WEBVTT - Drive Time: Dolphins Patriots Week 8 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>your pulse if you're not for hear of them? What

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<v Speaker 1>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 Wingfield And on today's show, you know the drill

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<v Speaker 1>key stats, all twenty two reviews, some injury updates, snap counts,

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<v Speaker 1>all of that and more from the Baptist Health Studios

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<v Speaker 1>inside the Baptist Health Training Complex. This is the Draft

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<v Speaker 1>Time Podcast. Maybe gaffe trying to speed it all up

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<v Speaker 1>today because we have a lot of notes to get

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<v Speaker 1>to because a lot of guys bawled the f out

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<v Speaker 1>on Sunday. So the injury updates from coach on Monday's

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<v Speaker 1>press conference sounds like to Ron Arbson has a chance

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<v Speaker 1>to get back for the KC game. He will potentially

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<v Speaker 1>have his twenty one day window opened up. We'll travel

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<v Speaker 1>with the team and they'll test it out all week long.

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<v Speaker 1>Robert Hunt is day to day. What else do we get?

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<v Speaker 1>Looks like Javon Holland will be coming out of protocol

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<v Speaker 1>this week. He tweeted himself that that was the case,

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<v Speaker 1>so taking his word for that, David Long returned to

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<v Speaker 1>the game, so he's fine, good to go. What else

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<v Speaker 1>we got? Gave us some updates on durham Smyth and

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<v Speaker 1>alec Ingold, but not a lot of clarity there. So

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<v Speaker 1>lots of questions to coach by injuries every single week,

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<v Speaker 1>never get really any full clarity. But there you go.

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<v Speaker 1>If you want to check it out on YouTube, you

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<v Speaker 1>can see the entire press conference. We're gonna skip it

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<v Speaker 1>on the podcast today because well, we have a lot

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<v Speaker 1>to get to, starting with the big play breakdowns from

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<v Speaker 1>Week eight against the Nelnggland Patriots, a thirty one seventeen

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<v Speaker 1>Dolphins victory, and you know where we're going to start here.

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<v Speaker 1>A forty two yard dart from Tua to Tyreek for

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<v Speaker 1>another long touchdown, and just a great call all around

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<v Speaker 1>because the Patriots are doing what they do and getting

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<v Speaker 1>an extra hat to the fit in the running game.

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<v Speaker 1>They've got a zero technique which is head up over

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<v Speaker 1>the center, a four technique which is head up over

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<v Speaker 1>a tackle, a four eye technique which is just inside

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<v Speaker 1>that tackle, and then two wide nines. Those are two

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<v Speaker 1>think Cameron Wakes flexed way the heck out there off

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<v Speaker 1>either tight end. Really, if there was a tight end,

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<v Speaker 1>they'd be outside that tight end with their pre snap alignment,

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<v Speaker 1>and this leaves them a man short in coverage against

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<v Speaker 1>a two by two set. Then we motion hefe Wilson

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<v Speaker 1>across the formation to tyreek side, which makes it three

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<v Speaker 1>to one, and they don't chase him over there, which

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<v Speaker 1>tells me zone. But the field safety loses his depth

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<v Speaker 1>because he sees that motion man and comes forward. All

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<v Speaker 1>the while j C. Jackson stops his feet for some reason.

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<v Speaker 1>He comes downhill and stops his feet. Wish we could

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<v Speaker 1>play that guy more often, but just two times this year.

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<v Speaker 1>Tua turns his back to the defense to fake the

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<v Speaker 1>jet sweep to Jeff Wilson, and you see Twoa's head

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<v Speaker 1>immediately snap back and locate that safety who's losing depth.

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<v Speaker 1>He's coming downhill and right there Tua knows where the

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<v Speaker 1>football is going, but he doesn't rush the mechanics and

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<v Speaker 1>this is the key part of the play for me

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<v Speaker 1>with Tua to put himself in position to throw this

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<v Speaker 1>ball half the field right like he threw the ball

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<v Speaker 1>from midfield. It winds up a couple of yards deep

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<v Speaker 1>in the end zone for a touchdown. It's all about

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<v Speaker 1>the hitch up and the foot mechanics for Tua here,

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<v Speaker 1>which doesn't rush. It gets to his drop hitches up,

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<v Speaker 1>clean footwork, no clicking, no cross feet, just keeping the

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<v Speaker 1>feet even with the part shoulders, hips, feet, all that

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<v Speaker 1>stuff aligned underneath him. It allows him to do what

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<v Speaker 1>he does best and throw fifty yard handoffs, this one

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<v Speaker 1>again to Tyreek Hill for a long touchdown. And the

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<v Speaker 1>way he's layering these balls to the outside shoulder to

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<v Speaker 1>really run ty Reek away from the contact Chef's kiss

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<v Speaker 1>baby like. I love the location on these throws. You

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<v Speaker 1>basically create no chance for the defense to make a

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<v Speaker 1>play on it if you miss it somehow. But she

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<v Speaker 1>also give the best receiver in the National Football League

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<v Speaker 1>plenty of opportunity to run underneath it. Just perfect. And

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<v Speaker 1>then Tyreek man wasted zero time like on the slow

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<v Speaker 1>release against the Eagles, and it was a shorter part

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<v Speaker 1>of the field. I think they were what thirty one

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<v Speaker 1>yards compared to forty two yards or whatever it was

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<v Speaker 1>on this one, he didn't have He didn't have time

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<v Speaker 1>to waste. To quote Alkaline Trio and he just went

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<v Speaker 1>just straight gas all the way to the end zone.

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<v Speaker 1>And also you know, it locates the ball tracks, it

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<v Speaker 1>hauls in, and he's back on the bench. I talked

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<v Speaker 1>about it on Twitter on mon Sunday night. I went

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<v Speaker 1>ahead and put the clock to it. From anap to

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<v Speaker 1>catch is four point nine seconds. From ketch to bench

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<v Speaker 1>is nine point one seven seconds, so a little more

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<v Speaker 1>than double, but impressive. Nonetheless, the next big player breaking

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<v Speaker 1>down is the Tyreek catch on third and nine with

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<v Speaker 1>six and a half minutes to go in the fourth quarter.

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<v Speaker 1>Balls at the minus forty one and the score is

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<v Speaker 1>twenty four to seventeen. If you don't get this first

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<v Speaker 1>down right here, the Patriots have half the quarter and

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<v Speaker 1>two timeouts to potentially mount a the exact same drive

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<v Speaker 1>they just had right, a full length field scoring drive,

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<v Speaker 1>and they probably go for two. And I don't want

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<v Speaker 1>to be in that position at all. So let's get

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<v Speaker 1>the defense or the offense rather to convert. And that's

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<v Speaker 1>exactly what happens. We come out in an empty set

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<v Speaker 1>three by two with the strength to the field. What

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<v Speaker 1>does that mean, Dravis? It means you're three receivers to

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<v Speaker 1>the wide side of the field. And the Pats are

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<v Speaker 1>in Cover zero and they place four birds on the fence.

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<v Speaker 1>That means the defenders are just hanging out at the

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<v Speaker 1>sticks nine yards down the field, trying to cut off

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<v Speaker 1>any passes right at the sticks. And still Miami gets it.

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<v Speaker 1>They send five on the rush, a safety pivots out

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<v Speaker 1>into the and they're in this what I think is

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<v Speaker 1>a hybrid zone man combination, which can be a variation

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<v Speaker 1>of Cover eight. It can be sometimes Cover six. There's

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<v Speaker 1>all kinds of different coverages that have multiple variations. But

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<v Speaker 1>I think we get man to the boundary and zone

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<v Speaker 1>to the field. They defend Waddle and claypool man up

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<v Speaker 1>to the boundary. That's obvious to me, but I think

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<v Speaker 1>they're trying to inside out this thing to the field,

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<v Speaker 1>which is basically a communication like a banjo switch, where

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<v Speaker 1>one guy takes in and you carry him, and then

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<v Speaker 1>the second guy to the outside. The second player carries

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<v Speaker 1>that guy. It sounds confusing because it kind of is.

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<v Speaker 1>But Tua has a three step drop from the shotgun,

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<v Speaker 1>and as he's hitting the top of that drop, he's

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<v Speaker 1>geared up to make this throw. The hand separate. The

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<v Speaker 1>ball's coming out and Tyreek is sandwich between two defenders

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<v Speaker 1>and he's three yards short of the sticks. Like that

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<v Speaker 1>tells you how fast has happened. Like Tyreek is six

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<v Speaker 1>yards off the line of scrimmage and Tua has already

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<v Speaker 1>sped up the process to get the process of the

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<v Speaker 1>throw going, and he wedges this football just right between

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<v Speaker 1>two defenders, and you get tremendous effort from Cedric and

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<v Speaker 1>Barrios to run the perimeter defenders off and Tyreek to

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<v Speaker 1>really push up to really I guess, keep those defenders

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<v Speaker 1>on their heels long enough to create that space that

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<v Speaker 1>he winds up fitting it in between. And then of

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<v Speaker 1>course Tyreek skies up and catches the football off of

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<v Speaker 1>his frame, which you know, Tua gets out of the

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<v Speaker 1>credit for the throw and he should, but Tyreek to

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<v Speaker 1>make that catch like someone who called him one trick

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<v Speaker 1>pony who was at the ESPN guy, the ESPAN analytics

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<v Speaker 1>guy that said he was a one trick receiver, Like,

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<v Speaker 1>shut up, dude, that's a big time catch in a

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<v Speaker 1>big time moment. And you know something that you would

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<v Speaker 1>see I don't know George Pickens or I guess who's

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<v Speaker 1>a great all time Terrell Owens. So it's a better

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<v Speaker 1>option there if they did this in a playoff game,

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<v Speaker 1>like if that was like the AFC Championship game or whatever,

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<v Speaker 1>that would be the play where you're getting testimonies from

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<v Speaker 1>to Tyreek, McDaniel, maybe Christian Wilkins about you know, like

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<v Speaker 1>on America's game like that was that play was sick man,

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<v Speaker 1>they would break it down because it was so high

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<v Speaker 1>level in such a critical spot of the game. Pass

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<v Speaker 1>Pro does a good job absorbing four man and then

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<v Speaker 1>a fifth rusher gets free, which you know that's part

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<v Speaker 1>of the issue in the protection slide, I suppose. But

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<v Speaker 1>if he's coming off of to his left side, you know,

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<v Speaker 1>from the far side, Tua is so good that he

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<v Speaker 1>gets the ball out before that player can arrive, like

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<v Speaker 1>ninety percent of the time. And that sped two up.

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<v Speaker 1>But just a team with two elite players two in

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<v Speaker 1>Tyreek executing at a super high level to help you

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<v Speaker 1>win a football game. Fantastic. And then Waddle ends up.

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<v Speaker 1>The Patriots go cover zero again. Dugger steps down to

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<v Speaker 1>fit the run off play action and that was really

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<v Speaker 1>the key part of the play. But Jack Jones is

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<v Speaker 1>sprinting across the formation, going with the man in motion,

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<v Speaker 1>and you know, trying to take away tyreek, converting to

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<v Speaker 1>a kind of deep half field corner at that point,

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<v Speaker 1>and Wattle comes clean down the middle. Now it's a

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<v Speaker 1>wide open walk in Tuddy. But if you've got the tape,

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<v Speaker 1>pull it up and take a look at Twuoa's feet

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<v Speaker 1>for me. Once again. He keeps them active. He keeps

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<v Speaker 1>kind of like tapping and clicking and making sure that

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<v Speaker 1>he's not you know, getting crossed up or getting stationary

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<v Speaker 1>and stuck in a position where if I see the throw,

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<v Speaker 1>I want to make sure my feet are active and

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<v Speaker 1>moving in a position to where I can get off

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<v Speaker 1>a good mechanical operation here and not you know, have

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<v Speaker 1>an overstride or a mistride and possibly drop the arm

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<v Speaker 1>angle and missed this walk in touchdown and create a

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<v Speaker 1>fourth down situation where we have to convert. Otherwise we're

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<v Speaker 1>back in that same spot where the Patriots can go

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<v Speaker 1>win the game. But he doesn't do that clean footwork.

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<v Speaker 1>Puts the ball right in the spot, and he kind

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<v Speaker 1>of locks on the Tyreek first and sends the coverage

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<v Speaker 1>that way, sees the overplayed it gets aligned, locates, Waddle

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<v Speaker 1>puts it on him, and Ingold picks up a key

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<v Speaker 1>chip that Kendall Lamb actually misses on the original protection.

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<v Speaker 1>You get a good wall from Cotton, Eikenberg, Jones and

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<v Speaker 1>Jackson that a FOURDS two of the time ballgame, last

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<v Speaker 1>big play. Ramsey swipes it. So at the snap of

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<v Speaker 1>Jaylen Ramsey's interception, the Patriots are four by one with

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<v Speaker 1>two wide and orbit motion man heading to the strength

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<v Speaker 1>and the back is also to the strength offset in

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<v Speaker 1>the back that alongside Mac Jones. So four players to

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<v Speaker 1>one side eligible one and he's attached on the line

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<v Speaker 1>of scrimmage, so not really much of a passing threat.

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<v Speaker 1>So Miami kind of knows, well, the only possible threat

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<v Speaker 1>here is the perimeter and also maybe a crossing route

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<v Speaker 1>back to the backside. And to me, there's two parts

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<v Speaker 1>of this play that made the play happen to start.

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<v Speaker 1>Before the two things, I think Andrew van ginkles, So

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<v Speaker 1>I guess the third thing, Andrew Van Ginkle's speed rush

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<v Speaker 1>and win around the corner sped Mac Jones up just

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<v Speaker 1>a little bit. He beat Trent Brown off the edge,

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<v Speaker 1>but you see Brandon Jones drive on DeVante Parker with

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<v Speaker 1>Ramsey outside leverage. Like Ramsey's walling off the sideline. He's

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<v Speaker 1>running in phase with Parker on the outside hip. But

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<v Speaker 1>then Brandon Jones just stops and wheels back into the post,

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<v Speaker 1>which is where Parker runs. So there's like a film study,

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<v Speaker 1>you know, dual communication thing here with Ramsey and Jones

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<v Speaker 1>that works out perfectly, and I think that Ramsey feels this.

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<v Speaker 1>But either way, his eyes are on the quarterback all

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<v Speaker 1>the way, which the ability to run and phase but

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<v Speaker 1>also have eyes in the quarterback is super, super rare.

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<v Speaker 1>So I think mac Jones is expecting Jalen to ki

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<v Speaker 1>Harry Parker to the post and for Brandon Jones to

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<v Speaker 1>be too far away to come down and close off

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<v Speaker 1>that wheel. But at the last second they swap that

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<v Speaker 1>and Jones runs the post and Ramsey comes back down

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<v Speaker 1>the wheel and the moment that you see mac Jones's

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<v Speaker 1>hand separate, this is the second part of the play

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<v Speaker 1>that blows my frigging mind. The plant. Like the minute

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<v Speaker 1>he separates, Ramsey internalizes it and hits the plant leg.

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<v Speaker 1>And when I tell you that, this man stops a

0:10:26.960 --> 0:10:30.280
<v Speaker 1>full sprint and then starts in the other direction, all

0:10:30.280 --> 0:10:33.160
<v Speaker 1>within two steps, like you know when you're driving, and like, oh,

0:10:33.200 --> 0:10:35.240
<v Speaker 1>you want to reverse your car and it's an automatic

0:10:35.280 --> 0:10:36.599
<v Speaker 1>and you pop it back into reverse and takes a

0:10:36.600 --> 0:10:39.400
<v Speaker 1>minute for the gears to click. Like Ramsey's quicker than

0:10:39.400 --> 0:10:42.160
<v Speaker 1>the gear click on your car. We said he was

0:10:42.200 --> 0:10:45.199
<v Speaker 1>an alien for the recovery. This is the alien stuff

0:10:45.200 --> 0:10:47.040
<v Speaker 1>that he does. The change of direction that puts him

0:10:47.040 --> 0:10:49.240
<v Speaker 1>in shape for the easiest catch, like coming back down

0:10:49.280 --> 0:10:51.719
<v Speaker 1>the stem. That's the easiest catch anybody can make. That's

0:10:51.760 --> 0:10:53.640
<v Speaker 1>that's in the pregame warm ups when the coaches are

0:10:53.640 --> 0:10:55.720
<v Speaker 1>throwing you footballs out of your back pedal and you

0:10:55.760 --> 0:10:58.760
<v Speaker 1>come back down hill. That's fantastic work to get themselves

0:10:58.760 --> 0:11:01.120
<v Speaker 1>in that position. Then you get a great downfield block

0:11:01.120 --> 0:11:03.440
<v Speaker 1>from cater co who that helps spring Ramsey for a

0:11:03.520 --> 0:11:06.120
<v Speaker 1>forty nine yard return on the reception Top five tapes

0:11:06.160 --> 0:11:09.480
<v Speaker 1>with Miami Dolphins. We're gonna stay right there with Jalen Ramsey.

0:11:09.520 --> 0:11:11.880
<v Speaker 1>You can see the impact by how he aligns. The

0:11:11.920 --> 0:11:14.720
<v Speaker 1>defense has all these moving parts and shifting and pointing

0:11:14.720 --> 0:11:18.120
<v Speaker 1>things out and communication changes. But Ramsey, I'm chill. I'm

0:11:18.120 --> 0:11:20.280
<v Speaker 1>just pressed up over here on the one to the field,

0:11:20.320 --> 0:11:22.720
<v Speaker 1>which is the furthest out receiver to the wide side

0:11:22.760 --> 0:11:24.840
<v Speaker 1>of the field. Sometimes it's the boundary the short side

0:11:24.840 --> 0:11:26.480
<v Speaker 1>of the field. But either way, I'm just gonna go

0:11:26.559 --> 0:11:28.440
<v Speaker 1>ahead and press up and keep my eyes on this

0:11:28.520 --> 0:11:31.360
<v Speaker 1>man right here, not even concerning myself with the rest

0:11:31.400 --> 0:11:33.760
<v Speaker 1>of the defensive call or shifts or motions. It's the

0:11:33.760 --> 0:11:36.440
<v Speaker 1>old Sam Madison tend on ten ten on ten and

0:11:36.480 --> 0:11:39.040
<v Speaker 1>the coolest part. And Jordan rod Reeg from The Athletic

0:11:39.360 --> 0:11:42.320
<v Speaker 1>told us about this in the podcast this summer. Dennis

0:11:42.320 --> 0:11:47.040
<v Speaker 1>told me about these shorts Kendrick Bourne, DeVante Parker, Hunter, Henry,

0:11:47.440 --> 0:11:49.800
<v Speaker 1>Randy Moss. It doesn't matter. He can cover them all.

0:11:49.960 --> 0:11:52.960
<v Speaker 1>They were essentially taking various parts of their progression out

0:11:52.960 --> 0:11:55.440
<v Speaker 1>of the game when they matched up on Ramsey because

0:11:56.000 --> 0:11:58.200
<v Speaker 1>he just beat them all. He won with physicality, he

0:11:58.240 --> 0:12:01.200
<v Speaker 1>won with quickness and instincts. I knew he was good.

0:12:01.880 --> 0:12:04.640
<v Speaker 1>I didn't you had my attention. Now you've got youah

0:12:04.679 --> 0:12:06.880
<v Speaker 1>my curiosity. Now you've had my attention. I just blew that.

0:12:07.160 --> 0:12:09.640
<v Speaker 1>But I did not expect him to be this good.

0:12:09.840 --> 0:12:13.040
<v Speaker 1>Ninety four days off surgery and then the force fumble

0:12:13.320 --> 0:12:16.440
<v Speaker 1>was textbook like Pop Warner one on one football. It's

0:12:16.480 --> 0:12:18.560
<v Speaker 1>how they teach it man, which is kind of rare

0:12:18.600 --> 0:12:21.000
<v Speaker 1>in the National Football League these days, Hat on the

0:12:21.000 --> 0:12:24.080
<v Speaker 1>correct side of the ball carrier, brought his feet through

0:12:24.120 --> 0:12:27.080
<v Speaker 1>the party, finished through the ball carrier. Man, I wish

0:12:27.080 --> 0:12:29.160
<v Speaker 1>we had fallen on that ball, so it counted. Deshaun

0:12:29.200 --> 0:12:30.600
<v Speaker 1>Elliott tried to scoop it up and maybe he had

0:12:30.640 --> 0:12:32.280
<v Speaker 1>a chance to be falls on it, but a good

0:12:32.280 --> 0:12:34.160
<v Speaker 1>effort by Zeke Elliott to get his hand back in

0:12:34.200 --> 0:12:35.840
<v Speaker 1>there and kind of strip it away from DeShawn who

0:12:35.960 --> 0:12:37.719
<v Speaker 1>was going to pick it up and posta run it

0:12:37.800 --> 0:12:40.280
<v Speaker 1>back for six. By the way, if Wilkins doesn't get

0:12:40.280 --> 0:12:43.120
<v Speaker 1>the sack before the Patriots field goal at the beginning

0:12:43.120 --> 0:12:45.320
<v Speaker 1>of the third quarter, after we fumbled it back to him,

0:12:45.360 --> 0:12:47.360
<v Speaker 1>they go three and out. Ramsey would have picked off

0:12:47.360 --> 0:12:50.360
<v Speaker 1>the third downplay because he falls into a backside, you know,

0:12:50.480 --> 0:12:53.040
<v Speaker 1>deep over route from Kendrick Bourne and he would have

0:12:53.080 --> 0:12:55.199
<v Speaker 1>gotten there before the ball did him. Born put the

0:12:55.240 --> 0:12:57.760
<v Speaker 1>mailbox up like I'm open, but he wasn't because Ramsey

0:12:57.800 --> 0:12:59.840
<v Speaker 1>felt it the entire way. Go watch it on tape,

0:12:59.840 --> 0:13:02.680
<v Speaker 1>you'll I'm talking about twenty nine coverage snaps. They targeted

0:13:02.760 --> 0:13:05.000
<v Speaker 1>him three times, they caught one for twenty four yards.

0:13:05.120 --> 0:13:07.080
<v Speaker 1>He damn near broke that up to had a pick

0:13:07.080 --> 0:13:08.880
<v Speaker 1>and a forced fubble that did not go into the books.

0:13:09.559 --> 0:13:11.320
<v Speaker 1>First game back, he's the top tape of the week,

0:13:11.440 --> 0:13:14.120
<v Speaker 1>tape number two, and this is his seventh time in

0:13:14.120 --> 0:13:16.240
<v Speaker 1>the top five out of eight games this year. Two

0:13:16.720 --> 0:13:19.560
<v Speaker 1>tungu Lo. They blitzed the hell out of him and

0:13:19.559 --> 0:13:23.280
<v Speaker 1>effectively got free runners often, but man, he just got

0:13:23.360 --> 0:13:25.520
<v Speaker 1>rid of the football. Didn't matter. They blitzed him more

0:13:25.559 --> 0:13:28.080
<v Speaker 1>than double any defense did this year twenty three times.

0:13:28.200 --> 0:13:30.280
<v Speaker 1>That's forty eight percent of his dropbacks. And on those

0:13:30.360 --> 0:13:33.360
<v Speaker 1>dropbacks he did get sacked twice, he scrambled once, and

0:13:33.400 --> 0:13:35.920
<v Speaker 1>he was fourteen for twenty with a buck forty four

0:13:35.920 --> 0:13:38.720
<v Speaker 1>and two touchdowns. There's no good defense against this guy,

0:13:38.720 --> 0:13:43.200
<v Speaker 1>who is comfortably, comfortably the second best quarterback in the NFL.

0:13:43.360 --> 0:13:45.880
<v Speaker 1>And the only reason I give Mahomes this top spot

0:13:45.920 --> 0:13:48.199
<v Speaker 1>over him still is legacy because right now two is

0:13:48.200 --> 0:13:50.280
<v Speaker 1>playing better than anybody else in the National Football League.

0:13:50.400 --> 0:13:52.160
<v Speaker 1>Go talk to your cactus about it. And when you

0:13:52.200 --> 0:13:55.040
<v Speaker 1>can play like this under pressure with no run game, man,

0:13:55.120 --> 0:13:57.360
<v Speaker 1>that's putting the damn team on your back. Greg Jennings

0:13:57.400 --> 0:14:00.720
<v Speaker 1>style so much determination though the location on the back

0:14:00.760 --> 0:14:02.959
<v Speaker 1>shoulder ball to wattle on the fourth and one on

0:14:03.000 --> 0:14:06.000
<v Speaker 1>the opening possession, color flashes into his face, a blue

0:14:06.080 --> 0:14:09.480
<v Speaker 1>jersey right there. He throws it with Wattle at midfield

0:14:09.760 --> 0:14:12.559
<v Speaker 1>and a defender on top of him with inside leverage,

0:14:12.800 --> 0:14:14.640
<v Speaker 1>So the ball has to go back shoulder because he's

0:14:14.720 --> 0:14:16.840
<v Speaker 1>right there in the hip pocket. There's a safety over

0:14:16.840 --> 0:14:18.560
<v Speaker 1>the top ten yards deeper, so we have to make

0:14:18.559 --> 0:14:20.280
<v Speaker 1>sure this ball has some zip on it. So we

0:14:20.360 --> 0:14:23.040
<v Speaker 1>kind of settle Wattle down before he runs into that coverage,

0:14:23.080 --> 0:14:26.640
<v Speaker 1>and there trap corner who's outside squeezing back inside of Wattle.

0:14:26.680 --> 0:14:29.160
<v Speaker 1>So this ball it has to be through a proverbial

0:14:29.200 --> 0:14:32.440
<v Speaker 1>twenty two inch tire rim, you know, like old Big

0:14:32.480 --> 0:14:35.360
<v Speaker 1>Black from the Robin Black Days, twenty two inch arms.

0:14:35.400 --> 0:14:37.920
<v Speaker 1>My arms are my rims. It's a turnover on downs

0:14:37.960 --> 0:14:40.680
<v Speaker 1>if we don't fit it through Big Black's arms. And

0:14:40.920 --> 0:14:43.280
<v Speaker 1>when you have the most accurate quarterback in the NFL,

0:14:43.480 --> 0:14:45.720
<v Speaker 1>it's seventeen yards on fourth and one, not a turnover.

0:14:46.640 --> 0:14:48.920
<v Speaker 1>Just I can't say enough about this guy. He's so

0:14:49.080 --> 0:14:51.880
<v Speaker 1>damn good. We got a nice adjustment very early on too,

0:14:51.920 --> 0:14:55.200
<v Speaker 1>you know, the first incompletion to Claypool where Jonathan Jones

0:14:55.240 --> 0:14:56.840
<v Speaker 1>just sort of walls him off and you're like, what

0:14:56.880 --> 0:14:59.360
<v Speaker 1>the heck was that? Well, first of all, past interference,

0:14:59.400 --> 0:15:01.480
<v Speaker 1>I thought they he did that all game where somebody

0:15:01.480 --> 0:15:04.280
<v Speaker 1>would wheel out of the pressure look and just search

0:15:04.320 --> 0:15:07.240
<v Speaker 1>for the crosser and basically set a pick and wall

0:15:07.280 --> 0:15:10.000
<v Speaker 1>them off on the very next play after the Claypool

0:15:10.000 --> 0:15:12.880
<v Speaker 1>in completion, it's the following series they do the exact

0:15:12.880 --> 0:15:15.600
<v Speaker 1>same thing to Tyreek on a shallow cross. So Tua

0:15:15.840 --> 0:15:18.000
<v Speaker 1>checks it, and I think he's reading low to high.

0:15:18.200 --> 0:15:19.800
<v Speaker 1>You can't know if you're not in the quarterback room,

0:15:20.080 --> 0:15:22.320
<v Speaker 1>but I think he reads Tyreek and then Durham to

0:15:22.440 --> 0:15:25.280
<v Speaker 1>like the dagger the fifteen yard little en route and

0:15:25.320 --> 0:15:28.480
<v Speaker 1>then replaces the vacancy with the football to smile. That's

0:15:28.480 --> 0:15:31.360
<v Speaker 1>why your two star receivers went over one hundred yards

0:15:31.360 --> 0:15:34.560
<v Speaker 1>in my opinion, because you had solutions to those brackets

0:15:34.600 --> 0:15:38.360
<v Speaker 1>with your MVP. To this point, quarterback finding the available

0:15:38.360 --> 0:15:41.080
<v Speaker 1>space that they created, he threw them out of that

0:15:41.160 --> 0:15:43.400
<v Speaker 1>coverage enough to the point we got two hundred and

0:15:43.480 --> 0:15:46.680
<v Speaker 1>thirty three yards from Waddle and Hill combined. Really good stuff.

0:15:46.920 --> 0:15:48.680
<v Speaker 1>The pick he told us about it. They ran a

0:15:48.760 --> 0:15:52.160
<v Speaker 1>unique coverage with double hooked defenders that damn Kyle dugger

0:15:52.240 --> 0:15:55.360
<v Speaker 1>Man that Damn, Bob Barker. He does such a good

0:15:55.440 --> 0:15:59.360
<v Speaker 1>job of just being in every place every time it

0:15:59.400 --> 0:16:02.080
<v Speaker 1>seems like. But on this particular play of flashing in

0:16:02.120 --> 0:16:04.160
<v Speaker 1>front of Julian Hill where it looks like he's gonna

0:16:04.160 --> 0:16:06.680
<v Speaker 1>pick him up and run the vertical stem, but then

0:16:06.720 --> 0:16:08.880
<v Speaker 1>he peels out right at the last moment and baits

0:16:08.880 --> 0:16:12.440
<v Speaker 1>two into that throw. Bad Reid. Great play defensively, tip

0:16:12.440 --> 0:16:13.800
<v Speaker 1>of the cap, Kyle Duggart, you made a lot of

0:16:13.800 --> 0:16:16.400
<v Speaker 1>players in this game. Oh my goodness, guys. The throw

0:16:16.480 --> 0:16:18.360
<v Speaker 1>to Waddle at the end of the half where he

0:16:18.440 --> 0:16:20.760
<v Speaker 1>laid out for the catch. So the Patriots are in

0:16:20.840 --> 0:16:23.520
<v Speaker 1>that double hook Look again, where where they're taking away

0:16:23.800 --> 0:16:26.120
<v Speaker 1>that ten to eighteen yard rage pass that we just

0:16:26.320 --> 0:16:29.440
<v Speaker 1>you know, Pepper teams with. We get a swing an

0:16:29.480 --> 0:16:32.960
<v Speaker 1>out from alec Ingold and a hookup from Durham smythe

0:16:33.040 --> 0:16:35.320
<v Speaker 1>all to that side of the formation with Wattle running

0:16:35.360 --> 0:16:38.160
<v Speaker 1>the cross or in behind all of that. Now, when

0:16:38.160 --> 0:16:42.560
<v Speaker 1>Tua strides on the throw, he's directing his body language

0:16:42.640 --> 0:16:45.560
<v Speaker 1>at alec Ingold on the out route and the entirety

0:16:45.600 --> 0:16:48.280
<v Speaker 1>of that middle structure of the Patriots defense, which by

0:16:48.320 --> 0:16:50.600
<v Speaker 1>the way, there's also two deep safeties on top of

0:16:50.640 --> 0:16:53.200
<v Speaker 1>all that with a three man rush. So this really

0:16:53.240 --> 0:16:57.000
<v Speaker 1>well orchestrated, really well conceived, eight man drop in coverage.

0:16:57.280 --> 0:16:59.080
<v Speaker 1>These are the hardest plays to win against when you

0:16:59.160 --> 0:17:01.400
<v Speaker 1>have no threat of the run due to the game situation.

0:17:01.520 --> 0:17:04.240
<v Speaker 1>In this situation, no clock left, you know, before the half,

0:17:04.840 --> 0:17:08.840
<v Speaker 1>Tua gets them all to flow outside of that throw

0:17:08.920 --> 0:17:13.040
<v Speaker 1>to Wattle because he strides to Ingold, then fires over

0:17:13.119 --> 0:17:15.879
<v Speaker 1>that level twenty yards down the field to Wattle. That

0:17:16.040 --> 0:17:19.320
<v Speaker 1>is as elite as it gets. I know that people

0:17:19.359 --> 0:17:23.239
<v Speaker 1>want to see guys throw you know, off script, you know,

0:17:23.960 --> 0:17:26.480
<v Speaker 1>rolling to their left, across their body, ropes and stuff.

0:17:26.520 --> 0:17:28.439
<v Speaker 1>But I don't give a damn about that. I care

0:17:28.480 --> 0:17:30.840
<v Speaker 1>about this stuff. This is winning football, like elite stuff.

0:17:31.280 --> 0:17:33.879
<v Speaker 1>Then the throw to Waddle after the dropped back shoulder

0:17:33.920 --> 0:17:36.040
<v Speaker 1>that he had, He's chased off the spot, attacks the

0:17:36.080 --> 0:17:38.560
<v Speaker 1>line of scrimmage, eyes up, and throws a dart to

0:17:38.600 --> 0:17:42.080
<v Speaker 1>Waddle on the move. Siri, what does elite quarterback play

0:17:42.119 --> 0:17:46.000
<v Speaker 1>look like? Oh? Yeah, cool, cool cool. I think you

0:17:46.000 --> 0:17:48.000
<v Speaker 1>could look back at the top two or the two

0:17:48.080 --> 0:17:49.879
<v Speaker 1>New England games this season at the end of the

0:17:49.960 --> 0:17:52.880
<v Speaker 1>year and collectively say that that was Tua's most impressive

0:17:52.920 --> 0:17:55.280
<v Speaker 1>body of work over his entire career in terms of

0:17:55.280 --> 0:17:58.199
<v Speaker 1>how they challenge you, make you play left handed or

0:17:58.240 --> 0:18:01.040
<v Speaker 1>I guess right handed in this case, ten to find

0:18:01.080 --> 0:18:03.679
<v Speaker 1>ways to make you one dimensional, the way they challenge

0:18:03.720 --> 0:18:06.840
<v Speaker 1>your rules, the way he executed from a progression standpoint

0:18:06.880 --> 0:18:08.919
<v Speaker 1>back in week two and in this game from a

0:18:08.920 --> 0:18:12.280
<v Speaker 1>big moment execution standpoint, from beating tight coverages time and

0:18:12.320 --> 0:18:16.520
<v Speaker 1>time again. Third and longs who collectively just two awesome,

0:18:16.720 --> 0:18:20.520
<v Speaker 1>awesome tapes from QB one. Am I plugged in here?

0:18:20.760 --> 0:18:22.120
<v Speaker 1>I would suck if I just did all that without

0:18:22.119 --> 0:18:25.480
<v Speaker 1>being plugged in. Let's see just thoughts by train of thought.

0:18:25.560 --> 0:18:29.320
<v Speaker 1>So besides the pick I thought, he had two other misfires.

0:18:29.320 --> 0:18:31.600
<v Speaker 1>The one to Barrios that Jack Jones almost broke on.

0:18:31.680 --> 0:18:33.359
<v Speaker 1>That's just a good play from the defender, really, and

0:18:33.359 --> 0:18:36.040
<v Speaker 1>then the final touchdown drive before the huge third down

0:18:36.080 --> 0:18:38.920
<v Speaker 1>conversion of Tyreek, he had Wattle wide open and through

0:18:38.960 --> 0:18:41.960
<v Speaker 1>the ball behind him. Waddle dropped it, but it could

0:18:42.000 --> 0:18:43.840
<v Speaker 1>have been a lot bit of a throw otherwise, an

0:18:43.880 --> 0:18:46.199
<v Speaker 1>awesome tape that ended with a touchdown throw to Waddle.

0:18:46.640 --> 0:18:49.360
<v Speaker 1>His lowest deep ball percentage of the season, just went

0:18:49.400 --> 0:18:51.679
<v Speaker 1>one for four for forty two yards. It's nice to

0:18:51.680 --> 0:18:53.600
<v Speaker 1>have a score in there as well. And then on

0:18:53.680 --> 0:18:56.679
<v Speaker 1>throws over ten yards in general, so ten to nineteen

0:18:56.680 --> 0:18:58.560
<v Speaker 1>plus a twenty plus he was nine for twenty with

0:18:58.600 --> 0:19:00.760
<v Speaker 1>a buck ninety two and two touchdown and a pick.

0:19:01.080 --> 0:19:04.359
<v Speaker 1>Both are over one hundred and passer rating, so relatively speaking,

0:19:04.400 --> 0:19:07.680
<v Speaker 1>like this guy still just balls out and still leads

0:19:07.680 --> 0:19:09.240
<v Speaker 1>the league in everything. If he doesn't leave the league,

0:19:09.240 --> 0:19:11.360
<v Speaker 1>he's second or third in the category. Let's run out

0:19:11.359 --> 0:19:13.040
<v Speaker 1>of the top five tapes on the other side here and

0:19:13.080 --> 0:19:15.480
<v Speaker 1>take our first break because we are deep into the podcast.

0:19:15.680 --> 0:19:18.520
<v Speaker 1>That's next Draft Time podcast, your host, Travis Wingfield, brought

0:19:18.560 --> 0:19:23.960
<v Speaker 1>to you by Auto Nation. Top two tapes today go

0:19:24.000 --> 0:19:26.240
<v Speaker 1>to Jalen Ramsey and two A Tongue Bi Loa. Our

0:19:26.280 --> 0:19:29.320
<v Speaker 1>third top tape against the Patriots goes to Jalen Waddle

0:19:29.600 --> 0:19:31.359
<v Speaker 1>and just want to acknowledge off the top some of

0:19:31.359 --> 0:19:34.080
<v Speaker 1>the drops that both he and Tyreek had because spoiler

0:19:34.119 --> 0:19:36.840
<v Speaker 1>Tyreek is my fourth top tape, just a rare instance

0:19:36.840 --> 0:19:39.639
<v Speaker 1>for both, but my goodness, I just love this dude's game, man,

0:19:39.840 --> 0:19:43.240
<v Speaker 1>the effort in getting himself into position and outworking guys

0:19:43.280 --> 0:19:46.920
<v Speaker 1>in the run blocking game. Just grit and determination and demeanor.

0:19:46.960 --> 0:19:50.040
<v Speaker 1>It's all really like, it's admirable for a guy that

0:19:50.400 --> 0:19:53.280
<v Speaker 1>makes his money running by people, I think. And then

0:19:53.320 --> 0:19:55.960
<v Speaker 1>how about the ultimate hype man when a fellow wide

0:19:55.960 --> 0:19:59.000
<v Speaker 1>receiver does something big, just loving up on Heeddrick Wilson

0:19:59.040 --> 0:20:01.119
<v Speaker 1>after his first career touch his the Miami Dolphin. And

0:20:01.119 --> 0:20:02.640
<v Speaker 1>then there's the stuff that he gets paid for making

0:20:02.640 --> 0:20:04.840
<v Speaker 1>the big plays like catching a now throw at the

0:20:04.880 --> 0:20:07.960
<v Speaker 1>Lion scrimmage on third and fourteen and following great blocks

0:20:08.000 --> 0:20:11.680
<v Speaker 1>from Tyreek, from Barrios, from Jackson Hunt and getting seven

0:20:11.760 --> 0:20:14.600
<v Speaker 1>yards after the initial contact. He is so adept at

0:20:14.600 --> 0:20:17.639
<v Speaker 1>picking his way through traffic. It's no mystery why he

0:20:17.720 --> 0:20:20.959
<v Speaker 1>was a dynamic returnment in college. The balance the accelerator

0:20:21.000 --> 0:20:24.520
<v Speaker 1>slash decelerator up the stem after one of the best

0:20:24.560 --> 0:20:28.359
<v Speaker 1>released packages in the entire game. That's why he's always open. Tremendous,

0:20:28.440 --> 0:20:31.520
<v Speaker 1>tremendous route runner. And as I wrote that, So he

0:20:31.600 --> 0:20:33.840
<v Speaker 1>drops that back shoulder throw in the third quarter right like,

0:20:34.160 --> 0:20:35.879
<v Speaker 1>got to make the play. But onto the next snap

0:20:35.880 --> 0:20:38.440
<v Speaker 1>and he gets j C. Jackson one v one, Tua

0:20:38.520 --> 0:20:41.720
<v Speaker 1>extends the play, Wattle presses the off coverage and just

0:20:41.880 --> 0:20:45.480
<v Speaker 1>gets going downhill at him and then turns in with

0:20:45.640 --> 0:20:48.840
<v Speaker 1>the head nod to sell the inside route. Jackson takes

0:20:48.840 --> 0:20:50.520
<v Speaker 1>the cheese and wheels all the way out and runs

0:20:50.520 --> 0:20:53.879
<v Speaker 1>around and circles and tries to drive before realizing it's

0:20:53.840 --> 0:20:56.000
<v Speaker 1>to double move. And then all of a sudden, Jackson

0:20:56.040 --> 0:20:58.080
<v Speaker 1>sprints back to the goal line and Wattle flattens it

0:20:58.160 --> 0:21:00.560
<v Speaker 1>back out and it's a deep, out, wide open, easy

0:21:00.560 --> 0:21:02.440
<v Speaker 1>catch of twenty three yards. This is the wattle game

0:21:02.480 --> 0:21:04.520
<v Speaker 1>we were used to in twenty twenty two. In terms

0:21:04.520 --> 0:21:06.760
<v Speaker 1>of stats, two point eight eight yards per route, ran

0:21:07.080 --> 0:21:09.320
<v Speaker 1>ten point one yards per target, forty one yards after

0:21:09.320 --> 0:21:11.800
<v Speaker 1>the catch, and what could have been so much more

0:21:11.840 --> 0:21:15.680
<v Speaker 1>because three drops on the back shoulder on the dagger

0:21:15.720 --> 0:21:17.639
<v Speaker 1>that I thought to a put behind him, and that

0:21:17.680 --> 0:21:20.359
<v Speaker 1>little swing throw that would have been like at least

0:21:20.359 --> 0:21:22.080
<v Speaker 1>fifty more yards. He could have been close to like

0:21:22.119 --> 0:21:24.080
<v Speaker 1>one seventy five, close to two hundred if he catches

0:21:24.119 --> 0:21:26.800
<v Speaker 1>all his balls. My fourth top tape is Tyreek Hill,

0:21:27.000 --> 0:21:29.359
<v Speaker 1>and the chemistry that he has with two a tongue

0:21:29.359 --> 0:21:31.119
<v Speaker 1>of I looa continues to pop in a way that

0:21:31.240 --> 0:21:34.720
<v Speaker 1>just is rare. He ran one crosser on boot action

0:21:35.240 --> 0:21:38.000
<v Speaker 1>with layers where you got you know, a low layer,

0:21:38.040 --> 0:21:39.960
<v Speaker 1>a mid layer, a top layer to kind of spread

0:21:39.960 --> 0:21:42.560
<v Speaker 1>the defense out in terms of vertical spacing. And Kyle

0:21:42.640 --> 0:21:44.600
<v Speaker 1>Dugger saw it and knew where to go because he's

0:21:44.640 --> 0:21:46.960
<v Speaker 1>Kyle freaking Dugger, and he runs to the spot where

0:21:46.960 --> 0:21:50.960
<v Speaker 1>Tyreek Sprout normally goes, and then, in perfect unison, Tua

0:21:51.119 --> 0:21:53.680
<v Speaker 1>starts his throw at the exact same time that Tyreek

0:21:53.800 --> 0:21:56.600
<v Speaker 1>just throttles down and stops, and he checks up, and

0:21:56.640 --> 0:21:59.040
<v Speaker 1>Tua knew that he would and just throws it there.

0:21:59.200 --> 0:22:02.120
<v Speaker 1>It goes back to his postgame comment to us about

0:22:02.160 --> 0:22:05.600
<v Speaker 1>practicing against looks you probably won't get to see, you know,

0:22:06.760 --> 0:22:08.960
<v Speaker 1>against a team because of olive variety they show, and

0:22:09.000 --> 0:22:11.600
<v Speaker 1>a good example of just having answers to overplay and

0:22:11.600 --> 0:22:13.879
<v Speaker 1>answers to what they might do to you, because you

0:22:13.960 --> 0:22:16.320
<v Speaker 1>have this offense so well versed. And really, I think

0:22:16.320 --> 0:22:18.359
<v Speaker 1>the part of his game that makes him so dangerous,

0:22:18.359 --> 0:22:21.280
<v Speaker 1>because we've seen you know, John Ross, like four to

0:22:21.320 --> 0:22:24.440
<v Speaker 1>two guys coming to the NFL and accomplish absolutely nothing, right,

0:22:24.960 --> 0:22:28.320
<v Speaker 1>is Tyreek's feel, his understanding of coverage and how teams

0:22:28.320 --> 0:22:30.720
<v Speaker 1>are trying to defend him. He's so smart and tow

0:22:30.840 --> 0:22:34.639
<v Speaker 1>of matches that smartness. I have to imagine why. That's

0:22:34.720 --> 0:22:38.240
<v Speaker 1>why that he went on that like pr campaign last summer,

0:22:38.600 --> 0:22:41.160
<v Speaker 1>gassing up his quarterback because like the confidence to Bill

0:22:41.280 --> 0:22:43.800
<v Speaker 1>is nice, that's good, but because I think that he

0:22:43.880 --> 0:22:46.199
<v Speaker 1>knew a secret that nobody else really did. That this

0:22:46.280 --> 0:22:48.280
<v Speaker 1>quarterback and him, we're gonna go off the way. They

0:22:48.280 --> 0:22:50.520
<v Speaker 1>have two point five to five yards per round. Ran

0:22:50.640 --> 0:22:53.240
<v Speaker 1>just eight point six yards per target, his second lowest

0:22:53.280 --> 0:22:56.080
<v Speaker 1>output on both those categories on the year, both of

0:22:56.080 --> 0:22:58.720
<v Speaker 1>those against the Patriots. Thirty two yards after the catch.

0:22:58.960 --> 0:23:01.640
<v Speaker 1>We move Christian Filkin's my fifth best tape. They didn't

0:23:01.680 --> 0:23:03.639
<v Speaker 1>move him with a double team all game long. It's

0:23:03.680 --> 0:23:05.919
<v Speaker 1>a thankless job for anybody that has to fulfill it,

0:23:06.119 --> 0:23:08.080
<v Speaker 1>and it helps him create splash plays for other guys

0:23:08.080 --> 0:23:09.760
<v Speaker 1>around him. And then he does that as well as

0:23:09.760 --> 0:23:12.600
<v Speaker 1>anybody along with Zack Seeler. But man, how about the

0:23:12.680 --> 0:23:14.440
<v Speaker 1>run stuff he had that I mentioned in the podcast

0:23:14.520 --> 0:23:17.120
<v Speaker 1>last night. He's the one technique He knocks the right

0:23:17.160 --> 0:23:19.560
<v Speaker 1>guard back into the backfield, throws him to the side,

0:23:19.600 --> 0:23:23.040
<v Speaker 1>feels the flow, beats Ezekiel Elliott to the corner, and

0:23:23.119 --> 0:23:25.479
<v Speaker 1>cuts him down outside of the numbers for a big tackle.

0:23:25.720 --> 0:23:28.520
<v Speaker 1>You know Andrews and Strange on the Patriots O line

0:23:28.520 --> 0:23:30.720
<v Speaker 1>are good players. He gave him all they could handle.

0:23:30.760 --> 0:23:32.959
<v Speaker 1>They couldn't deal with Christian Wilkins and the way he

0:23:33.000 --> 0:23:35.480
<v Speaker 1>creates gaps and then exploits them like I'm gonna knock

0:23:35.560 --> 0:23:37.840
<v Speaker 1>you back into the backfield, then get off this block

0:23:37.840 --> 0:23:41.520
<v Speaker 1>inside and cut down the B gap. It's impressive, man,

0:23:41.520 --> 0:23:43.840
<v Speaker 1>It's really really impressive. All game he would widen the

0:23:43.840 --> 0:23:45.800
<v Speaker 1>split and then get back inside of the block to

0:23:45.840 --> 0:23:48.640
<v Speaker 1>make the play. His sack arsenal is or his sack

0:23:48.720 --> 0:23:50.359
<v Speaker 1>was the full arsenal of moves he has where he

0:23:50.400 --> 0:23:53.280
<v Speaker 1>walks the right guard three yards into the backfield, disengages,

0:23:53.280 --> 0:23:55.800
<v Speaker 1>and then closes with the first explosive step to the quarterback.

0:23:56.119 --> 0:23:58.480
<v Speaker 1>What a game. One pressure of the sack, but five

0:23:58.560 --> 0:24:01.679
<v Speaker 1>stops in terms of getting rundown or wins for the

0:24:01.680 --> 0:24:04.560
<v Speaker 1>defense and running downs. My consideration for top tapes were

0:24:04.560 --> 0:24:07.840
<v Speaker 1>also Austin Jackson. I thought the combination of Rob Jones

0:24:07.840 --> 0:24:10.480
<v Speaker 1>and Lester Cotton were really good. Jalen Phillips with my

0:24:10.640 --> 0:24:14.199
<v Speaker 1>five b behind Christian Wilkins, David Long, Cater Kohu, and

0:24:14.280 --> 0:24:18.000
<v Speaker 1>Deshaun Elliet all garnered consideration for top tapes. Let's go

0:24:18.000 --> 0:24:20.119
<v Speaker 1>ahead and pick up the offensive notes here and just

0:24:20.160 --> 0:24:23.000
<v Speaker 1>in general. So I would love to have coach McDaniel

0:24:23.040 --> 0:24:25.320
<v Speaker 1>explain this, because he alluded to it in his press

0:24:25.359 --> 0:24:28.119
<v Speaker 1>conference postgame. But I think the reason that he was

0:24:28.160 --> 0:24:31.000
<v Speaker 1>so impressed by the Patriots game plan was because they

0:24:31.000 --> 0:24:35.679
<v Speaker 1>had many different looks that ultimately gave them the same result.

0:24:35.800 --> 0:24:38.040
<v Speaker 1>Bodies in the middle of the field who could both

0:24:38.080 --> 0:24:40.119
<v Speaker 1>fit a gap in the running game but also be

0:24:40.240 --> 0:24:43.600
<v Speaker 1>able to get proper depth to take away those intermediate

0:24:43.640 --> 0:24:46.560
<v Speaker 1>throws between the numbers where Miami lives. Because the thing

0:24:46.560 --> 0:24:48.719
<v Speaker 1>that Miami did to combat that was, you know, they

0:24:48.720 --> 0:24:50.639
<v Speaker 1>had to have success to other parts of the field,

0:24:50.680 --> 0:24:54.160
<v Speaker 1>the perimeter, the flats, the verticals, you know, the Barrios reception,

0:24:54.280 --> 0:24:57.119
<v Speaker 1>the Ingold swing, the Reek and Waddell screen passes, the

0:24:57.160 --> 0:24:59.800
<v Speaker 1>Tyreek deep shot. Hitting all those opened up some of

0:24:59.840 --> 0:25:01.359
<v Speaker 1>your bread and butter later in the game. And then

0:25:01.400 --> 0:25:03.240
<v Speaker 1>then would come back to those concepts and the Patriots

0:25:03.240 --> 0:25:07.240
<v Speaker 1>would react differently. And it's Tua's ability to recognize real

0:25:07.320 --> 0:25:10.879
<v Speaker 1>time those variances that's what made the difference to me.

0:25:10.960 --> 0:25:13.080
<v Speaker 1>I talked about it in camp all camp long, right,

0:25:13.680 --> 0:25:16.480
<v Speaker 1>it seemed like Miami made this concerted effort to be

0:25:16.520 --> 0:25:20.320
<v Speaker 1>able to expand their passing game with consistency beyond those

0:25:20.359 --> 0:25:22.280
<v Speaker 1>middle of the field throws, and at times it looked

0:25:22.280 --> 0:25:24.920
<v Speaker 1>like a struggle. But those reps are starting to pay

0:25:24.920 --> 0:25:28.240
<v Speaker 1>off now because A, you know, you had success moving

0:25:28.320 --> 0:25:30.359
<v Speaker 1>the ball and doing that, and B you got the

0:25:30.400 --> 0:25:33.440
<v Speaker 1>Patriots to react to get ultimately what you do best.

0:25:33.720 --> 0:25:35.879
<v Speaker 1>An example, you know, the fourth and one conversion to

0:25:35.920 --> 0:25:39.080
<v Speaker 1>Waddle was the exact same concept as the Wattle touchdown,

0:25:39.280 --> 0:25:42.159
<v Speaker 1>but the Patriots react differently. They vacate the middle of

0:25:42.200 --> 0:25:44.199
<v Speaker 1>the field you see to a hitch and pump and

0:25:44.240 --> 0:25:47.200
<v Speaker 1>realize it let the ball go walk in touchdown. I

0:25:47.200 --> 0:25:49.360
<v Speaker 1>would love to, you know, ask like a Bill Belichick

0:25:49.440 --> 0:25:52.840
<v Speaker 1>or somebody how they feel about defending this offense for

0:25:52.920 --> 0:25:55.280
<v Speaker 1>sixty minutes, because it just looks like such a challenge

0:25:55.680 --> 0:25:57.680
<v Speaker 1>and it's proven to be that way so far. The

0:25:57.720 --> 0:25:59.960
<v Speaker 1>rest of the eligibles. I just want to note Durham smile.

0:26:00.040 --> 0:26:02.399
<v Speaker 1>It's gutty performance because he got dinged up early and

0:26:02.440 --> 0:26:04.240
<v Speaker 1>just kept coming back for more and toughed it out,

0:26:04.280 --> 0:26:06.320
<v Speaker 1>made some big catches and key blocks and competed his

0:26:06.359 --> 0:26:09.480
<v Speaker 1>ass off. Great game durham smyth, Julian Hill is a

0:26:09.480 --> 0:26:12.000
<v Speaker 1>player man. So like we have you know, support staff

0:26:12.040 --> 0:26:14.239
<v Speaker 1>that aids the coaches around the building and whatnot, like

0:26:14.560 --> 0:26:18.280
<v Speaker 1>whether it's cutting up tape, getting extra research info, or

0:26:18.440 --> 0:26:20.600
<v Speaker 1>just getting a coffee, like it makes the job easier, right,

0:26:20.960 --> 0:26:23.600
<v Speaker 1>I feel like that's Julian Hill's role for the offensive tackles.

0:26:23.640 --> 0:26:26.840
<v Speaker 1>He enacts something of a push push on some catch

0:26:26.880 --> 0:26:29.119
<v Speaker 1>and climb doubles where he gets surge and kind of

0:26:29.160 --> 0:26:31.960
<v Speaker 1>helps displace those five and four techniques out of their gap.

0:26:32.200 --> 0:26:35.800
<v Speaker 1>Then stays attached at the hip with really good chemistry

0:26:35.840 --> 0:26:38.720
<v Speaker 1>with those tackles to prevent the second level defender from

0:26:38.760 --> 0:26:41.360
<v Speaker 1>coming downhill and splitting that double team. He just looked

0:26:41.520 --> 0:26:43.800
<v Speaker 1>climbs up and walls them off. It's really impressive, and

0:26:43.840 --> 0:26:46.560
<v Speaker 1>on a consistent basis, he dents the edge you know,

0:26:46.600 --> 0:26:49.640
<v Speaker 1>and creates a new gap inside for Miami. On Raheem's

0:26:49.640 --> 0:26:51.800
<v Speaker 1>touchdown run. You know, as my co host Seth Levitt

0:26:51.800 --> 0:26:54.040
<v Speaker 1>would say on the postgame show, he just hits you know,

0:26:54.119 --> 0:26:57.240
<v Speaker 1>grown ass man blocks and he raises the forced defender

0:26:57.480 --> 0:26:59.880
<v Speaker 1>for a Raheem Moster walk in touchdown. He's a damn

0:27:00.040 --> 0:27:03.240
<v Speaker 1>good cog here Man alec Ingold, same story. His ability

0:27:03.240 --> 0:27:06.160
<v Speaker 1>to change track, like the mental processing to go pick

0:27:06.240 --> 0:27:09.359
<v Speaker 1>up a block that looked like somebody else had it,

0:27:09.400 --> 0:27:12.080
<v Speaker 1>but they fall off the block is just awesome. Like

0:27:12.800 --> 0:27:14.960
<v Speaker 1>you know, someone springs a leak, he's going one way,

0:27:15.000 --> 0:27:17.160
<v Speaker 1>he stops and goes and gets it. Maybe we dub

0:27:17.240 --> 0:27:20.399
<v Speaker 1>him the repair man. I like that nickname, just kind

0:27:20.440 --> 0:27:21.679
<v Speaker 1>of a jumping off point. I don't know. You can

0:27:21.680 --> 0:27:23.680
<v Speaker 1>tell me whether or not you like it. Chase Claypool

0:27:23.760 --> 0:27:25.480
<v Speaker 1>awesome right after the catch. But man, the block that

0:27:25.520 --> 0:27:28.200
<v Speaker 1>he hit on fourth and one, the conversion to Tyreek,

0:27:28.600 --> 0:27:31.240
<v Speaker 1>that's to me his welcome to the Dolphins moment. Great,

0:27:31.280 --> 0:27:33.840
<v Speaker 1>great work there. You do that, Chase, You're gonna get

0:27:33.880 --> 0:27:36.480
<v Speaker 1>more and more ops and he seems inspired. I just

0:27:36.520 --> 0:27:38.240
<v Speaker 1>get the feeling that he's gonna make a big play

0:27:38.280 --> 0:27:39.919
<v Speaker 1>in a big game at some point this year. Go

0:27:39.960 --> 0:27:41.800
<v Speaker 1>ahead and write that down. We'll come back to it later.

0:27:42.000 --> 0:27:45.240
<v Speaker 1>Cedric Wilson. The pre snap motion creates a situation on

0:27:45.320 --> 0:27:47.119
<v Speaker 1>his touchdown where he had a two way go and

0:27:47.160 --> 0:27:50.000
<v Speaker 1>he has to win inside and his release sells the

0:27:50.040 --> 0:27:52.640
<v Speaker 1>defender that the outside kind of fade route or outbreaking

0:27:52.680 --> 0:27:55.040
<v Speaker 1>route was a possibility, and that was just all he

0:27:55.119 --> 0:27:57.560
<v Speaker 1>needed to cross face and give two of that target.

0:27:57.720 --> 0:28:01.480
<v Speaker 1>Excellent route, good catch, touchdown. Dolphins Raheem Moster looked off

0:28:01.520 --> 0:28:03.880
<v Speaker 1>to me, looked slower to hit his creases. He would

0:28:03.920 --> 0:28:06.159
<v Speaker 1>stretch his track, I thought, too far and allow the

0:28:06.200 --> 0:28:09.119
<v Speaker 1>backside pursuit to catch up. There were some failed blocks

0:28:09.160 --> 0:28:11.560
<v Speaker 1>that led to immediate contact, but I thought the backs

0:28:11.840 --> 0:28:14.119
<v Speaker 1>in this game in general did little to help. That

0:28:14.520 --> 0:28:17.840
<v Speaker 1>to me, the lowest performing game for the running backs

0:28:17.840 --> 0:28:20.480
<v Speaker 1>of the Dolphins this season. Shout out to Savon Ahmed though,

0:28:20.520 --> 0:28:23.280
<v Speaker 1>for making the unblocked man miss on that screenplay where

0:28:23.320 --> 0:28:25.480
<v Speaker 1>he picked up like sixteen yards and got us a

0:28:25.480 --> 0:28:27.440
<v Speaker 1>big first down when we're backed up behind the sticks.

0:28:27.640 --> 0:28:29.479
<v Speaker 1>That's what you ask of your back win a one

0:28:29.520 --> 0:28:31.800
<v Speaker 1>on one matchup in space, and he executed for a

0:28:31.840 --> 0:28:35.560
<v Speaker 1>big conversion there. Offensive line wise. Just to lay a

0:28:35.600 --> 0:28:38.400
<v Speaker 1>blanket over this and how you know, how can you

0:28:38.440 --> 0:28:41.080
<v Speaker 1>be anything less than impressed? I mean, yes, the Patriots

0:28:41.080 --> 0:28:43.240
<v Speaker 1>did pressure us more than a team so far this year,

0:28:43.560 --> 0:28:47.160
<v Speaker 1>but damn it, the offense was incredibly productive even though

0:28:47.200 --> 0:28:49.320
<v Speaker 1>they had to dig deep into the offensive line depth.

0:28:49.520 --> 0:28:51.640
<v Speaker 1>It's a credit to so many people, starting with Butch

0:28:51.680 --> 0:28:53.920
<v Speaker 1>Berry for teaching them, and the players of course for

0:28:53.960 --> 0:28:56.440
<v Speaker 1>taking the teaching and executing it. But it's also up

0:28:56.480 --> 0:28:59.120
<v Speaker 1>top with personnel for building this football team in a

0:28:59.120 --> 0:29:01.320
<v Speaker 1>way that maximized the strengths of the quarterback and the

0:29:01.360 --> 0:29:04.880
<v Speaker 1>head coach Mike McDaniel, who implored the organization to do

0:29:05.040 --> 0:29:07.800
<v Speaker 1>so with his famed seven hundred play cut up to

0:29:07.840 --> 0:29:10.440
<v Speaker 1>build a team from the outside in in terms of

0:29:10.480 --> 0:29:14.520
<v Speaker 1>getting dynamic eligibles who can maximize the accuracy and anticipation

0:29:14.600 --> 0:29:17.200
<v Speaker 1>while making the job on the line easier because the

0:29:17.200 --> 0:29:20.440
<v Speaker 1>anticipation and getting the football out quickly. It's just an

0:29:20.520 --> 0:29:23.440
<v Speaker 1>organizational win across the board. But again giving up for

0:29:23.520 --> 0:29:27.160
<v Speaker 1>Lamb Cotton, Liam both Robs Austin forgetting the job done yesterday.

0:29:27.360 --> 0:29:30.000
<v Speaker 1>There was a time when this organization, you know, if

0:29:30.000 --> 0:29:32.640
<v Speaker 1>you're down for offensive lineman or even a couple, they

0:29:32.640 --> 0:29:35.000
<v Speaker 1>wouldn't have scored a point, maybe not even get first down.

0:29:35.280 --> 0:29:38.000
<v Speaker 1>But Miami with this situation twenty four first downs, thirty

0:29:38.040 --> 0:29:40.720
<v Speaker 1>one points. Hats off in that scenario. I had been

0:29:40.800 --> 0:29:43.720
<v Speaker 1>concerned about the connectivity on the interior that was sharp

0:29:43.800 --> 0:29:46.360
<v Speaker 1>all year prior to injuries, but damn it, it was

0:29:46.400 --> 0:29:49.320
<v Speaker 1>really good. So credit to Jones, Cotton, even Eikenberg forgetting

0:29:49.320 --> 0:29:52.240
<v Speaker 1>this stuff picked up and playing as a singular unit individually.

0:29:52.960 --> 0:29:55.280
<v Speaker 1>I thought Cotton got some good movement on some successful

0:29:55.360 --> 0:29:57.160
<v Speaker 1>runs they had, and had really good work in pass

0:29:57.160 --> 0:30:00.000
<v Speaker 1>pro evident by one pressure allowed on forty eight pass

0:30:00.000 --> 0:30:03.120
<v Speaker 1>blocking snaps Austin Jackson. What more can you say about

0:30:03.120 --> 0:30:05.840
<v Speaker 1>the guy? His processing has been fantastic. He really seems

0:30:05.880 --> 0:30:08.440
<v Speaker 1>to understand the design of each protection when to go

0:30:08.520 --> 0:30:10.760
<v Speaker 1>help inside, but to also keep an eye outside for

0:30:10.800 --> 0:30:13.320
<v Speaker 1>those delayed blitzer or guys coming off the edge who

0:30:13.320 --> 0:30:16.440
<v Speaker 1>maybe weren't part of the initial pressure equation. He just

0:30:16.600 --> 0:30:20.840
<v Speaker 1>is smart. His first vertical step after engaging contact on

0:30:20.880 --> 0:30:23.440
<v Speaker 1>a pass rusher, it's gotta be one of the quickest

0:30:23.440 --> 0:30:25.560
<v Speaker 1>in the league because he gets so much depth with

0:30:25.600 --> 0:30:27.960
<v Speaker 1>it that the rusher thinks like he shows him the

0:30:28.000 --> 0:30:30.840
<v Speaker 1>corner and they try to take it with speed. He

0:30:30.920 --> 0:30:33.280
<v Speaker 1>just latches on and runs them right by the quarterback

0:30:33.520 --> 0:30:36.200
<v Speaker 1>and they wind up five yards behind the QB forty

0:30:36.280 --> 0:30:38.720
<v Speaker 1>eight pass block snaps, no pressures allowed. I'm ready to

0:30:38.760 --> 0:30:41.360
<v Speaker 1>rubber stamp it. Austin Jackson's a very good player. Kendall

0:30:41.440 --> 0:30:43.840
<v Speaker 1>Lamb displacement in the running game was consistent. His work

0:30:43.840 --> 0:30:46.480
<v Speaker 1>off the edge was really good. That patented patient hand

0:30:46.560 --> 0:30:49.560
<v Speaker 1>draw where he flashes the hands and brings him back

0:30:49.600 --> 0:30:52.120
<v Speaker 1>and gets the pass rusher to show his hands. Does

0:30:52.120 --> 0:30:54.600
<v Speaker 1>it so well. He got critical push on a mid

0:30:54.640 --> 0:30:57.640
<v Speaker 1>red zone run before our third touchdown that created a

0:30:57.680 --> 0:31:00.320
<v Speaker 1>six yard run due largely to his dentic of the

0:31:00.440 --> 0:31:02.680
<v Speaker 1>edge after the injury too, What a beast that is.

0:31:02.880 --> 0:31:04.520
<v Speaker 1>And then to go back to that on the game

0:31:04.600 --> 0:31:07.000
<v Speaker 1>sealing touchdown drive. Raheem had a ten yard run on

0:31:07.080 --> 0:31:09.440
<v Speaker 1>second and five on the opening series of the drive.

0:31:09.680 --> 0:31:11.000
<v Speaker 1>I just saw it was such a key play in

0:31:11.040 --> 0:31:13.560
<v Speaker 1>the game, and Lamb sealed that block with a great reach.

0:31:13.840 --> 0:31:15.680
<v Speaker 1>He had to get outside of a a I think

0:31:15.680 --> 0:31:18.120
<v Speaker 1>a five technique on an outside shoulder to go hit

0:31:18.160 --> 0:31:20.400
<v Speaker 1>with proficiency. He does a huge play in a big spot.

0:31:20.480 --> 0:31:23.480
<v Speaker 1>Forty five or rather forty six pass block snaps, no

0:31:23.560 --> 0:31:26.680
<v Speaker 1>pressures allowed. A couple of negatives. I thought Rob Hunt

0:31:26.720 --> 0:31:29.400
<v Speaker 1>had his worst game in a long time, even before

0:31:29.400 --> 0:31:32.240
<v Speaker 1>the injury. He lost back to back blocks for TFLs

0:31:32.240 --> 0:31:35.040
<v Speaker 1>on the opening drive, missed a pretty simple second level

0:31:35.080 --> 0:31:37.000
<v Speaker 1>wall off that cost Raheem a chance to hit a

0:31:37.040 --> 0:31:39.160
<v Speaker 1>second level at full speed. Then he got beat on

0:31:39.200 --> 0:31:42.360
<v Speaker 1>the outside post for a sack, eventually gets injured, just

0:31:42.440 --> 0:31:43.960
<v Speaker 1>not the rob hump we've seen all year long. And

0:31:43.960 --> 0:31:46.960
<v Speaker 1>then leam Meikenberg, same story, got thrown around. Didn't really

0:31:47.000 --> 0:31:49.400
<v Speaker 1>sustain blocks, unreliable the few times you asked him to

0:31:49.400 --> 0:31:51.400
<v Speaker 1>hold up one on one in pass protection. We had

0:31:51.440 --> 0:31:53.560
<v Speaker 1>the perfect look on the long Tyreek touchdown, and it

0:31:53.600 --> 0:31:56.520
<v Speaker 1>almost got ruined because he got undressed by Barmore on

0:31:56.560 --> 0:31:58.680
<v Speaker 1>that play. So that's your Dolphins offense. Let's go ahead

0:31:58.680 --> 0:32:00.440
<v Speaker 1>and take our last break right there and back on

0:32:00.440 --> 0:32:03.520
<v Speaker 1>the other side to a quick defensive recap and snapcout recap.

0:32:03.520 --> 0:32:06.360
<v Speaker 1>That's next Draft Time podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought

0:32:06.360 --> 0:32:12.680
<v Speaker 1>to you by Autotation. Defensively a strong showing for your

0:32:12.680 --> 0:32:15.800
<v Speaker 1>Miami Dolphins, and just some general notes off the top.

0:32:15.880 --> 0:32:18.400
<v Speaker 1>I'm not sure what happened on the Kendrick Bourne touchdown,

0:32:19.280 --> 0:32:21.240
<v Speaker 1>but it was way too easy, and I think that

0:32:21.240 --> 0:32:24.680
<v Speaker 1>Bethel expected help inside because he didn't really challenge Bourne's

0:32:24.720 --> 0:32:27.320
<v Speaker 1>access to the inside release. And it looks like Deshaun

0:32:27.360 --> 0:32:29.280
<v Speaker 1>Elliott maybe saw something on the other side of the

0:32:29.320 --> 0:32:32.320
<v Speaker 1>formation that forced him to run that way away. From

0:32:32.360 --> 0:32:34.840
<v Speaker 1>the post. Maybe just a miscommunication, I don't know, but

0:32:34.880 --> 0:32:37.040
<v Speaker 1>it definitely is a teachable moment because that was way

0:32:37.040 --> 0:32:39.440
<v Speaker 1>too easy on that situation there. But you know what else,

0:32:40.240 --> 0:32:43.200
<v Speaker 1>other than that play, the cohesion just seemed really damn good.

0:32:43.200 --> 0:32:46.320
<v Speaker 1>There was a lot of like you know, sharp communications

0:32:46.320 --> 0:32:49.400
<v Speaker 1>and pass offs, mostly working off Jalen Ramsey. And my

0:32:49.480 --> 0:32:52.600
<v Speaker 1>theory there is that he's so instinctual and consistently in

0:32:52.640 --> 0:32:54.760
<v Speaker 1>good position that it makes life easier for everybody else

0:32:54.800 --> 0:32:57.200
<v Speaker 1>to go get their keys and find him. Go. So

0:32:57.560 --> 0:32:59.920
<v Speaker 1>I thought that was great on the front. Jalen Phillips

0:33:00.040 --> 0:33:02.360
<v Speaker 1>and like he was so close to my top five tapes,

0:33:02.360 --> 0:33:04.800
<v Speaker 1>the way he would work inside, then spin back outside

0:33:04.800 --> 0:33:07.680
<v Speaker 1>and make a run stuff and after forcing the back

0:33:07.720 --> 0:33:10.560
<v Speaker 1>to bounce out there or when you know the opposite

0:33:10.600 --> 0:33:12.480
<v Speaker 1>was true, he'd work outside the set the edge and

0:33:12.520 --> 0:33:14.840
<v Speaker 1>then kick back inside for a tackle when you can

0:33:14.880 --> 0:33:17.760
<v Speaker 1>dictate the backs track and then make the play. He

0:33:17.840 --> 0:33:20.720
<v Speaker 1>and Wilkins did this all game long. That's elite stuff.

0:33:20.800 --> 0:33:24.160
<v Speaker 1>Attacks goes out in attacks pulling guards to which those

0:33:24.160 --> 0:33:25.760
<v Speaker 1>guys are supposed to be able to knock out of edge,

0:33:25.840 --> 0:33:28.360
<v Speaker 1>but not dealing Phillips. He wins that shut down the

0:33:28.360 --> 0:33:30.640
<v Speaker 1>series in the next run as well. Very next play

0:33:30.680 --> 0:33:33.520
<v Speaker 1>he locks out Hunter Henry and then resets Lione scrimmage,

0:33:33.680 --> 0:33:36.200
<v Speaker 1>detaches and cuts down a jet sweep for a short game.

0:33:36.440 --> 0:33:38.760
<v Speaker 1>That's three notes. I'm six snaps into his game. He

0:33:38.800 --> 0:33:41.600
<v Speaker 1>finishes with two pressures and five stops. They ran to

0:33:41.680 --> 0:33:45.640
<v Speaker 1>his side the right tackle and right end six times

0:33:45.760 --> 0:33:49.040
<v Speaker 1>for seventeen total yards. Good game, JP, Bradley Chubb his

0:33:49.160 --> 0:33:51.400
<v Speaker 1>length impact of the game. I thought big time. They

0:33:51.440 --> 0:33:53.720
<v Speaker 1>couldn't really move him in the running game. His pass

0:33:53.800 --> 0:33:55.320
<v Speaker 1>rush heated up as the game went on, and he

0:33:55.360 --> 0:33:57.920
<v Speaker 1>and Phillips just whipped tight ends all game long. They

0:33:57.920 --> 0:34:00.640
<v Speaker 1>should and they did the coverage on the play before

0:34:00.640 --> 0:34:03.320
<v Speaker 1>the play from last night's podcast. Just good stuff, man.

0:34:03.400 --> 0:34:05.680
<v Speaker 1>And what's funny, his sack wasn't even one of the

0:34:05.720 --> 0:34:07.880
<v Speaker 1>best pass rushes. I didn't think it was a double

0:34:07.920 --> 0:34:10.880
<v Speaker 1>team that just kind of stopped playing and he didn't.

0:34:10.920 --> 0:34:13.760
<v Speaker 1>And just another reason that you don't look at sacks

0:34:13.800 --> 0:34:15.480
<v Speaker 1>as the end all be off because he had better

0:34:15.560 --> 0:34:17.200
<v Speaker 1>rushes in the game where he didn't get there because

0:34:17.200 --> 0:34:18.719
<v Speaker 1>the ball gets out before you can get there. So

0:34:18.960 --> 0:34:22.000
<v Speaker 1>three pressures and two stops for Bradley Chubb off ball

0:34:22.040 --> 0:34:24.840
<v Speaker 1>linebackers David Long. It's great to see him playing like

0:34:24.880 --> 0:34:26.239
<v Speaker 1>he has the last two weeks. To me, this is

0:34:26.280 --> 0:34:28.799
<v Speaker 1>a player that you know, we saw in Tennessee who

0:34:28.880 --> 0:34:32.440
<v Speaker 1>uses knowledge and instincts with speed to make those splash

0:34:32.480 --> 0:34:34.880
<v Speaker 1>plays every single game, and these last two games he's

0:34:34.920 --> 0:34:36.719
<v Speaker 1>been all over the field. It's sort of like two

0:34:36.840 --> 0:34:38.840
<v Speaker 1>on offense. The more reps he gets, I think, the

0:34:38.880 --> 0:34:41.120
<v Speaker 1>better that he will get as a player because he

0:34:41.200 --> 0:34:43.520
<v Speaker 1>just kind of sees more and becomes more familiar with

0:34:43.560 --> 0:34:45.080
<v Speaker 1>more in terms of his you know, role on this

0:34:45.080 --> 0:34:47.279
<v Speaker 1>football team. So that's great to see him, you know,

0:34:47.400 --> 0:34:49.560
<v Speaker 1>enact all that. And then when he went out for

0:34:49.600 --> 0:34:53.359
<v Speaker 1>a snap, we got one snap of Duke Riley and

0:34:53.600 --> 0:34:56.400
<v Speaker 1>all he does is recognize a pulling guard and wham,

0:34:56.440 --> 0:34:58.719
<v Speaker 1>he goes and gets him and stands him up. That's

0:34:58.880 --> 0:35:00.759
<v Speaker 1>great work from Duke there. On stap off the bench

0:35:00.800 --> 0:35:02.920
<v Speaker 1>and you go and initiate contact like that. Keep that up.

0:35:03.320 --> 0:35:05.799
<v Speaker 1>Jerome Baker, I thought timed up some blitzeres really well

0:35:05.880 --> 0:35:08.280
<v Speaker 1>and played through some contact well early in the game.

0:35:08.480 --> 0:35:11.279
<v Speaker 1>But just as I freaking write that, back to back

0:35:11.360 --> 0:35:13.239
<v Speaker 1>passive reps where we get out of our gap and

0:35:13.280 --> 0:35:15.800
<v Speaker 1>let a down block absorb us. It's just freshrating the

0:35:15.880 --> 0:35:18.600
<v Speaker 1>lack of consistency there. Then we come back and overrun

0:35:18.600 --> 0:35:21.160
<v Speaker 1>another hookup throw. I get that. It's to Mario Douglass

0:35:21.160 --> 0:35:23.320
<v Speaker 1>and he's fast as hell, but it's a common occurrence

0:35:23.320 --> 0:35:25.239
<v Speaker 1>where it's a whip route. We attack it. He makes

0:35:25.239 --> 0:35:27.759
<v Speaker 1>a move and beats us back inside. Just frustrating to

0:35:27.760 --> 0:35:30.720
<v Speaker 1>me and the secondary Deshaun Elliott. This dude's an absolute baller.

0:35:30.800 --> 0:35:33.840
<v Speaker 1>So Javon Holland typically plays the boundary side safety and

0:35:33.880 --> 0:35:35.600
<v Speaker 1>two high looks where you're on the short side of

0:35:35.600 --> 0:35:37.840
<v Speaker 1>the field, and this allows him to peak on potential

0:35:37.880 --> 0:35:40.520
<v Speaker 1>crossers on the front side, help the X receiver to

0:35:40.600 --> 0:35:43.600
<v Speaker 1>the backside. It just gives him options and I thought

0:35:43.600 --> 0:35:46.520
<v Speaker 1>Elliott just killed it in this role. The run fits.

0:35:46.560 --> 0:35:48.759
<v Speaker 1>There's a play where the Patriots on the Patriots first

0:35:48.760 --> 0:35:51.400
<v Speaker 1>touchdown drive where it's him and Ramondre Stevenson in the gap,

0:35:51.600 --> 0:35:54.520
<v Speaker 1>nobody else Mono Imano and he just whacks Stevenson and

0:35:54.520 --> 0:35:56.239
<v Speaker 1>puts him on the ground. That's a two hundred and

0:35:56.280 --> 0:35:57.880
<v Speaker 1>thirty pounds back man. And then of course the hit

0:35:57.920 --> 0:36:01.520
<v Speaker 1>on DeVante Parker. Good stuff man, set and stuff cater Kohu.

0:36:01.600 --> 0:36:03.400
<v Speaker 1>I just love this tape from him. He played closer

0:36:03.400 --> 0:36:05.200
<v Speaker 1>to the lion scrimmage in the formation of this game,

0:36:05.360 --> 0:36:07.680
<v Speaker 1>did some more blitzing, but man, when he follows the

0:36:07.760 --> 0:36:09.960
<v Speaker 1>jet motion, you might as well take it out of

0:36:09.960 --> 0:36:13.000
<v Speaker 1>the progression because they threw those swings against him three times,

0:36:13.160 --> 0:36:15.200
<v Speaker 1>and I think they broke even like zero yards in

0:36:15.239 --> 0:36:17.080
<v Speaker 1>those plays. They tried him quite a few times. Three

0:36:17.160 --> 0:36:20.200
<v Speaker 1>two covered snaps, seven targets, six catches, but just thirty

0:36:20.200 --> 0:36:22.840
<v Speaker 1>four yards allowed. That's under five yards per target. A

0:36:22.880 --> 0:36:25.440
<v Speaker 1>great day there for cater Kohu. We finish up the

0:36:25.480 --> 0:36:28.200
<v Speaker 1>podcast here as we do every single Tuesday or Monday

0:36:28.280 --> 0:36:31.360
<v Speaker 1>night with the snap counts, so quite a bit of

0:36:31.360 --> 0:36:34.480
<v Speaker 1>a shuffling on the offensive line. Both Liam Austin. Liam

0:36:34.480 --> 0:36:37.040
<v Speaker 1>and Austin went the entire distance in the game, and

0:36:37.040 --> 0:36:38.880
<v Speaker 1>then you had a bunch of guys that missed some snaps.

0:36:39.120 --> 0:36:42.719
<v Speaker 1>Lamb missed five snaps, caught and missed six snaps. I

0:36:42.719 --> 0:36:44.400
<v Speaker 1>think it was the one series they were rotating him

0:36:44.400 --> 0:36:47.160
<v Speaker 1>and Robert Jones out. Speaking of Robert Jones, he plays

0:36:47.160 --> 0:36:49.560
<v Speaker 1>fifty six snaps in the game and Rob Hunt played

0:36:49.560 --> 0:36:51.480
<v Speaker 1>just twenty seven snaps in this game, with Keon Smith

0:36:51.520 --> 0:36:55.480
<v Speaker 1>playing five in his first NFL action ever, Tua goes

0:36:55.520 --> 0:36:59.080
<v Speaker 1>the distance. Waddle and Tyreek both played exactly three quarters

0:36:59.120 --> 0:37:02.040
<v Speaker 1>of the snaps fifty eight total. The next receiver was

0:37:02.080 --> 0:37:05.280
<v Speaker 1>Braxon Barrios at fifty three percent of the snaps. Cedric

0:37:05.320 --> 0:37:08.799
<v Speaker 1>Wilson played thirty percent, and then Chase Claypool played fourteen percent.

0:37:08.840 --> 0:37:10.600
<v Speaker 1>I imagine that we'll start to kick up here as

0:37:10.640 --> 0:37:13.200
<v Speaker 1>we go along. That's kind of your typical receiver rotation

0:37:13.280 --> 0:37:16.000
<v Speaker 1>without River Craycraft back out there. Yet at tight end,

0:37:16.080 --> 0:37:18.120
<v Speaker 1>we had Durham Smyth play sixty six percent and he

0:37:18.200 --> 0:37:21.240
<v Speaker 1>gutted all those snaps out. Julian Hill played forty four percent,

0:37:21.280 --> 0:37:23.080
<v Speaker 1>So lots of tight end action in this game. Plenty

0:37:23.120 --> 0:37:26.279
<v Speaker 1>of twelve personnel they enacted in this one. Ingold gives

0:37:26.320 --> 0:37:28.680
<v Speaker 1>you thirty two percent of the workload, and then your

0:37:28.760 --> 0:37:31.080
<v Speaker 1>running back workload. Raheem kind of got some time off

0:37:31.080 --> 0:37:33.480
<v Speaker 1>in this game fifty six percent of the snaps, and

0:37:33.520 --> 0:37:35.799
<v Speaker 1>then savonn Okme was second with twenty five percent. Jeff

0:37:35.800 --> 0:37:37.840
<v Speaker 1>Wilson got the same amount there. Bothose guys got nineteen

0:37:37.880 --> 0:37:41.560
<v Speaker 1>snaps at the running back position. On defense, I think

0:37:41.560 --> 0:37:43.480
<v Speaker 1>you've kind of fallen into a power now going what

0:37:43.520 --> 0:37:45.399
<v Speaker 1>you're gonna get here in terms of who's gonna play

0:37:45.440 --> 0:37:47.719
<v Speaker 1>the most and who's not. You saw on defense, both

0:37:47.719 --> 0:37:50.440
<v Speaker 1>safeties played the entire game, all fifty three stats for

0:37:50.520 --> 0:37:54.000
<v Speaker 1>Jones and Elliott, Cater and Ramsey played fifty three and

0:37:54.080 --> 0:37:56.680
<v Speaker 1>forty nine STAPs respectively, so basically the entire game for

0:37:56.719 --> 0:38:00.239
<v Speaker 1>all four of those guys. The other cornerback additions, Bole

0:38:00.280 --> 0:38:02.440
<v Speaker 1>played eighty nine percent of the snaps and then you

0:38:02.480 --> 0:38:04.000
<v Speaker 1>had a big drop off there because the next guy

0:38:04.040 --> 0:38:06.480
<v Speaker 1>was Justin Bethel who played four and Nick Eadom got

0:38:06.520 --> 0:38:11.480
<v Speaker 1>four snaps on that final series. Let's see other linebackers.

0:38:11.560 --> 0:38:13.919
<v Speaker 1>Jerome Baker played every snap long came off the field

0:38:13.920 --> 0:38:15.799
<v Speaker 1>on the injury. He played eighty nine percent of the

0:38:15.840 --> 0:38:18.480
<v Speaker 1>total workload, and then Duke Rowley had the one snap

0:38:18.520 --> 0:38:22.240
<v Speaker 1>off the edge. We saw Phillips play eighty five percent

0:38:22.280 --> 0:38:23.759
<v Speaker 1>of the snap, so it looks like he's all the

0:38:23.800 --> 0:38:26.719
<v Speaker 1>way back and that's fantastic news. Chubb played eighty one

0:38:26.719 --> 0:38:28.920
<v Speaker 1>percent and Van Ginkle had a big dip in production here.

0:38:28.920 --> 0:38:31.520
<v Speaker 1>But this Patriots group is a big unit, so it

0:38:31.560 --> 0:38:33.640
<v Speaker 1>makes sense to have Chubb and Phillips more than a

0:38:33.680 --> 0:38:36.040
<v Speaker 1>speed rusher like Andrew Van Ginkle. He gave you twenty

0:38:36.080 --> 0:38:39.640
<v Speaker 1>six percent of the snaps on the interior Ogbah played

0:38:39.640 --> 0:38:41.640
<v Speaker 1>six snaps in the game, so his workload continues to

0:38:41.680 --> 0:38:44.120
<v Speaker 1>decrease here for the Dolphins as he kind of falls

0:38:44.160 --> 0:38:46.799
<v Speaker 1>into that fourth edge man fourth position on the edge

0:38:46.840 --> 0:38:50.840
<v Speaker 1>rotation on the interior defensive line. Wilkins played eighty seven percent,

0:38:51.120 --> 0:38:54.000
<v Speaker 1>Steeler played eighty five percent. Those guys are just beast man.

0:38:54.320 --> 0:38:57.799
<v Speaker 1>Raykwan gave you thirty eight percent and that's it. So

0:38:57.880 --> 0:38:59.680
<v Speaker 1>there you go. Those are your Dolphins. Snap Count your

0:38:59.719 --> 0:39:02.960
<v Speaker 1>Dolphin All twenty two review from the Patriots victory, a

0:39:03.080 --> 0:39:05.880
<v Speaker 1>sweep of the Patriots. We'll come back on Wednesday and

0:39:06.040 --> 0:39:08.200
<v Speaker 1>preview the Chiefs, as the entire team is now in

0:39:08.239 --> 0:39:10.080
<v Speaker 1>j Germany by the time you hear this podcast. We'll get

0:39:10.120 --> 0:39:11.600
<v Speaker 1>to that on Wednesday, but until then, that's gonna be

0:39:11.640 --> 0:39:14.400
<v Speaker 1>my time you all. Please be sure to subscribe to

0:39:14.440 --> 0:39:17.719
<v Speaker 1>the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, wherever you get

0:39:17.719 --> 0:39:20.239
<v Speaker 1>your podcasts from. Go ahead, leave us that rating, leave

0:39:20.320 --> 0:39:22.839
<v Speaker 1>us that review. You can follow me on social at

0:39:22.840 --> 0:39:26.000
<v Speaker 1>linkfold NFL and the team at Miami Dolphins check out

0:39:26.000 --> 0:39:28.080
<v Speaker 1>the Fish Tank Podcast with Seth and Juice and our

0:39:28.120 --> 0:39:30.560
<v Speaker 1>post game show on iHeart app, the iHeartRadio app I

0:39:30.560 --> 0:39:33.400
<v Speaker 1>Should Say, and Big one O five FM one O

0:39:33.480 --> 0:39:36.000
<v Speaker 1>five point nine FM. Check out the YouTube channel for

0:39:36.040 --> 0:39:39.160
<v Speaker 1>Dolphins Today, Media availabilities, and so much more, and last

0:39:39.160 --> 0:39:41.360
<v Speaker 1>but not least, my three Takeaways piece up on Miami

0:39:41.400 --> 0:39:43.799
<v Speaker 1>Dolphins dot com. Until next time, fins up on Camera

0:39:43.840 --> 0:39:48.400
<v Speaker 1>and Daddy