WEBVTT - Drive Time: Dolphins Jets All 22 Review

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<v Speaker 1>Drive Time with Travis Wingfield begins. Now let me check

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<v Speaker 1>what is up Dolphins And welcome to the Draft Time Podcast,

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<v Speaker 1>part of the Miami Dolphins podcast network, covering your team,

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<v Speaker 1>your Miami Dolphins. How's it going everybody? I am your host,

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<v Speaker 1>Travis Winfield. And on today's show, it's the film review episode,

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<v Speaker 1>the Autopsy from the game looking at the Jets corpse.

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<v Speaker 1>In this one, the tape has been grinded, grounded, ground,

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<v Speaker 1>The numbers are up, the big plays are broken down,

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<v Speaker 1>the top five tapes have been decided. We go under

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<v Speaker 1>the microscope for the Dolphins thirty four the Jets thirteen

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<v Speaker 1>from the Baptist Health Studios inside the Baptist Health Training Complex.

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<v Speaker 1>This is the Draft Time podcast.

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<v Speaker 2>Ye gaffs.

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<v Speaker 1>First, we start with the big play breakdowns, as we

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<v Speaker 1>do each week here on the Monday All twenty two

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<v Speaker 1>review podcast, and we start with the what's it like

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<v Speaker 1>the fifth play of the game, the fourth play of

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<v Speaker 1>the game. It's a deep shot the Tyreek hill in

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<v Speaker 1>the first quarter with eleven twenty one to play, So

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<v Speaker 1>Dolphins third play offensively of the day, third and eight.

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<v Speaker 1>And I think this play. The reason I start with

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<v Speaker 1>it is I think it's super instructive going forward for

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<v Speaker 1>this Dolphins team. And here's why I think it's so

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<v Speaker 1>massive that this and a later play to Jalen Waddle

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<v Speaker 1>are now on tape for the Dolphins offense as recently

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<v Speaker 1>as Week twelve. So it starts off third and eight,

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<v Speaker 1>a three by one set, and the Jets are in

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<v Speaker 1>pressed man across the board with a middle of the

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<v Speaker 1>field safety who his only intention after the snap, based

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<v Speaker 1>upon his body position and really just his disposition in general,

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<v Speaker 1>is to squat on and wall off Waddle, who is

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<v Speaker 1>the three to the field, which means he's the furthest

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<v Speaker 1>inside closest to your right tackle, no, your left tackle.

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<v Speaker 1>On this play to the wide side of the field,

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<v Speaker 1>he's preventing the crossing route, the deep over plays that

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<v Speaker 1>we hit explosives on all the time, with another linebacker

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<v Speaker 1>who's taking away the running backs two way go. So

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<v Speaker 1>what this means is you have some receips who are

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<v Speaker 1>one on one and Tyreek is one of those guys

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<v Speaker 1>who has a one on one matchup as the two

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<v Speaker 1>to the field. So Jalen's the three inside, Tyreek's the next,

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<v Speaker 1>and then Braxton is the one out furthest he also

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<v Speaker 1>has a one on one. So if you're gonna play

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<v Speaker 1>that coverage, the ball has to go along to Tyreek.

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<v Speaker 1>It just absolutely has to. Most teams don't do this because, well,

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<v Speaker 1>you've seen what happens when they do it. We hit

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<v Speaker 1>thirty plus yard plays most of the time, we hit

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<v Speaker 1>sixty plus yard touchdowns. When that happens, we usually beat it.

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<v Speaker 1>And we did it again right here. But against this

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<v Speaker 1>defense that can really disrupt. They know that our bread

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<v Speaker 1>and butter has been the middle of the field passing game,

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<v Speaker 1>the intermediate passing game, and that's what they're doing, trusting

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<v Speaker 1>that they can bracket the two way goes, press and

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<v Speaker 1>disrupt the one way goes and get home with their

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<v Speaker 1>four man rush. Because Tua has been dotting these vertical

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<v Speaker 1>shots right in the bucket. You just can't cover that.

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<v Speaker 1>So you have no good solution. And what does McDaniel

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<v Speaker 1>always say, if they take something away, it opens up

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<v Speaker 1>something else. So, because we've been so damn good the

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<v Speaker 1>last two years hitting those in breakers and chunk gains,

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<v Speaker 1>take that away, we have to hit verticals. So Reek

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<v Speaker 1>or rather DJ Reid I should say, is in pretty

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<v Speaker 1>good shape on this play. But Tua throws this thing

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<v Speaker 1>with one hitch timing, perfect footwork. Lets it go with

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<v Speaker 1>Tyreek two yards in front of DJ Reid. That's two

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<v Speaker 1>yards before the old he's even he's leaving saying at

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<v Speaker 1>the thirty three yard line, and Reek catches it. Now

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<v Speaker 1>just one yard beyond DJ Reid at the other forty

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<v Speaker 1>six that's twenty five air yards. It's an inch away

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<v Speaker 1>from a seventy two yard touchdown. I think that Reid

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<v Speaker 1>got lucky on the tackle. Quite personally. That's a game changer, man.

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<v Speaker 1>I'm so glad it's on tape now and it shows

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<v Speaker 1>up again in the beginning of the second half. And

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<v Speaker 1>allow me to tell you why this one is even better.

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<v Speaker 1>So quarter three, fourteen oh four to play, third and

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<v Speaker 1>three deep shot to Wattleford. I think it was thirty

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<v Speaker 1>five yards on the play, So they walled off the

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<v Speaker 1>cross for the first time. Right from that press man

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<v Speaker 1>free liow single high free safety press coverage across the board.

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<v Speaker 1>Try and get disruption on the routes in the beginning,

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<v Speaker 1>try and take away the hot routes and the quick

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<v Speaker 1>answers to a potential pressure look and get home with

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<v Speaker 1>your front four. But now they're going to go zero

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<v Speaker 1>to the field. Last time it was zero to the boundary.

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<v Speaker 1>Now they're zero to the field, and they bring that

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<v Speaker 1>safety over to the boundary because guess who's there, Tyreek Hill.

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<v Speaker 1>We can't let Tyreek Hill get vertical on us here.

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<v Speaker 1>And this is why it's so nice to have two

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<v Speaker 1>number one wide receivers. This time DJ Reid has press

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<v Speaker 1>and he has help, so the short stuff to him

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<v Speaker 1>is out. Reid's gonna squat and play short and let

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<v Speaker 1>him get on top vertically. Probably not gonna throw vertically

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<v Speaker 1>because he does have a help up top. But you're

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<v Speaker 1>gonna beat that bracket before. But against this look, it's

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<v Speaker 1>not bracket. It's more trail and funnel, so which you know,

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<v Speaker 1>play under funnel to the deep stuff. Bracket is inside outside.

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<v Speaker 1>Don't let him get, you know, either leverage on you.

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<v Speaker 1>So for now you have Sauce Gardner against Jalen Waddle,

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<v Speaker 1>who is a better player. So Sauce tries to mirror

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<v Speaker 1>while but he can't run with seventeen, So it's just

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<v Speaker 1>straight gas off the line of scrimmage for the fade

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<v Speaker 1>where you're evenly split between the numbers and the hash

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<v Speaker 1>mark on your pre snap alignment, and then you catch

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<v Speaker 1>the football outside the number, so you kind of give

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<v Speaker 1>yourself all that space to operate with and fade away

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<v Speaker 1>from the inside leverage of the defensive back. And again

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<v Speaker 1>Tua lets this thing go and wattles at his own

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<v Speaker 1>thirty seven and he makes the catch at the other

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<v Speaker 1>forty one. That's twenty four yards of anticipation with trajectory

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<v Speaker 1>under the football, and he couldn't have walked that thing

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<v Speaker 1>down there and placed it any better. Plus Wattle survives

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<v Speaker 1>contact and the ground with the catch. That is him,

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<v Speaker 1>that is in fact him does me. The next big

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<v Speaker 1>play is a thirty four yard touchdown scamper from Raheem

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<v Speaker 1>Moster in the fourth quarter with four minutes to play.

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<v Speaker 1>I don't have a profound breakdown here on this one.

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<v Speaker 1>It's a hat on a hat, Liam's connected, Lester gets connected,

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<v Speaker 1>Smyth widens a gap with his block, Lamb holds a seal,

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<v Speaker 1>Connor gets a two piece, a catch and climb, and

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<v Speaker 1>then it's patients, good track and vision and speed to

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<v Speaker 1>daylight from Raheem Mostert. You spent fifty six minutes asserting

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<v Speaker 1>your will on this front, and this was you breaking

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<v Speaker 1>them down and putting the dagger in their proverbial chest.

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<v Speaker 1>Good stuff, good night. And then finally the defensive play.

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<v Speaker 1>What else would it besides the haland pick six. We've

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<v Speaker 1>been over this at length so far, but Holland the catch.

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<v Speaker 1>Phillips comes flying back into the frame downfield to help

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<v Speaker 1>ensure that Javon does not get tripped up at his

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<v Speaker 1>own thirty yard line. And then we've discussed Christian Wilkins'

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<v Speaker 1>twelve yard drive block puts Bresee Hall's back onto the

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<v Speaker 1>turf at Metlive Stadium. Bradley Chubb gets a key block,

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<v Speaker 1>Jerome Baker gets two critical key blocks. Cam Smith comes

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<v Speaker 1>flying back into the frame so as Nick need him,

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<v Speaker 1>and then Javon Hall with that move on Timmy boyle

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<v Speaker 1>Coyle McPoyle six, game changer, good night, put it in

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<v Speaker 1>the books. Let's go ahead and talk about the top

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<v Speaker 1>five tapes, though. First here number one, Jalen Phillips gets

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<v Speaker 1>the first tap of the night. We're gonna miss this guy. Man,

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<v Speaker 1>he was playing so good, so effective, so powerful, so inspired,

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<v Speaker 1>and we're gonna miss him because they tried to crack him.

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<v Speaker 1>Opening play. What does he do, just takes the receiver

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<v Speaker 1>out wide and basically forces him all the way to

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<v Speaker 1>the perimeter and then just chucks him and gets back

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<v Speaker 1>inside and gets in on the play. He then later on,

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<v Speaker 1>like a couple of plays later, absorbs a kickout block,

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<v Speaker 1>climbs over with a little swim move for a tackle

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<v Speaker 1>for loss the next drive. The first play they try

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<v Speaker 1>to block him with the tight end, just dispatch him

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<v Speaker 1>in two tenths of a second rather and then he

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<v Speaker 1>just sprints to the quarterback and man the closing speed

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<v Speaker 1>he had to the quarterback on that play, I'm not

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<v Speaker 1>sure I've seen a faster edge in football. It's a

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<v Speaker 1>blur how quick he was moving. I still think the

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<v Speaker 1>blind flip that Tim Boyle had on that play should

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<v Speaker 1>constitute as grounding because the spirit of the rule is

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<v Speaker 1>you shouldn't just get to kind of ground the football,

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<v Speaker 1>and he wasn't. He didn't know what he was doing.

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<v Speaker 1>He should have paid for that mistake. And also if

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<v Speaker 1>you watch it, like JP for sure pulled up on

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<v Speaker 1>that because if he just ran through the sack, he

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<v Speaker 1>probably has the same roughing the passer call got on

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<v Speaker 1>Herbert last year. But if he does that, he might

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<v Speaker 1>bulldoze Boil into a forced fumble. And a touchdown there

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<v Speaker 1>for the Dolphins. So I understand why he did it,

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<v Speaker 1>but man, football, Yeah, bring back hitting quarterbacks. Man, That's

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<v Speaker 1>how I feel about it. But then the very next play,

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<v Speaker 1>a very next possession, I should say, he chases the

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<v Speaker 1>play away from him on that dropped pitch for a

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<v Speaker 1>six yard TfL like he shouldn't have been on that play.

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<v Speaker 1>The very next series, he makes the right tackle look

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<v Speaker 1>like tight end and just runs through him and then

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<v Speaker 1>swats a pass. He was doing this all night long.

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<v Speaker 1>What a game for Jalen Phillips. We'll see him again

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<v Speaker 1>next year, but man, we are gonna miss that guy.

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<v Speaker 1>He gets the top tape of the game in his

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<v Speaker 1>last game in twenty twenty three. Our second best tape

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<v Speaker 1>goes to another Jalen, Jalen Waddle. And this was almost

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<v Speaker 1>some fore shouting from last week when I told you

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<v Speaker 1>guys that he was in the top five tapes after

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<v Speaker 1>having a four for fifty four day. Because this dude's

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<v Speaker 1>playing his ass off right now, and what a time

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<v Speaker 1>to have him kind of accelerate into twenty twenty two

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<v Speaker 1>version of Jalen Waddle. First of all, the physicality is

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<v Speaker 1>all the way back I'm not saying it wasn't before,

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<v Speaker 1>but I think the accumulated injuries kind of the slow

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<v Speaker 1>ease back in approach. They had had to have had

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<v Speaker 1>a little bit of an impact, a physical run to

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<v Speaker 1>drop his shoulder and run through a man on the

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<v Speaker 1>opening pop pass that he got this little set hut

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<v Speaker 1>catch the football, pop it forward to Wattle on the

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<v Speaker 1>jet sweep and he goes off the edge, drops the shoulder,

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<v Speaker 1>runs through a tackler. The next play is a now

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<v Speaker 1>screen and Tyreek gets the football and he gets one

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<v Speaker 1>Jets defender to the ground and then completely seals off

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<v Speaker 1>a second comes off the block, flexing like he does.

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<v Speaker 1>This me mention the love of the game routes. Right

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<v Speaker 1>that Durham ten yard catch on the second drive, the

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<v Speaker 1>boundary safety is again squatting and walling off the front

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<v Speaker 1>side cross or that was their entire game plan, which

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<v Speaker 1>the Jets game plan was strange to begin with, because

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<v Speaker 1>they played light fronts against this under man Dolphins interior

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<v Speaker 1>offensive lineman or offensive line should say and just only

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<v Speaker 1>we're concerned about crossing routes where they didn't realize that

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<v Speaker 1>and probably watching Stephen A. Smith and Stephen Ruiz and

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<v Speaker 1>all these guys, non Dolphins fans on Twitter who think

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<v Speaker 1>that Tua cannot throw the ball to the perimeter. Maybe

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<v Speaker 1>he's listening to that stuff. I don't know, but the

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<v Speaker 1>game plan was very generic in that sense. But the

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<v Speaker 1>Dolphins responded to how to take advantage of the overplay.

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<v Speaker 1>So Waddle on this play takes the inside release and

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<v Speaker 1>presses his stem. So your stem is like how you

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<v Speaker 1>get vertical, how you get up the field. He presses

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<v Speaker 1>this thing right at the safety and it causes some indecision,

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<v Speaker 1>but also forces a natural pick where he has to

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<v Speaker 1>climb over the top of that. That's being a great teammate,

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<v Speaker 1>that's giving great effort. That's winning football. On the nine

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<v Speaker 1>minute drive, week converted a third down in a pop

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<v Speaker 1>pass at Tyreek and Waddle once again drove his corner

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<v Speaker 1>off the edge eight yards, then flexed again to his sideline.

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<v Speaker 1>And that's not even talking about the catches he made.

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<v Speaker 1>He had fourteen point three yards per target. He had

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<v Speaker 1>four point h seven yards per route ran. That's insane

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<v Speaker 1>levels of production. In fact, he and Tyreek had the

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<v Speaker 1>highest combined YPPR by two teammates in a game this

0:10:55.320 --> 0:10:59.040
<v Speaker 1>season since Week one. When they did it against the Chargers.

0:10:59.040 --> 0:11:01.640
<v Speaker 1>So just thirty six of his one hundred and fourteen

0:11:01.720 --> 0:11:04.760
<v Speaker 1>yards where yak he caught the football, he got speed

0:11:04.800 --> 0:11:07.160
<v Speaker 1>down the field, he blought, he did everything in this game.

0:11:07.400 --> 0:11:10.080
<v Speaker 1>Jalen Waddle your second best tape. Your third best tape

0:11:10.120 --> 0:11:12.719
<v Speaker 1>is another Jade name, but it's Javon Jalen Jalen, and

0:11:12.760 --> 0:11:15.160
<v Speaker 1>Javon sounds like a jam band. It starts with the

0:11:15.160 --> 0:11:18.200
<v Speaker 1>pick six, obviously completely change the complexion of the game,

0:11:18.240 --> 0:11:22.440
<v Speaker 1>a defleeting moment, defleeting, deflating moment for the opposition. But

0:11:22.559 --> 0:11:26.080
<v Speaker 1>throughout the game you just see the secondary constantly shifting

0:11:26.120 --> 0:11:29.120
<v Speaker 1>in unison, a ton of pre snap communication where he's

0:11:29.160 --> 0:11:31.720
<v Speaker 1>the one barking out the orders, the way he closes

0:11:31.800 --> 0:11:34.000
<v Speaker 1>down on routes at the top of the stem to

0:11:34.080 --> 0:11:37.079
<v Speaker 1>take away options for the quarterback to get him off

0:11:37.120 --> 0:11:39.520
<v Speaker 1>that read, to mess up the timing of the passing

0:11:39.559 --> 0:11:42.680
<v Speaker 1>game and create another third three tenths of a second

0:11:42.679 --> 0:11:44.959
<v Speaker 1>for your pass rush. And that's all this front needs.

0:11:45.080 --> 0:11:47.600
<v Speaker 1>It's why I was so adamant that just a little

0:11:47.640 --> 0:11:50.720
<v Speaker 1>bit more cornerback help and they go get Jaalen Ramsey

0:11:50.880 --> 0:11:53.240
<v Speaker 1>would help this pass rush so much. And you're seeing

0:11:53.280 --> 0:11:55.959
<v Speaker 1>why because the back end is good. It's just when

0:11:56.000 --> 0:11:58.040
<v Speaker 1>you had one week spot, the quarterback new where to

0:11:58.080 --> 0:11:59.679
<v Speaker 1>go with it and they could take advantage of it.

0:11:59.679 --> 0:12:01.720
<v Speaker 1>In the past, fast rush suffered as a result, but

0:12:02.720 --> 0:12:05.800
<v Speaker 1>rather Holland's coverage ability. He came from depth and shut

0:12:05.840 --> 0:12:08.120
<v Speaker 1>down one run the sea gap that was super impressive

0:12:08.120 --> 0:12:11.440
<v Speaker 1>with an open field tackle. He's having a phenomenal year

0:12:11.800 --> 0:12:14.600
<v Speaker 1>and it's the plays he makes that mostly occur where

0:12:14.640 --> 0:12:17.080
<v Speaker 1>the ball doesn't even go towards him. So it's tough

0:12:17.080 --> 0:12:20.000
<v Speaker 1>to notice if you're just watching the broadcast one time,

0:12:20.440 --> 0:12:22.200
<v Speaker 1>or if you have soup in your brains. Now, I'm

0:12:22.200 --> 0:12:24.880
<v Speaker 1>just kidding, that's that's a cheap shot. But most people

0:12:24.920 --> 0:12:26.800
<v Speaker 1>watching football don't really know what they're watching, right, Like

0:12:26.800 --> 0:12:28.360
<v Speaker 1>he don't know concepts, you don't know coverages, you don't

0:12:28.360 --> 0:12:30.040
<v Speaker 1>know how those things attack each other. So when you

0:12:30.080 --> 0:12:32.000
<v Speaker 1>watch him, maybe you don't see that impact, but on

0:12:32.120 --> 0:12:36.280
<v Speaker 1>tape it pops every single week. Number four Christian Wilkins,

0:12:36.400 --> 0:12:40.000
<v Speaker 1>when he's really taking his game to the next level.

0:12:40.000 --> 0:12:42.520
<v Speaker 1>To me, where he has is the marriage between the

0:12:42.559 --> 0:12:45.040
<v Speaker 1>moves and the quickness with his hands because he times

0:12:45.120 --> 0:12:47.920
<v Speaker 1>up his punches and the placement at the exact same time,

0:12:48.240 --> 0:12:51.720
<v Speaker 1>and those two things working in unison. It's like how

0:12:52.120 --> 0:12:54.880
<v Speaker 1>mechanics work, right, It's like how an engine works. You

0:12:54.920 --> 0:12:58.920
<v Speaker 1>have two pistons firing and opposite, you know, revolutions, and

0:12:58.960 --> 0:13:02.199
<v Speaker 1>that's what creates the forward thrust. It's about creating momentum

0:13:02.520 --> 0:13:06.160
<v Speaker 1>and generating leverage. And Christian Wilkins is like a freaking

0:13:07.160 --> 0:13:09.280
<v Speaker 1>I don't know a Maserati. What's the best machine out there?

0:13:09.280 --> 0:13:12.120
<v Speaker 1>I don't know cars. But he the way he times

0:13:12.160 --> 0:13:14.920
<v Speaker 1>up his punches in the placement, it pairs up with

0:13:14.960 --> 0:13:18.600
<v Speaker 1>these hesitation steps, these crossover steps, the lateral agility he

0:13:18.679 --> 0:13:21.480
<v Speaker 1>has because his first sack, he starts his rush towards

0:13:21.559 --> 0:13:24.160
<v Speaker 1>the B gap. He's a two technique head up over

0:13:24.200 --> 0:13:26.800
<v Speaker 1>the right guard, and he starts his rush towards the

0:13:26.840 --> 0:13:29.720
<v Speaker 1>B gap, which is the gap off of the right

0:13:29.760 --> 0:13:33.480
<v Speaker 1>guard's right shoulder right wider around to the quarterback, and

0:13:33.520 --> 0:13:36.679
<v Speaker 1>this forces him to overset. But because he locked in

0:13:36.720 --> 0:13:39.640
<v Speaker 1>his right hand on the middle chest plate, the minute

0:13:39.640 --> 0:13:42.880
<v Speaker 1>he tries to generate force back the other way to

0:13:42.960 --> 0:13:45.760
<v Speaker 1>the A gap back inside, the guard tries to run

0:13:45.800 --> 0:13:48.560
<v Speaker 1>with him, but he's already pinned him in that place

0:13:48.880 --> 0:13:51.120
<v Speaker 1>with his hand on the chest plate, and then he

0:13:51.160 --> 0:13:53.560
<v Speaker 1>can use that left leg to cross over step and

0:13:53.559 --> 0:13:55.600
<v Speaker 1>then it gives him a free run to the quarterback

0:13:55.640 --> 0:13:57.679
<v Speaker 1>and from there he's got one of the best ten

0:13:57.760 --> 0:14:01.679
<v Speaker 1>splits among defensive tackles. So you're talking out a tremendous,

0:14:01.800 --> 0:14:07.319
<v Speaker 1>absolutely tremendous technician who has a first round skill set athletically,

0:14:07.679 --> 0:14:10.640
<v Speaker 1>and then he also has the desire of an undrafted

0:14:10.720 --> 0:14:13.800
<v Speaker 1>rookie free agent trying to make a team. You see

0:14:13.800 --> 0:14:16.400
<v Speaker 1>that on the retrace against the Raiders to cut Hunter

0:14:16.480 --> 0:14:19.080
<v Speaker 1>renfro down thirty five yards down the field, on the

0:14:19.120 --> 0:14:21.880
<v Speaker 1>block on Javon Hollins's pick, driving a running back twelve

0:14:21.960 --> 0:14:24.320
<v Speaker 1>yards down the field for a key spring for a

0:14:24.360 --> 0:14:27.200
<v Speaker 1>touchdown run. There the unbridled joy when he makes a

0:14:27.240 --> 0:14:30.200
<v Speaker 1>play or his teammate makes a play. What a freaking

0:14:30.200 --> 0:14:32.560
<v Speaker 1>player this guy is. He's one of the best Dolphins

0:14:32.600 --> 0:14:35.080
<v Speaker 1>we've had in a long, long time. Three pressures, two stops,

0:14:35.080 --> 0:14:37.680
<v Speaker 1>two sacks, six and a half sacks is a career high.

0:14:37.800 --> 0:14:40.080
<v Speaker 1>Connor Williams is my fifth best tape of the game.

0:14:40.280 --> 0:14:42.320
<v Speaker 1>I never get sick of watching this guy run from

0:14:42.320 --> 0:14:45.840
<v Speaker 1>the far hash to the opposite numbers twenty yards downfield

0:14:46.040 --> 0:14:48.360
<v Speaker 1>and squaring up a block like he's going against a

0:14:48.400 --> 0:14:51.600
<v Speaker 1>guard who's half yard away from him. The accuracy of

0:14:51.640 --> 0:14:55.080
<v Speaker 1>that is it's like Tua throwing deep balls, like he

0:14:55.160 --> 0:14:57.360
<v Speaker 1>puts it right where it has to be right. I've

0:14:57.400 --> 0:15:00.680
<v Speaker 1>never seen an offensive lineman with his control and open space.

0:15:00.760 --> 0:15:04.040
<v Speaker 1>It's so awesome to watch on the end zone copy

0:15:04.040 --> 0:15:05.960
<v Speaker 1>of the All twenty two. And then when you paired

0:15:06.000 --> 0:15:08.160
<v Speaker 1>that with his power in a phone booth, like he

0:15:08.320 --> 0:15:11.280
<v Speaker 1>handled these dudes, Quinn Williams, no chance, John Frankly Meyers,

0:15:11.320 --> 0:15:13.680
<v Speaker 1>come on inside and get your butt kicked. It didn't matter.

0:15:13.920 --> 0:15:16.520
<v Speaker 1>He's on a heater right now, playing maybe the best

0:15:16.520 --> 0:15:18.720
<v Speaker 1>we've seen of him so far in his two years here.

0:15:18.760 --> 0:15:21.720
<v Speaker 1>And that's crazy to say because the standard from him

0:15:22.080 --> 0:15:25.080
<v Speaker 1>from the word go. Last year was a top five

0:15:25.200 --> 0:15:28.360
<v Speaker 1>center in the National Football League. One pressure allowed, it

0:15:28.400 --> 0:15:30.360
<v Speaker 1>was a sack, his first of the year. But he

0:15:30.400 --> 0:15:32.720
<v Speaker 1>did work in the running game all game long, critical

0:15:32.800 --> 0:15:37.560
<v Speaker 1>first and second level of blocks on so many key runs. Close,

0:15:37.600 --> 0:15:40.120
<v Speaker 1>but no cigar for the tapes this week. Tyreek was

0:15:40.160 --> 0:15:42.160
<v Speaker 1>in there, but I wanted to go waddle because I

0:15:42.200 --> 0:15:43.920
<v Speaker 1>thought that his effort on the running game was just

0:15:43.920 --> 0:15:47.480
<v Speaker 1>a little bit better. Tuas also in there. He's close

0:15:47.520 --> 0:15:49.560
<v Speaker 1>to the top tape, if not for the pick six.

0:15:49.640 --> 0:15:52.160
<v Speaker 1>Quite frankly, I'll tell you about the other pick here

0:15:52.160 --> 0:15:54.360
<v Speaker 1>in a minute. Alec Ingold was also in there, where

0:15:54.400 --> 0:15:57.160
<v Speaker 1>he moster also was close. I had the entire wide

0:15:57.200 --> 0:15:59.440
<v Speaker 1>receiver room as a mention because of their blocking alone.

0:16:00.000 --> 0:16:02.720
<v Speaker 1>Shout out to Headrick Wilson and River Craycraft. I also

0:16:02.800 --> 0:16:05.320
<v Speaker 1>put Xavier and Howard and Jerome Baker in there in

0:16:05.360 --> 0:16:08.160
<v Speaker 1>the close but no cigar category. That's our time for

0:16:08.200 --> 0:16:10.480
<v Speaker 1>our first break right there. Let's go ahead and come

0:16:10.520 --> 0:16:12.800
<v Speaker 1>back on the other side and do offensive notes and

0:16:12.840 --> 0:16:15.320
<v Speaker 1>defensive notes. We'll also talk about snap counts, and I

0:16:15.400 --> 0:16:18.520
<v Speaker 1>have a SoundBite from coach McDaniel. I think you want

0:16:18.520 --> 0:16:20.760
<v Speaker 1>to hear all that. Next Draft Time podcast, your host

0:16:20.800 --> 0:16:26.760
<v Speaker 1>Travis Wingfield, brought to you by Auto Nation. Let's go

0:16:26.800 --> 0:16:29.240
<v Speaker 1>ahead and kick off the offensive notes from the dolphins

0:16:29.240 --> 0:16:31.560
<v Speaker 1>thirty four to thirteen win over the New York Just

0:16:31.840 --> 0:16:35.080
<v Speaker 1>the stage with a gripe. My only real gripe aside

0:16:35.080 --> 0:16:37.320
<v Speaker 1>from the end of the first half was the first

0:16:37.360 --> 0:16:41.360
<v Speaker 1>half short yardage, particularly the throw to durham smythe before

0:16:41.400 --> 0:16:45.280
<v Speaker 1>the fourth and one field goal and first off, like, hey,

0:16:45.520 --> 0:16:48.200
<v Speaker 1>don't run from who you are, like, go for it.

0:16:48.240 --> 0:16:49.760
<v Speaker 1>Go for it on fourth and one. I get that

0:16:49.800 --> 0:16:51.680
<v Speaker 1>you want to get points there, especially against a team

0:16:51.720 --> 0:16:54.320
<v Speaker 1>like this, but man, you're gonna convert that. Go for

0:16:54.400 --> 0:16:57.160
<v Speaker 1>it right and also hand it off like Jeff Wilson

0:16:57.200 --> 0:16:58.720
<v Speaker 1>had a first down on a give there. But we

0:16:58.760 --> 0:17:01.120
<v Speaker 1>seem to get really alex he brained on some of

0:17:01.120 --> 0:17:04.159
<v Speaker 1>those spots consistently until we didn't late in the game.

0:17:04.359 --> 0:17:06.240
<v Speaker 1>But hopefully that's a sign of things to come. With

0:17:06.240 --> 0:17:08.440
<v Speaker 1>the throw of Eram Smile in that play, just bad

0:17:08.480 --> 0:17:10.600
<v Speaker 1>operation all around, and it really ticked me off at

0:17:10.600 --> 0:17:12.680
<v Speaker 1>the time and especially watching it back on the notes.

0:17:12.800 --> 0:17:15.360
<v Speaker 1>Let's go ahead and talk about t ton go by Loa.

0:17:15.400 --> 0:17:19.119
<v Speaker 1>Those two get man throws, man, like really really one throw.

0:17:19.880 --> 0:17:21.760
<v Speaker 1>The second one was the equivalent to a hell Mary.

0:17:21.920 --> 0:17:24.479
<v Speaker 1>I'll explain that here shortly, but you take away that

0:17:24.520 --> 0:17:28.439
<v Speaker 1>one really really really bad mistake, terrible throw, terrible decision,

0:17:28.520 --> 0:17:30.480
<v Speaker 1>terrible timing. In fact, i'll tell you why it was

0:17:30.560 --> 0:17:33.480
<v Speaker 1>a bad throw. But this is easily the best tape

0:17:33.480 --> 0:17:36.480
<v Speaker 1>against this Vauntage Jets defense aside from that throw. But

0:17:36.520 --> 0:17:38.800
<v Speaker 1>that throw still sticks to my freaking crawl. We did

0:17:38.800 --> 0:17:41.000
<v Speaker 1>the first deep shot breakdown in big plays, also the

0:17:41.000 --> 0:17:43.600
<v Speaker 1>second one to Waddle, But I thought t had Tyreek

0:17:43.720 --> 0:17:46.040
<v Speaker 1>on the third down before the fade drop on the

0:17:46.080 --> 0:17:48.399
<v Speaker 1>opening drive to the back corner of the end zone.

0:17:48.520 --> 0:17:51.800
<v Speaker 1>It's a bunch. Tyreek gets through the mess clean to

0:17:51.880 --> 0:17:55.040
<v Speaker 1>the corner route on the opposite side. The cornerback squats

0:17:55.280 --> 0:17:56.919
<v Speaker 1>and so we've seen two of make that throw a

0:17:56.920 --> 0:17:59.080
<v Speaker 1>million times working off the leverage. In fact, he makes

0:17:59.119 --> 0:18:01.880
<v Speaker 1>that same throw later in the game to Waddle on

0:18:02.000 --> 0:18:04.639
<v Speaker 1>a third down conversion. They hit where the ball kind

0:18:04.640 --> 0:18:05.920
<v Speaker 1>of hung up for a little bit, but he makes

0:18:05.920 --> 0:18:08.399
<v Speaker 1>a clutch catch. Similar type of leverage he threw against

0:18:08.480 --> 0:18:11.840
<v Speaker 1>on this potential non touchdown play here on the opening drive.

0:18:12.280 --> 0:18:13.960
<v Speaker 1>I don't know why he didn't go there. It was

0:18:14.040 --> 0:18:16.600
<v Speaker 1>condensed space of the boundary maybe that's why. But he

0:18:16.680 --> 0:18:19.000
<v Speaker 1>had a touchdown pass to Tyreek Hill on the play

0:18:19.040 --> 0:18:22.479
<v Speaker 1>before Tyreek Hill dropped the touchdown on the perfectly placed

0:18:22.720 --> 0:18:25.240
<v Speaker 1>fade ball. So Tua and Tyreek mistakes on back to

0:18:25.280 --> 0:18:27.720
<v Speaker 1>back plays to cost you six points. It's frustrating, but

0:18:27.760 --> 0:18:30.680
<v Speaker 1>sometimes that happens. My next note, though, came on third

0:18:30.680 --> 0:18:32.800
<v Speaker 1>and five at the start of the second quarter in

0:18:32.880 --> 0:18:34.760
<v Speaker 1>a three to nothing game where the Jets peel off

0:18:34.760 --> 0:18:38.600
<v Speaker 1>into cover two from press, so cornerbacks pressed up in

0:18:38.600 --> 0:18:40.040
<v Speaker 1>the face of the receiver. They're going to play the

0:18:40.080 --> 0:18:42.480
<v Speaker 1>short cloud area and you're going to have two deep

0:18:42.560 --> 0:18:45.679
<v Speaker 1>half field safeties up top. They played their rules and

0:18:45.800 --> 0:18:48.320
<v Speaker 1>expand from there as well as any defense we've watched

0:18:48.359 --> 0:18:50.800
<v Speaker 1>on taper I have, I should say, like, you see

0:18:50.800 --> 0:18:55.320
<v Speaker 1>both Sauce and Red feel the flat and there's nothing

0:18:55.320 --> 0:18:56.879
<v Speaker 1>going to happen in that flat, so they start to

0:18:56.880 --> 0:18:59.199
<v Speaker 1>get depth and that just expands their zone that they

0:18:59.240 --> 0:19:02.119
<v Speaker 1>can cover, and it's really impressive how they do it.

0:19:02.160 --> 0:19:04.520
<v Speaker 1>But for Tua, you know, Smyth and Barrios on this

0:19:04.560 --> 0:19:07.080
<v Speaker 1>third and five play, they go in and out from

0:19:07.080 --> 0:19:09.840
<v Speaker 1>this bunch. So then it gives Waddle a little glance

0:19:09.920 --> 0:19:12.280
<v Speaker 1>behind the hook zone, behind those linebackers that want to

0:19:12.359 --> 0:19:14.199
<v Speaker 1>you know, rob that part of the field and and

0:19:14.240 --> 0:19:16.800
<v Speaker 1>force the quarterback into a different look. But it's there.

0:19:17.080 --> 0:19:19.760
<v Speaker 1>But Tua has pressure, so he steps up and he

0:19:19.800 --> 0:19:22.320
<v Speaker 1>winds up flat footed, and he winds up dropping the

0:19:22.440 --> 0:19:24.879
<v Speaker 1>arm angle to like three quarter and puts the ball

0:19:25.119 --> 0:19:28.320
<v Speaker 1>right on Wattle right on time. At this stage, you're

0:19:28.440 --> 0:19:31.000
<v Speaker 1>sixteen minutes into the game so far, and you've seen

0:19:31.040 --> 0:19:34.080
<v Speaker 1>Tua hit a dime on a nine route on third

0:19:34.119 --> 0:19:37.040
<v Speaker 1>and eight, place, a fade perfectly on fourth and goal

0:19:37.080 --> 0:19:39.760
<v Speaker 1>for a should be touchdown, and now evade a pressure

0:19:39.760 --> 0:19:42.520
<v Speaker 1>to convert a third medium. The picks, I know the picks,

0:19:42.520 --> 0:19:44.439
<v Speaker 1>but these are the kind of plays that we marvel

0:19:44.480 --> 0:19:47.840
<v Speaker 1>with other quarterbacks about and say that they offset their

0:19:47.880 --> 0:19:50.800
<v Speaker 1>turnover they had in the game because of plays like this, right,

0:19:50.880 --> 0:19:55.160
<v Speaker 1>high level stuff. He missed Tyreek a little back throw

0:19:55.200 --> 0:19:57.760
<v Speaker 1>on the back shoulder on a levels throw on play

0:19:57.760 --> 0:20:01.240
<v Speaker 1>action bootleg where the balls just behind. Not very common

0:20:01.280 --> 0:20:02.960
<v Speaker 1>for him, but he had that miss in this one.

0:20:03.080 --> 0:20:05.400
<v Speaker 1>And then just a footwork observation here on a third

0:20:05.440 --> 0:20:09.080
<v Speaker 1>and five conversion to hefe here comes Bryce Huff shortening

0:20:09.119 --> 0:20:11.320
<v Speaker 1>the corner once again. What a good player he is.

0:20:11.359 --> 0:20:13.600
<v Speaker 1>By the way Tua is in his drop back, but

0:20:13.680 --> 0:20:16.160
<v Speaker 1>you see him do something I've clamored about since Bama,

0:20:16.240 --> 0:20:19.160
<v Speaker 1>where he speeds up his drop. He expedites the process,

0:20:19.280 --> 0:20:22.360
<v Speaker 1>operate quicker, and even if it's not quick enough, you've

0:20:22.359 --> 0:20:24.600
<v Speaker 1>got the fastest trigger in the game where he can

0:20:24.840 --> 0:20:27.760
<v Speaker 1>the time Tua decides balls coming out to the ball

0:20:27.800 --> 0:20:30.720
<v Speaker 1>actually coming out is the fastest I've ever seen I

0:20:30.760 --> 0:20:34.880
<v Speaker 1>think ever, maybe Marino, maybe Philip Rivers like that's the

0:20:35.000 --> 0:20:38.800
<v Speaker 1>company that he keeps with the release, but his ability

0:20:39.280 --> 0:20:43.800
<v Speaker 1>to throw with that speedy release accurately without the feat

0:20:43.840 --> 0:20:46.160
<v Speaker 1>being right, the ball could not have been placed better.

0:20:46.560 --> 0:20:49.960
<v Speaker 1>No one excels with these fine intricacies at the position

0:20:50.000 --> 0:20:52.320
<v Speaker 1>the way that Tua does. Nobody does in the National

0:20:52.320 --> 0:20:54.080
<v Speaker 1>Football League. Then we gets to the corner route I

0:20:54.080 --> 0:20:56.480
<v Speaker 1>talked about earlier. I mean a third down master class

0:20:56.480 --> 0:20:58.879
<v Speaker 1>here from Tua. The ball is out against the leverage

0:20:58.880 --> 0:21:02.280
<v Speaker 1>of a cloud corner who's squatting on tyreek underneath a

0:21:02.320 --> 0:21:04.359
<v Speaker 1>safety who couldn't quite get over the top because he

0:21:04.400 --> 0:21:06.960
<v Speaker 1>has to kind of decipher the route concept, but two

0:21:07.080 --> 0:21:08.879
<v Speaker 1>us doing it faster than he can. So he's playing

0:21:08.880 --> 0:21:11.320
<v Speaker 1>before the defense can react and the trail defender is

0:21:11.320 --> 0:21:13.679
<v Speaker 1>still trying to stick to waddle at the top of

0:21:13.720 --> 0:21:17.000
<v Speaker 1>his stem. He hits this thing with his usual pocket anticipation,

0:21:17.359 --> 0:21:19.760
<v Speaker 1>but he ripped it off of one foot, falling off

0:21:19.800 --> 0:21:22.160
<v Speaker 1>to his left because of pressure in his face. This

0:21:22.240 --> 0:21:25.120
<v Speaker 1>is creating. This is arm talent. This is playing on

0:21:25.240 --> 0:21:29.159
<v Speaker 1>time amidst the chaos man. I'm so bummed that the

0:21:29.160 --> 0:21:31.960
<v Speaker 1>pick is coming because this tape is spotless so far.

0:21:32.400 --> 0:21:35.639
<v Speaker 1>For QB one, I think the game plan was clear

0:21:35.920 --> 0:21:38.880
<v Speaker 1>early on. You knew your defense was going to limit scoring.

0:21:39.080 --> 0:21:41.439
<v Speaker 1>You ran the football well, so set yourself up for

0:21:41.480 --> 0:21:44.200
<v Speaker 1>third manageables, and your quarterback stepped up time and time

0:21:44.200 --> 0:21:46.480
<v Speaker 1>again to convert those to stay on the field and

0:21:46.560 --> 0:21:48.800
<v Speaker 1>keep the offense and scoring range really all game long.

0:21:49.040 --> 0:21:51.480
<v Speaker 1>It's a plan a lot of teams have taken against

0:21:51.480 --> 0:21:54.320
<v Speaker 1>this Jets defense because they squeeze everything and make you

0:21:54.400 --> 0:21:56.520
<v Speaker 1>earn every inch. But you need to be sharp on

0:21:56.640 --> 0:21:59.080
<v Speaker 1>third down to execute that plan. And in fact, Miami

0:21:59.160 --> 0:22:02.720
<v Speaker 1>was eleven ver six teen sixty nine percent. Only one

0:22:02.760 --> 0:22:05.680
<v Speaker 1>other team was over fifty percent. That was the cow

0:22:05.920 --> 0:22:09.360
<v Speaker 1>or rather the Chiefs. No check that the Eagles in

0:22:09.720 --> 0:22:11.960
<v Speaker 1>that game they had a while back. The Bills are

0:22:12.040 --> 0:22:14.520
<v Speaker 1>combined ten for twenty six against the Jets on third down.

0:22:14.520 --> 0:22:17.480
<v Speaker 1>The Raiders were five for fifteen, the Chargers were seven

0:22:17.520 --> 0:22:20.600
<v Speaker 1>for sixteen, the Giants two for nineteen. The Broncos were

0:22:20.640 --> 0:22:22.639
<v Speaker 1>four for ten. The Chiefs were seven for twelve. So

0:22:22.680 --> 0:22:24.080
<v Speaker 1>I have that stat wrong. They had two teams were

0:22:24.080 --> 0:22:27.199
<v Speaker 1>over fifty percent. The Patriots were eight for nineteen, the

0:22:27.280 --> 0:22:30.200
<v Speaker 1>Cowboys were nine for nineteen, and the Bills were five

0:22:30.240 --> 0:22:35.520
<v Speaker 1>for thirteen. So Tu against a tough defense again, really

0:22:35.520 --> 0:22:38.080
<v Speaker 1>played better than most of the quarterbacks's defense has seen

0:22:38.119 --> 0:22:41.080
<v Speaker 1>this year. Okay, so two plays that stand out negatively

0:22:41.080 --> 0:22:42.800
<v Speaker 1>from the rest. The first pick, let's talk about it,

0:22:42.800 --> 0:22:45.320
<v Speaker 1>the slant flat combination. That is the first combo you

0:22:45.440 --> 0:22:48.200
<v Speaker 1>install every single year. The one receiver runs a slant

0:22:48.200 --> 0:22:50.600
<v Speaker 1>in the middle, the two receiver runs a flat off

0:22:50.640 --> 0:22:53.120
<v Speaker 1>of that. You try and catch that those two corners

0:22:53.119 --> 0:22:55.679
<v Speaker 1>off that side in peril. Where Tua got in trouble

0:22:55.720 --> 0:22:58.399
<v Speaker 1>here was that he wasn't on time. He pumped to

0:22:58.440 --> 0:23:00.560
<v Speaker 1>the slant, and I think he really wanted to go there.

0:23:00.600 --> 0:23:02.560
<v Speaker 1>In fact, it was open to tyreek. I'm not sure

0:23:02.560 --> 0:23:05.480
<v Speaker 1>what he saw, but something told him to clutch and

0:23:05.520 --> 0:23:08.240
<v Speaker 1>then go to the flat. And by that time, Brandon

0:23:08.240 --> 0:23:11.080
<v Speaker 1>Eckles had already kind of seen this play out and

0:23:11.119 --> 0:23:13.680
<v Speaker 1>he immediately started getting dep or with I should say,

0:23:13.720 --> 0:23:15.720
<v Speaker 1>to the side of the field. And so ecckles is

0:23:15.800 --> 0:23:18.280
<v Speaker 1>breaking on this ball before Tua throws it. And that's

0:23:18.320 --> 0:23:20.879
<v Speaker 1>why I get on other quarterbacks for being terrible like

0:23:20.960 --> 0:23:23.800
<v Speaker 1>for Josh Rosen, this was consistent with him. For Zach Wilson,

0:23:23.800 --> 0:23:26.800
<v Speaker 1>this happens every damn snap. For Tua, it never happened.

0:23:26.840 --> 0:23:32.240
<v Speaker 1>It literally never ever happens until this. That's why I'm

0:23:32.280 --> 0:23:36.880
<v Speaker 1>so dumbfounded by it, and it's why watching other quarterbacks

0:23:37.000 --> 0:23:40.199
<v Speaker 1>makes me immensely appreciate Tua even more because he just

0:23:40.200 --> 0:23:42.840
<v Speaker 1>doesn't do that. He's not like that, and here he

0:23:42.960 --> 0:23:45.399
<v Speaker 1>is doing it one time and he pays the ultimate price.

0:23:45.720 --> 0:23:48.320
<v Speaker 1>I loved how McDaniel, though, on the very next drive,

0:23:48.359 --> 0:23:51.200
<v Speaker 1>got him going with two now throws catch rock, throw

0:23:51.320 --> 0:23:54.040
<v Speaker 1>screen to Wattle, screen to Tyreek, and then he rips

0:23:54.080 --> 0:23:56.359
<v Speaker 1>a glance sproute to Wattle and your back on target,

0:23:56.400 --> 0:23:58.840
<v Speaker 1>back on time, perfect location, low and a way to

0:23:58.920 --> 0:24:00.800
<v Speaker 1>protect him from the hit from the safety. Then we

0:24:00.880 --> 0:24:03.199
<v Speaker 1>get a far hash out and this time it's on

0:24:03.280 --> 0:24:06.119
<v Speaker 1>time and it works. But then we miss and this

0:24:06.400 --> 0:24:09.000
<v Speaker 1>I think of this play like a hell Mary, no timeouts,

0:24:09.200 --> 0:24:12.280
<v Speaker 1>third and one ball at your own forty five yard line.

0:24:12.359 --> 0:24:14.800
<v Speaker 1>You need a yard to have a heave to the

0:24:14.880 --> 0:24:16.800
<v Speaker 1>end zone on the next play, because there's nine seconds

0:24:16.880 --> 0:24:18.520
<v Speaker 1>left in the game or the half you have to

0:24:18.520 --> 0:24:20.280
<v Speaker 1>get out of bounce you have no timeouts, and the

0:24:20.359 --> 0:24:23.000
<v Speaker 1>Jets know this, so they protect the perimeter. They put

0:24:23.240 --> 0:24:27.400
<v Speaker 1>two defenders on the sidelines at the plus forty yard

0:24:27.400 --> 0:24:31.119
<v Speaker 1>line fifteen yards away. They have two high shell defenders

0:24:31.400 --> 0:24:35.480
<v Speaker 1>with three intermediate defenders taking away the middle of the field.

0:24:35.520 --> 0:24:37.760
<v Speaker 1>I guess just there for tackling purposes. I'm not really sure.

0:24:37.840 --> 0:24:41.000
<v Speaker 1>And then no pass rush with two corners manning up

0:24:41.080 --> 0:24:43.800
<v Speaker 1>the mesh we ran. We ran two shallow crossers, one

0:24:43.840 --> 0:24:46.040
<v Speaker 1>to either side of the field. So there's zero chance

0:24:46.040 --> 0:24:48.239
<v Speaker 1>that two throws this ball if it's not the end

0:24:48.240 --> 0:24:50.720
<v Speaker 1>of the half. Zero chance. And to compound it, he

0:24:50.800 --> 0:24:53.560
<v Speaker 1>threw it too far inside missed his spot. So those

0:24:53.600 --> 0:24:55.880
<v Speaker 1>two picks. I think that's the first time all year

0:24:56.040 --> 0:24:59.080
<v Speaker 1>either of those things happened. Late and a missed spot

0:24:59.080 --> 0:25:01.359
<v Speaker 1>on a short throw. Hey, I'm glad he got him

0:25:01.359 --> 0:25:02.920
<v Speaker 1>out of the way in this game and we destroyed

0:25:03.119 --> 0:25:06.400
<v Speaker 1>an inferior New York Jets team. On the never ending drive,

0:25:06.440 --> 0:25:09.040
<v Speaker 1>he hit two third downs, including one of off the

0:25:09.400 --> 0:25:12.200
<v Speaker 1>similar rail glance concept. You know that the wheel route

0:25:12.240 --> 0:25:14.200
<v Speaker 1>with the inside little slant that we run all the

0:25:14.280 --> 0:25:16.520
<v Speaker 1>time off of RPO or off of play pass action.

0:25:16.920 --> 0:25:19.919
<v Speaker 1>He slides to his left and Tyreek is engaged on

0:25:20.000 --> 0:25:23.000
<v Speaker 1>a press from DJ Reid, and Tua throws it like

0:25:23.040 --> 0:25:25.680
<v Speaker 1>he's posted up in basketball, like I got my left

0:25:25.800 --> 0:25:27.880
<v Speaker 1>arm pinning him, throws to my right arm, two throws

0:25:27.920 --> 0:25:31.000
<v Speaker 1>it off the off shoulder. Tyreek disengages, makes the catch,

0:25:31.160 --> 0:25:33.160
<v Speaker 1>and then lays it off the glass for two points. JK.

0:25:33.600 --> 0:25:36.880
<v Speaker 1>But just a really good example again of how Tua's

0:25:36.960 --> 0:25:39.680
<v Speaker 1>understanding of leverage and placement makes him a high level quarterback.

0:25:39.880 --> 0:25:42.760
<v Speaker 1>I think his game the ability to convert in obvious

0:25:42.800 --> 0:25:46.840
<v Speaker 1>passing situations, the added creativity, the obvious high level play

0:25:46.840 --> 0:25:49.880
<v Speaker 1>from instructure. I came away from this tape the opposite

0:25:49.880 --> 0:25:51.600
<v Speaker 1>of concerned about our passing game. I think it's only

0:25:51.600 --> 0:25:53.679
<v Speaker 1>going to get better from here. The only thing that

0:25:54.040 --> 0:25:58.320
<v Speaker 1>I concerned that concerns me is just these self inflicted errors.

0:25:58.320 --> 0:26:01.119
<v Speaker 1>It happens far too frequently. There's still some time to

0:26:01.160 --> 0:26:04.600
<v Speaker 1>iron it out, but it's incumbent upon them on the team,

0:26:04.760 --> 0:26:07.040
<v Speaker 1>on Tua to get that sorted out. If they do,

0:26:08.160 --> 0:26:10.320
<v Speaker 1>we're gonna win the super Bowl. That's how I feel

0:26:10.320 --> 0:26:12.000
<v Speaker 1>about it. If they get that figured out and they

0:26:12.040 --> 0:26:14.919
<v Speaker 1>can play four clean games in January, they'll win the

0:26:14.920 --> 0:26:17.800
<v Speaker 1>whole thing PFF twenty plus are yard throws two for

0:26:17.840 --> 0:26:20.399
<v Speaker 1>two for sixty seven yards. On ten plus throws, he

0:26:20.480 --> 0:26:22.639
<v Speaker 1>was six for seven for one sixty two. Damn. What

0:26:22.720 --> 0:26:24.399
<v Speaker 1>a game. Just the short right part of the field

0:26:24.440 --> 0:26:27.640
<v Speaker 1>cost him. He was blitzed just four times, got sacked once.

0:26:27.680 --> 0:26:30.320
<v Speaker 1>He was one for three for seventeen. He was pressured

0:26:30.680 --> 0:26:33.840
<v Speaker 1>four times, got both sacks obviously, and then was one

0:26:33.880 --> 0:26:37.680
<v Speaker 1>for two on those two plays for seventeen yards also,

0:26:37.720 --> 0:26:39.880
<v Speaker 1>I believe. So there you go. There's your two notes.

0:26:39.960 --> 0:26:41.560
<v Speaker 1>Let's go ahead and take our last break. Come back

0:26:41.600 --> 0:26:43.600
<v Speaker 1>on the other side. Do the rest of the offense,

0:26:43.720 --> 0:26:46.879
<v Speaker 1>do the defense. We'll also do the snap counts and

0:26:46.920 --> 0:26:49.639
<v Speaker 1>our last quote from Mike McDaniel. That's all next Draft

0:26:49.640 --> 0:26:52.239
<v Speaker 1>Time Podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought to you by

0:26:52.320 --> 0:26:59.400
<v Speaker 1>I don'tation. Third segment. We've only covered the quarterback right now.

0:26:59.440 --> 0:27:02.200
<v Speaker 1>We did top five play, Top five tapes, explosive plays

0:27:02.240 --> 0:27:04.080
<v Speaker 1>as well. Let's go ahead and pick up the rest

0:27:04.119 --> 0:27:06.320
<v Speaker 1>of the offense here though, and start by just another

0:27:06.840 --> 0:27:10.560
<v Speaker 1>mention of Cedric Wilson, Brasen Barrios and the entire receivers

0:27:10.600 --> 0:27:14.280
<v Speaker 1>work in blocking Cedric Wilson on a pop pass. Hip

0:27:14.320 --> 0:27:15.639
<v Speaker 1>toss to guy to the ground. You don't see that

0:27:15.760 --> 0:27:18.880
<v Speaker 1>very often in the offensive line, much less among Roger receivers.

0:27:19.040 --> 0:27:21.640
<v Speaker 1>Had a critical connect and pin on a second quarter run.

0:27:22.040 --> 0:27:24.920
<v Speaker 1>It was just consistent, excellent work without the ball in

0:27:24.960 --> 0:27:27.560
<v Speaker 1>his hands. I see you said making big plays. Same

0:27:27.600 --> 0:27:30.400
<v Speaker 1>for Braxon Barrios. Really the whole room blocked their butts off.

0:27:30.600 --> 0:27:33.080
<v Speaker 1>Ad Durham spice to that mix as well. You missed

0:27:33.160 --> 0:27:34.440
<v Speaker 1>him with the game that he was down, but he's

0:27:34.480 --> 0:27:39.359
<v Speaker 1>critical to our perimeter success. Jeff Wilson I thought had

0:27:39.520 --> 0:27:41.159
<v Speaker 1>one of his best games as a Dolphin. There was

0:27:41.160 --> 0:27:43.400
<v Speaker 1>some more juice from him that we've seen great time

0:27:43.440 --> 0:27:45.840
<v Speaker 1>from fresh legs man. The route on the angle route

0:27:45.840 --> 0:27:48.160
<v Speaker 1>that he ran to convert on third down. You add

0:27:48.200 --> 0:27:50.760
<v Speaker 1>that with his ability and pass protection, but also to

0:27:50.800 --> 0:27:53.560
<v Speaker 1>push piles in short yardage. Having that skill set in

0:27:53.600 --> 0:27:55.840
<v Speaker 1>the equation, I think gives you a chance to improve

0:27:55.920 --> 0:27:58.560
<v Speaker 1>upon what has been the league worst short yardage. I

0:27:58.560 --> 0:28:01.120
<v Speaker 1>can tell you that's a good thing to have. Raheem Moster.

0:28:01.200 --> 0:28:03.159
<v Speaker 1>It thought he ran with real conviction, especially in the

0:28:03.200 --> 0:28:05.280
<v Speaker 1>second half. I just love the way that he finishes

0:28:05.359 --> 0:28:08.199
<v Speaker 1>runs man. I thought his physicality was what brought the

0:28:08.240 --> 0:28:10.639
<v Speaker 1>face mask on that third and a mile. Then he

0:28:10.680 --> 0:28:13.040
<v Speaker 1>pays it off with the fourteen yard touchdown. Got awesome

0:28:13.080 --> 0:28:16.160
<v Speaker 1>blocks on that play from Julian Hill, Austin Jackson, alec Ingold,

0:28:16.200 --> 0:28:19.920
<v Speaker 1>Durham Smyth, Austin Jackson. I said that twice Liam Eichenberg,

0:28:20.000 --> 0:28:23.800
<v Speaker 1>Connor Williams. He ran through three Jets defenders though at

0:28:23.800 --> 0:28:26.359
<v Speaker 1>the eight and in for six. So Raheem continues to

0:28:26.400 --> 0:28:31.040
<v Speaker 1>get yards after contact receivers Tyreek I mentioned Waddle already,

0:28:31.680 --> 0:28:34.439
<v Speaker 1>but for Tyreek, you have to appreciate the concentration catches.

0:28:34.600 --> 0:28:36.560
<v Speaker 1>A lot of fast guys struggle with that. It's tough

0:28:36.560 --> 0:28:38.520
<v Speaker 1>when you run twenty two miles an hour. Your head bobbles,

0:28:38.520 --> 0:28:40.480
<v Speaker 1>you know, as you run. But he never drops those

0:28:40.720 --> 0:28:42.640
<v Speaker 1>drop the ball in there. He keeps on going. The

0:28:42.680 --> 0:28:44.920
<v Speaker 1>first screen of the game, we are one of just

0:28:45.040 --> 0:28:47.680
<v Speaker 1>one of three offensive linemen peeling back and getting a

0:28:47.680 --> 0:28:50.880
<v Speaker 1>block on Dj Reed from a fun Tyreek screen touchdown.

0:28:51.080 --> 0:28:53.360
<v Speaker 1>But then Tyreek did score on that little swing route

0:28:53.400 --> 0:28:56.040
<v Speaker 1>from the backfield. Doesn't score there without creating an open

0:28:56.080 --> 0:28:58.600
<v Speaker 1>field mistackle. And then how can you be anything but

0:28:58.680 --> 0:29:01.320
<v Speaker 1>appreciative of a potential two thousand yard wide receiver, a

0:29:01.360 --> 0:29:04.719
<v Speaker 1>potential league MVP who's asked to crack pin a two

0:29:04.840 --> 0:29:07.120
<v Speaker 1>hundred and sixty yard defensive end and he does it

0:29:07.240 --> 0:29:10.120
<v Speaker 1>like his life depends on it. Best trade in franchise history.

0:29:10.160 --> 0:29:12.320
<v Speaker 1>Three points six four yards per route rayand eleven point

0:29:12.320 --> 0:29:15.080
<v Speaker 1>one yards per target Big yat game seventy six yards

0:29:15.120 --> 0:29:18.240
<v Speaker 1>eight point four per catch on the day for Tyreek Hill.

0:29:18.280 --> 0:29:21.080
<v Speaker 1>Alec Ingle was fantastic. He was head up on the

0:29:21.080 --> 0:29:23.840
<v Speaker 1>linebacker and the gap one v one double digit times,

0:29:24.040 --> 0:29:26.520
<v Speaker 1>and I think he lost maybe one or two of those.

0:29:26.880 --> 0:29:29.480
<v Speaker 1>Really really impressive stuff on the offensive line. I think

0:29:29.480 --> 0:29:32.840
<v Speaker 1>a generic statement is required here because they consistently had

0:29:32.920 --> 0:29:35.440
<v Speaker 1>hat on a hat, moved guys against their will, and

0:29:35.480 --> 0:29:38.600
<v Speaker 1>created big creases. Just a great game for the offensive line.

0:29:38.680 --> 0:29:40.600
<v Speaker 1>Some notes here on Austin Jackson, who I thought had

0:29:40.640 --> 0:29:42.400
<v Speaker 1>his worst game of the year. But here's why I'm

0:29:42.400 --> 0:29:44.000
<v Speaker 1>gonna tell you it's a good thing. Because on the

0:29:44.000 --> 0:29:46.760
<v Speaker 1>second play of the game, on a play action pass,

0:29:46.840 --> 0:29:50.280
<v Speaker 1>they get him working laterally and he thwarts the rush

0:29:50.520 --> 0:29:53.720
<v Speaker 1>to the left, but Tua goes high low to the right,

0:29:54.040 --> 0:29:55.960
<v Speaker 1>comes back high low to the left. Four reads for

0:29:56.040 --> 0:29:57.840
<v Speaker 1>him on this play, and I bring this up because

0:29:57.840 --> 0:30:00.760
<v Speaker 1>it's a long play. So Austin squeezes the four eye

0:30:00.840 --> 0:30:03.840
<v Speaker 1>technique inside, tries to rush inside of his left post.

0:30:04.040 --> 0:30:06.320
<v Speaker 1>He then tries to spend back outside and you just

0:30:06.360 --> 0:30:09.920
<v Speaker 1>see Austin's feet my favorite term typewriter feet baby just

0:30:10.000 --> 0:30:12.880
<v Speaker 1>tapping and allowing him to transfer that weight with ease.

0:30:13.080 --> 0:30:15.280
<v Speaker 1>Then he spins back inside and Austin does the exact

0:30:15.320 --> 0:30:17.640
<v Speaker 1>same thing again. There's a drill and the combine and

0:30:17.720 --> 0:30:20.480
<v Speaker 1>indie and he aced it with live action. Here the

0:30:20.720 --> 0:30:23.840
<v Speaker 1>rabbit drill inside, outside, inside, outside. All that said, nobody

0:30:23.840 --> 0:30:25.680
<v Speaker 1>gave him the issues that Bryce huffed all year, and

0:30:25.720 --> 0:30:28.720
<v Speaker 1>what I liked about it was the first move typically

0:30:28.760 --> 0:30:32.240
<v Speaker 1>went Huff's way, but Austin just continuously responded time and

0:30:32.240 --> 0:30:35.240
<v Speaker 1>time again and did enough to keep his quarterback clean,

0:30:35.360 --> 0:30:37.280
<v Speaker 1>sell out, and make the block anyway you have to.

0:30:37.600 --> 0:30:39.760
<v Speaker 1>He did that against a very good player. All thanks told,

0:30:40.040 --> 0:30:42.760
<v Speaker 1>Huff is an elite player. I love his game because

0:30:42.760 --> 0:30:46.160
<v Speaker 1>when Jackson drew Franklin Myers, he made him obsolete in

0:30:46.160 --> 0:30:48.760
<v Speaker 1>the game. Should also mention that Austin was bullying guys

0:30:48.760 --> 0:30:51.760
<v Speaker 1>in the running game Liam. His balance and strength looks

0:30:51.840 --> 0:30:54.400
<v Speaker 1>noticeably better. He's not getting knocked off target, He's not

0:30:54.480 --> 0:30:56.680
<v Speaker 1>falling as much still on the ground. Sometimes he has

0:30:56.680 --> 0:30:58.440
<v Speaker 1>a pretty good snatch trap move that he's been using

0:30:58.480 --> 0:31:01.440
<v Speaker 1>that it's been effective for him. Encourage about Liam's growth

0:31:01.440 --> 0:31:03.760
<v Speaker 1>here this season. How about Keon Smith coming off the

0:31:03.760 --> 0:31:06.400
<v Speaker 1>bench on his first play, collapsing the edge for a

0:31:06.440 --> 0:31:09.400
<v Speaker 1>third down run conversion. That's good stuff. I had two

0:31:09.400 --> 0:31:11.920
<v Speaker 1>negative notes here, Lester Cotton. I think this game, along

0:31:11.920 --> 0:31:14.200
<v Speaker 1>with the Raider game, has led to a very obvious

0:31:14.200 --> 0:31:16.480
<v Speaker 1>conclusion to me that Liam Eichenberg should be the left

0:31:16.480 --> 0:31:18.880
<v Speaker 1>guard when Hunt gets back, or maybe it's Rob Jones

0:31:18.880 --> 0:31:21.800
<v Speaker 1>when he's ready. I just know it's not sixty six

0:31:21.840 --> 0:31:24.080
<v Speaker 1>for me. There are far too many easy misses, not

0:31:24.120 --> 0:31:26.800
<v Speaker 1>even tough assignments, like an outside run to Jeff Wilson

0:31:26.840 --> 0:31:30.680
<v Speaker 1>to the right where you're you got an awesome turn

0:31:30.720 --> 0:31:33.560
<v Speaker 1>and pin from Liam, a perfect second level block from Austin,

0:31:33.600 --> 0:31:36.560
<v Speaker 1>a crackback from said, squared up lead block from Alec,

0:31:36.640 --> 0:31:39.480
<v Speaker 1>and yet a defensive tackle from the backside pursuit makes

0:31:39.520 --> 0:31:41.680
<v Speaker 1>the play because we couldn't wall him off, just couldn't

0:31:41.880 --> 0:31:44.240
<v Speaker 1>get in his way. I always talk about how difficult

0:31:44.280 --> 0:31:46.440
<v Speaker 1>it is to get an outside shoulder of a defensive

0:31:46.440 --> 0:31:49.560
<v Speaker 1>lineman who has you outflanked like a reach block. Right,

0:31:49.880 --> 0:31:52.360
<v Speaker 1>the converse is true here the two I technique shoots

0:31:52.360 --> 0:31:55.040
<v Speaker 1>across the outside shoulder and we let him just run

0:31:55.120 --> 0:31:57.320
<v Speaker 1>right around us and go make the play. I don't

0:31:57.320 --> 0:31:59.880
<v Speaker 1>know how big the play is if we execute that block,

0:32:00.080 --> 0:32:03.040
<v Speaker 1>but when he's tackled, there are three Jets defenders who

0:32:03.080 --> 0:32:05.479
<v Speaker 1>have Dolphins hats on them. It's at least a ten

0:32:05.560 --> 0:32:07.520
<v Speaker 1>yard game. It only went for two. It might have

0:32:07.600 --> 0:32:09.480
<v Speaker 1>been fifty, it might have been six. And this has

0:32:09.480 --> 0:32:11.960
<v Speaker 1>happened multiple times the last couple of weeks. And then

0:32:11.960 --> 0:32:13.840
<v Speaker 1>tarn Armstead just doesn't look right to me right now.

0:32:13.960 --> 0:32:15.520
<v Speaker 1>That's not the player I'm used to seeing on tape

0:32:15.520 --> 0:32:18.360
<v Speaker 1>the last two weeks. You can tell physically he's limited.

0:32:18.600 --> 0:32:20.880
<v Speaker 1>I know he could keep pushing through, but makes sense

0:32:20.880 --> 0:32:22.280
<v Speaker 1>to me to get him one hundred percent for the

0:32:22.280 --> 0:32:24.960
<v Speaker 1>stretch run. You know, Washington traded away. They're two best

0:32:25.040 --> 0:32:27.200
<v Speaker 1>rushers and the Titans don't have an exterior rush, so

0:32:27.520 --> 0:32:29.880
<v Speaker 1>to me, see, you'll meek fourteen for these Jets again,

0:32:29.880 --> 0:32:31.760
<v Speaker 1>but we'll see what happens there. And then just tip

0:32:31.800 --> 0:32:33.360
<v Speaker 1>of the cap across the board to key on it.

0:32:33.440 --> 0:32:36.200
<v Speaker 1>Left tackle and right tackle Kendall Lamb into the game late.

0:32:36.240 --> 0:32:39.160
<v Speaker 1>Good stuff all around. In fact, PFF said that the

0:32:39.280 --> 0:32:43.840
<v Speaker 1>Jets had six total pressures in the game, two credited

0:32:44.200 --> 0:32:47.240
<v Speaker 1>to Tua, but the six pressures was the lowest in

0:32:47.280 --> 0:32:49.920
<v Speaker 1>the game for the Jets this year. They tabbed one

0:32:49.960 --> 0:32:52.960
<v Speaker 1>to smythe to Tehran, to Connor, and to Austin. So

0:32:53.040 --> 0:32:55.800
<v Speaker 1>clean sheets for Liam, Lester, Keon and Kendall. And how

0:32:55.800 --> 0:32:58.800
<v Speaker 1>about this, Actually, the Jets six pressures was their season

0:32:58.840 --> 0:33:02.040
<v Speaker 1>low by eight. Their previous low was fourteen. They came

0:33:02.040 --> 0:33:04.960
<v Speaker 1>into the game averaging twenty three point one pressures per game,

0:33:05.120 --> 0:33:08.000
<v Speaker 1>but Miami held them twenty five percent of their usual

0:33:08.000 --> 0:33:11.600
<v Speaker 1>production while playing six different offensive linemen and having seven

0:33:11.640 --> 0:33:14.240
<v Speaker 1>total guys play in the game. On top of being down,

0:33:14.480 --> 0:33:16.760
<v Speaker 1>they're starting right guard, they're starting left guard, and their

0:33:16.800 --> 0:33:21.200
<v Speaker 1>top interior swing man in Rob Jones. Pretty damn good defensively.

0:33:21.800 --> 0:33:24.320
<v Speaker 1>Gonna keep this brief because it was dominant. Everybody won

0:33:24.360 --> 0:33:27.040
<v Speaker 1>their matchup. The team played fast, inspired, and the Jets

0:33:27.080 --> 0:33:29.160
<v Speaker 1>did not get a whole lot done. Like, there wasn't

0:33:29.200 --> 0:33:31.480
<v Speaker 1>a ton schematically that jumped off the tape in this game.

0:33:31.640 --> 0:33:34.920
<v Speaker 1>It was just overwhelming. One v one domination across the

0:33:34.960 --> 0:33:36.680
<v Speaker 1>board for the majority of the snaps. I thought the

0:33:36.680 --> 0:33:38.720
<v Speaker 1>connectivity in the back end was great. I thought the

0:33:38.760 --> 0:33:41.200
<v Speaker 1>way the front seven is playing together up front stands

0:33:41.240 --> 0:33:43.480
<v Speaker 1>out a lot three of our top five tapes where

0:33:43.480 --> 0:33:46.120
<v Speaker 1>guys right here, Christian Javaon and Jalen sardlumped a lot

0:33:46.160 --> 0:33:48.400
<v Speaker 1>of this together. Starting up front with Raykwon Davis, who

0:33:48.400 --> 0:33:50.600
<v Speaker 1>I've been so impressed by two additions to his game

0:33:50.640 --> 0:33:52.960
<v Speaker 1>this year, where I think he's better planting his feet

0:33:52.960 --> 0:33:55.280
<v Speaker 1>into the ground against doubles and holding up not getting

0:33:55.280 --> 0:33:58.080
<v Speaker 1>grand backwards, and then also the balance to get down

0:33:58.080 --> 0:33:59.920
<v Speaker 1>the line when he has a chance to make more

0:34:00.160 --> 0:34:03.000
<v Speaker 1>plays in one gap situations or single blocks and making

0:34:03.040 --> 0:34:06.040
<v Speaker 1>those gaps and creases for the back to choose from

0:34:06.240 --> 0:34:08.759
<v Speaker 1>much more tighter. The more I watch this, it's just

0:34:08.840 --> 0:34:11.920
<v Speaker 1>Rinse repeat man Seeler getting one on one wins. Ogbaugh

0:34:11.960 --> 0:34:13.759
<v Speaker 1>came in and did it two Van Ginkle got his.

0:34:14.080 --> 0:34:15.759
<v Speaker 1>I think my biggest takeaway from this tape is that

0:34:15.760 --> 0:34:18.480
<v Speaker 1>the scheme is becoming second nature of these guys more

0:34:18.520 --> 0:34:20.960
<v Speaker 1>and more each week. They're all winning in ways where

0:34:21.000 --> 0:34:23.480
<v Speaker 1>I think they're making fuel plays. Like I talked to

0:34:23.480 --> 0:34:25.719
<v Speaker 1>Bradleychubb about this for the breakdown down on YouTube. Go

0:34:25.880 --> 0:34:28.279
<v Speaker 1>check it out. How you can pick spots where you

0:34:28.320 --> 0:34:30.360
<v Speaker 1>can get off your gap or cheat the scheme a

0:34:30.360 --> 0:34:32.800
<v Speaker 1>little bit, and it's based upon how you can anticipate

0:34:32.840 --> 0:34:35.279
<v Speaker 1>where both the opponent is going and what the guy

0:34:35.360 --> 0:34:37.839
<v Speaker 1>next to you is doing. Obviously it requires a lot

0:34:37.840 --> 0:34:41.080
<v Speaker 1>more contact with the gist of it is that. That's

0:34:41.120 --> 0:34:43.480
<v Speaker 1>the gist of it, and man, it's been consistent all

0:34:43.520 --> 0:34:46.480
<v Speaker 1>game long, and these guys are just getting after it.

0:34:46.960 --> 0:34:49.479
<v Speaker 1>Van Ginkle led the team with five pressures. Chubb had three.

0:34:49.640 --> 0:34:52.080
<v Speaker 1>Also had two stops, including a four to cut block

0:34:52.120 --> 0:34:53.480
<v Speaker 1>in the first play of the game that I loved

0:34:53.560 --> 0:34:55.239
<v Speaker 1>and one of the most violent hits in a pulling

0:34:55.239 --> 0:34:57.840
<v Speaker 1>guard I've seen in a long time. Ogball had three pressures,

0:34:57.880 --> 0:35:00.440
<v Speaker 1>and Wilkins and Hand both had two pressures of their

0:35:00.480 --> 0:35:02.960
<v Speaker 1>own as well. I thought Jerome Baker's closing speed of

0:35:03.040 --> 0:35:05.160
<v Speaker 1>the perimeter really popped in this game. I also love

0:35:05.160 --> 0:35:07.799
<v Speaker 1>the way he anticipated the passing game, which isn't something

0:35:07.800 --> 0:35:09.480
<v Speaker 1>he's done in the past to me, whether he was

0:35:09.480 --> 0:35:11.640
<v Speaker 1>in coverage from the start or sneaking around the line

0:35:11.640 --> 0:35:13.840
<v Speaker 1>of scrimmage to bell out and bluff that rush. He

0:35:13.840 --> 0:35:15.960
<v Speaker 1>would get to the flats quick and hit the backs

0:35:16.120 --> 0:35:18.760
<v Speaker 1>before they could build up speed as runners after the catch.

0:35:19.000 --> 0:35:20.680
<v Speaker 1>He also led the team with three stops and had

0:35:20.719 --> 0:35:23.200
<v Speaker 1>a pressure and of course the pick in the secondary.

0:35:23.239 --> 0:35:26.480
<v Speaker 1>I just noted that Cater consistently plays with anticipation and physicality,

0:35:26.600 --> 0:35:29.200
<v Speaker 1>which is a perfect combination for a slot cornerback. The

0:35:29.360 --> 0:35:32.120
<v Speaker 1>entire secondary worked so well in concert. There just weren't

0:35:32.120 --> 0:35:35.320
<v Speaker 1>many concepts that ran a route into one player. It

0:35:35.400 --> 0:35:38.239
<v Speaker 1>was constantly getting ran into multiple guys. We constantly had

0:35:38.280 --> 0:35:41.200
<v Speaker 1>the numbers advantage in terms of max pro versus limited

0:35:41.280 --> 0:35:44.919
<v Speaker 1>rush or vice versa. I think the communication has really

0:35:44.960 --> 0:35:47.839
<v Speaker 1>clicked here. I think Deshaun Elliott played another damn good game.

0:35:47.880 --> 0:35:49.680
<v Speaker 1>I think X looks as smooth as he has in

0:35:49.719 --> 0:35:51.960
<v Speaker 1>a long time. I think Glen Ramsey is just a

0:35:51.960 --> 0:35:54.200
<v Speaker 1>black hole until teams want to actually throw at him

0:35:54.200 --> 0:35:55.960
<v Speaker 1>and you see what happens. There not a lot of

0:35:56.080 --> 0:35:58.920
<v Speaker 1>chances here, but it was so consistently in tight phase

0:35:59.000 --> 0:36:02.880
<v Speaker 1>engaging guys at the los. That's the dentist system. Apparently

0:36:03.200 --> 0:36:05.759
<v Speaker 1>a great overall effort from this group, and PFF had

0:36:05.800 --> 0:36:09.359
<v Speaker 1>Cater with forty four coverage snaps allowed seventeen yards x

0:36:09.440 --> 0:36:13.440
<v Speaker 1>thirty eight coverage snaps zero yards, one target, no catches,

0:36:13.640 --> 0:36:16.280
<v Speaker 1>and Ramsey had three catches allowed for twenty five yards

0:36:16.280 --> 0:36:18.879
<v Speaker 1>on thirty eight coverage snaps. And before we get into

0:36:18.880 --> 0:36:21.880
<v Speaker 1>snapcounts here, that's the end of the notes there, before

0:36:21.920 --> 0:36:24.680
<v Speaker 1>we get into snapcounts, I wanted to give coach McDaniel

0:36:24.719 --> 0:36:27.560
<v Speaker 1>the opportunity to clear the air about that weird story

0:36:27.800 --> 0:36:30.480
<v Speaker 1>that Al Michaels told on Friday night about how he

0:36:30.560 --> 0:36:33.040
<v Speaker 1>met his wife, not exactly how it went down. Al

0:36:33.120 --> 0:36:35.080
<v Speaker 1>here's what coach McDaniel had to say about that.

0:36:35.360 --> 0:36:38.840
<v Speaker 2>I would say the skeleton of the story is correct,

0:36:40.520 --> 0:36:43.960
<v Speaker 2>but there's a couple important caveats. First of all, the

0:36:45.360 --> 0:36:52.359
<v Speaker 2>perceived threat that I made to a player was over

0:36:53.080 --> 0:36:56.839
<v Speaker 2>the top of joke, considering both he and I knew that.

0:36:57.040 --> 0:36:59.480
<v Speaker 2>As a writing back coach, I no, I had no

0:36:59.520 --> 0:37:02.239
<v Speaker 2>ability to say if he was there or not. It

0:37:02.280 --> 0:37:07.120
<v Speaker 2>was more in jest. And then second of all, you know,

0:37:07.480 --> 0:37:10.040
<v Speaker 2>my wife was telling me that people are talking about

0:37:10.040 --> 0:37:14.120
<v Speaker 2>me stealing people's girls. The dude had met her for

0:37:14.120 --> 0:37:17.960
<v Speaker 2>forty five seconds. It was a special place in our memories,

0:37:18.000 --> 0:37:22.640
<v Speaker 2>but I don't think it was I was. I don't

0:37:22.640 --> 0:37:27.359
<v Speaker 2>know it was. I wasn't nearly that. I feel like

0:37:27.440 --> 0:37:30.000
<v Speaker 2>I was painted out to be kind of a a

0:37:30.120 --> 0:37:33.080
<v Speaker 2>d bag and it wasn't like that at all. It

0:37:33.120 --> 0:37:36.080
<v Speaker 2>was it was all It was all niceties. We were

0:37:36.080 --> 0:37:40.360
<v Speaker 2>celebrating as a team, and it was something that I

0:37:40.680 --> 0:37:43.839
<v Speaker 2>think Stephen Barkley that the player that was dancing with

0:37:43.880 --> 0:37:47.040
<v Speaker 2>her was well aware when I when I made that

0:37:47.160 --> 0:37:49.080
<v Speaker 2>joke in jest that it was more important to me

0:37:49.160 --> 0:37:52.839
<v Speaker 2>than it was to him. So and I'm pretty sure

0:37:52.840 --> 0:37:56.040
<v Speaker 2>I was right right. I mean, I have a family now,

0:37:57.560 --> 0:38:03.439
<v Speaker 2>like good decision won or over. Clearly I had nothing

0:38:03.480 --> 0:38:07.239
<v Speaker 2>to do with anything. It wasn't my my physical disposition.

0:38:07.280 --> 0:38:10.920
<v Speaker 2>I promise to that. But uh yeah, it was a

0:38:11.200 --> 0:38:13.560
<v Speaker 2>it was a cool, lightheaded story that I that I

0:38:13.640 --> 0:38:15.160
<v Speaker 2>felt like took a turn.

0:38:15.560 --> 0:38:17.400
<v Speaker 1>So I appreciate you following.

0:38:17.080 --> 0:38:23.400
<v Speaker 2>Up of us, like, yikes, this hails in comparison and

0:38:23.440 --> 0:38:26.160
<v Speaker 2>the grand scheme of important things which happened in your

0:38:26.200 --> 0:38:28.440
<v Speaker 2>life light of that story.

0:38:28.560 --> 0:38:33.640
<v Speaker 1>But Kendall Lamb's back. I had to leave that last

0:38:33.680 --> 0:38:36.080
<v Speaker 1>part and there because Barry finished up with a great

0:38:36.160 --> 0:38:38.839
<v Speaker 1>follow up question about Kendall Lamb and the delivery of

0:38:38.840 --> 0:38:41.560
<v Speaker 1>that line of Kendall Lamb was hilarious, so I wanted

0:38:41.560 --> 0:38:43.839
<v Speaker 1>to keep that in there. Okay, snap counts for the game,

0:38:43.920 --> 0:38:46.520
<v Speaker 1>so we had four offensive linemen go the distance, right

0:38:46.600 --> 0:38:49.000
<v Speaker 1>or not quite because Austin Jackson got tossed from the game,

0:38:49.040 --> 0:38:51.959
<v Speaker 1>but most of the guys went the distance. Tua played

0:38:51.960 --> 0:38:53.600
<v Speaker 1>all but one night because they gave Mike White a

0:38:53.600 --> 0:38:55.520
<v Speaker 1>snap there at the end, which is hilarious by the way.

0:38:56.400 --> 0:38:59.840
<v Speaker 1>So Kendall Lamb had eight snaps and Keon Smith played

0:38:59.800 --> 0:39:03.000
<v Speaker 1>twenty one, a career high for him. At receiver, Waddle

0:39:03.080 --> 0:39:05.400
<v Speaker 1>led the way forty six snaps. That was two thirds

0:39:05.400 --> 0:39:08.040
<v Speaker 1>of the reps. Tyreek played forty four snaps, so just

0:39:08.120 --> 0:39:10.279
<v Speaker 1>below that, and then Barrios the next man up at

0:39:10.320 --> 0:39:14.000
<v Speaker 1>fifty four percent. Cedric played forty percent, River played thirty

0:39:14.000 --> 0:39:16.239
<v Speaker 1>five percent, so good work from the entire receiver room

0:39:16.280 --> 0:39:20.440
<v Speaker 1>here in this one. At running back, Raheem got the

0:39:20.440 --> 0:39:23.239
<v Speaker 1>bulk of the workload sixty percent of the snaps, Jeff

0:39:23.280 --> 0:39:26.160
<v Speaker 1>Wilson thirty three percent. A good little workload for him

0:39:26.160 --> 0:39:28.880
<v Speaker 1>getting worked back into things here. And then Darrington Evans

0:39:28.880 --> 0:39:30.480
<v Speaker 1>had five snaps before he fumbled and never saw the

0:39:30.480 --> 0:39:33.080
<v Speaker 1>field again. Ingold played thirty percent of the snaps in

0:39:33.160 --> 0:39:35.879
<v Speaker 1>this one at the tight end position. Derham Smith welcome back,

0:39:36.000 --> 0:39:39.160
<v Speaker 1>seventy seven percent of the snaps, Julian Hill played thirty percent,

0:39:39.239 --> 0:39:41.640
<v Speaker 1>and then Tyler Croft got nine percent of the snaps

0:39:41.640 --> 0:39:44.480
<v Speaker 1>in there at the end. And that's it, right, and

0:39:44.520 --> 0:39:47.560
<v Speaker 1>then defensively, so no one went the distance. I's to

0:39:47.560 --> 0:39:50.479
<v Speaker 1>get some rest there. Xavian Cater and Jalen all played

0:39:50.520 --> 0:39:53.680
<v Speaker 1>forty eight snaps. Javon Holland played forty four. Bradley Chubb

0:39:53.680 --> 0:39:56.520
<v Speaker 1>played forty six off the edge. Of course, Phillips was

0:39:56.600 --> 0:39:58.239
<v Speaker 1>right there with him, played thirty five before he got

0:39:58.320 --> 0:40:00.600
<v Speaker 1>hurt and had to exit, but also off the edge.

0:40:01.960 --> 0:40:04.279
<v Speaker 1>Let's see. Ogba played fourteen snaps in the game, so

0:40:04.320 --> 0:40:06.040
<v Speaker 1>you'll probably see more of him going forward. But Van

0:40:06.080 --> 0:40:08.319
<v Speaker 1>Ginkle gets the big boost I think going forward as well,

0:40:08.560 --> 0:40:10.480
<v Speaker 1>twenty nine snaps for him. He has to kind of,

0:40:10.600 --> 0:40:13.080
<v Speaker 1>I guess, get some less off ball linebacker snaps now

0:40:13.080 --> 0:40:15.800
<v Speaker 1>that we're gonna be playing more edge up front. Wilkins

0:40:15.800 --> 0:40:18.920
<v Speaker 1>and Sealer their usual work Wilkins thirty seven snaps, Stealer

0:40:19.040 --> 0:40:21.600
<v Speaker 1>thirty two. Actually everyone got a reduction workload here, so

0:40:21.680 --> 0:40:24.000
<v Speaker 1>great job to get some rest in this game. David

0:40:24.040 --> 0:40:26.000
<v Speaker 1>Long played two thirds of the snaps in this one.

0:40:26.120 --> 0:40:28.840
<v Speaker 1>Javon Holland played three quarters of the snaps. Nick Neatam

0:40:28.920 --> 0:40:31.680
<v Speaker 1>got twelve snaps, Cam Smith got eleven snaps, Elijah Campbell

0:40:31.719 --> 0:40:34.319
<v Speaker 1>got ten snaps, Cam Good got ten as well, and

0:40:34.520 --> 0:40:37.319
<v Speaker 1>Justin Bethel saw one. So honestly, not much take away

0:40:37.320 --> 0:40:39.680
<v Speaker 1>from all that except for to say they destroy the Jets,

0:40:39.680 --> 0:40:41.920
<v Speaker 1>which is cool to see. But that is your podcast.

0:40:41.920 --> 0:40:45.480
<v Speaker 1>That is your breakdown, lengthy as always here on a Monday.

0:40:46.320 --> 0:40:48.120
<v Speaker 1>In the meantime, that's gonna be my time. We'll be

0:40:48.200 --> 0:40:51.399
<v Speaker 1>back on Wednesday for the preview of the Commandos. We'll

0:40:51.440 --> 0:40:53.480
<v Speaker 1>just do that on Wednesday, but you will please be

0:40:53.520 --> 0:40:56.359
<v Speaker 1>sure to subscribe to the podcast on Apple, Spotify, wherever

0:40:56.360 --> 0:40:58.120
<v Speaker 1>you get your podcast from Lewis and Rady. Leave us

0:40:58.160 --> 0:41:01.160
<v Speaker 1>a review, Follow me on social at winkfold NFL. For

0:41:01.239 --> 0:41:03.439
<v Speaker 1>all the team at Miami Dolphins, check out the fish

0:41:03.440 --> 0:41:05.880
<v Speaker 1>Tank podcast with my guys Seth and Juice. Check out

0:41:05.920 --> 0:41:08.560
<v Speaker 1>the YouTube channel for media availabilities, Dolphins Today and so

0:41:08.680 --> 0:41:11.480
<v Speaker 1>much more, and last but not least, Miami Dolphins dot Com.

0:41:11.600 --> 0:41:13.840
<v Speaker 1>Until next time, Fins Up came on camera and Daddy

0:41:14.400 --> 0:41:14.560
<v Speaker 1>just go