 0:18:18.440
<v Speaker 1>to make plays. He reads his keys, gets himself into

0:18:18.480 --> 0:18:21.119
<v Speaker 1>an impactful position pretty much every single time. And I

0:18:21.160 --> 0:18:24.120
<v Speaker 1>know folks will see the strip sack scoop stat and say, okay,

0:18:24.200 --> 0:18:26.080
<v Speaker 1>now he's starting to really earn his worth around here.

0:18:26.160 --> 0:18:28.040
<v Speaker 1>But he impacts the game in so many ways that

0:18:28.160 --> 0:18:30.360
<v Speaker 1>just do not show from the box score, like, for instance,

0:18:30.560 --> 0:18:34.919
<v Speaker 1>the pass rush where he ran over James Robinson have mercy,

0:18:35.000 --> 0:18:36.399
<v Speaker 1>and then on the strip sack. You really want to

0:18:36.440 --> 0:18:39.399
<v Speaker 1>point out that Zach Seiler and Emmanuel Ogba both had

0:18:39.400 --> 0:18:41.800
<v Speaker 1>big plays on this one. To Seiler, he allowed Van

0:18:41.880 --> 0:18:43.680
<v Speaker 1>Noyd to come in on that twist and knock a

0:18:43.760 --> 0:18:45.919
<v Speaker 1>man over and then rework back to the quarterback. And

0:18:45.960 --> 0:18:49.080
<v Speaker 1>that happened because Seiler had stifled him initially, got his

0:18:49.119 --> 0:18:51.159
<v Speaker 1>footwork and hand placement all out of whack. And then

0:18:51.200 --> 0:18:53.760
<v Speaker 1>Ogba for coming off the edge and forcing Minshew up

0:18:53.760 --> 0:18:56.920
<v Speaker 1>into the pocket. Talked about gruge Hill's speed. He stayed

0:18:57.040 --> 0:18:59.639
<v Speaker 1>very tight to Zach Seiler on that rush and created

0:18:59.640 --> 0:19:02.600
<v Speaker 1>a good rush lane for himself. Good smart football, like

0:19:02.640 --> 0:19:05.120
<v Speaker 1>we talked about in the beginning. I love Jerome Baker's

0:19:05.119 --> 0:19:07.080
<v Speaker 1>work taking on blocks in this game. Thought he played

0:19:07.080 --> 0:19:09.960
<v Speaker 1>really strong at the point, showed good sideline to sideline range,

0:19:10.040 --> 0:19:12.280
<v Speaker 1>and was good in coverage finding depth as well and

0:19:12.320 --> 0:19:15.320
<v Speaker 1>cutting off those hook and curl zones at cornerback communication

0:19:15.400 --> 0:19:18.080
<v Speaker 1>I thought was just terrific in general. Lots of passing

0:19:18.080 --> 0:19:20.320
<v Speaker 1>off plastering in man coverage when they were either in

0:19:20.400 --> 0:19:23.080
<v Speaker 1>zone coverage or the quarterback broke the pocket. We talked

0:19:23.080 --> 0:19:25.240
<v Speaker 1>about Jamal Perry. He is a hell of a tackler,

0:19:25.480 --> 0:19:27.439
<v Speaker 1>something I talked about a lot last year. He just

0:19:27.520 --> 0:19:30.720
<v Speaker 1>rallies up and sticks people. And at the cornerback position

0:19:30.840 --> 0:19:33.200
<v Speaker 1>just before that gruge hill sack at the end of

0:19:33.200 --> 0:19:35.840
<v Speaker 1>the half, there's a play before that where Igbo works

0:19:35.880 --> 0:19:38.080
<v Speaker 1>to get upfield and forces the cut back from the

0:19:38.160 --> 0:19:40.080
<v Speaker 1>running back to go back into where his friends can

0:19:40.080 --> 0:19:41.960
<v Speaker 1>clean it up, and they do just that. So more

0:19:41.960 --> 0:19:44.080
<v Speaker 1>good work from the Dolphins cornerback there. And then at

0:19:44.080 --> 0:19:46.560
<v Speaker 1>safety again the play I referenced earlier with og ball

0:19:46.560 --> 0:19:48.480
<v Speaker 1>where he stops the tight end from getting to the

0:19:48.480 --> 0:19:50.560
<v Speaker 1>second level. It was Eric Rowe who flew and it

0:19:50.600 --> 0:19:52.840
<v Speaker 1>made the tackle for loss on that play. Good work

0:19:52.920 --> 0:19:56.120
<v Speaker 1>all around their cumulatively, thought Zack Steler was a wrecking ball,

0:19:56.160 --> 0:19:59.720
<v Speaker 1>powerful hands, double teams, pass rush, Really nice game from him.

0:20:00.040 --> 0:20:02.199
<v Speaker 1>Jack Laws and Emmanuel Ogball both had a number of

0:20:02.200 --> 0:20:04.960
<v Speaker 1>pressures and run stops, working through the tackle, using power,

0:20:05.080 --> 0:20:07.600
<v Speaker 1>using length for Agball. That is just a nice game

0:20:07.640 --> 0:20:10.480
<v Speaker 1>from both those guys. Van Noy, the unsung hero of sorts,

0:20:10.520 --> 0:20:12.320
<v Speaker 1>kind of always been that way in his career. The

0:20:12.400 --> 0:20:15.240
<v Speaker 1>run fits, the aggressiveness with which he attacks blocks, the

0:20:15.280 --> 0:20:18.560
<v Speaker 1>sack production, the coverage recognition. Damn he sure was good.

0:20:18.680 --> 0:20:20.879
<v Speaker 1>I thought Andrew van Ginkl had some really nice wiggle

0:20:20.880 --> 0:20:23.199
<v Speaker 1>in this game, like we saw at Wisconsin. He can

0:20:23.240 --> 0:20:25.440
<v Speaker 1>really turn it up in those late game moments where

0:20:25.440 --> 0:20:27.199
<v Speaker 1>you have a lead and he can isolate and go

0:20:27.240 --> 0:20:30.200
<v Speaker 1>to work as a pass rusher. Eggnogady the mental fortitude,

0:20:30.200 --> 0:20:32.919
<v Speaker 1>the competitive toughness, the reads he made, the tackling, the

0:20:32.920 --> 0:20:36.439
<v Speaker 1>tight coverage. Very good game from him. Xaviing Howard another

0:20:36.560 --> 0:20:39.199
<v Speaker 1>one of these vintage x Xavian Howard games. He was

0:20:39.280 --> 0:20:41.960
<v Speaker 1>always plastered downfield and coverage and that I n T

0:20:42.200 --> 0:20:44.680
<v Speaker 1>was certainly vintage x Dare we say he is back?

0:20:44.800 --> 0:20:47.040
<v Speaker 1>How great would that be? And Bobby McCain had an

0:20:47.040 --> 0:20:49.640
<v Speaker 1>excellent game as well. Communication on point I didn't really

0:20:49.640 --> 0:20:52.240
<v Speaker 1>see any breakdowns and coverage on the film, passing off

0:20:52.480 --> 0:20:54.960
<v Speaker 1>deep lane, deep running the deep lanes, cutting those things

0:20:55.040 --> 0:20:57.000
<v Speaker 1>off over the top, having the range to get over

0:20:57.160 --> 0:20:59.000
<v Speaker 1>and Eric Row as well a good game in this one,

0:20:59.040 --> 0:21:01.639
<v Speaker 1>both in coverage and against the run. A few more

0:21:01.720 --> 0:21:04.560
<v Speaker 1>nuggets and snippets from this game. The Dolphins four point

0:21:04.640 --> 0:21:06.879
<v Speaker 1>three penalties per game right now or the fifth lowest

0:21:06.920 --> 0:21:09.280
<v Speaker 1>in the NFL, and the thirty five point three penalty

0:21:09.320 --> 0:21:11.919
<v Speaker 1>yards assessed against them is the eighth lowest in the

0:21:12.040 --> 0:21:15.840
<v Speaker 1>entire National Football League. Jacksonville converted just three of thirteen

0:21:15.920 --> 0:21:18.960
<v Speaker 1>on third and fourth down. The conversion rate by the

0:21:18.960 --> 0:21:21.480
<v Speaker 1>Miami defense was the lowest since it went too for

0:21:21.560 --> 0:21:24.119
<v Speaker 1>eleven on third and fourth down plays back in twenty nineteen.

0:21:24.200 --> 0:21:27.680
<v Speaker 1>Last year against Washington, the red zone offense is converting

0:21:27.720 --> 0:21:30.280
<v Speaker 1>sixty six point seven percent of trips inside the twenty

0:21:30.280 --> 0:21:33.240
<v Speaker 1>into touchdowns. That's tied for ninth best in the NFL,

0:21:33.480 --> 0:21:35.920
<v Speaker 1>and the forty four point four percent third down convergent

0:21:36.000 --> 0:21:39.439
<v Speaker 1>rate ranks fourteen in the entire National Football League. And

0:21:39.480 --> 0:21:42.120
<v Speaker 1>any way you splice it, Fitzpatrick was dealing in this

0:21:42.200 --> 0:21:44.760
<v Speaker 1>game all night he had blue grades from PFF. Across

0:21:44.800 --> 0:21:46.840
<v Speaker 1>the board, he was six for six with eighty one

0:21:46.920 --> 0:21:49.200
<v Speaker 1>yards and a touchdown. Pass When under pressure, he was

0:21:49.240 --> 0:21:51.960
<v Speaker 1>twelve of thirteen with seventy eight yards and two touchdowns.

0:21:51.960 --> 0:21:54.960
<v Speaker 1>When Jacksonville blitzed, he was six of six on intermediate

0:21:54.960 --> 0:21:57.800
<v Speaker 1>throws the eleven to nineteen yard range with ninety yards

0:21:57.800 --> 0:22:00.000
<v Speaker 1>and a pair of touchdowns. And per next Gen fits,

0:22:00.000 --> 0:22:02.879
<v Speaker 1>Patrick ranks five in the NFL and completion percentage above

0:22:02.920 --> 0:22:06.879
<v Speaker 1>expected at plus six point seven percent and completions above

0:22:06.920 --> 0:22:09.919
<v Speaker 1>expected rate, and he's also the number six quarterback in

0:22:10.000 --> 0:22:13.159
<v Speaker 1>terms of q BR on ESPN so far through the NFL.

0:22:13.320 --> 0:22:15.760
<v Speaker 1>DeVante Parker he caught all five of his targets for

0:22:15.840 --> 0:22:17.800
<v Speaker 1>sixty nine yards in this game, and you look at

0:22:17.880 --> 0:22:20.680
<v Speaker 1>his recent game logs going back over his career, he's

0:22:20.720 --> 0:22:23.520
<v Speaker 1>become a real consistent player for those Dolphins offense. He'll

0:22:23.560 --> 0:22:26.040
<v Speaker 1>have the big hundred and thirty yard games, multi touchdown games,

0:22:26.080 --> 0:22:28.200
<v Speaker 1>and that's how you get to d receiving yards and

0:22:28.280 --> 0:22:30.600
<v Speaker 1>nine touchdowns a year ago. But you look at his floor,

0:22:30.680 --> 0:22:33.280
<v Speaker 1>he pretty much never goes below five catches fifty yards,

0:22:33.280 --> 0:22:35.919
<v Speaker 1>been consistent that way as a Dolphins number one receiver.

0:22:36.160 --> 0:22:38.720
<v Speaker 1>The offensive line has gone wire to wire all three games.

0:22:38.760 --> 0:22:41.600
<v Speaker 1>That's been awesome. The pass protection has been really, really

0:22:41.600 --> 0:22:44.920
<v Speaker 1>good once again. Solomon Kinley a pass protection shut out,

0:22:44.960 --> 0:22:48.720
<v Speaker 1>no quarterback pressures, Ted Harris and Austin Jackson allowed one apiece,

0:22:48.880 --> 0:22:52.280
<v Speaker 1>and Eric Flowers surrender just two pressures in the entire game.

0:22:52.520 --> 0:22:54.120
<v Speaker 1>On the other side of the football, we talked about

0:22:54.160 --> 0:22:57.040
<v Speaker 1>Kyle van Noy. He had six pressures on twenty pass

0:22:57.080 --> 0:23:01.320
<v Speaker 1>rush snaps. That's a thirty percent PRP pass productivity. He

0:23:01.359 --> 0:23:04.240
<v Speaker 1>had a sack of forced fumble, recovered that fumble and

0:23:04.280 --> 0:23:05.920
<v Speaker 1>also made a pair of run stops in this game

0:23:05.960 --> 0:23:08.399
<v Speaker 1>as well. Andrew Van Ginkel also had a good PRP

0:23:08.520 --> 0:23:11.120
<v Speaker 1>at seventeen percent. He had three pressures on eight teen

0:23:11.160 --> 0:23:14.439
<v Speaker 1>pass rush reps. Shack Lawson had a fourteen percent PRP

0:23:14.800 --> 0:23:18.240
<v Speaker 1>with six pressures on thirty two reps. Emmanuel Ogba five

0:23:18.240 --> 0:23:21.080
<v Speaker 1>pressures on forty three reps at twelve percent, So all

0:23:21.119 --> 0:23:23.280
<v Speaker 1>four of those guys with really good days rushing the

0:23:23.320 --> 0:23:25.880
<v Speaker 1>passer and the running defense was working pretty well as well.

0:23:26.040 --> 0:23:29.640
<v Speaker 1>Christian Wilkins, Ray Kwon, Davis, Zack Seeler, Jerome Baker, Eric Rowe,

0:23:29.720 --> 0:23:33.080
<v Speaker 1>and Brandon Jones all had two run stops in the game.

0:23:33.320 --> 0:23:37.240
<v Speaker 1>Cornerback Xavien Howard and Noah Ignogamy allowed one completion combined

0:23:37.280 --> 0:23:39.760
<v Speaker 1>on six pass targets. That's an average it went for

0:23:39.840 --> 0:23:43.119
<v Speaker 1>two yards and average of point three three yards per target.

0:23:43.240 --> 0:23:46.520
<v Speaker 1>That gives you a zero point zero passer rating against

0:23:46.680 --> 0:23:49.119
<v Speaker 1>on either of those guys. And Bobby McCain allowed one

0:23:49.160 --> 0:23:51.920
<v Speaker 1>completion for four yards on two targets. So good work

0:23:51.960 --> 0:23:55.080
<v Speaker 1>from the Dolphins offense and defense. A complete team victory.

0:23:55.520 --> 0:23:57.679
<v Speaker 1>And with that, let's go ahead and spend things forward

0:23:57.680 --> 0:23:59.800
<v Speaker 1>now as we get ready for Week number four and

0:23:59.840 --> 0:24:03.040
<v Speaker 1>the Seattle Seahawks. Let's go ahead and here from coach Flores,

0:24:03.200 --> 0:24:06.080
<v Speaker 1>who was wearing his Miami Marlins hat actually looked like

0:24:06.119 --> 0:24:09.000
<v Speaker 1>a Florida Marlins hat. The old logo, the old colors,

0:24:09.040 --> 0:24:11.720
<v Speaker 1>all that good stuff, a good flashback hat. He was

0:24:11.760 --> 0:24:14.480
<v Speaker 1>wearing there to support the Marlins in their quest back

0:24:14.520 --> 0:24:17.159
<v Speaker 1>to the playoffs, breaking a seventeen year playoff drought. And

0:24:17.200 --> 0:24:19.920
<v Speaker 1>what a week it was for South Florida sports. Obviously,

0:24:20.240 --> 0:24:23.480
<v Speaker 1>go Heat. The Miami Heat now in the NBA Finals

0:24:23.480 --> 0:24:26.800
<v Speaker 1>against Lebron James, his tenth NBA Finals, the Heat looking

0:24:26.840 --> 0:24:29.000
<v Speaker 1>to knock him off as well, like so many other

0:24:29.040 --> 0:24:31.760
<v Speaker 1>teams have before. Coach were in the Miami Marlins hat

0:24:31.800 --> 0:24:33.960
<v Speaker 1>there as well, and the Dolphins getting their big win

0:24:34.000 --> 0:24:36.080
<v Speaker 1>on Thursday night. Let's go ahead and look ahead here

0:24:36.119 --> 0:24:39.200
<v Speaker 1>to the Seattle Seahawks, and here from coach on Russell Wilson.

0:24:40.680 --> 0:24:45.400
<v Speaker 1>A spectacular player. I mean these guys, UM, it's tough

0:24:45.440 --> 0:24:49.119
<v Speaker 1>to defend. It makes really good decisions, you can extend

0:24:49.160 --> 0:24:54.439
<v Speaker 1>plays ex accurate with the football. Pretty much knows what

0:24:54.480 --> 0:24:56.520
<v Speaker 1>you're in from a cover standpoint, because he's seen a

0:24:56.520 --> 0:25:02.480
<v Speaker 1>lot of um, exotic you know, defenses. H. I miss

0:25:02.520 --> 0:25:04.159
<v Speaker 1>one of the best players in the league, if you know,

0:25:04.400 --> 0:25:07.520
<v Speaker 1>I means, if not the best. So umus would be

0:25:07.520 --> 0:25:11.000
<v Speaker 1>an extremely uh challenging game for us. It's not just him.

0:25:11.080 --> 0:25:13.680
<v Speaker 1>I mean they've got receivers that've got back to got

0:25:13.680 --> 0:25:15.639
<v Speaker 1>good old line and the tight ends. They played a

0:25:15.640 --> 0:25:17.560
<v Speaker 1>really good defense, they played in the kick well in

0:25:17.560 --> 0:25:22.080
<v Speaker 1>the kicking game that well coached. UM, they played together

0:25:22.119 --> 0:25:24.760
<v Speaker 1>for a long time. This is this is gonna be

0:25:24.800 --> 0:25:28.160
<v Speaker 1>a tough, tough, tough challenge for us. So we've we've

0:25:28.160 --> 0:25:31.440
<v Speaker 1>got to um, we gotta have a good week of preparation.

0:25:31.920 --> 0:25:34.720
<v Speaker 1>UM and then we gotta play well. I mean tell me,

0:25:34.760 --> 0:25:39.600
<v Speaker 1>he's a he's a he's a great player. Um. And

0:25:39.880 --> 0:25:41.639
<v Speaker 1>we have to, you know, we have to do everything

0:25:41.680 --> 0:25:46.680
<v Speaker 1>at a high level, um to limit this offense. UM.

0:25:46.720 --> 0:25:51.160
<v Speaker 1>So from a communication standpoint, from a tackling standpoint, from

0:25:51.240 --> 0:25:56.000
<v Speaker 1>uh you know, uh pass for our standpoint, they have

0:25:56.080 --> 0:26:00.000
<v Speaker 1>to play very well to keep this this offense uh

0:26:00.040 --> 0:26:03.920
<v Speaker 1>limited and contained. I think you know, he's gonna they're

0:26:03.920 --> 0:26:05.720
<v Speaker 1>gonna make some plays. I mean they're good. You know,

0:26:05.720 --> 0:26:07.399
<v Speaker 1>they got a good quarterback and they got good players,

0:26:07.400 --> 0:26:10.199
<v Speaker 1>so they're gonna make a few plays. Um. You know,

0:26:10.240 --> 0:26:12.320
<v Speaker 1>we just need to keep then you try to keep

0:26:12.720 --> 0:26:16.760
<v Speaker 1>the We gotta continue to try to just you know,

0:26:17.760 --> 0:26:21.600
<v Speaker 1>have good communication, have good technique or fundamentals, tackle well,

0:26:22.359 --> 0:26:25.399
<v Speaker 1>defend the deep part of the field. Um. You know,

0:26:25.760 --> 0:26:29.120
<v Speaker 1>he had a good rush and and and we gotta

0:26:29.119 --> 0:26:32.280
<v Speaker 1>play well. It's a good offense. You heard about coach

0:26:32.320 --> 0:26:35.359
<v Speaker 1>on the opposition, Seattle Seahawks and Russell Wilson. Let's go

0:26:35.359 --> 0:26:36.960
<v Speaker 1>ahead and go back to our own team here, and

0:26:37.000 --> 0:26:40.520
<v Speaker 1>hear about coaches evaluation of the offensive line and specifically

0:26:40.720 --> 0:26:44.440
<v Speaker 1>rookie left tackle Austin Jackson. They're you know, they're coming together. Look,

0:26:44.480 --> 0:26:49.399
<v Speaker 1>they work hard, um to to all get on the

0:26:49.400 --> 0:26:52.000
<v Speaker 1>same page. I mean I think individually they they're they're

0:26:52.000 --> 0:26:55.560
<v Speaker 1>a harder grouping group, working working group. But collectively as

0:26:55.560 --> 0:26:59.840
<v Speaker 1>a unit, UM, they understand that communication is important, that uh,

0:27:00.200 --> 0:27:02.600
<v Speaker 1>playing as a as a unit is very important. I

0:27:02.600 --> 0:27:06.000
<v Speaker 1>think Steve has done a really good job and uh

0:27:06.240 --> 0:27:09.560
<v Speaker 1>just stand on on top of him about the fundamentals

0:27:09.560 --> 0:27:13.640
<v Speaker 1>and techniques working with one another. They spent a lot

0:27:13.680 --> 0:27:16.520
<v Speaker 1>of time together, that's what you need. There's still a

0:27:16.560 --> 0:27:19.200
<v Speaker 1>lot of improvements to make that hasn't been all perfect.

0:27:19.240 --> 0:27:23.159
<v Speaker 1>But uh, I think as a group, UM, you know

0:27:23.160 --> 0:27:26.520
<v Speaker 1>we've got leadership from the more veteran guys jesse Ted

0:27:26.600 --> 0:27:30.680
<v Speaker 1>Carres eric um, and then our our young players from

0:27:30.680 --> 0:27:33.760
<v Speaker 1>you know, Robert Hunt, Austin Jackson and Solomon. You know,

0:27:33.760 --> 0:27:35.400
<v Speaker 1>they're just following their lead, which you know, I feel

0:27:35.400 --> 0:27:39.439
<v Speaker 1>like we're talking about that every week. UM. But if

0:27:39.480 --> 0:27:41.879
<v Speaker 1>we just continue to do that, I think we have

0:27:41.920 --> 0:27:45.440
<v Speaker 1>a chance to get better improved. Specific to Austin, UM,

0:27:45.440 --> 0:27:47.760
<v Speaker 1>I mean you asked about him, Josh, Um. I think

0:27:48.359 --> 0:27:51.840
<v Speaker 1>you know, being a rookie, UM, you know, there's things

0:27:51.880 --> 0:27:55.640
<v Speaker 1>that he's learning every time he goes out there. UM,

0:27:55.680 --> 0:28:00.440
<v Speaker 1>you know, every different situation, whether it's third down, UH

0:28:00.440 --> 0:28:02.719
<v Speaker 1>in a five man protection, whether it's goal line and

0:28:03.520 --> 0:28:06.840
<v Speaker 1>UM and what that Uh, you know how different that

0:28:06.960 --> 0:28:10.359
<v Speaker 1>snap is and you know another a normal snap in

0:28:10.359 --> 0:28:13.920
<v Speaker 1>the field and UM, how big strong And this isn't

0:28:13.960 --> 0:28:16.800
<v Speaker 1>just specific to Austin but all those rookies, how big, strong,

0:28:16.920 --> 0:28:20.360
<v Speaker 1>fast the defensive lineman in this league are. I think

0:28:20.359 --> 0:28:24.919
<v Speaker 1>he's getting acclimated to that. But every week it's a

0:28:24.920 --> 0:28:27.320
<v Speaker 1>different challenge and this week, you know, it's you know,

0:28:27.400 --> 0:28:29.600
<v Speaker 1>certainly a big challenge against this this group that we're

0:28:29.600 --> 0:28:33.160
<v Speaker 1>going to see UM and his team that we're gonna see. UM.

0:28:33.240 --> 0:28:35.920
<v Speaker 1>But I think, you know, we just continue to try

0:28:35.960 --> 0:28:40.120
<v Speaker 1>to improve every day, UM, and hopefully we you know,

0:28:40.240 --> 0:28:44.400
<v Speaker 1>continue to UM to get better. Let's go ahead and

0:28:44.480 --> 0:28:46.280
<v Speaker 1>stay on the same side of the football in a

0:28:46.320 --> 0:28:49.520
<v Speaker 1>similar area at the tight end position. And Mike Gasicki,

0:28:49.720 --> 0:28:52.680
<v Speaker 1>who coach, was asked about his development and you're number three,

0:28:52.840 --> 0:28:54.560
<v Speaker 1>you're gonna hear coach talk about a word that I

0:28:54.600 --> 0:28:56.760
<v Speaker 1>love so very much when it comes to football. We've

0:28:56.760 --> 0:28:59.920
<v Speaker 1>heard Miles Gaskin, Bobby McCain, Ryan Fitzpatrick, everybody under this

0:29:00.040 --> 0:29:03.120
<v Speaker 1>on talks about the importance of leverage and how Mike

0:29:03.160 --> 0:29:05.440
<v Speaker 1>Kasiki is learning about leverage and it's making him a

0:29:05.480 --> 0:29:07.640
<v Speaker 1>better route runner, a better pass catcher, and a better

0:29:07.720 --> 0:29:11.000
<v Speaker 1>overall receiver at that tight end position. You know, Mike.

0:29:12.760 --> 0:29:17.640
<v Speaker 1>I think Mike's definitely Uh, we've seen a lot of improvement, um,

0:29:17.640 --> 0:29:19.800
<v Speaker 1>you know from him since since I've been here, and

0:29:19.840 --> 0:29:22.760
<v Speaker 1>really since his his rookie year. UM. And I think

0:29:22.760 --> 0:29:26.440
<v Speaker 1>that's just you know, time spent in the league understanding

0:29:27.000 --> 0:29:32.280
<v Speaker 1>different defenses, understanding how uh different you know, leverages of defenders,

0:29:33.160 --> 0:29:37.760
<v Speaker 1>understanding coverages. UH. You know, he's got an obviously good

0:29:37.800 --> 0:29:42.400
<v Speaker 1>rapport with fits and you're starting to see some of

0:29:42.840 --> 0:29:46.440
<v Speaker 1>he's he's talented. Um. When you put all of it together, UM,

0:29:48.480 --> 0:29:52.080
<v Speaker 1>you can see kind of the talent um um show

0:29:52.160 --> 0:29:54.320
<v Speaker 1>up on game day. UM. He's still got a long

0:29:54.360 --> 0:29:57.000
<v Speaker 1>way to go. UM. As far as you know, there's

0:29:57.040 --> 0:29:59.480
<v Speaker 1>things in his game that he can improve on. UM,

0:29:59.600 --> 0:30:04.120
<v Speaker 1>you know, op it around, releases, things like nature blocking. UM.

0:30:04.160 --> 0:30:06.000
<v Speaker 1>But he's definitely made a lot of improvement. He's made

0:30:06.040 --> 0:30:10.840
<v Speaker 1>place for us this season so far. UM. But there's

0:30:10.920 --> 0:30:14.280
<v Speaker 1>I mean, there's still a lot you know, Uh, he's

0:30:14.360 --> 0:30:17.160
<v Speaker 1>left a few players out there also. Um, and I

0:30:17.160 --> 0:30:19.880
<v Speaker 1>think it's you know, the tight end room with Durham

0:30:20.080 --> 0:30:22.560
<v Speaker 1>and you know Adam. I mean it's a good group.

0:30:22.920 --> 0:30:25.320
<v Speaker 1>They work well together. I think they complement each other well.

0:30:25.440 --> 0:30:29.520
<v Speaker 1>Channel Cox also full full back tight end. Um, they

0:30:29.560 --> 0:30:35.360
<v Speaker 1>compliment each other well. Um and um you know that

0:30:35.560 --> 0:30:39.479
<v Speaker 1>they're making some improvements. But again, consistency is a big

0:30:39.560 --> 0:30:42.600
<v Speaker 1>thing in this league, and um, that's what we need.

0:30:43.080 --> 0:30:46.800
<v Speaker 1>I think you build consistently. It's consistency through practice and

0:30:47.320 --> 0:30:52.200
<v Speaker 1>walk throughs and um, you know, continuing to work the

0:30:52.240 --> 0:30:54.960
<v Speaker 1>way that they work to have a little bit of

0:30:55.000 --> 0:30:59.200
<v Speaker 1>success they've had so far. Um. Again as a as

0:30:59.200 --> 0:31:03.040
<v Speaker 1>an overall team, um, uh, we got a long way

0:31:03.080 --> 0:31:06.880
<v Speaker 1>to go. Um. And look, we got a great challenge

0:31:06.880 --> 0:31:08.640
<v Speaker 1>this week against a really good team and we have

0:31:08.760 --> 0:31:12.280
<v Speaker 1>to you know, really prepare and play well too, Yeah,

0:31:12.880 --> 0:31:15.920
<v Speaker 1>to give ourselves a chance to to to win. You

0:31:15.960 --> 0:31:18.280
<v Speaker 1>heard me talk about Bobby McCain and the importance of

0:31:18.320 --> 0:31:20.560
<v Speaker 1>the communication role he plays in the back end of

0:31:20.600 --> 0:31:23.160
<v Speaker 1>that defense. Here's Coach Flora's we'll go ahead and finish

0:31:23.200 --> 0:31:25.800
<v Speaker 1>with us one for coach about the importance and of

0:31:25.960 --> 0:31:28.720
<v Speaker 1>Bobby McCain in that position, his role as a leader

0:31:28.760 --> 0:31:30.880
<v Speaker 1>back at that safety spot and the growth for him

0:31:30.880 --> 0:31:33.040
<v Speaker 1>in his second year at the position, coming over from

0:31:33.040 --> 0:31:36.680
<v Speaker 1>the slot slash outside cornerback position here in Miami. I

0:31:36.680 --> 0:31:38.560
<v Speaker 1>think Bobby is a very important part of two to

0:31:38.600 --> 0:31:45.120
<v Speaker 1>our defense. UM. I think, you know, safety, linebacker, but

0:31:45.160 --> 0:31:50.360
<v Speaker 1>specifically safety, the quarterback of the defense. UM. So a

0:31:50.400 --> 0:31:53.000
<v Speaker 1>lot of what he does is getting guys lined up

0:31:53.440 --> 0:31:57.840
<v Speaker 1>pre snap so that we can have uh, you know,

0:31:59.160 --> 0:32:01.719
<v Speaker 1>a good called it post nap play. UM. I think

0:32:01.760 --> 0:32:03.640
<v Speaker 1>he's done a good job of that. I think in

0:32:03.720 --> 0:32:06.840
<v Speaker 1>some of instances, UM, we've been aligned correctly, we've been

0:32:06.840 --> 0:32:09.760
<v Speaker 1>in the right places. But um, you know, we haven't

0:32:09.920 --> 0:32:12.680
<v Speaker 1>made the play or had a bad post snap read

0:32:12.880 --> 0:32:17.200
<v Speaker 1>or um. But Bobby has been. He's been, he's played

0:32:17.240 --> 0:32:21.200
<v Speaker 1>well so far this year, and UM, you know, his leadership,

0:32:21.360 --> 0:32:26.600
<v Speaker 1>his communication is UM, I think he's tackling well thus far.

0:32:26.800 --> 0:32:29.720
<v Speaker 1>So I think he's played well and we need we

0:32:29.760 --> 0:32:34.520
<v Speaker 1>need we need, uh we need to continue to play

0:32:34.560 --> 0:32:37.640
<v Speaker 1>well when the other guys to kind of uh play

0:32:37.720 --> 0:32:41.000
<v Speaker 1>the way he's been playing and his leadership, it definitely

0:32:41.120 --> 0:32:43.040
<v Speaker 1>it shows up on our team and you know, we're

0:32:43.120 --> 0:32:45.280
<v Speaker 1>we're I'm very I've been very pleased with him. All

0:32:45.360 --> 0:32:47.440
<v Speaker 1>r let's go ahead now and here from Dolphins defensive

0:32:47.480 --> 0:32:49.880
<v Speaker 1>lineman Zach Seeler had a big game on Thursday. I

0:32:49.920 --> 0:32:53.360
<v Speaker 1>wanted to ask him about the mindset of rushing to

0:32:53.440 --> 0:32:55.600
<v Speaker 1>help other guys out on the team. Here is Zach

0:32:55.640 --> 0:32:58.440
<v Speaker 1>Seiler and the approach this team has on creating opportunities

0:32:58.640 --> 0:33:02.160
<v Speaker 1>for their friends. Is za about you guys just collective

0:33:02.200 --> 0:33:04.200
<v Speaker 1>team pass rush work. It seems like a lot of

0:33:04.200 --> 0:33:07.000
<v Speaker 1>the EFFECTIVENESSUE guys get comes out of running games and

0:33:07.120 --> 0:33:10.160
<v Speaker 1>you guys up front creating opportunities for second level players

0:33:10.160 --> 0:33:12.960
<v Speaker 1>and rushers. I'm just curious how that mindset works when

0:33:12.960 --> 0:33:14.520
<v Speaker 1>it comes to like I'm going to be the one

0:33:14.560 --> 0:33:17.200
<v Speaker 1>that creates an opportunity for this player. Is that something

0:33:17.240 --> 0:33:21.160
<v Speaker 1>you see collectively throughout the course of the defensive room. Oh? Absolutely,

0:33:21.160 --> 0:33:23.880
<v Speaker 1>we celebrate that kind of stuff. We uh, we want

0:33:23.920 --> 0:33:26.080
<v Speaker 1>to be able to create opportunities for other players. And

0:33:26.120 --> 0:33:28.880
<v Speaker 1>it's it's not what I did or what It's a

0:33:28.920 --> 0:33:31.080
<v Speaker 1>team team and we just we were able to set

0:33:31.080 --> 0:33:32.720
<v Speaker 1>some up for him or like with excess pick in

0:33:32.800 --> 0:33:35.680
<v Speaker 1>the end, stuff like that we sell. We we we

0:33:35.800 --> 0:33:38.480
<v Speaker 1>thoroughly enjoy watching everyone else succeed as well. And how

0:33:38.520 --> 0:33:41.800
<v Speaker 1>about Zack Seeler's side job. What do he moonlights as

0:33:41.960 --> 0:33:45.360
<v Speaker 1>more of a hobby? How about hunting alligators, wild pigs

0:33:45.400 --> 0:33:47.640
<v Speaker 1>and crazy stuff out here and all the wildlife I've

0:33:47.680 --> 0:33:50.320
<v Speaker 1>come to learn to know about South Florida. It's a

0:33:50.360 --> 0:33:53.000
<v Speaker 1>big process. Um We've had we have guides that have

0:33:53.080 --> 0:33:56.720
<v Speaker 1>hunted for twenty plus years now, over thirty five years

0:33:56.720 --> 0:34:00.520
<v Speaker 1>of experience together. Um, so we kind of met up

0:34:00.560 --> 0:34:02.400
<v Speaker 1>with I've been hunting down here for a long, long time,

0:34:03.440 --> 0:34:06.840
<v Speaker 1>family in the central Florida area, my whole life. So

0:34:07.120 --> 0:34:09.680
<v Speaker 1>with that we kinda to my first and second year

0:34:09.719 --> 0:34:12.040
<v Speaker 1>started this outfitters business and it's been good for us,

0:34:12.640 --> 0:34:15.319
<v Speaker 1>a huge passion of mine. Yeah, let's go to the

0:34:15.320 --> 0:34:17.520
<v Speaker 1>other side of the ball here and wide receiver Jachim

0:34:17.600 --> 0:34:20.000
<v Speaker 1>Grant and get to my question for the Dolphins wide

0:34:20.000 --> 0:34:22.680
<v Speaker 1>receiver and j Caine. We asked you about the end around.

0:34:22.719 --> 0:34:24.680
<v Speaker 1>I want to get your take on the reception you had.

0:34:24.960 --> 0:34:26.960
<v Speaker 1>I'm curious to hear what that route it's called look

0:34:27.000 --> 0:34:29.560
<v Speaker 1>like some kind of wheel like stop comeback route. What

0:34:29.600 --> 0:34:31.120
<v Speaker 1>did you see on that play because it looked like

0:34:31.160 --> 0:34:34.160
<v Speaker 1>you motioned over to where they didn't really have anybody

0:34:34.160 --> 0:34:36.600
<v Speaker 1>over there besides the one corner. So does your speed

0:34:36.680 --> 0:34:38.560
<v Speaker 1>in that situation kind of make you more of a

0:34:38.600 --> 0:34:41.239
<v Speaker 1>threat on that comeback? And then also the ability to

0:34:41.280 --> 0:34:43.320
<v Speaker 1>get up after the catch on a player who's a

0:34:43.400 --> 0:34:45.680
<v Speaker 1>rookie who didn't touch me down. Just kind of talk

0:34:45.760 --> 0:34:48.799
<v Speaker 1>us through that play if you can, um let's out,

0:34:48.880 --> 0:34:53.120
<v Speaker 1>end up, stop wherever you want to call it. And

0:34:53.560 --> 0:34:58.080
<v Speaker 1>I knew, Dad, a lot of dbs will any time Dad,

0:34:58.120 --> 0:35:01.279
<v Speaker 1>I'm going on any top of vertical out that they're

0:35:01.280 --> 0:35:05.600
<v Speaker 1>gonna basically haul hall lass and trying to stay over

0:35:05.640 --> 0:35:08.160
<v Speaker 1>the top of me. And I just made it look

0:35:08.200 --> 0:35:10.480
<v Speaker 1>like I'm running as fast as I could, and I

0:35:10.560 --> 0:35:13.200
<v Speaker 1>just put on the brakes and dude kept running for

0:35:13.280 --> 0:35:16.360
<v Speaker 1>about probably three yards, and you know, I made the

0:35:16.719 --> 0:35:19.360
<v Speaker 1>Ditmond catch. I actually like, I couldn't see I definitely

0:35:19.400 --> 0:35:21.319
<v Speaker 1>couldn't see the ball coming out of the break because

0:35:21.320 --> 0:35:23.520
<v Speaker 1>of the lights. And I was like, Okay, there it is.

0:35:23.640 --> 0:35:26.399
<v Speaker 1>I dote for it. And and when he didn't touch

0:35:26.480 --> 0:35:28.279
<v Speaker 1>me when I fell on the ground, I was like,

0:35:28.280 --> 0:35:30.319
<v Speaker 1>oh yeah, I didn't feel them touch me. So I

0:35:30.360 --> 0:35:32.960
<v Speaker 1>got up and I'm like, and he probably thought on

0:35:33.080 --> 0:35:35.560
<v Speaker 1>film when I watched it, he thought I dropped the ball,

0:35:35.840 --> 0:35:38.200
<v Speaker 1>and so he was clapping like yeah, he didn't catch it,

0:35:38.400 --> 0:35:40.480
<v Speaker 1>like uh, And so I just got up and the

0:35:40.560 --> 0:35:43.680
<v Speaker 1>ram because I felt I didn't even feel them touch me.

0:35:43.719 --> 0:35:45.640
<v Speaker 1>So I was like, yeah, this this came right. And

0:35:46.239 --> 0:35:47.880
<v Speaker 1>he didn't want to touch me, then all right, let

0:35:47.880 --> 0:35:49.360
<v Speaker 1>me get up and run for a couple more yards.

0:35:49.800 --> 0:35:52.600
<v Speaker 1>And how about the friendly trash talk between he and

0:35:52.680 --> 0:35:55.000
<v Speaker 1>fellow kickers when it comes to the kickoff game and

0:35:55.080 --> 0:35:58.080
<v Speaker 1>kicking touchbacks over his head And I'm always taunting him

0:35:58.320 --> 0:36:01.839
<v Speaker 1>everything every kickoff return. Um, you've probably see me back there.

0:36:01.840 --> 0:36:03.920
<v Speaker 1>I'm always waving my hands and telling them to kick

0:36:03.920 --> 0:36:07.040
<v Speaker 1>it to me. And then a lot of guys always

0:36:07.080 --> 0:36:10.160
<v Speaker 1>run down and say, uh, come on, man, bring it out.

0:36:10.160 --> 0:36:12.399
<v Speaker 1>Then I'm like, you're kicking in nine deep, it's only

0:36:12.480 --> 0:36:14.799
<v Speaker 1>teen yards and ends like you're kicking in n There's

0:36:14.800 --> 0:36:16.879
<v Speaker 1>no way I'm gonna bring it out. So I mean,

0:36:17.000 --> 0:36:18.640
<v Speaker 1>if you give me a chance, I'll bring it out.

0:36:18.719 --> 0:36:20.759
<v Speaker 1>So and we'll go ahead and finish up here with

0:36:20.800 --> 0:36:23.880
<v Speaker 1>Dolphins rookie left tackle Austin Jackson. You heard coach flora

0:36:23.960 --> 0:36:25.960
<v Speaker 1>Is talking about his game and his growth so far

0:36:26.040 --> 0:36:29.200
<v Speaker 1>in his age twenty one NFL season, ridiculously young and

0:36:29.200 --> 0:36:31.719
<v Speaker 1>getting the job done out there at left tackle. Here

0:36:31.719 --> 0:36:33.719
<v Speaker 1>he is talking about some of the technique and mentality

0:36:33.719 --> 0:36:35.840
<v Speaker 1>that comes into playing the offensive line here for the

0:36:35.840 --> 0:36:39.160
<v Speaker 1>Miami Dolphins. You know technique that you know, offensive linement

0:36:39.280 --> 0:36:44.120
<v Speaker 1>used because you know, oftentimes defensive linement can get leaning

0:36:44.120 --> 0:36:46.520
<v Speaker 1>all their weight on you. So it's just it's just

0:36:46.600 --> 0:36:49.840
<v Speaker 1>kind of a leverage battle. And if you see, you

0:36:49.840 --> 0:36:51.920
<v Speaker 1>know they're at a leverage, it's it's easy to swept

0:36:51.960 --> 0:36:54.279
<v Speaker 1>them down. I think leverage is gonna become our new

0:36:54.320 --> 0:36:56.840
<v Speaker 1>each and every day here on the Drive Time podcast.

0:36:56.920 --> 0:36:59.239
<v Speaker 1>Love that term. Love that word makes a lot of sense.

0:36:59.280 --> 0:37:02.000
<v Speaker 1>He was asked about the use of the hands and

0:37:02.080 --> 0:37:04.719
<v Speaker 1>chopping and swatting away that initial hand punch on the

0:37:04.719 --> 0:37:07.040
<v Speaker 1>defensive line. I talked about in the film notes about

0:37:07.080 --> 0:37:09.600
<v Speaker 1>him being patient and not letting guys get into him.

0:37:09.760 --> 0:37:11.600
<v Speaker 1>That's the perfect example of that right there, using the

0:37:11.680 --> 0:37:13.799
<v Speaker 1>leverage against them. Let's go ahead and finish up here.

0:37:13.840 --> 0:37:16.280
<v Speaker 1>One more quote from the Dolphins players on this Monday.

0:37:16.440 --> 0:37:19.320
<v Speaker 1>Austin Jackson talking about the leadership, the tricks of the trade,

0:37:19.440 --> 0:37:21.759
<v Speaker 1>and all the tips the veteran offensive lineman have given him.

0:37:21.760 --> 0:37:24.960
<v Speaker 1>So far through three games. Uh, you know, they help

0:37:25.000 --> 0:37:28.080
<v Speaker 1>me with a lot of advice, you know, whether it's situationally,

0:37:28.320 --> 0:37:32.040
<v Speaker 1>you know, situations during the game or um, you know

0:37:32.200 --> 0:37:34.160
<v Speaker 1>we need to get done, or what's to look out for,

0:37:34.719 --> 0:37:37.359
<v Speaker 1>just because you know they've been playing the league for

0:37:37.600 --> 0:37:39.680
<v Speaker 1>you know, such a good amount of time and you

0:37:39.719 --> 0:37:41.200
<v Speaker 1>know they they just got a lot of knowledge on

0:37:41.239 --> 0:37:44.160
<v Speaker 1>it or just kind of falls off and you know,

0:37:44.200 --> 0:37:46.759
<v Speaker 1>they helped me in a lot of areas. There you go,

0:37:46.920 --> 0:37:49.839
<v Speaker 1>There you have it. Austin Jackson, Joachim Grant. We had

0:37:50.320 --> 0:37:52.920
<v Speaker 1>coach Brian Flores as well as Zach Seeler. As we

0:37:52.960 --> 0:37:55.279
<v Speaker 1>get closer and closer to kick off on Sunday, a

0:37:55.320 --> 0:37:57.440
<v Speaker 1>little extra time to rest here the Seahawks coming off

0:37:57.480 --> 0:37:59.799
<v Speaker 1>that type game with the Dallas Cowboys. We're gonna cover

0:37:59.840 --> 0:38:02.640
<v Speaker 1>all that stuff here on the Drivetime podcast all week long.

0:38:02.920 --> 0:38:06.360
<v Speaker 1>Injury Reports, game preview player features everything you want here

0:38:06.400 --> 0:38:09.759
<v Speaker 1>on Drivetime on Miami Dolphins dot com. As for today's time,

0:38:09.800 --> 0:38:12.200
<v Speaker 1>that's gonna be my time you all, please be sure

0:38:12.360 --> 0:38:15.000
<v Speaker 1>to subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcast. Leave us

0:38:15.000 --> 0:38:17.440
<v Speaker 1>a rating, leave us a review, give me a follow

0:38:17.480 --> 0:38:20.560
<v Speaker 1>on Twitter. It's at Wingfield NFL. Follow the Dolphins at

0:38:20.560 --> 0:38:23.800
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0:38:23.920 --> 0:38:26.839
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0:38:26.840 --> 0:38:29.879
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0:38:30.080 --> 0:38:30.600
<v Speaker 1>finds up