WEBVTT - Field Yates: People and Process

0:00:01.080 --> 0:00:15.960
<v Speaker 1>That's wrong Field touchdown, Miami a drawn? What is up? Dolphans?

0:00:16.040 --> 0:00:19.319
<v Speaker 1>And welcome to the Drive Time Podcast, part of the

0:00:19.360 --> 0:00:24.680
<v Speaker 1>Miami Dolphins official podcast network, covering your team, your Miami Dolphins.

0:00:24.880 --> 0:00:29.520
<v Speaker 1>How's it going? Everybody is Tuesday? Season is in the books.

0:00:29.600 --> 0:00:32.640
<v Speaker 1>I am your host, Travis Wingfield, and I'm here to

0:00:32.680 --> 0:00:35.880
<v Speaker 1>bring you your daily dose of Miami Dolphins football. And

0:00:35.920 --> 0:00:39.280
<v Speaker 1>on today's show, the season is a wrap. The Buccaneers

0:00:39.320 --> 0:00:42.600
<v Speaker 1>are world champions. We're gonna welcome in Field Yates of

0:00:43.000 --> 0:00:46.640
<v Speaker 1>ESPN to talk about next steps for the Miami Dolphins.

0:00:46.640 --> 0:00:48.599
<v Speaker 1>Will look back at the first two years under Chris

0:00:48.680 --> 0:00:51.680
<v Speaker 1>Greer and Brian Flores and project where this team is going.

0:00:52.000 --> 0:00:55.280
<v Speaker 1>All of that and more on this Tuesday, February, the

0:00:55.360 --> 0:01:02.000
<v Speaker 1>ninth edition of the Drive Time Podcast. Miami Times And So,

0:01:02.120 --> 0:01:04.920
<v Speaker 1>the Super Bowl is in the books. It's a rap

0:01:05.280 --> 0:01:07.880
<v Speaker 1>not the game. I think from a competitive standpoint, the

0:01:07.959 --> 0:01:12.039
<v Speaker 1>neutral observer typically roots for. I was personally pulling for

0:01:12.080 --> 0:01:14.960
<v Speaker 1>the a f C side, because typically I do root

0:01:15.040 --> 0:01:17.399
<v Speaker 1>for the conference the Dolphins are in, unless it's been

0:01:17.480 --> 0:01:20.760
<v Speaker 1>a division opponent over the last several years. But the

0:01:20.800 --> 0:01:23.920
<v Speaker 1>Chiefs come up short to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Tom

0:01:23.959 --> 0:01:27.720
<v Speaker 1>Brady's first year in Tampa Bay yields a Lombardi Trophy

0:01:27.800 --> 0:01:30.560
<v Speaker 1>number seven for Brady all time. What a heck of

0:01:30.560 --> 0:01:32.400
<v Speaker 1>a run he's had, What a heck of a career

0:01:32.640 --> 0:01:35.160
<v Speaker 1>he's had with that Buccaneers team. Thought it was kind

0:01:35.160 --> 0:01:37.440
<v Speaker 1>of cool to seeing Dominican Sue get his first ring.

0:01:37.680 --> 0:01:40.080
<v Speaker 1>A guy that's been a productive player in league for

0:01:40.080 --> 0:01:41.959
<v Speaker 1>a long time, was a member of the Miami Dolphins

0:01:42.120 --> 0:01:44.840
<v Speaker 1>for quite some time as well, he gets his first ring.

0:01:44.920 --> 0:01:48.360
<v Speaker 1>So congratulations to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. They pull off

0:01:48.400 --> 0:01:51.440
<v Speaker 1>the upset in the Super Bowl. I you know, I

0:01:51.440 --> 0:01:53.000
<v Speaker 1>thought the Chiefs were gonna win that game, and they

0:01:53.040 --> 0:01:55.080
<v Speaker 1>just were sloppy from the start. It seemed like in

0:01:55.200 --> 0:01:57.360
<v Speaker 1>terms of the penalties, how many flags came out in

0:01:57.360 --> 0:02:00.040
<v Speaker 1>that game. They had double digit flags for over a

0:02:00.120 --> 0:02:03.120
<v Speaker 1>hundred yards in that game. Patrick Mahomes on the move

0:02:03.240 --> 0:02:05.640
<v Speaker 1>constantly throughout the course of the night. Some of the

0:02:05.640 --> 0:02:08.760
<v Speaker 1>incompletions he had in that game were, I mean, the

0:02:08.840 --> 0:02:11.280
<v Speaker 1>highlights of the game because of how impressive they were

0:02:11.280 --> 0:02:13.840
<v Speaker 1>throwing the ball falling to his side. One of the

0:02:13.840 --> 0:02:17.079
<v Speaker 1>best memes I saw on Twitter on Super Bowl Sunday

0:02:17.320 --> 0:02:20.480
<v Speaker 1>was a side by side shot of that incomplete past

0:02:20.560 --> 0:02:23.760
<v Speaker 1>that Mahomes through on fourth down where he's basically parallel

0:02:23.800 --> 0:02:26.560
<v Speaker 1>to the ground falling to the ground side by side

0:02:26.560 --> 0:02:30.400
<v Speaker 1>with White Goodman from Dodgeball, Ben Stiller's character and that

0:02:30.480 --> 0:02:32.959
<v Speaker 1>great Vince Fawn movie back in like two thousand and five,

0:02:33.160 --> 0:02:35.600
<v Speaker 1>pretty much the exact same throw there from Patrick Mahomes.

0:02:35.600 --> 0:02:38.239
<v Speaker 1>So he remains ridiculous despite the fact that he and

0:02:38.280 --> 0:02:40.840
<v Speaker 1>the Chiefs are now one and one in Super Bowls

0:02:40.840 --> 0:02:43.440
<v Speaker 1>with that collection of players. But that means the end

0:02:43.440 --> 0:02:45.880
<v Speaker 1>of the season now, it means it's all about one

0:02:46.200 --> 0:02:49.519
<v Speaker 1>free agency on the periphery draft season, well within draft

0:02:49.560 --> 0:02:52.520
<v Speaker 1>season right now. And I put the off season calendar

0:02:52.560 --> 0:02:55.640
<v Speaker 1>for the NFL up in Monday's Blitz article up on

0:02:55.680 --> 0:02:59.640
<v Speaker 1>Miami Dolphins dot com, where we look at the timeline

0:02:59.639 --> 0:03:01.720
<v Speaker 1>for and events to occur around the league. Of course,

0:03:01.919 --> 0:03:03.800
<v Speaker 1>this year we're not going to have the scouting combine

0:03:03.840 --> 0:03:07.360
<v Speaker 1>with everybody descending onto Indianapolis, but there is the window

0:03:07.440 --> 0:03:10.560
<v Speaker 1>for the franchise and transitional player that is from February

0:03:11.240 --> 0:03:14.400
<v Speaker 1>to March ninth, where teams can designate one franchise or

0:03:14.520 --> 0:03:18.120
<v Speaker 1>transitional player. From March fifteen, through seventeen. Those are the

0:03:18.120 --> 0:03:21.480
<v Speaker 1>three days before free agency begins where clubs are permitted

0:03:21.480 --> 0:03:25.160
<v Speaker 1>to contact and enter into contract negotiations with players with

0:03:25.280 --> 0:03:29.120
<v Speaker 1>agents of players rather who will become unrestricted free agents

0:03:29.120 --> 0:03:31.480
<v Speaker 1>on the new league year. And that new league year

0:03:31.520 --> 0:03:34.880
<v Speaker 1>starts on March seventeenth at four pm Eastern. Set your

0:03:35.120 --> 0:03:38.240
<v Speaker 1>calendars right now, set your alarm clocks for March seventeenth,

0:03:38.480 --> 0:03:40.240
<v Speaker 1>the start of the new league year. That's when everything

0:03:40.240 --> 0:03:42.560
<v Speaker 1>really gets going here and that's on a Wednesday for

0:03:42.600 --> 0:03:44.640
<v Speaker 1>you guys here. So free agency, we're gonna have that

0:03:44.720 --> 0:03:47.840
<v Speaker 1>covered on Drivetown at Miami Dolphins dot com in depth.

0:03:47.920 --> 0:03:50.600
<v Speaker 1>Every signing, every action we take will be all over that.

0:03:50.640 --> 0:03:53.480
<v Speaker 1>So the official start of the new league year March seventeenth,

0:03:53.480 --> 0:03:57.800
<v Speaker 1>Wednesday at four pm Eastern. And on April nineteenth, offseason

0:03:57.840 --> 0:04:01.119
<v Speaker 1>workout programs can begin, and on a bull the last

0:04:01.160 --> 0:04:04.280
<v Speaker 1>day for restrictive free agents to sign their offer sheets occurs.

0:04:04.360 --> 0:04:07.920
<v Speaker 1>And then finally we have the draft on April through

0:04:08.000 --> 0:04:10.640
<v Speaker 1>May one, and the draft is scheduled to take place

0:04:10.720 --> 0:04:13.280
<v Speaker 1>this year in Cleveland, Ohio. All R, let's go ahead

0:04:13.320 --> 0:04:15.120
<v Speaker 1>and get to my guest now on this edition of

0:04:15.160 --> 0:04:19.080
<v Speaker 1>the Drivetime podcast, the Tuesday, February the ninth edition. Field

0:04:19.160 --> 0:04:22.960
<v Speaker 1>Yates of ESPN and writing Shotgun Now on the Drivetime

0:04:23.000 --> 0:04:26.520
<v Speaker 1>podcast is Field Yates. He's an NFL insider for ESPN

0:04:26.600 --> 0:04:29.760
<v Speaker 1>and co host of the Fantasy Focus Football podcast and

0:04:29.839 --> 0:04:32.480
<v Speaker 1>Field I think you're missing one major skill set here

0:04:32.520 --> 0:04:36.919
<v Speaker 1>from the Twitter bio man Senior Bowl anchor extraordinaire. I

0:04:36.920 --> 0:04:39.120
<v Speaker 1>had a lot of fun down there in Mobile. And

0:04:39.600 --> 0:04:41.720
<v Speaker 1>you know, I'll go through the usual and say thank

0:04:41.720 --> 0:04:44.600
<v Speaker 1>you for the opportunity to my employer. But I'm easy

0:04:44.640 --> 0:04:46.960
<v Speaker 1>to see when I say that, right, the ESPN put

0:04:46.960 --> 0:04:48.800
<v Speaker 1>some faith in me to go down to Mobile and

0:04:49.120 --> 0:04:52.320
<v Speaker 1>be a part of the tremendous coverage. Such a fun

0:04:52.360 --> 0:04:54.560
<v Speaker 1>event though in so many ways, you know, I think

0:04:54.600 --> 0:04:56.760
<v Speaker 1>in any year it's fun. But you know, I was

0:04:56.800 --> 0:04:59.000
<v Speaker 1>talking about this with some of my colleagues that were

0:04:59.040 --> 0:05:01.760
<v Speaker 1>down there in Lewis Red, my pant About and Todd McShay.

0:05:02.200 --> 0:05:03.919
<v Speaker 1>Just so good to be on a football field. You know,

0:05:03.960 --> 0:05:06.279
<v Speaker 1>many of us have not been in the football stadium

0:05:06.800 --> 0:05:09.600
<v Speaker 1>for close to a year. Much has been on the

0:05:09.640 --> 0:05:13.080
<v Speaker 1>field to be a ground level to be amongst not

0:05:13.160 --> 0:05:15.960
<v Speaker 1>just the players, but the two great coaching staffs, the

0:05:15.960 --> 0:05:18.960
<v Speaker 1>Miami Dolphins and the Carolina Panthers. Was that's a pretty

0:05:18.960 --> 0:05:22.640
<v Speaker 1>special opportunity to be Okay, Yeah, the things that we

0:05:22.839 --> 0:05:24.520
<v Speaker 1>that we took for grant in the past, right, we

0:05:24.600 --> 0:05:27.040
<v Speaker 1>no longer do. Like you mentioned that, there was actually

0:05:27.120 --> 0:05:29.400
<v Speaker 1>the Week two Dolphins and Bills game. I was there

0:05:29.440 --> 0:05:32.320
<v Speaker 1>in the press box and the CBS feed had got

0:05:32.320 --> 0:05:34.720
<v Speaker 1>cut for like three or four minutes, and so I

0:05:34.760 --> 0:05:36.839
<v Speaker 1>was literally like tweeting out my fan base and they're like,

0:05:36.880 --> 0:05:39.159
<v Speaker 1>Travis's Twitter's timeline is where we're gonna find the place

0:05:39.200 --> 0:05:42.120
<v Speaker 1>for the game today. So it's has been a crazy year, man,

0:05:42.120 --> 0:05:44.240
<v Speaker 1>But I thought you killed it and and you mentioned

0:05:44.320 --> 0:05:47.279
<v Speaker 1>McShay and Riddick and tannem baumb man, I wanted to

0:05:47.279 --> 0:05:50.320
<v Speaker 1>ask you this because those are three, you know, heavy

0:05:50.400 --> 0:05:52.960
<v Speaker 1>hitters in terms of football knowledge and football insight and

0:05:53.000 --> 0:05:55.240
<v Speaker 1>resumes in the in the league. What is it like

0:05:55.360 --> 0:05:58.440
<v Speaker 1>being around those guys when you're evaluating a hundred and

0:05:58.520 --> 0:06:00.960
<v Speaker 1>thirty five prospects, like you have to soak up some information,

0:06:01.000 --> 0:06:04.200
<v Speaker 1>I'd imagine. Yeah, it's so unique because each one of

0:06:04.200 --> 0:06:07.240
<v Speaker 1>them brings a different perspective as well. Right, you know,

0:06:07.240 --> 0:06:10.360
<v Speaker 1>Mike Cannon almost start there obviously very familiar to Dolphins fans.

0:06:10.400 --> 0:06:12.720
<v Speaker 1>He was, you know, either a GM or the e

0:06:12.839 --> 0:06:16.720
<v Speaker 1>DP of football Operations for basically twenty years. Obviously led

0:06:16.760 --> 0:06:18.880
<v Speaker 1>the show in Miami, led the show in New York.

0:06:18.960 --> 0:06:21.800
<v Speaker 1>Yet and of course in the fact that it was

0:06:21.839 --> 0:06:23.920
<v Speaker 1>a Dolphin staff mean there were time people that Michael

0:06:23.960 --> 0:06:25.880
<v Speaker 1>is very familiar with. I felt like I was walking

0:06:25.920 --> 0:06:28.159
<v Speaker 1>around with the Mayor of mobiles when you were near

0:06:28.200 --> 0:06:32.160
<v Speaker 1>Mike tannonbomb. But Mike has basically seen every single situation.

0:06:32.480 --> 0:06:35.200
<v Speaker 1>Lewis Riddick did not just play the game. He also

0:06:35.920 --> 0:06:38.360
<v Speaker 1>was a scout for many years, a working personnel for

0:06:38.400 --> 0:06:41.320
<v Speaker 1>many years of both Washington football team and the Philadelphia Eagles.

0:06:41.600 --> 0:06:43.920
<v Speaker 1>And now he's evolved into one of e fpn's foremost

0:06:43.960 --> 0:06:47.240
<v Speaker 1>game analysts. Obviously part of the Monday Nights Football Books broadcast,

0:06:47.279 --> 0:06:49.960
<v Speaker 1>and you can tap into all the different uh tenets

0:06:50.400 --> 0:06:53.360
<v Speaker 1>of his coverage. I think you've got Todd McShay whos

0:06:53.360 --> 0:06:56.240
<v Speaker 1>still library and I'm fortunate to do the podcast called

0:06:56.240 --> 0:06:59.920
<v Speaker 1>The First Draft with Todd McShay and mel kiper Jr. Ever,

0:07:00.120 --> 0:07:02.160
<v Speaker 1>single two they would drop an episode for PM E.

0:07:02.200 --> 0:07:05.240
<v Speaker 1>Sterns I'm fired from the shameless plug and it never

0:07:05.279 --> 0:07:09.000
<v Speaker 1>ceases too amazing that these two have an energy that

0:07:09.120 --> 0:07:13.520
<v Speaker 1>is unmatched and a passion that's unmatched, rollnecks of information

0:07:13.560 --> 0:07:17.800
<v Speaker 1>that's unmatched about these prospects. There thousands, and I'm not exaggerating.

0:07:17.800 --> 0:07:21.600
<v Speaker 1>There are players they are responsible to be somewhat familiar with.

0:07:21.840 --> 0:07:24.040
<v Speaker 1>By the time the draft rolls around. Each of them

0:07:24.120 --> 0:07:27.240
<v Speaker 1>could basically, uh discuss those players as if they were

0:07:27.240 --> 0:07:29.600
<v Speaker 1>their own children. They have such good knowledge of them.

0:07:29.760 --> 0:07:31.920
<v Speaker 1>I love working with all those guys. That's what makes

0:07:31.920 --> 0:07:35.920
<v Speaker 1>the draft, watching the entire seven round, you know, extravaganza

0:07:36.000 --> 0:07:37.600
<v Speaker 1>for a week and an ESPN does such a great

0:07:37.680 --> 0:07:40.080
<v Speaker 1>job on the coverage because you get these inside stories

0:07:40.080 --> 0:07:42.560
<v Speaker 1>on these kids that you probably didn't know beforehand, like

0:07:42.600 --> 0:07:45.200
<v Speaker 1>for instance, last year Solomon killing the big fish the

0:07:45.360 --> 0:07:48.080
<v Speaker 1>lifeguard for the Miami Dolphins and that great story that

0:07:48.080 --> 0:07:50.360
<v Speaker 1>that provided us so much content this year for Miami

0:07:50.440 --> 0:07:52.560
<v Speaker 1>Dolphins dot Com and here on Drive Time that we

0:07:52.560 --> 0:07:55.000
<v Speaker 1>didn't know about before the ESPN shared that story. So

0:07:55.080 --> 0:07:57.560
<v Speaker 1>that was that was really cool to see. And you mentioned,

0:07:57.600 --> 0:07:59.600
<v Speaker 1>you know, being down there on the field and mobile

0:07:59.640 --> 0:08:01.720
<v Speaker 1>for the press for the Senior Bowl, for all those

0:08:01.720 --> 0:08:04.400
<v Speaker 1>practices and feel I think my favorite part of the

0:08:04.440 --> 0:08:06.680
<v Speaker 1>coverage was the mic up segments with the coaches, like

0:08:06.880 --> 0:08:08.080
<v Speaker 1>what was that from your what was that like from

0:08:08.120 --> 0:08:10.400
<v Speaker 1>your guys perspective? As far as getting those coaches miked

0:08:10.480 --> 0:08:11.840
<v Speaker 1>up and just hear what they had to say on

0:08:11.880 --> 0:08:14.920
<v Speaker 1>the practice field. Yeah, there's no two ways about it.

0:08:15.000 --> 0:08:16.880
<v Speaker 1>That's the best part. And you know when we go

0:08:16.960 --> 0:08:19.960
<v Speaker 1>down there at the four hours, well two hour broadcast,

0:08:20.120 --> 0:08:23.360
<v Speaker 1>thirty minute breaks and then two hours more for each

0:08:23.360 --> 0:08:26.800
<v Speaker 1>of the practices. And in speaking with our producer Brian

0:08:26.880 --> 0:08:30.600
<v Speaker 1>Rider going into the event, you know, I was hammering

0:08:30.680 --> 0:08:32.280
<v Speaker 1>him with questions like, what are you gonna do here?

0:08:32.280 --> 0:08:35.400
<v Speaker 1>Is We're good, We're gonna hang for two hours. We're

0:08:35.400 --> 0:08:37.800
<v Speaker 1>gonna watch football for two hours and talk about it.

0:08:38.040 --> 0:08:40.480
<v Speaker 1>And it's unlike anything else that we do, at least

0:08:40.520 --> 0:08:43.520
<v Speaker 1>in terms of my response building the b SPN everything else.

0:08:43.880 --> 0:08:46.960
<v Speaker 1>You know, you spend a day working on NFL Live

0:08:47.120 --> 0:08:49.840
<v Speaker 1>Rundown and you know starts at seven am that morning

0:08:49.880 --> 0:08:51.880
<v Speaker 1>until you go on the air at four pm. That's

0:08:51.920 --> 0:08:54.320
<v Speaker 1>just so great about Senior is that the best part,

0:08:54.400 --> 0:08:57.240
<v Speaker 1>without question is when the coaches are animated, the coaches

0:08:57.280 --> 0:08:59.720
<v Speaker 1>are giving you sounds, you get to see the passion

0:08:59.760 --> 0:09:02.200
<v Speaker 1>of East coaches, and there's not one way to skin

0:09:02.280 --> 0:09:04.439
<v Speaker 1>the cat when it comes to coaching. Not every coach

0:09:04.480 --> 0:09:07.040
<v Speaker 1>has to be you know, in your face. Not ever,

0:09:07.040 --> 0:09:10.160
<v Speaker 1>your coach has to be sort of this quiet, stoic leader.

0:09:10.480 --> 0:09:12.839
<v Speaker 1>Not every coach has to be a guy who you know,

0:09:12.960 --> 0:09:17.880
<v Speaker 1>doesn't with energy or enthusiasm or positivity or you know, criticism.

0:09:17.960 --> 0:09:20.360
<v Speaker 1>Everybody is different, and that's what I really enjoyed watching

0:09:20.440 --> 0:09:23.199
<v Speaker 1>both the Panthers and of course the Dolphins staff, as

0:09:23.200 --> 0:09:26.320
<v Speaker 1>we got to see a handful of different Dolphins coaches,

0:09:26.800 --> 0:09:28.800
<v Speaker 1>Mike up and um. You know, it was great to

0:09:28.840 --> 0:09:30.640
<v Speaker 1>be able to chat with them a little bit, you know,

0:09:30.679 --> 0:09:33.400
<v Speaker 1>between drills and before practice as well, but to hear

0:09:33.440 --> 0:09:35.880
<v Speaker 1>that sound when they're on the field doing what they love.

0:09:36.080 --> 0:09:38.520
<v Speaker 1>I think it's the coolest part of the broadcast. Because

0:09:38.840 --> 0:09:41.320
<v Speaker 1>football coaching sounds like a dream job to a lot

0:09:41.320 --> 0:09:43.360
<v Speaker 1>of people, and it is for many. It's also a

0:09:43.440 --> 0:09:45.880
<v Speaker 1>life that is incredibly demanded. You might as well basically

0:09:45.920 --> 0:09:47.599
<v Speaker 1>say good body to your family from the time of

0:09:47.600 --> 0:09:49.920
<v Speaker 1>your report to training camp until the time the season

0:09:50.040 --> 0:09:52.200
<v Speaker 1>is over. But the reason why they do it is

0:09:52.200 --> 0:09:53.880
<v Speaker 1>not just because they want to feed their family and

0:09:53.920 --> 0:09:55.839
<v Speaker 1>they want to provide you know, great life for their

0:09:55.840 --> 0:09:58.800
<v Speaker 1>family is that they can. But it's because they love teachings.

0:09:58.840 --> 0:10:00.520
<v Speaker 1>They love to be teaching, they love to be on

0:10:00.559 --> 0:10:02.559
<v Speaker 1>the field with the players. And that's the sound that

0:10:02.640 --> 0:10:05.160
<v Speaker 1>you get. You can see how contagious their energy is.

0:10:06.160 --> 0:10:08.200
<v Speaker 1>I've I've written so many pieces this year, Field about

0:10:08.240 --> 0:10:10.760
<v Speaker 1>how Emmanuel Agba had a breakout season, or how Eric

0:10:10.840 --> 0:10:12.880
<v Speaker 1>Row and you know, you're number six is having the

0:10:12.880 --> 0:10:14.920
<v Speaker 1>best year of his career at a new position, or

0:10:14.920 --> 0:10:17.640
<v Speaker 1>Bobby McCain moves to safety a new position and has

0:10:17.679 --> 0:10:19.920
<v Speaker 1>you know, kind of a resurgence in his career as well.

0:10:19.960 --> 0:10:23.040
<v Speaker 1>So it's not just exclusive to rookie's first year player

0:10:23.080 --> 0:10:25.080
<v Speaker 1>second year players. I mean, guys developed all the time

0:10:25.280 --> 0:10:27.640
<v Speaker 1>at different stages of their career. And you know that

0:10:27.679 --> 0:10:29.920
<v Speaker 1>brings me back to kind of an interesting point about

0:10:30.160 --> 0:10:32.440
<v Speaker 1>where this Dolphins team is right now today. Field, you

0:10:32.440 --> 0:10:35.320
<v Speaker 1>talk about the morning after the Super Bowl in one

0:10:35.360 --> 0:10:37.360
<v Speaker 1>compared to where they were. Let's go back to when

0:10:37.400 --> 0:10:39.480
<v Speaker 1>Brian Floors was hired the day after the Super Bowl,

0:10:39.720 --> 0:10:43.160
<v Speaker 1>back after the eighteen season, where this team was coming in.

0:10:43.200 --> 0:10:45.440
<v Speaker 1>They knew they had some contracts to get off the books.

0:10:45.559 --> 0:10:48.000
<v Speaker 1>They had to kind of restock the draft capital. Like

0:10:48.000 --> 0:10:50.280
<v Speaker 1>where was your thirty thousand foot view be of where

0:10:50.320 --> 0:10:52.720
<v Speaker 1>this team has? Like how far they've come in those

0:10:52.720 --> 0:10:54.920
<v Speaker 1>twenty four months from the day Brian Floors was hired

0:10:55.000 --> 0:10:57.480
<v Speaker 1>with Chris Careers the GM to now where they are

0:10:57.480 --> 0:10:59.559
<v Speaker 1>with all this draft capital. They're they're in good shape,

0:10:59.600 --> 0:11:02.120
<v Speaker 1>cap Y, They've got a much better roster. How would

0:11:02.160 --> 0:11:05.359
<v Speaker 1>you say they've kind of grown those twenty four months masterfully?

0:11:05.520 --> 0:11:07.360
<v Speaker 1>And I'm not trying. This is not one of those

0:11:07.360 --> 0:11:10.120
<v Speaker 1>where you go on a podcast that runs on the

0:11:10.160 --> 0:11:12.600
<v Speaker 1>team's website and you do your best to say as

0:11:12.640 --> 0:11:15.040
<v Speaker 1>many nice things so it sounds like a great interview

0:11:15.280 --> 0:11:17.120
<v Speaker 1>and you get a bunch of listons and clicks and

0:11:17.160 --> 0:11:20.120
<v Speaker 1>retweets and all that. I'm saying this because it's back

0:11:21.280 --> 0:11:25.080
<v Speaker 1>and and maybe Dolphins fans don't want to revisit this

0:11:26.320 --> 0:11:28.640
<v Speaker 1>two years ago, less than two years ago. At this point,

0:11:29.720 --> 0:11:34.240
<v Speaker 1>the Dolphins were losing games and historic fashion. There's always

0:11:34.240 --> 0:11:37.240
<v Speaker 1>that joke that rears itself on Twitter. Could Alabama beat

0:11:37.320 --> 0:11:40.000
<v Speaker 1>the worst team in the NFL. That's and it's always

0:11:40.080 --> 0:11:42.840
<v Speaker 1>lame and it's obviously never gonna happen, And would the

0:11:42.880 --> 0:11:48.960
<v Speaker 1>Dolphins at the time would have creamed the Alabama Crimson time.

0:11:49.320 --> 0:11:52.120
<v Speaker 1>But the point is that this team reached about as

0:11:52.200 --> 0:11:55.400
<v Speaker 1>low of an on field performance point as you could

0:11:56.480 --> 0:11:59.280
<v Speaker 1>in the NFL. We haven't seen and and we all

0:11:59.360 --> 0:12:02.520
<v Speaker 1>understand this was you know, short term pain for long

0:12:02.640 --> 0:12:06.640
<v Speaker 1>term game. But I wasn't expecting that long term game

0:12:06.880 --> 0:12:09.559
<v Speaker 1>to happen a year later, right, And so we got

0:12:09.559 --> 0:12:12.280
<v Speaker 1>to address a few things. The people and the people

0:12:12.320 --> 0:12:15.040
<v Speaker 1>are unquestionably the right ones in place. You know, Brian Flores,

0:12:15.440 --> 0:12:17.520
<v Speaker 1>you know we didn't did not win it, but it's

0:12:17.880 --> 0:12:19.599
<v Speaker 1>you told me, Brian Flores, with the nfls Coach of

0:12:19.640 --> 0:12:21.040
<v Speaker 1>the Year the past year, I would have said, good,

0:12:21.040 --> 0:12:25.679
<v Speaker 1>he deserved it. Chris career, phenomenal job, outstanding person, level

0:12:25.679 --> 0:12:29.720
<v Speaker 1>head and leaders process. How's the process been? Have they

0:12:29.960 --> 0:12:32.800
<v Speaker 1>made investments that have proved worthwhile? We just mentioned Emmanuel

0:12:32.800 --> 0:12:36.240
<v Speaker 1>as an example. Guys really good maybe and Howard a

0:12:36.280 --> 0:12:38.520
<v Speaker 1>players they've developed themselves by the way, the second round

0:12:38.520 --> 0:12:40.199
<v Speaker 1>tack and I know that was the previous regime, but

0:12:40.280 --> 0:12:42.719
<v Speaker 1>still player who was right there in the stick of

0:12:42.760 --> 0:12:45.320
<v Speaker 1>the defensive Player of the Year conversation. Guys on the

0:12:45.360 --> 0:12:47.280
<v Speaker 1>offensive side of the ball that we're rookies that were

0:12:47.520 --> 0:12:50.880
<v Speaker 1>contributing right away, Salm and Kamley, Robert Hunt playing something

0:12:50.880 --> 0:12:53.760
<v Speaker 1>this past year. Guys like Jesse Davis who are under

0:12:53.760 --> 0:12:56.720
<v Speaker 1>the radar acquisitions in time that have evolved into other

0:12:56.800 --> 0:13:00.120
<v Speaker 1>team fastins or useful pieces. So process, I am on

0:13:00.240 --> 0:13:02.640
<v Speaker 1>board with people. I on board with. The big question

0:13:02.760 --> 0:13:04.640
<v Speaker 1>is simply going to be and I'm not trying to

0:13:04.640 --> 0:13:07.440
<v Speaker 1>make this about one person, but as you know, the

0:13:07.520 --> 0:13:10.880
<v Speaker 1>quarterback German League too makes that next step watch out.

0:13:11.200 --> 0:13:13.040
<v Speaker 1>It's just a fact and you and obviously there's some

0:13:13.040 --> 0:13:15.240
<v Speaker 1>pieces you gotta probably reinforced. I think you could stand

0:13:15.280 --> 0:13:17.840
<v Speaker 1>at a little more size at wide receiver, um, but

0:13:17.960 --> 0:13:19.520
<v Speaker 1>this is a team but I think is equipped to

0:13:19.520 --> 0:13:22.199
<v Speaker 1>make more strides going forward. As as you kind of

0:13:22.320 --> 0:13:24.760
<v Speaker 1>gather the you know, to go back to the quarterback position,

0:13:24.800 --> 0:13:26.760
<v Speaker 1>like you mentioned their fields, you kind of gauge the

0:13:26.840 --> 0:13:30.840
<v Speaker 1>temperature of the league. Is that a pretty general expectation

0:13:30.880 --> 0:13:32.640
<v Speaker 1>for the quarterback from year one to year two to

0:13:32.679 --> 0:13:35.080
<v Speaker 1>make that jump? Like why for fans that maybe don't

0:13:35.120 --> 0:13:37.640
<v Speaker 1>understand the difficulty of going from college to the NFL

0:13:37.760 --> 0:13:41.520
<v Speaker 1>At that position where lights, camera, action, man, everything's on you.

0:13:41.640 --> 0:13:44.240
<v Speaker 1>There's thirty two faces of the franchise when it comes

0:13:44.240 --> 0:13:47.080
<v Speaker 1>to the quarterback position, what's the biggest challenge for that

0:13:47.160 --> 0:13:49.720
<v Speaker 1>big step And is there a league wide expectation Like, yeah,

0:13:49.760 --> 0:13:52.440
<v Speaker 1>once the guys out of that rookie season, especially in

0:13:52.480 --> 0:13:54.839
<v Speaker 1>a pandemic driven off season where there is no off

0:13:54.880 --> 0:13:57.120
<v Speaker 1>season where this guy's coming back off of a hip

0:13:57.160 --> 0:13:59.520
<v Speaker 1>injury that basically he had to rehab the whole off season,

0:13:59.880 --> 0:14:02.880
<v Speaker 1>is there a general expectation for a pretty big leap there. Yeah.

0:14:02.920 --> 0:14:05.920
<v Speaker 1>I don't know that I've heard this specifically from Brian

0:14:06.000 --> 0:14:08.600
<v Speaker 1>flores Um, but I know that I heard this for

0:14:08.640 --> 0:14:10.800
<v Speaker 1>many years when spending a lot of time around the

0:14:10.800 --> 0:14:13.560
<v Speaker 1>Patriots and also spending a little bit of time covering

0:14:13.600 --> 0:14:16.880
<v Speaker 1>them too. Is Bill Belichick has always remarked on how

0:14:16.960 --> 0:14:20.320
<v Speaker 1>typically the player's biggest leap in his NFL career is

0:14:20.360 --> 0:14:22.320
<v Speaker 1>going to be from year one day year two. You know,

0:14:22.360 --> 0:14:24.920
<v Speaker 1>I always laughed at like people ask what happens during

0:14:24.960 --> 0:14:27.520
<v Speaker 1>rookie mini camp when these guys arrived from the facility

0:14:27.560 --> 0:14:30.440
<v Speaker 1>under normal circumtas for the first time, and it's like

0:14:30.880 --> 0:14:33.640
<v Speaker 1>they teach them where about the locker roommates and like

0:14:34.040 --> 0:14:36.800
<v Speaker 1>what the person who, like, you know, the security guards

0:14:36.840 --> 0:14:38.360
<v Speaker 1>name is right, it's not like they're getting right in.

0:14:38.440 --> 0:14:40.360
<v Speaker 1>So here's how we're gonna play cover two and just

0:14:40.720 --> 0:14:42.560
<v Speaker 1>you know, down in distance. It's no, no, no no, not

0:14:42.680 --> 0:14:46.640
<v Speaker 1>like it's fundamentally you're learning. Like I know this sounds ridiculous,

0:14:46.640 --> 0:14:48.680
<v Speaker 1>but one of the first installs you'll have is for

0:14:48.800 --> 0:14:51.600
<v Speaker 1>offensive players, how do we huddle up? Where's the left tackle?

0:14:51.600 --> 0:14:54.320
<v Speaker 1>Where's the right tackle? Some guys obviously never huddling college,

0:14:54.360 --> 0:14:56.640
<v Speaker 1>and sometimes it's a little bit different than how other

0:14:56.680 --> 0:14:59.680
<v Speaker 1>guys who did huddle in college. So my point is

0:14:59.720 --> 0:15:03.000
<v Speaker 1>that typically that jump happened between the first and second years,

0:15:03.200 --> 0:15:05.320
<v Speaker 1>that we've also seen it between years two and three

0:15:05.400 --> 0:15:08.520
<v Speaker 1>we thought was somebody like Josh Josh Allen, excuse me.

0:15:08.920 --> 0:15:10.960
<v Speaker 1>And then there are other players who it might happen later,

0:15:11.040 --> 0:15:13.040
<v Speaker 1>like Sam Donald might be an example of the guy

0:15:13.120 --> 0:15:16.880
<v Speaker 1>that circumstantially hasn't had quite the same pieces around him.

0:15:17.160 --> 0:15:19.520
<v Speaker 1>So that's why I think this upcoming year could potentially

0:15:19.520 --> 0:15:21.560
<v Speaker 1>be one that we have all eyes on Tom because

0:15:22.120 --> 0:15:24.400
<v Speaker 1>let's let's just operate unto this presumption he's the guy

0:15:24.440 --> 0:15:27.560
<v Speaker 1>going into the season, and that the Dolphins used some

0:15:27.600 --> 0:15:31.080
<v Speaker 1>of their resources available to maybe pad the offensive playmakers

0:15:31.120 --> 0:15:33.880
<v Speaker 1>a little bit, whether that's addressing as I mentioned, wide

0:15:33.880 --> 0:15:36.480
<v Speaker 1>receiver to me is an area they could add some depth.

0:15:36.920 --> 0:15:39.000
<v Speaker 1>And then I don't know that running backs is a

0:15:39.080 --> 0:15:41.280
<v Speaker 1>need or if it's not a need. The reason why

0:15:41.280 --> 0:15:43.800
<v Speaker 1>I say that is that on the one hand, Miles

0:15:43.800 --> 0:15:46.840
<v Speaker 1>Gaskin seventh round pick and Savan Akhmed a waiver wire

0:15:46.880 --> 0:15:50.840
<v Speaker 1>add play tremendous when given the opportunity. On the other hand,

0:15:50.840 --> 0:15:54.320
<v Speaker 1>the Dolphins also turned to five running backs this year.

0:15:54.360 --> 0:15:57.320
<v Speaker 1>For stretches between those two players. Plush Jordan Howard before

0:15:57.320 --> 0:15:59.680
<v Speaker 1>he was waived, but Matt Brita, who's gonna be a

0:15:59.680 --> 0:16:04.880
<v Speaker 1>free what Patrick Lair? So maybe the team says, hey, guys,

0:16:04.960 --> 0:16:07.920
<v Speaker 1>let's streamline, let's go to you know, let's let's find

0:16:07.960 --> 0:16:12.320
<v Speaker 1>one workforce back for lacking better a term. So if

0:16:12.320 --> 0:16:15.720
<v Speaker 1>those pieces are put in place, and assuming that the system,

0:16:15.760 --> 0:16:18.160
<v Speaker 1>which I don't think we'll be overhaul because the two

0:16:18.200 --> 0:16:21.480
<v Speaker 1>promotions to co offensive coordinators, I think that too could

0:16:21.480 --> 0:16:24.280
<v Speaker 1>be primed for quite elape this year. Now, I did

0:16:24.360 --> 0:16:28.000
<v Speaker 1>see the Fantasy the Fantasy Focus Football podcast love for

0:16:28.080 --> 0:16:31.040
<v Speaker 1>both Gasing and Akmed fields. We appreciate that definitely here

0:16:31.840 --> 0:16:34.920
<v Speaker 1>on the Drivetime podcast, and you know, I'm glad you

0:16:34.960 --> 0:16:37.840
<v Speaker 1>mentioned the story about having the rookies find the locker room,

0:16:37.880 --> 0:16:39.440
<v Speaker 1>for instance, because I got a good story for you

0:16:39.480 --> 0:16:42.000
<v Speaker 1>real quickly. Here. This was my first year in Miami

0:16:42.080 --> 0:16:44.840
<v Speaker 1>covering the team, and my first week in the building.

0:16:45.120 --> 0:16:47.680
<v Speaker 1>You know, our old practice facility, which will be well,

0:16:47.960 --> 0:16:51.160
<v Speaker 1>will move to the stadium this year at in Miami Gardens.

0:16:51.160 --> 0:16:54.600
<v Speaker 1>But the practice facility and Davy the upstairs hallways, it's amaze.

0:16:54.600 --> 0:16:56.880
<v Speaker 1>It's an absolute maze. And if your first time up there,

0:16:57.040 --> 0:16:58.960
<v Speaker 1>you do not know where you're going. And it was

0:16:59.000 --> 0:17:01.080
<v Speaker 1>like my third day on and I was still trying

0:17:01.080 --> 0:17:03.280
<v Speaker 1>to find the kitchen, where the bathroom was and stuff

0:17:03.320 --> 0:17:05.159
<v Speaker 1>like that, because you just get lost up there. And

0:17:05.280 --> 0:17:07.879
<v Speaker 1>ray Kwon Davis. So you've got hundred fifty pound me

0:17:08.200 --> 0:17:10.800
<v Speaker 1>and three d thirty pound ray Kwon Davis comes intersection

0:17:10.800 --> 0:17:12.399
<v Speaker 1>and we I saw him in the in the lobby

0:17:12.440 --> 0:17:14.720
<v Speaker 1>earlier and he's like, where the hell am I going.

0:17:14.800 --> 0:17:17.200
<v Speaker 1>I'm like, I think you turn around and go that way,

0:17:17.240 --> 0:17:19.199
<v Speaker 1>but I'm not sure. Luckily I was right, so it

0:17:19.200 --> 0:17:20.959
<v Speaker 1>looked like I knew what I was doing. But just

0:17:21.000 --> 0:17:22.760
<v Speaker 1>a fun little story about how you know you gotta

0:17:22.800 --> 0:17:24.719
<v Speaker 1>find your way around the building first before you can

0:17:24.720 --> 0:17:28.200
<v Speaker 1>worry about playing three technique, right, totally, I mean I

0:17:28.560 --> 0:17:30.840
<v Speaker 1>know what you're talking about. I mean it's much different

0:17:30.840 --> 0:17:33.159
<v Speaker 1>scale and not that being in the SPN employee is

0:17:33.520 --> 0:17:36.119
<v Speaker 1>as physically demanding as being an NFL player. But remember

0:17:36.160 --> 0:17:38.400
<v Speaker 1>I first got here. I showed up to the gym

0:17:38.680 --> 0:17:40.560
<v Speaker 1>first time I get there and they're like, oh, you

0:17:40.640 --> 0:17:43.399
<v Speaker 1>gotta bring your own power. So like I finished up

0:17:43.400 --> 0:17:45.000
<v Speaker 1>with workout and I'm like, great, where is it? You know?

0:17:45.119 --> 0:17:47.119
<v Speaker 1>Much mean, you know, I'm like walking back into uh,

0:17:47.160 --> 0:17:50.040
<v Speaker 1>into the office with the sweaty forehead. It's like these

0:17:50.080 --> 0:17:53.760
<v Speaker 1>a little filly you know, tiny steps that you gotta

0:17:53.800 --> 0:17:56.800
<v Speaker 1>take that that impact your day to day that you

0:17:56.840 --> 0:17:58.760
<v Speaker 1>gotta learn in your a rookie or a new person

0:17:58.840 --> 0:18:02.359
<v Speaker 1>on the job. Yeah, exactly. You mentioned the Super Bowl

0:18:02.440 --> 0:18:05.760
<v Speaker 1>happened on Sunday. And remember Chris Godwin on Hard Knocks

0:18:05.800 --> 0:18:07.920
<v Speaker 1>one time. They the coaches were so impressed, like this

0:18:07.920 --> 0:18:09.760
<v Speaker 1>guy went guys ONWN apartment. He went and took care

0:18:09.800 --> 0:18:11.800
<v Speaker 1>of his own things. Like it's it's a different a

0:18:11.840 --> 0:18:13.440
<v Speaker 1>different world for a rookie coming in to the league,

0:18:13.520 --> 0:18:15.479
<v Speaker 1>especially you know guys that are going out on their

0:18:15.520 --> 0:18:17.879
<v Speaker 1>own for the first time. So, uh, you know, speaking

0:18:17.920 --> 0:18:20.040
<v Speaker 1>of that Super Bowl, I wanted to ask you kind

0:18:20.080 --> 0:18:21.600
<v Speaker 1>of you know, going back to the Chris Career and

0:18:21.600 --> 0:18:23.280
<v Speaker 1>you talked about the people in the process. I thought

0:18:23.280 --> 0:18:25.320
<v Speaker 1>that was a great quote. Field you mentioned, you know,

0:18:25.400 --> 0:18:28.720
<v Speaker 1>Chris Career putting together this his personnel staff. I I've

0:18:28.800 --> 0:18:30.960
<v Speaker 1>known that he's he's good at delegating. He has plenty

0:18:31.000 --> 0:18:33.159
<v Speaker 1>of people that he puts into position of power to

0:18:33.160 --> 0:18:35.440
<v Speaker 1>to make these decisions and help them kind of collaborate

0:18:35.640 --> 0:18:37.679
<v Speaker 1>on a team effort. But we just saw the Tampa

0:18:37.720 --> 0:18:40.840
<v Speaker 1>Bay Buccaneers shut down what, in my opinion is the

0:18:40.840 --> 0:18:45.080
<v Speaker 1>greatest offensive engine of all time, and and Indie Reid

0:18:45.119 --> 0:18:47.240
<v Speaker 1>and Patrick Mahomes and all those guys. And we saw

0:18:47.280 --> 0:18:49.359
<v Speaker 1>the Chiefs get there because of that offensive engine and

0:18:49.480 --> 0:18:51.399
<v Speaker 1>that quarterback. So when you consider the end of the

0:18:51.440 --> 0:18:54.000
<v Speaker 1>season and how far teams that won ten games like

0:18:54.040 --> 0:18:56.879
<v Speaker 1>Miami are to these teams that are competing for Super Bowls,

0:18:57.000 --> 0:18:58.800
<v Speaker 1>what have we learned from that Super Bowl And how

0:18:58.840 --> 0:19:00.640
<v Speaker 1>can the Dolphins kind of apply that to the off

0:19:00.680 --> 0:19:03.359
<v Speaker 1>season to get closer and close that gap between Day

0:19:03.400 --> 0:19:06.200
<v Speaker 1>and the Chiefs and the Buccaneers of the world. So

0:19:06.320 --> 0:19:08.399
<v Speaker 1>I would start here, is you're right, is it was

0:19:08.440 --> 0:19:12.359
<v Speaker 1>a great performance last night by the Buccaneers, masterfull defensive

0:19:12.359 --> 0:19:17.800
<v Speaker 1>efforts in so many ways. I mean, I think most people, um,

0:19:17.880 --> 0:19:19.679
<v Speaker 1>you know, watch the game and are acutely aware of

0:19:19.720 --> 0:19:21.600
<v Speaker 1>what happens. I'm not going to rehast you know, every

0:19:21.640 --> 0:19:23.560
<v Speaker 1>single detail of what the Bucks did right or wrong.

0:19:24.080 --> 0:19:25.840
<v Speaker 1>I will just say that there were some lessons that

0:19:25.880 --> 0:19:29.399
<v Speaker 1>were reinforced last night. Because I mentioned earlier to quarterback

0:19:29.440 --> 0:19:32.240
<v Speaker 1>Durman League and I'll stand by that. But it's a

0:19:32.280 --> 0:19:35.480
<v Speaker 1>team game, right. That's what we forget sometimes is that

0:19:35.600 --> 0:19:40.159
<v Speaker 1>the masterful performances of somebody like Patrick Mahomes sometimes numbs

0:19:40.240 --> 0:19:43.000
<v Speaker 1>up to the impact of everybody else on the field.

0:19:43.680 --> 0:19:47.240
<v Speaker 1>And I'm not saying I think sometimes people get like

0:19:47.240 --> 0:19:52.200
<v Speaker 1>they may be misconstrue analysis and that Patrick Mahomes could

0:19:52.200 --> 0:19:55.960
<v Speaker 1>have been better last night. He could have His offensive

0:19:56.000 --> 0:19:59.800
<v Speaker 1>line was completely overmactual last night. And we knew coming

0:19:59.800 --> 0:20:03.080
<v Speaker 1>into the game that offensive tackle injuries were concerned for

0:20:03.160 --> 0:20:06.320
<v Speaker 1>the Chiefs. They stepped up in a major way last night.

0:20:06.359 --> 0:20:08.600
<v Speaker 1>Those injuries did right if they reared themselves in a

0:20:08.640 --> 0:20:11.240
<v Speaker 1>major way last night. So the team building lesson is

0:20:11.280 --> 0:20:16.280
<v Speaker 1>that it's a team team building, right. Um. I also

0:20:16.359 --> 0:20:20.040
<v Speaker 1>think Travis, one thing that's really interesting to me is

0:20:20.040 --> 0:20:26.040
<v Speaker 1>that this is being the Super Bowl champion is really tough.

0:20:26.520 --> 0:20:28.399
<v Speaker 1>You know, it's been sixteen years as we had a

0:20:28.480 --> 0:20:34.200
<v Speaker 1>repeat champion, and that's the longest stretch ever in NFL history.

0:20:34.240 --> 0:20:35.840
<v Speaker 1>A matter of fact, I looked it up this morning.

0:20:35.840 --> 0:20:38.680
<v Speaker 1>It's twice as long as the next longest stretch, right,

0:20:39.359 --> 0:20:43.120
<v Speaker 1>And so what it reinforced to me. Another reinforcement reference

0:20:43.320 --> 0:20:46.080
<v Speaker 1>is that not only is it hard to get back

0:20:46.119 --> 0:20:50.280
<v Speaker 1>to the mountain top, but any given Sunday, it takes

0:20:50.280 --> 0:20:53.800
<v Speaker 1>out the elements a predictability that you can sometimes see

0:20:53.840 --> 0:20:56.520
<v Speaker 1>other sports. And I'm not saying that other champions aren't deserving,

0:20:56.840 --> 0:20:59.840
<v Speaker 1>but as we know in the n b A tomorrow,

0:20:59.840 --> 0:21:03.040
<v Speaker 1>this reference right now, like the Lakers are gonna be

0:21:03.080 --> 0:21:05.840
<v Speaker 1>really tough to beat, provided in Lebron James and Anthony

0:21:05.880 --> 0:21:10.160
<v Speaker 1>Davis are on the court for seven games. Right. In football,

0:21:11.320 --> 0:21:13.439
<v Speaker 1>I don't know how many times the Bucks beat the

0:21:13.480 --> 0:21:15.320
<v Speaker 1>Chiefs or the Chiefs beat the Bucks if they play

0:21:15.359 --> 0:21:19.720
<v Speaker 1>a hundred simulations, maybe it's fifty five, maybe it's I

0:21:19.800 --> 0:21:22.320
<v Speaker 1>don't know, but it didn't matter because they played once

0:21:22.400 --> 0:21:25.680
<v Speaker 1>in one game that matters. And so for the Dolphin,

0:21:25.960 --> 0:21:30.440
<v Speaker 1>it's not just addressing the needs. It's not just elevation

0:21:30.440 --> 0:21:32.920
<v Speaker 1>of quarterback play from two and next year. It's also

0:21:32.960 --> 0:21:35.800
<v Speaker 1>that you've got layers of depth because it's the ultimate

0:21:35.800 --> 0:21:38.520
<v Speaker 1>team building sport. And if you've got the layers of depth,

0:21:38.680 --> 0:21:41.760
<v Speaker 1>you've got a chance. Yeah, exactly right, especially when you

0:21:41.800 --> 0:21:44.159
<v Speaker 1>when you think about the the you know, coaching up

0:21:44.160 --> 0:21:46.080
<v Speaker 1>a scheme or or developing a scheme for a certain

0:21:46.080 --> 0:21:47.439
<v Speaker 1>game plan. We saw that with the Bucks in that

0:21:47.480 --> 0:21:49.680
<v Speaker 1>game and Todd Bowls and the fantastic job he did

0:21:49.920 --> 0:21:51.600
<v Speaker 1>in that game. I want to ask you one more

0:21:51.600 --> 0:21:53.800
<v Speaker 1>thing here, Field with regards to the roster building idea,

0:21:53.840 --> 0:21:56.800
<v Speaker 1>because I'm curious and it pertains to the idea of,

0:21:56.840 --> 0:21:59.240
<v Speaker 1>you know, having a multi year snapshot as far as

0:21:59.280 --> 0:22:01.199
<v Speaker 1>how you build a full ball team. And maybe this

0:22:01.240 --> 0:22:03.000
<v Speaker 1>is back to more of a general question for you.

0:22:03.040 --> 0:22:06.080
<v Speaker 1>Since you are plugged into all thirty two franchises. You know,

0:22:06.320 --> 0:22:08.479
<v Speaker 1>we're in year three hour or approaching your number three

0:22:08.520 --> 0:22:10.679
<v Speaker 1>here with Brian Floors and Chris Career. Is there a

0:22:10.680 --> 0:22:13.879
<v Speaker 1>certain point in an organization where whether it's the timeline

0:22:13.880 --> 0:22:17.320
<v Speaker 1>of the rookie quarterback contractor the third year of the process,

0:22:17.359 --> 0:22:19.600
<v Speaker 1>fourth year of the process, where you switch and say,

0:22:19.880 --> 0:22:22.159
<v Speaker 1>now maybe it's not so much about acquiring all that

0:22:22.280 --> 0:22:24.679
<v Speaker 1>draft capital. Maybe we turn the wheel a little bit

0:22:24.680 --> 0:22:27.200
<v Speaker 1>now and we get aggressive, like, for instance, the best

0:22:27.240 --> 0:22:29.640
<v Speaker 1>example for me is Los Angeles Rams and this goes

0:22:29.680 --> 0:22:31.880
<v Speaker 1>back to before these recent trades, and they'll go out

0:22:31.880 --> 0:22:33.840
<v Speaker 1>and get Brandon Cooks or a key to leave. Is

0:22:33.840 --> 0:22:36.040
<v Speaker 1>there a point in the franchise where you say, okay,

0:22:36.080 --> 0:22:39.440
<v Speaker 1>now we're ready to twist the screws and be more aggressive.

0:22:40.280 --> 0:22:43.000
<v Speaker 1>I don't think so, only because you know, here's how

0:22:43.080 --> 0:22:47.840
<v Speaker 1>it's said. It's not based off of the year. It's

0:22:47.840 --> 0:22:51.560
<v Speaker 1>based off of the quarterbacks readiness. Right, So for the

0:22:51.680 --> 0:22:54.240
<v Speaker 1>Chiefs just to go back to them for a second,

0:22:54.800 --> 0:22:57.919
<v Speaker 1>their quarterbacks proved in year two he was ready to

0:22:57.960 --> 0:23:02.760
<v Speaker 1>be a league altering player. So a year after after

0:23:02.840 --> 0:23:06.960
<v Speaker 1>the Chiefs they lost in the h championship game that year, well,

0:23:06.960 --> 0:23:08.600
<v Speaker 1>they're gonna go out there and they're gonna they're gonna

0:23:08.640 --> 0:23:10.920
<v Speaker 1>take some big swings now, right because they know they can.

0:23:11.440 --> 0:23:15.280
<v Speaker 1>They acquired Frank Clark as an example trade for a

0:23:15.400 --> 0:23:17.919
<v Speaker 1>trade for the Seattle Seahawks. Those are the kind of

0:23:17.920 --> 0:23:19.880
<v Speaker 1>things you do because you're like, you know what, let's

0:23:19.920 --> 0:23:21.879
<v Speaker 1>do it. Our quarterback is ready to do it, and

0:23:22.000 --> 0:23:23.919
<v Speaker 1>that might be the difference between us winning and losing.

0:23:24.760 --> 0:23:28.840
<v Speaker 1>But conversely, if your quarterback is not there by year two,

0:23:28.880 --> 0:23:31.440
<v Speaker 1>you might need to keep waiting. I will say this though,

0:23:32.080 --> 0:23:37.399
<v Speaker 1>if your quarterback proves that he's ready during the first

0:23:37.400 --> 0:23:41.119
<v Speaker 1>three seasons of his rookie contract, you start thinking about it.

0:23:41.119 --> 0:23:43.680
<v Speaker 1>The only thing, it's just a financial thing. It just is.

0:23:44.280 --> 0:23:48.720
<v Speaker 1>Quarterbacks becomes extension eligible after year three. Usually a team

0:23:48.800 --> 0:23:52.480
<v Speaker 1>is motivated to extend the player if he is worthwhile

0:23:52.600 --> 0:23:55.600
<v Speaker 1>an extension already. Unquestionably after year three. There are some

0:23:55.640 --> 0:23:58.800
<v Speaker 1>advantages to both five. So if you have a quarterback

0:23:58.840 --> 0:24:01.000
<v Speaker 1>that shows he's ready been the first three years in

0:24:01.040 --> 0:24:03.359
<v Speaker 1>the contract, the wheel does turn a little bit. To

0:24:03.400 --> 0:24:06.320
<v Speaker 1>borrow your pleas, yeah, yes, and it's certainly easier when

0:24:06.320 --> 0:24:08.320
<v Speaker 1>those draft picks come in the late twenties too, opposed

0:24:08.400 --> 0:24:10.200
<v Speaker 1>to you know, like you mentioned, having the third pick

0:24:10.200 --> 0:24:12.359
<v Speaker 1>in the draft this year, definitely a benefit hopefully an

0:24:12.400 --> 0:24:14.760
<v Speaker 1>area of the Dolphins not picking in very very often

0:24:14.840 --> 0:24:17.520
<v Speaker 1>for very long here under Brian Floors and Chris career Field,

0:24:17.600 --> 0:24:20.119
<v Speaker 1>Yates he's at Field Dates on Twitter, the host of

0:24:20.119 --> 0:24:24.320
<v Speaker 1>the fantasy focused football podcast NFL Insider at ESPN, and

0:24:24.359 --> 0:24:26.879
<v Speaker 1>the best dance Senior Bowl anchor in the game Field.

0:24:26.920 --> 0:24:28.920
<v Speaker 1>I appreciate your time today, man. If you've got to

0:24:28.920 --> 0:24:31.240
<v Speaker 1>get back on the peloton, I understand, but I appreciate

0:24:31.240 --> 0:24:35.040
<v Speaker 1>your time today, sir. I live. I love that that peloton, man,

0:24:35.080 --> 0:24:37.960
<v Speaker 1>that thing is awesome. So I appreciate you. And that's

0:24:37.960 --> 0:24:40.359
<v Speaker 1>the luster in the off season. And hope catch up

0:24:40.359 --> 0:24:42.840
<v Speaker 1>again sometimes here soon sounds good. Feel appreciate it, man,

0:24:43.480 --> 0:24:46.440
<v Speaker 1>all right, and there he goes. Man, how great was that?

0:24:46.480 --> 0:24:48.960
<v Speaker 1>Just some good nuggets there about not just the Dolphins,

0:24:48.960 --> 0:24:51.520
<v Speaker 1>but the league in general. Some really good insight there

0:24:51.520 --> 0:24:53.560
<v Speaker 1>into how things kind of operate this time of year.

0:24:53.800 --> 0:24:56.040
<v Speaker 1>I've said it before in the podcast, the off seasons

0:24:56.080 --> 0:24:58.760
<v Speaker 1>kind of where you know, a fan like myself lives

0:24:58.800 --> 0:25:00.760
<v Speaker 1>because you get a chance to to play with the

0:25:00.800 --> 0:25:02.800
<v Speaker 1>scenarios and it's not so black and white like a

0:25:02.880 --> 0:25:05.879
<v Speaker 1>result on game day. There's so many different simulations and

0:25:06.000 --> 0:25:08.919
<v Speaker 1>permutations you can operate with and mock drafts and and

0:25:08.920 --> 0:25:10.919
<v Speaker 1>if you guys are a fan of of doing the

0:25:11.000 --> 0:25:13.920
<v Speaker 1>mock drafts, like the Draft Network stuff. Also check out

0:25:13.960 --> 0:25:16.960
<v Speaker 1>fans Speaks mock off season simulator. A lot of fun

0:25:17.000 --> 0:25:18.960
<v Speaker 1>you can have there with giving out players contracts and

0:25:18.960 --> 0:25:21.159
<v Speaker 1>stuff like that. Just a lot of fun to participate

0:25:21.359 --> 0:25:23.400
<v Speaker 1>as a fan this time year. Put the GM head

0:25:23.440 --> 0:25:25.560
<v Speaker 1>on as we trust Brian Floors and Chris we are

0:25:25.640 --> 0:25:28.440
<v Speaker 1>to build this Dolphins team to their vision and continue

0:25:28.440 --> 0:25:31.720
<v Speaker 1>that trajectory they are on. So Field Yates ESPN check

0:25:31.760 --> 0:25:34.520
<v Speaker 1>out his work. He's a great follow, a great fantasy

0:25:34.520 --> 0:25:36.920
<v Speaker 1>football expert, a great insider. Plenty of great stuff to

0:25:36.960 --> 0:25:39.479
<v Speaker 1>say about Field here on the podcast. As for this

0:25:39.640 --> 0:25:42.480
<v Speaker 1>edition of the Drive Time podcast, that is going to

0:25:42.520 --> 0:25:45.679
<v Speaker 1>be my time you all, please be sure to subscribe,

0:25:45.840 --> 0:25:49.720
<v Speaker 1>rate review, follow me on Twitter at Wingfield NFL, follow

0:25:49.760 --> 0:25:52.440
<v Speaker 1>the team at Miami Dolphins, check out the Fish Tank

0:25:52.520 --> 0:25:56.160
<v Speaker 1>and the Audible podcast, and of course Miami Dolphins dot com.

0:25:56.400 --> 0:25:58.439
<v Speaker 1>And until next time, fins up.