WEBVTT - Drive Time: All 22 Review Dolphins Broncos Week 3

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<v Speaker 1>You are listening to the Miami Dolphins Podcast Network.

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<v Speaker 2>This is Drive Time with Travis Wingfield.

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<v Speaker 1>Back to throw to a looking whips about a wide Dolphin.

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<v Speaker 3>Touchdown time, Rick call uncolievable, just blue.

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<v Speaker 2>Fire for a second time. Don't know where he was

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<v Speaker 2>going right away. I want to hit that there.

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<v Speaker 4>Man.

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<v Speaker 2>I'm gonna help you.

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<v Speaker 1>Someone will keep on your bandwagon.

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<v Speaker 2>Wattle, Wattle to a shot, guts back to throw looking

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<v Speaker 2>at them's up fires touchdown. It's Waddle his sixth touchdown. Parass.

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<v Speaker 5>This tag Drive Time with Travis Wingfield begins.

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<v Speaker 2>Now check your pulse for what is up Dolphins and

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<v Speaker 2>welcome to the Draft Time podcast, part of the Miami

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<v Speaker 2>Dolphins podcast Network, covering your team, your Miami Dolphins. How's

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<v Speaker 2>it going everybody? I am your host, Travis Wingfield And

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<v Speaker 2>on today's show, a fun tape to break down for y'all,

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<v Speaker 2>we'll look at the numbers from Pro Football Focus, the

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<v Speaker 2>Next Gen, the top five tapes Tough to choose from.

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<v Speaker 2>This week, we'll also hear from head coach Mike McDaniel,

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<v Speaker 2>Austin Jackson, Emmanuel Ogbaugh, Christian Wilkins, and a whole lot more.

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<v Speaker 2>Plus if we have some time, we'll take a look

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<v Speaker 2>around the web. The Dolphins are very popular right now

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<v Speaker 2>in the national sphere. From the Baptist Health Studios inside

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<v Speaker 2>the Baptist Health Training Complex, this is the Drive Time Podcast.

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<v Speaker 2>Some injury updates from Mike McDaniel's Monday press conference Real Quick.

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<v Speaker 2>Jalen Waddles sounds like he's going to be back sooner

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<v Speaker 2>than later. Still in the concussion protocol, but coach that

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<v Speaker 2>they are very optimistic about his availability heading into the week.

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<v Speaker 2>Connor Williams and Jalen Phillips great news here are both

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<v Speaker 2>day Today, McDaniel said, I thought Connor's injury looked a

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<v Speaker 2>lot worse than day to day, So that's fantastic to

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<v Speaker 2>get one of the game's best centers back in there.

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<v Speaker 2>And by the way, nobody really mentioned the snaps yesterday

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<v Speaker 2>because they were fine and he continues to make blocks

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<v Speaker 2>as good as any center in the National Football League.

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<v Speaker 2>So just think we should get the same energy with

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<v Speaker 2>that player all the time. And then unfortunately, River Craycraft

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<v Speaker 2>will miss some time with a shoulder injury. They don't

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<v Speaker 2>have the exact timeline, but he will miss some time,

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<v Speaker 2>per coach Mike McDaniel. How about that tape. I was

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<v Speaker 2>overwhelmed coming into the office today to watch this tape

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<v Speaker 2>and put together a podcast. And you're gonna understand why

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<v Speaker 2>right off the top here, because I'm going to punt

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<v Speaker 2>Unlike the Dolphins offense, I'm going to punt once on

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<v Speaker 2>the big play breakdowns because I don't know how I

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<v Speaker 2>could select enough of them. I wouldn't do the game

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<v Speaker 2>justice to do any of them because there are like

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<v Speaker 2>thirty there's literally thirty plays to go break down. So

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<v Speaker 2>I thought, let's do the top five tapes. Will sprinkle

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<v Speaker 2>in the top plays throughout the podcast and also cover

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<v Speaker 2>the entire offense and defense who shined who did not,

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<v Speaker 2>And it's mostly shined this week, as you can imagine.

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<v Speaker 2>But I didn't want the podcast to be two hours long,

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<v Speaker 2>so let's go ahead and do our top five tapes.

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<v Speaker 2>And number one is running back devon a chain. The

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<v Speaker 2>first touchdown, he ducks under a tackle at the five

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<v Speaker 2>yard line, drops a shoulder on another defender. The three

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<v Speaker 2>gets a second defender or I guess third in this

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<v Speaker 2>instance in terms of broken tackles, and they're attached to

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<v Speaker 2>him at the two yard line and he powers through

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<v Speaker 2>it to put the ball over the goal line. Now,

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<v Speaker 2>I think one of the biggest takeaways from the tape

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<v Speaker 2>is how bad Denver's effort was throughout much of the game,

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<v Speaker 2>but not at this stage of the game. A chan

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<v Speaker 2>just outworked these guys when they were still trying to

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<v Speaker 2>give effort, and you could see it. It popped off a

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<v Speaker 2>tape just like his speed, the low center of gravity

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<v Speaker 2>and the zero to sixty acceleration that he shows. It's

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<v Speaker 2>a deadly combination. Man, you better bring your damn technique

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<v Speaker 2>as a tackler and play with a relentless pursuit because

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<v Speaker 2>if you don't, he's gonna make you look silly like

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<v Speaker 2>he did the Broncos defense all day long. Six point

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<v Speaker 2>two yards average after initial contact. If a running back

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<v Speaker 2>ran for six point two yards per carry, they would

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<v Speaker 2>be the greatest prinning back of all time. He did

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<v Speaker 2>it after initial contact. He forced six missed tackles as

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<v Speaker 2>a ball carrier and also as a pass receiver three,

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<v Speaker 2>so he had nine total in the game. He had

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<v Speaker 2>one hundred and twelve yards just as a ball carrier

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<v Speaker 2>after contact, not as a pass receiver as a handoff

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<v Speaker 2>like a running back. Right one hundred and twelve yards

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<v Speaker 2>after initial contact. He had four runs of ten plus

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<v Speaker 2>yards and the third of his carries went for first

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<v Speaker 2>downs and touchdowns. Let's go ahead and hear from Austin Jackson,

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<v Speaker 2>who spoke with the media on Monday and talked a

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<v Speaker 2>little bit about the running backs game here and this

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<v Speaker 2>big breakout performance you got.

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<v Speaker 3>He got in with us in OTAs McDaniel. McDaniel coached

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<v Speaker 3>him up for sure, and he's taken all the coach

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<v Speaker 3>in and he's been very attentative and like just surely

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<v Speaker 3>elevated because you know him taking the coach in and

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<v Speaker 3>working hard. So I love to see that type of

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<v Speaker 3>stuff out of him.

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<v Speaker 2>And just real quick, I recorded this before the updates.

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<v Speaker 2>Devon a Chan. That's the way you pronounce his name,

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<v Speaker 2>Devon a Chan. He clarified that this week we should

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<v Speaker 2>call the young man what he wants to be called,

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<v Speaker 2>Devon a Chan. Top tape number two to a tongue

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<v Speaker 2>Bi Loo, who's now three for three in this department.

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<v Speaker 2>I think the best that you can say about Tua

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<v Speaker 2>is the information that he gathers at three critical points

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<v Speaker 2>of every single play, pre snap, post snap, and then

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<v Speaker 2>his first read and that first read for some quarterbacks

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<v Speaker 2>provides info that provides them the opportunity to find more

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<v Speaker 2>information with their next progression. But Tula uses what he

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<v Speaker 2>sees before the snap, at the snap, and then how

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<v Speaker 2>they rotate based upon his first read and his ability

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<v Speaker 2>to manipulate coverage with body position and eyes to move

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<v Speaker 2>things around, and he knows the answers to the test

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<v Speaker 2>after that, like he knows if I look this way

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<v Speaker 2>and make this movement, that's going to have this impact

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<v Speaker 2>on the backside. And my goodness, the ball is out

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<v Speaker 2>so quickly, especially to backs and tight ends on those checkdowns,

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<v Speaker 2>and it gives them just more space, more time to

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<v Speaker 2>make a move and operate. And there's just not that

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<v Speaker 2>many backs who are going to be tackled out in

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<v Speaker 2>space one on one. And speaking of balls in the backs,

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<v Speaker 2>who told you, shameless self promotion, who told you this

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<v Speaker 2>summer we were going to see the running backs involved

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<v Speaker 2>a lot more in the passing game and the tight ends?

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<v Speaker 2>Who told you that? Pretty good? So far? In fact,

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<v Speaker 2>running backs had one hundred and fifteen yards after the catch,

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<v Speaker 2>which to me speaks to two is timing an accuracy

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<v Speaker 2>on layup throws. You might think that's easy and it's

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<v Speaker 2>pretty innocuous, and it mostly is, but not every quarterback

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<v Speaker 2>is doing that. They only had ninety yards receiving. They

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<v Speaker 2>broke eight tackles on their receptions on eleven receptions. It's crazy,

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<v Speaker 2>just crazy anticipation on so many throws from this quarterback.

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<v Speaker 2>There's a twenty five yard comeback where his hands separate

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<v Speaker 2>before Tyreek even throttles down against off coverage. And when

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<v Speaker 2>they have those one on one looks where Tyreek's out

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<v Speaker 2>of the blocks, burning and a four to two speed

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<v Speaker 2>down the field, I don't know how you cover that

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<v Speaker 2>because he can either run by you if you play

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<v Speaker 2>the comeback and if you if you play the deep ball,

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<v Speaker 2>he'll rip it off and come back down the field

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<v Speaker 2>and make a twenty yard play. So I guess it's

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<v Speaker 2>better to give up twenty yards than sixty yards and

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<v Speaker 2>a touchdown. But either way, you're not gonna win. A

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<v Speaker 2>few plays later, the Dolphins go bunch right to the field.

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<v Speaker 2>That's the wide side of the field. It's a trip's formation,

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<v Speaker 2>your bunch look, and the Broncos coverage just cannot react

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<v Speaker 2>to it fast enough. Because of the quarterback play you're

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<v Speaker 2>getting in Miami, you have rules. When you have those

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<v Speaker 2>types of stacks and bunches and trips, like you take

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<v Speaker 2>the first guy in, I'll take the second guy out,

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<v Speaker 2>and like you have different ways you communicate that coverage

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<v Speaker 2>to deal with bunches and stacks. But the way Tua's playing,

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<v Speaker 2>I don't give a damn If you have no stra

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<v Speaker 2>damas back there with a minor in football coverages and

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<v Speaker 2>how to decipher defensive coverages and communicate them, it doesn't

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<v Speaker 2>matter who it is, because Tua is just better than

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<v Speaker 2>you at it. Tua is deciphering where the opening will

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<v Speaker 2>be before the Dolphins receivers even declare their routes, so

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<v Speaker 2>before they have an opportunity the defense to process info

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<v Speaker 2>to get into the proper look against that. You know

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<v Speaker 2>two man coverage or three man route concept, Tua has

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<v Speaker 2>already done it. It's too late for you. At that point,

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<v Speaker 2>you cannot defend it. There's a third and four conversion

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<v Speaker 2>on a speed out to Brax and Barrios. Speed out

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<v Speaker 2>is gett about three or four yards of depth and

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<v Speaker 2>break that thing off to the sideline and the defensive

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<v Speaker 2>back is inside, leveraged by two yards and off coverage

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<v Speaker 2>five yards. When Tua makes the decision. He has no

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<v Speaker 2>chance to drive on that foot. He's making this read

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<v Speaker 2>based on the leverage he's reading from a different defensive

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<v Speaker 2>back in the bunch set. He sees it, he knows

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<v Speaker 2>what's going to open up. He throws it, and it

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<v Speaker 2>all plays out the way. I'm sure At forecasts it

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<v Speaker 2>in his mind. What he's doing is so special. Enjoy this, guys,

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<v Speaker 2>It is special. It's rare. This kind of quarterback play

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<v Speaker 2>is going to make us not like football in fifteen

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<v Speaker 2>years because if he does this forever, like, it's gonna

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<v Speaker 2>not be fun when you go to the next guy,

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<v Speaker 2>because he's going to ruin it for you. That's how

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<v Speaker 2>good it has been so far. And if he continues

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<v Speaker 2>doing it, my goodness. A couple more things. If you

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<v Speaker 2>guys saw the Dan Orlowsky video, the ability to pump, recoil,

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<v Speaker 2>and release the football to manipulate and then take advantage

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<v Speaker 2>of the manipulation, like within a snapshot. It's all inside

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<v Speaker 2>of one second. Do you know how fast that is.

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<v Speaker 2>That's faster than a ninety nine Milt Hoar fastball. You

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<v Speaker 2>have time to react to it displaces the defense and

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<v Speaker 2>his ability to do that and then fire the football

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<v Speaker 2>with the accuracy he shows. Go back and watch the tape.

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<v Speaker 2>The balls are on face masks in stride to four

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<v Speaker 2>two receivers. The way he's doing it right now, you're

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<v Speaker 2>not going to be able to stop it if he

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<v Speaker 2>continues playing at this level. The last note I have

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<v Speaker 2>on Tua the ball handling and footwork. You know that

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<v Speaker 2>plays a big part in his passing success, obviously, but

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<v Speaker 2>it also helps accentuate the eye candy. The defense must

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<v Speaker 2>sort through because on those shotgun looks where he turns

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<v Speaker 2>his back to the defense and hands off to the

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<v Speaker 2>running back running wide against the grain, there's a play

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<v Speaker 2>here where he executes the fake and I put him

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<v Speaker 2>on the clock from snap to turn your back to

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<v Speaker 2>the defense, fake the handoff behind you, and then to

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<v Speaker 2>throw the football down the field seventeen yards one point

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<v Speaker 2>eight three seconds, sixteen air yards down the field. What

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<v Speaker 2>what You also see this on a third down conversion

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<v Speaker 2>to Tyreek in the third quarter. And the thing about

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<v Speaker 2>mechanics and the way he sees the field, it all

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<v Speaker 2>works together in this beautiful symphony. You have Tyreek and

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<v Speaker 2>Barrios running double slants to the field. What that means

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<v Speaker 2>is Barrios is the one receiver out wide to the

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<v Speaker 2>wide side of the field. He's the closest to the sideline.

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<v Speaker 2>The two is the next guy inside, So Barrios wide

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<v Speaker 2>Tyreek in a slat alignment. There's one linebacker in the

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<v Speaker 2>hook zone, which is kind of the middle of the

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<v Speaker 2>field about five to seven yards, trying to cover both

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<v Speaker 2>of these slants. And that's the guy they want to

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<v Speaker 2>work off of. So what does Tua do. He looks

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<v Speaker 2>to Barrios on that second slant and he strides his way.

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<v Speaker 2>So what's the linebacker do? Oh, that's where the football's going.

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<v Speaker 2>Not so fast, my friend. He stops him dead in

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<v Speaker 2>his tracks, and then as he strides to Barrios, he

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<v Speaker 2>just kind of whips that arm in a three quarter

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<v Speaker 2>release point and slings it to Tyreek. And guess where

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<v Speaker 2>it is between the one and the zero. You can't

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<v Speaker 2>defend that. You can't defend it. He's first in well,

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<v Speaker 2>basically every stat He's behind Cousins by a few yards

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<v Speaker 2>and one touchdown after skipping the fourth quarter in yesterday's game.

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<v Speaker 2>But EPA total QBR touchdown percentage passer rating PFF grade,

0:10:56.440 --> 0:10:59.960
<v Speaker 2>big time, big time throw completion percentage over expected yard

0:11:00.120 --> 0:11:03.000
<v Speaker 2>per pass, yards per drop back, sack rate, average depth

0:11:03.000 --> 0:11:05.120
<v Speaker 2>of target to a tongue of Bai lowla, ranks first,

0:11:05.320 --> 0:11:07.559
<v Speaker 2>and all that stupid stuff. I just said number one

0:11:07.600 --> 0:11:09.200
<v Speaker 2>in the NFL. He's the best quarterback in the league

0:11:09.280 --> 0:11:11.320
<v Speaker 2>right now. Deal with it. He was eight for nine

0:11:11.559 --> 0:11:13.560
<v Speaker 2>on ten plus air yard throws in the game for

0:11:13.600 --> 0:11:15.880
<v Speaker 2>a buck seventy two in a touchdown. I talked about

0:11:15.920 --> 0:11:18.400
<v Speaker 2>beating the blitz. They only blitzed five times. So Vance

0:11:18.480 --> 0:11:23.280
<v Speaker 2>Joseph literally remade his defensive system to deal with this quarterback. Which, yeah,

0:11:23.320 --> 0:11:25.640
<v Speaker 2>his blitz has been getting beat this year and really forever,

0:11:25.920 --> 0:11:27.560
<v Speaker 2>but he changed it. And look at what it did

0:11:27.600 --> 0:11:29.439
<v Speaker 2>to the Broncos defense. They couldn't compete. They weren't on

0:11:29.480 --> 0:11:32.600
<v Speaker 2>the same field as the Miami Dolphins offense because of

0:11:32.640 --> 0:11:35.440
<v Speaker 2>how Tua and this offense shreds the blitz. So he

0:11:35.600 --> 0:11:38.040
<v Speaker 2>was four or five on those blitzer with two touchdowns

0:11:38.160 --> 0:11:40.679
<v Speaker 2>and credit the offensive line, and two was trigger time.

0:11:40.720 --> 0:11:43.320
<v Speaker 2>But he was only pressured twice in the game. He

0:11:43.440 --> 0:11:45.560
<v Speaker 2>hit both of those passes when he was pressured for

0:11:45.679 --> 0:11:50.920
<v Speaker 2>twenty eight yards. I mentioned Tua's processor with the mechanical

0:11:51.160 --> 0:11:55.040
<v Speaker 2>proficiency how those two things together are creating this Joe

0:11:55.080 --> 0:11:59.200
<v Speaker 2>Montana Niners level offensive efficiency that we've heard from Boomerasisin

0:11:59.320 --> 0:12:01.920
<v Speaker 2>or other folks out out there. I think that the

0:12:01.960 --> 0:12:05.480
<v Speaker 2>Dolphins operation of getting the play calls in faster and

0:12:05.520 --> 0:12:07.880
<v Speaker 2>giving him more time at the line of scrimmage decipher

0:12:07.960 --> 0:12:12.400
<v Speaker 2>what he's seeing has really accentuated those traits that two exhibits.

0:12:12.520 --> 0:12:15.480
<v Speaker 2>Let's go ahead and hear from coach McDaniel on the

0:12:15.520 --> 0:12:18.440
<v Speaker 2>process of putting all this in to cut down on

0:12:18.480 --> 0:12:21.320
<v Speaker 2>the pre snap penalties, all that good stuff. Here's Coach McDaniel.

0:12:21.360 --> 0:12:27.319
<v Speaker 5>I knew we stood a fighting chance for what guys

0:12:27.400 --> 0:12:30.240
<v Speaker 5>are willing to say they want, but you don't always

0:12:30.240 --> 0:12:33.679
<v Speaker 5>know if they're willing to deliver on it. When we

0:12:33.720 --> 0:12:37.600
<v Speaker 5>started the off season, the first thing that we showed

0:12:37.760 --> 0:12:40.440
<v Speaker 5>was just every single one of those penalties to the

0:12:40.480 --> 0:12:44.240
<v Speaker 5>face in a row, and the fact that all the

0:12:44.320 --> 0:12:51.160
<v Speaker 5>players didn't lose interest, that it had a visceral feeling

0:12:51.760 --> 0:12:55.320
<v Speaker 5>that they wanted to correct and you could see it

0:12:55.440 --> 0:12:58.640
<v Speaker 5>every time that we went and operated as an offense,

0:12:59.559 --> 0:13:02.920
<v Speaker 5>and how focused people were on it, trying to get

0:13:02.920 --> 0:13:05.040
<v Speaker 5>it right. And it wasn't like it was a night

0:13:05.320 --> 0:13:10.160
<v Speaker 5>night and day thing. So that's that's something that you know,

0:13:10.480 --> 0:13:14.720
<v Speaker 5>over a three game span. It is only three games,

0:13:14.760 --> 0:13:17.800
<v Speaker 5>but I'm very proud of that in terms of there's

0:13:17.840 --> 0:13:21.640
<v Speaker 5>there's not a quick fix to that, or it's not like, hey,

0:13:21.800 --> 0:13:25.440
<v Speaker 5>just don't do that. You know, there's people really have

0:13:25.480 --> 0:13:29.520
<v Speaker 5>to look inward and self assess across the board, those

0:13:29.520 --> 0:13:33.600
<v Speaker 5>who are teaching it and those who are executing it.

0:13:33.760 --> 0:13:36.840
<v Speaker 5>And when you're just worried about the things that you

0:13:36.880 --> 0:13:41.920
<v Speaker 5>can control, you can get solutions to very very real problems,

0:13:41.960 --> 0:13:45.400
<v Speaker 5>like like we are over three games span with that stuff.

0:13:45.679 --> 0:13:47.680
<v Speaker 2>I also want to take advantage of the opportunity. We

0:13:47.720 --> 0:13:50.760
<v Speaker 2>had to talk to Austin Jackson today, who obviously sits

0:13:50.800 --> 0:13:53.240
<v Speaker 2>in these offensive meetings and reviews of tape with the guys.

0:13:53.440 --> 0:13:55.640
<v Speaker 2>I was just curious, Austin, what is it like watching

0:13:55.640 --> 0:13:57.880
<v Speaker 2>TUA do these subtle little things that coaches point out

0:13:57.880 --> 0:13:59.440
<v Speaker 2>to you guys and you guys see on the tape.

0:13:59.559 --> 0:14:01.560
<v Speaker 2>What's it like watching too his tape on Mondays?

0:14:01.600 --> 0:14:04.840
<v Speaker 3>Who is a magician? Yeah, he's just he's a magician.

0:14:04.880 --> 0:14:07.840
<v Speaker 3>He's a dog, a great, great football player, a great teammate.

0:14:09.920 --> 0:14:14.920
<v Speaker 3>You know, our coach is challenging challenge him, not in

0:14:14.920 --> 0:14:17.920
<v Speaker 3>a bad way, but just like they give him an

0:14:17.920 --> 0:14:20.200
<v Speaker 3>expectation because they know he can he can handle it,

0:14:20.280 --> 0:14:22.680
<v Speaker 3>and he'll do it well. And he just consistently does

0:14:22.720 --> 0:14:25.600
<v Speaker 3>that over and over again. So yeah, we love watching

0:14:25.640 --> 0:14:29.560
<v Speaker 3>his little crazy not look passes and just watching him

0:14:29.560 --> 0:14:34.080
<v Speaker 3>throw every throw in rhythm with no hitches and perfect footwork.

0:14:34.200 --> 0:14:37.360
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, it's magician magic man. Now you see him, Now

0:14:37.400 --> 0:14:39.880
<v Speaker 2>you don't. Speaking of Austin Jackson, Let's go ahead and

0:14:39.920 --> 0:14:41.800
<v Speaker 2>take our first break right here and come back on

0:14:41.840 --> 0:14:44.280
<v Speaker 2>the other side and get to my number three top

0:14:44.320 --> 0:14:47.200
<v Speaker 2>tape of the game. Spoiler, it's Austin Jackson. That's next

0:14:47.280 --> 0:14:50.040
<v Speaker 2>Draft Time podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought to you

0:14:50.080 --> 0:14:55.720
<v Speaker 2>by I don't know my top two tapes from the

0:14:55.760 --> 0:15:02.160
<v Speaker 2>Denver Broncos Demolish the Demolition. It was Austin Jackson number three.

0:15:02.240 --> 0:15:04.400
<v Speaker 2>TUA was number one, or TUA was number two. H

0:15:04.400 --> 0:15:07.760
<v Speaker 2>a number one, Austin Jackson takes number three. I'm off

0:15:07.800 --> 0:15:10.520
<v Speaker 2>the rails, guys. I've had like four coffees today grinding

0:15:10.560 --> 0:15:13.440
<v Speaker 2>this tape, working on about five hours of sleep. That's

0:15:13.560 --> 0:15:16.440
<v Speaker 2>about two more than Cameron allows the Winfold household to average.

0:15:16.880 --> 0:15:20.920
<v Speaker 2>But I'm just fired the French up dog Austin Jackson hit.

0:15:20.960 --> 0:15:24.840
<v Speaker 2>The symbiotic relationship between his hands and feet stands out

0:15:24.960 --> 0:15:27.160
<v Speaker 2>in a way that just he just was not doing

0:15:27.160 --> 0:15:31.200
<v Speaker 2>in the past. Fast, physical, elite technique. Those are three

0:15:31.360 --> 0:15:35.200
<v Speaker 2>principles that McDaniel preaches in terms of things he wants

0:15:35.320 --> 0:15:38.160
<v Speaker 2>Miami Dolphins football players to exhibit. And they were all

0:15:38.200 --> 0:15:40.880
<v Speaker 2>on display as he was able to snatch an anchor

0:15:40.920 --> 0:15:43.560
<v Speaker 2>and pass pro, you know, get guys hands off the chest,

0:15:43.600 --> 0:15:47.040
<v Speaker 2>play and really negate their power they're trying to generate

0:15:47.080 --> 0:15:50.160
<v Speaker 2>from either their runway or their swipe or their leverage

0:15:50.160 --> 0:15:52.280
<v Speaker 2>they create with hands and swipes and punches and all

0:15:52.320 --> 0:15:57.000
<v Speaker 2>that stuff. He where he really excels. And I talk

0:15:57.920 --> 0:16:02.200
<v Speaker 2>again your boy paid attention and training camp and preseason.

0:16:03.640 --> 0:16:06.360
<v Speaker 2>I was a little bit dubious at the right word

0:16:06.640 --> 0:16:09.400
<v Speaker 2>of Austin and passpro coming into the season. Why wouldn't

0:16:09.440 --> 0:16:11.120
<v Speaker 2>you be. It's been a rough go for him through

0:16:11.120 --> 0:16:13.760
<v Speaker 2>the first three years. The injury last year obviously, you know,

0:16:14.440 --> 0:16:17.040
<v Speaker 2>kind of I guess put a little bit of hiccup

0:16:17.080 --> 0:16:19.880
<v Speaker 2>in his development, and it wasn't great the first couple

0:16:19.920 --> 0:16:22.520
<v Speaker 2>of years of his career. And so my thought was

0:16:23.000 --> 0:16:26.920
<v Speaker 2>his expanded athletic ability to get out in space accentuates

0:16:26.960 --> 0:16:29.680
<v Speaker 2>what this offense wants to be with the wide zone runs,

0:16:29.880 --> 0:16:32.480
<v Speaker 2>and from there you can help him and the entire

0:16:32.520 --> 0:16:35.520
<v Speaker 2>offensive line within the structure of the scheme of the

0:16:35.560 --> 0:16:38.320
<v Speaker 2>offense because of how good he is in the running

0:16:38.360 --> 0:16:41.560
<v Speaker 2>game and how much that athletic ability out to space

0:16:41.960 --> 0:16:45.760
<v Speaker 2>creates conflict for the defense, particularly the second level linebackers

0:16:45.960 --> 0:16:48.200
<v Speaker 2>and the edge defenders who have been in hell through

0:16:48.240 --> 0:16:50.800
<v Speaker 2>three games. There's a reason we don't allow that many pressures.

0:16:50.840 --> 0:16:53.000
<v Speaker 2>Why don't we have a good offensive line? Two? The

0:16:53.080 --> 0:16:56.160
<v Speaker 2>scheme just puts them in constant peril and conflict. And

0:16:56.240 --> 0:16:59.840
<v Speaker 2>with Austin Jackson, the way they create these extra gaps

0:17:00.040 --> 0:17:03.280
<v Speaker 2>out wide and the way he approaches these blocks in

0:17:03.360 --> 0:17:06.720
<v Speaker 2>control as a run blocker, it's so good. He's been

0:17:06.840 --> 0:17:11.240
<v Speaker 2>excellent in space, creating lanes out wide for a Chan

0:17:11.920 --> 0:17:16.320
<v Speaker 2>a Chan mostert achmed when Wilson gets back Azukama, whatever

0:17:16.359 --> 0:17:18.280
<v Speaker 2>the case may be, you do that, and then you

0:17:18.320 --> 0:17:20.840
<v Speaker 2>also factor in the fact that he can downblock and

0:17:21.320 --> 0:17:24.199
<v Speaker 2>displace a four eye technique of four eyes on his

0:17:24.280 --> 0:17:27.480
<v Speaker 2>inside shoulder, and if you're running left for your right tackle,

0:17:27.680 --> 0:17:29.440
<v Speaker 2>that's a tough block to make. You have to get

0:17:29.600 --> 0:17:32.360
<v Speaker 2>outside leverage that you're already out flanked in and get

0:17:32.359 --> 0:17:35.080
<v Speaker 2>across that body and drive him. And he's doing it.

0:17:35.119 --> 0:17:38.400
<v Speaker 2>He's displacing guys three yards sideways, five yards back off

0:17:38.400 --> 0:17:42.800
<v Speaker 2>the football and finishing with authority with a pancake. Damn it.

0:17:42.800 --> 0:17:46.679
<v Speaker 2>It's fun to watch like that forty yard a chan run.

0:17:46.960 --> 0:17:50.119
<v Speaker 2>Austin is the backside tackle. He starts at the plus

0:17:50.160 --> 0:17:52.920
<v Speaker 2>forty six yard line and runs from the far hash

0:17:53.000 --> 0:17:55.119
<v Speaker 2>outside of the numbers. That's like twenty five yards in

0:17:55.160 --> 0:17:58.320
<v Speaker 2>with and down the field to the thirty six yard line.

0:17:58.320 --> 0:18:01.159
<v Speaker 2>So ten yards of depth and full speed rams this

0:18:01.240 --> 0:18:04.639
<v Speaker 2>defensive back and put him on his back. Man, it's absurd.

0:18:04.880 --> 0:18:07.240
<v Speaker 2>Let's hear from Austin. I asked him, how do you

0:18:07.280 --> 0:18:08.680
<v Speaker 2>feel about your technique right now?

0:18:08.720 --> 0:18:08.880
<v Speaker 4>Man?

0:18:08.920 --> 0:18:10.920
<v Speaker 2>Because I'm sitting here on Twitter in this room by

0:18:10.960 --> 0:18:13.440
<v Speaker 2>myself with a half half crooked hat on the side

0:18:13.440 --> 0:18:16.240
<v Speaker 2>of my head, just fist pumping in mid air for

0:18:16.600 --> 0:18:19.439
<v Speaker 2>nobody about how fun this tape is to watch. I

0:18:19.440 --> 0:18:22.679
<v Speaker 2>think your technique looks pretty damn good man. I'm fire up.

0:18:22.720 --> 0:18:22.880
<v Speaker 5>Man.

0:18:23.240 --> 0:18:24.880
<v Speaker 2>Here's Austin on his technique.

0:18:25.000 --> 0:18:26.720
<v Speaker 3>Feel pretty good. You know, I had a whole year

0:18:26.720 --> 0:18:29.480
<v Speaker 3>off of football, and I watched a lot of football

0:18:29.480 --> 0:18:32.600
<v Speaker 3>in that time, had a year of offseason the train,

0:18:33.240 --> 0:18:36.760
<v Speaker 3>and I kind of understand, you know, just what I

0:18:36.760 --> 0:18:39.240
<v Speaker 3>wanted to look like, and you know what I wanted

0:18:39.320 --> 0:18:43.119
<v Speaker 3>my game to look like. So I'm happy. I'm happy

0:18:43.119 --> 0:18:45.440
<v Speaker 3>to be healthy first and foremost because that's when I

0:18:45.480 --> 0:18:47.359
<v Speaker 3>give my opportunities to play.

0:18:48.560 --> 0:18:49.919
<v Speaker 1>So yes, very happy.

0:18:50.200 --> 0:18:51.840
<v Speaker 2>And then I wanted to put this question back to

0:18:51.920 --> 0:18:54.320
<v Speaker 2>him again because I asked this to all the guys

0:18:54.359 --> 0:18:56.479
<v Speaker 2>all off season. You guys heard it on the podcast here.

0:18:56.520 --> 0:18:58.520
<v Speaker 2>I was enamored by the idea of the second year

0:18:58.520 --> 0:19:00.760
<v Speaker 2>in this offense, and what do you know, it worked

0:19:00.760 --> 0:19:02.520
<v Speaker 2>out pretty good for the Dolphins so far. But I

0:19:02.560 --> 0:19:05.399
<v Speaker 2>wanted to ask Austin about how he thinks the scheme

0:19:05.440 --> 0:19:07.600
<v Speaker 2>benefits him now that he has three games of tape,

0:19:07.600 --> 0:19:09.920
<v Speaker 2>because last year he had like less than a full

0:19:09.960 --> 0:19:11.520
<v Speaker 2>game of tape and didn't have a chance to really

0:19:11.520 --> 0:19:13.560
<v Speaker 2>go back and you know, look at what he did.

0:19:13.800 --> 0:19:15.760
<v Speaker 2>But now that he does, how does he feel this

0:19:15.800 --> 0:19:19.400
<v Speaker 2>system benefits his skill set? Here's Austin a lot.

0:19:19.560 --> 0:19:23.679
<v Speaker 3>You know, I definitely think that I can play to

0:19:23.760 --> 0:19:28.040
<v Speaker 3>the advantage of my speed in this offense. It's very fun.

0:19:28.160 --> 0:19:32.639
<v Speaker 3>I love what the offensive concepts are focused around in

0:19:32.720 --> 0:19:37.359
<v Speaker 3>terms of angles and power, speed and just everything that

0:19:37.400 --> 0:19:38.280
<v Speaker 3>we can orchestrate.

0:19:40.800 --> 0:19:43.760
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, I think it fits a lot of my skill set.

0:19:44.240 --> 0:19:49.400
<v Speaker 2>Pretty cool, Pretty damn cool. My top tape, Number five,

0:19:49.560 --> 0:19:54.040
<v Speaker 2>number four top tape. Isaiah Win consistently seals gaps in

0:19:54.080 --> 0:19:56.359
<v Speaker 2>the running game through three game. That's all he's done. Man,

0:19:56.400 --> 0:19:59.520
<v Speaker 2>he's been awesome climbing to the second level locking down

0:19:59.520 --> 0:20:02.240
<v Speaker 2>in pass I can't count how many reps there were.

0:20:02.320 --> 0:20:03.919
<v Speaker 2>I tried, and I kind of lost track at the

0:20:03.960 --> 0:20:07.320
<v Speaker 2>end where he's one on one isolated in pass protection

0:20:07.600 --> 0:20:09.960
<v Speaker 2>and you can kind of see the tackle in him,

0:20:10.000 --> 0:20:12.600
<v Speaker 2>the tackle experience in pass pro. Because these guys are

0:20:12.600 --> 0:20:16.200
<v Speaker 2>trying to redirect, like their initial surge, nothing goes nowhere.

0:20:16.320 --> 0:20:19.320
<v Speaker 2>Let's try to redirect and detach from Isaiah. Good luck

0:20:19.359 --> 0:20:21.800
<v Speaker 2>didn't happen there. This was an elite tape for a

0:20:21.840 --> 0:20:25.880
<v Speaker 2>player who, once again, Chris Greer found himself a starry

0:20:25.880 --> 0:20:29.080
<v Speaker 2>and left guard for not that expensive Pretty sweet man.

0:20:29.240 --> 0:20:32.480
<v Speaker 2>Number five Javon Holland and I had to put somebody

0:20:32.520 --> 0:20:34.520
<v Speaker 2>on defense in here, or I was thinking I did.

0:20:34.840 --> 0:20:36.439
<v Speaker 2>I didn't want to because I wanted to make it

0:20:36.480 --> 0:20:40.560
<v Speaker 2>all offense. But then Javon's tape got watched by me.

0:20:41.000 --> 0:20:43.800
<v Speaker 2>I watched his tape, had fun doing it, and I

0:20:43.880 --> 0:20:45.359
<v Speaker 2>was like, all right, he has to go in. Because

0:20:46.200 --> 0:20:48.760
<v Speaker 2>from the first play of the game, Courtland Sutton tries

0:20:48.800 --> 0:20:50.879
<v Speaker 2>to down block him, and he goes and gets it

0:20:50.880 --> 0:20:52.800
<v Speaker 2>and says, you will not be down blocking me, sir,

0:20:52.880 --> 0:20:55.040
<v Speaker 2>I will be initiating that contact. And it kind of

0:20:55.040 --> 0:20:57.879
<v Speaker 2>makes Sutton rethink his decision because he whacked him right

0:20:57.960 --> 0:20:59.520
<v Speaker 2>off the top, and I feel like that kind of

0:20:59.520 --> 0:21:01.399
<v Speaker 2>had an impact throughout the course of the game. But

0:21:01.480 --> 0:21:03.320
<v Speaker 2>I want to break down the first of his two

0:21:03.359 --> 0:21:06.119
<v Speaker 2>forced fumbles. The second one was just great hustle and

0:21:06.160 --> 0:21:08.640
<v Speaker 2>effort by him, but the first one is a really

0:21:08.680 --> 0:21:11.639
<v Speaker 2>good example to show you, guys, what he does so

0:21:11.760 --> 0:21:13.639
<v Speaker 2>well that we do not get to see very often,

0:21:13.680 --> 0:21:17.080
<v Speaker 2>because typically when a safety makes a play, you know,

0:21:17.200 --> 0:21:20.480
<v Speaker 2>you get the splash. You know, sacks and TFLs and interceptions,

0:21:20.320 --> 0:21:23.200
<v Speaker 2>that's all great, but typically the best plays they make

0:21:23.359 --> 0:21:25.760
<v Speaker 2>lead to no target. Right, you don't test the guy

0:21:25.840 --> 0:21:28.359
<v Speaker 2>who's anticipating your coverage and running routes for the receiver.

0:21:28.640 --> 0:21:31.760
<v Speaker 2>We talk about Tua's anticipation on the offensive side all

0:21:31.800 --> 0:21:34.240
<v Speaker 2>the time on this show, but I would equate Javaon

0:21:34.400 --> 0:21:37.040
<v Speaker 2>on the back end of the defense to what Tuoa

0:21:37.080 --> 0:21:39.080
<v Speaker 2>was doing on offense. I'm not going to get into

0:21:39.080 --> 0:21:42.120
<v Speaker 2>the rules of Fangio's system because it's again a four

0:21:42.160 --> 0:21:45.160
<v Speaker 2>hour podcast to do that, and it's complex as hell.

0:21:45.480 --> 0:21:49.160
<v Speaker 2>But you know, the typical cover four six eight quads quarter, quarter,

0:21:49.160 --> 0:21:51.040
<v Speaker 2>a half, quarter, a half quarter, and when you hear that,

0:21:51.119 --> 0:21:53.280
<v Speaker 2>it's all about structure of the coverage. So the quads

0:21:53.320 --> 0:21:55.960
<v Speaker 2>is you know, cover four four deep quarter quarter half

0:21:56.040 --> 0:21:58.400
<v Speaker 2>is three deep defenders with one guy taking a quarter,

0:21:58.480 --> 0:22:00.520
<v Speaker 2>one guy taking a quarter, another guy to taking a half,

0:22:00.520 --> 0:22:02.239
<v Speaker 2>and then a quarter, a half quarter, you get it.

0:22:02.280 --> 0:22:06.040
<v Speaker 2>So that's all convoluted. But Javon's ability within the structure,

0:22:06.080 --> 0:22:09.399
<v Speaker 2>within the system to anticipate the way things happen. From that,

0:22:09.960 --> 0:22:13.840
<v Speaker 2>he frequently plays the backside safety position, which takes care

0:22:13.920 --> 0:22:16.640
<v Speaker 2>of help on the X receiver. It also can help

0:22:16.680 --> 0:22:18.560
<v Speaker 2>pick up the crossing routes on the strong side of

0:22:18.560 --> 0:22:23.159
<v Speaker 2>the formation, the passing strength, and he's the premiere player

0:22:23.240 --> 0:22:26.240
<v Speaker 2>at this in the NFL, I would say he and unfortunately,

0:22:26.320 --> 0:22:28.600
<v Speaker 2>you know let's be honest, mik If fitz Patrick's prettydamn

0:22:28.600 --> 0:22:30.880
<v Speaker 2>good at it too. But the way that he drives downhill,

0:22:30.920 --> 0:22:34.000
<v Speaker 2>the way he gets depth before the concept develops like

0:22:34.040 --> 0:22:36.320
<v Speaker 2>either direction. Even on the deep ball of charge the

0:22:36.480 --> 0:22:38.800
<v Speaker 2>Broncos hit early in the game, he kind of got beat.

0:22:38.840 --> 0:22:41.400
<v Speaker 2>But you saw him wheel out because he knew instinctually,

0:22:41.440 --> 0:22:43.399
<v Speaker 2>like I've messed that up. I gotta get depth. He

0:22:43.440 --> 0:22:45.679
<v Speaker 2>didn't get back quite fast enough. He was one step faster,

0:22:45.920 --> 0:22:47.560
<v Speaker 2>he would have had a pick. But the work that

0:22:47.600 --> 0:22:50.199
<v Speaker 2>he does back there, it shuts down so much that

0:22:50.240 --> 0:22:52.400
<v Speaker 2>we just do not see unless you're really digging into

0:22:52.400 --> 0:22:55.440
<v Speaker 2>the stuff. But on the force fumble, you'll see him

0:22:55.480 --> 0:22:58.399
<v Speaker 2>squat on the number two receiver to the field. We

0:22:58.440 --> 0:23:03.000
<v Speaker 2>talked about this in Tyreek, right, the second receiver is

0:23:03.119 --> 0:23:04.920
<v Speaker 2>usually the slot, First is out wide, third is in

0:23:04.960 --> 0:23:08.920
<v Speaker 2>close line scrrange twos in the slot. This guy's running

0:23:08.920 --> 0:23:12.000
<v Speaker 2>acrosser to Javon on the backside, and then because he

0:23:12.200 --> 0:23:15.280
<v Speaker 2>knows the concept is not going to sneak a route

0:23:15.280 --> 0:23:18.679
<v Speaker 2>in behind him, he can process, Okay, he just crossed face.

0:23:19.000 --> 0:23:20.960
<v Speaker 2>Now I can go pick up the other hook. The

0:23:20.960 --> 0:23:22.879
<v Speaker 2>guy runs on the other side of the football field

0:23:23.240 --> 0:23:26.919
<v Speaker 2>and he gets there, closes downhill and drives in that

0:23:27.040 --> 0:23:29.600
<v Speaker 2>throw and punches the football out and then we get

0:23:29.600 --> 0:23:33.600
<v Speaker 2>a convoy of defenders immediately turning upfield and laying blocks.

0:23:33.640 --> 0:23:38.320
<v Speaker 2>This is premire stuff from Javon Holland to create that

0:23:38.400 --> 0:23:41.040
<v Speaker 2>fumble and then it allows Andrew Van Ginkle to pick

0:23:41.080 --> 0:23:43.320
<v Speaker 2>it up. And is he a running back in the

0:23:43.359 --> 0:23:46.000
<v Speaker 2>past life? I mean gd man, he runs the ball

0:23:46.040 --> 0:23:47.800
<v Speaker 2>in the three yard line because of all these great

0:23:47.800 --> 0:23:49.880
<v Speaker 2>blocks that guys get, we score on the next play.

0:23:50.200 --> 0:23:52.919
<v Speaker 2>Great team effort, but finally a clip that allows us

0:23:52.960 --> 0:23:56.800
<v Speaker 2>to use definitive or allows us to definitively highlight just

0:23:56.880 --> 0:23:59.280
<v Speaker 2>how damn good Jevon Holland is. Let's go ahead and

0:23:59.320 --> 0:24:02.919
<v Speaker 2>hear from Christian Wilkins on the mindset of blocking on

0:24:03.000 --> 0:24:03.520
<v Speaker 2>a takeaway.

0:24:03.760 --> 0:24:05.399
<v Speaker 1>You know, that's something you you know, you kind of

0:24:05.440 --> 0:24:07.080
<v Speaker 1>talk about or mentioned like, you know, if there's an

0:24:07.119 --> 0:24:10.119
<v Speaker 1>interception or if there's a turnover, things like that always

0:24:10.160 --> 0:24:12.000
<v Speaker 1>go you know, try to find, you know, the first

0:24:12.040 --> 0:24:13.760
<v Speaker 1>opposite a couple of jersey you see, and you know

0:24:13.960 --> 0:24:16.520
<v Speaker 1>typically try to block the quarterback you know or skill

0:24:16.600 --> 0:24:18.760
<v Speaker 1>and that's who made the play. So you know, we

0:24:18.800 --> 0:24:20.160
<v Speaker 1>would have liked to get Gink in there. It would

0:24:20.160 --> 0:24:22.760
<v Speaker 1>have been cool, but you know, just that's kind of

0:24:22.800 --> 0:24:23.680
<v Speaker 1>what your coach is doing.

0:24:24.560 --> 0:24:27.880
<v Speaker 2>Again. Honestly, five tapes was not enough. It just wasn't.

0:24:27.960 --> 0:24:30.480
<v Speaker 2>I had tarn in there, but replaced him because he

0:24:30.600 --> 0:24:32.120
<v Speaker 2>just didn't play as much as the other guys, which

0:24:32.119 --> 0:24:34.280
<v Speaker 2>I thought was kind of fair. I also had Julian

0:24:34.359 --> 0:24:36.800
<v Speaker 2>Hill in there. I had Tyreek, I had Van Ginkel,

0:24:36.840 --> 0:24:38.600
<v Speaker 2>I had Ogby, I had David Long as guys that

0:24:38.640 --> 0:24:40.120
<v Speaker 2>could have been in the top five this week, maybe

0:24:40.119 --> 0:24:41.920
<v Speaker 2>top ten. But we'll just stick to breaking down those

0:24:41.920 --> 0:24:43.800
<v Speaker 2>top five. Actually, we'll go ahead and do the whole

0:24:43.840 --> 0:24:46.480
<v Speaker 2>damn thing because we'll finish up with the general notes

0:24:46.520 --> 0:24:49.120
<v Speaker 2>offense and defense. That's next here on the Draft Time podcast,

0:24:49.160 --> 0:24:51.679
<v Speaker 2>your host Travis Wingfield, brought to you by I donation.

0:24:54.320 --> 0:24:56.199
<v Speaker 2>We've done the top five tapes, let's go ahead and

0:24:56.200 --> 0:24:58.280
<v Speaker 2>get in some more general notes here. Stalking with the

0:24:58.280 --> 0:25:00.800
<v Speaker 2>offensive side of the football, and I was tracking how

0:25:00.880 --> 0:25:03.920
<v Speaker 2>frequently the Dolphins ran crack toss, which is the receiver

0:25:04.400 --> 0:25:08.360
<v Speaker 2>peeling back inside to kind of seal off the edge defender.

0:25:08.720 --> 0:25:11.040
<v Speaker 2>And it's not the hardest block if you put enough

0:25:11.040 --> 0:25:13.080
<v Speaker 2>effort into it and you have enough will you can

0:25:13.119 --> 0:25:15.120
<v Speaker 2>execute it. You know, easy for me to say, being

0:25:15.680 --> 0:25:18.520
<v Speaker 2>in my position. But what's so beautiful about it is

0:25:18.520 --> 0:25:21.560
<v Speaker 2>how much peril it creates. And it causes the little

0:25:21.560 --> 0:25:23.760
<v Speaker 2>bit of hesitation that you need for this offense to

0:25:23.800 --> 0:25:25.920
<v Speaker 2>do what it does best and put everybody in hell.

0:25:26.240 --> 0:25:28.879
<v Speaker 2>But on crack Toss, I counted six plays for fifty

0:25:28.920 --> 0:25:32.360
<v Speaker 2>one yards and a rushing touchdown. And it's awesome because

0:25:32.760 --> 0:25:34.560
<v Speaker 2>you get you know, I mentioned this in the Sunday

0:25:34.560 --> 0:25:37.280
<v Speaker 2>recap pod. The way we run these wide runs. You

0:25:37.320 --> 0:25:41.720
<v Speaker 2>get athletic linemen sometimes Alec Durham, Julian Hill blocking corners

0:25:41.760 --> 0:25:45.000
<v Speaker 2>out wide, and then because of all that action going

0:25:45.040 --> 0:25:47.920
<v Speaker 2>back across the flow, you know, split flow, full flow,

0:25:47.960 --> 0:25:51.240
<v Speaker 2>what half flow, whatever it might be. Like, these guys

0:25:51.840 --> 0:25:54.040
<v Speaker 2>have to be cognizant of the end a round. They

0:25:54.040 --> 0:25:56.080
<v Speaker 2>have to be cognizant of the play action, boot of

0:25:56.119 --> 0:25:59.439
<v Speaker 2>the under over concept. Like it's just too much to

0:25:59.520 --> 0:26:01.760
<v Speaker 2>deal with. And when you can execute crack Toss with

0:26:01.800 --> 0:26:04.000
<v Speaker 2>a tune of six carries fifty one yards and a touchdown,

0:26:04.400 --> 0:26:07.080
<v Speaker 2>it just makes it even harder. And you're gonna get

0:26:07.080 --> 0:26:09.960
<v Speaker 2>these running backs in these wide runs against cornerbacks one

0:26:10.040 --> 0:26:12.639
<v Speaker 2>on one opposed to you know, jamming it up inside

0:26:12.640 --> 0:26:16.480
<v Speaker 2>against defensive tackles and linebackers where you're essentially dropping seventy

0:26:16.520 --> 0:26:19.359
<v Speaker 2>pounds of player. These guys have to make miss out

0:26:19.680 --> 0:26:22.240
<v Speaker 2>in space, and the way they utilize all this flow

0:26:22.720 --> 0:26:25.480
<v Speaker 2>is just it's mind boggling. There's so many moving parts.

0:26:25.680 --> 0:26:28.720
<v Speaker 2>They dress up some pretty simple concepts with tons of flash.

0:26:29.000 --> 0:26:31.680
<v Speaker 2>You know Raheem catching a pop pass on fly motion,

0:26:32.160 --> 0:26:34.400
<v Speaker 2>which is just going across the entire formation in motion

0:26:34.480 --> 0:26:36.680
<v Speaker 2>pre snap, and the pop pass when the quarterback catches

0:26:36.720 --> 0:26:38.520
<v Speaker 2>it and taps it right forward to the guy in

0:26:38.560 --> 0:26:42.560
<v Speaker 2>motion with guard tackle counteraction that is both your guard

0:26:42.600 --> 0:26:44.639
<v Speaker 2>and your tackle pulling from one side to the other

0:26:44.680 --> 0:26:47.520
<v Speaker 2>part of the formation. You couple that with Tyreek running

0:26:47.560 --> 0:26:50.400
<v Speaker 2>an end around with that shovel pass inside. It's got

0:26:50.400 --> 0:26:52.920
<v Speaker 2>to be such a headache for the second level defenders

0:26:53.160 --> 0:26:55.399
<v Speaker 2>to try to sort through all the window dressing to

0:26:55.400 --> 0:26:57.679
<v Speaker 2>find out where the hell the football is actually going.

0:26:57.920 --> 0:27:00.760
<v Speaker 2>They have wrinkles off that off crack top where Tyreek

0:27:00.760 --> 0:27:03.320
<v Speaker 2>comes across the flow of play action and they throw

0:27:03.359 --> 0:27:05.879
<v Speaker 2>the under route to him. With Tua having pressure in

0:27:05.880 --> 0:27:08.879
<v Speaker 2>his face just does not matter. It's constant and the

0:27:08.920 --> 0:27:11.800
<v Speaker 2>speed we have on the perimeter Austin and Tistead and

0:27:11.840 --> 0:27:14.639
<v Speaker 2>Smythe and Hill and Alec it creates extra gaps that

0:27:14.720 --> 0:27:18.160
<v Speaker 2>allows our speedy backs to make those one cut explosive plays.

0:27:18.359 --> 0:27:22.399
<v Speaker 2>It's all built with intent, constant pressure, constant conflict. Never

0:27:22.560 --> 0:27:25.880
<v Speaker 2>enjoyed watching offensive tape the way I have this Dolphins team.

0:27:26.000 --> 0:27:28.000
<v Speaker 2>Let's go ahead and go back to Mike McDaniel who

0:27:28.040 --> 0:27:31.000
<v Speaker 2>addressed how they built in their motions this offseason and

0:27:31.080 --> 0:27:33.520
<v Speaker 2>the continuation what they showed last year on tape.

0:27:33.600 --> 0:27:41.480
<v Speaker 5>Here's coach, there's multiple jet tempo motions. There's a you know,

0:27:41.560 --> 0:27:46.280
<v Speaker 5>and that's you're kind of always problem solving, and sometimes

0:27:46.320 --> 0:27:52.280
<v Speaker 5>those things are given birth by the nature of necessity

0:27:52.880 --> 0:27:58.959
<v Speaker 5>or certain skill sets that individuals have, or you know,

0:27:59.080 --> 0:28:01.960
<v Speaker 5>different things that affect the defense. You know, I think

0:28:04.320 --> 0:28:08.639
<v Speaker 5>there was there's been motions that we utilized yesterday that

0:28:08.760 --> 0:28:13.359
<v Speaker 5>were from this offseason problem solving for some things. But

0:28:13.400 --> 0:28:18.680
<v Speaker 5>then there was a bunch that we'd we'd employed last

0:28:18.760 --> 0:28:22.800
<v Speaker 5>year and you know, this year. The only difference is

0:28:22.800 --> 0:28:25.719
<v Speaker 5>is that we're not having near the pre stap penalty

0:28:25.760 --> 0:28:28.840
<v Speaker 5>is while we're doing them. So you know, that's just

0:28:28.880 --> 0:28:33.800
<v Speaker 5>something that, uh, you know, at first, it's hard for

0:28:33.880 --> 0:28:40.600
<v Speaker 5>a coach because you know it's not clean when you

0:28:40.680 --> 0:28:44.120
<v Speaker 5>first start doing stuff like that and moving all the time.

0:28:44.760 --> 0:28:47.480
<v Speaker 5>But when it becomes your norm, you're able to guys

0:28:47.520 --> 0:28:50.280
<v Speaker 5>are guys kind of get uncomfortable now when there is

0:28:50.320 --> 0:28:52.680
<v Speaker 5>an emotion on a play, they're like, where's the rest

0:28:52.720 --> 0:28:57.040
<v Speaker 5>of the play? But that, uh, it's a It takes

0:28:57.040 --> 0:29:02.280
<v Speaker 5>a total commitment of every everyone, including an offensive line,

0:29:02.320 --> 0:29:04.960
<v Speaker 5>because you have to get used to the different types

0:29:05.000 --> 0:29:09.760
<v Speaker 5>of snap counts that Tuya uses it to employ to

0:29:09.840 --> 0:29:13.440
<v Speaker 5>not only execute some of those motions, but then make

0:29:13.520 --> 0:29:16.560
<v Speaker 5>sure that the defensive line can't tee off on snap

0:29:16.600 --> 0:29:20.120
<v Speaker 5>points and then have variations of cadence on that too.

0:29:20.160 --> 0:29:23.080
<v Speaker 5>So everybody plays a part in it, and it's something

0:29:23.120 --> 0:29:26.640
<v Speaker 5>that takes a village to execute.

0:29:27.280 --> 0:29:28.840
<v Speaker 2>Let's go ahead and get to some more tapes. I

0:29:28.920 --> 0:29:31.440
<v Speaker 2>liked out of the eligibles, the receivers and backsk the

0:29:31.480 --> 0:29:34.280
<v Speaker 2>Tyreek effects man check out a lot of those checkdowns.

0:29:34.360 --> 0:29:37.160
<v Speaker 2>You often will see two guys clamping on Tyreek hill

0:29:37.440 --> 0:29:40.200
<v Speaker 2>and Tuas seeing that and quickly getting to his next

0:29:40.240 --> 0:29:42.560
<v Speaker 2>look just makes this offense so potent. We talked about

0:29:42.560 --> 0:29:45.360
<v Speaker 2>that in the A Chanin portion damn It a chan

0:29:45.440 --> 0:29:47.640
<v Speaker 2>And portion of the podcast. The way he attacks the

0:29:47.640 --> 0:29:50.880
<v Speaker 2>football in the air, tyreeks his ability to hit a

0:29:50.920 --> 0:29:53.600
<v Speaker 2>different gear and go get the football and run through it.

0:29:53.720 --> 0:29:55.920
<v Speaker 2>I think it really maximizes his ability to chew up

0:29:55.960 --> 0:29:58.239
<v Speaker 2>yards after the catch, and it somehow makes Tua look

0:29:58.280 --> 0:30:00.920
<v Speaker 2>even more accurate than he is for it is copy

0:30:00.960 --> 0:30:04.400
<v Speaker 2>and paste each week, elite technique, elite effort. The skills

0:30:04.440 --> 0:30:06.760
<v Speaker 2>are off the page. I'm not sure we've ever seen

0:30:06.800 --> 0:30:09.120
<v Speaker 2>anything like this in a Dolphin's uniform. I think you

0:30:09.120 --> 0:30:11.400
<v Speaker 2>can safely say he's the best version of himself that

0:30:11.400 --> 0:30:14.000
<v Speaker 2>he's ever been. Just a cool seven point four to

0:30:14.000 --> 0:30:16.440
<v Speaker 2>eight yards per route ran in that game. Remember two

0:30:16.520 --> 0:30:18.360
<v Speaker 2>is like Pro Bowl level, so he's four times a

0:30:18.360 --> 0:30:21.160
<v Speaker 2>Pro bowler. Tyreek is now over three and a half

0:30:21.240 --> 0:30:23.000
<v Speaker 2>yards per route ran since he got here in twenty

0:30:23.040 --> 0:30:24.640
<v Speaker 2>twenty two. It's the best of all time in pro

0:30:24.640 --> 0:30:27.600
<v Speaker 2>football focus his history. He doesn't require a high volume

0:30:27.640 --> 0:30:30.680
<v Speaker 2>of targets either, caught nine for eleven. Also the best

0:30:30.720 --> 0:30:33.280
<v Speaker 2>in the category of yards per target, which essentially is

0:30:33.320 --> 0:30:36.400
<v Speaker 2>how an offense functions since his arrival. Yesterday, it was

0:30:36.480 --> 0:30:40.080
<v Speaker 2>fourteen point three. Anything over eight is considered good. I

0:30:40.160 --> 0:30:43.040
<v Speaker 2>like Durham Spice game here. Second level climbs looking exactly

0:30:43.200 --> 0:30:45.400
<v Speaker 2>or look exactly like his releases into the route, so

0:30:45.400 --> 0:30:48.720
<v Speaker 2>it's more confusion for defenses. That first play action throw

0:30:49.040 --> 0:30:52.360
<v Speaker 2>he kept the middle linebackers feet in concrete because he

0:30:52.480 --> 0:30:56.720
<v Speaker 2>released slowly into the route and the linebacker didn't know

0:30:56.800 --> 0:30:58.479
<v Speaker 2>what he was looking at. And to a dumps at

0:30:58.520 --> 0:31:01.200
<v Speaker 2>in for fifteen yards just easy as can be loved.

0:31:01.280 --> 0:31:04.880
<v Speaker 2>Julian Hill's game ceiling off the edge with tremendous consistency

0:31:05.120 --> 0:31:08.280
<v Speaker 2>on reaches as well, super strong hands and grip strength

0:31:08.320 --> 0:31:10.480
<v Speaker 2>and plays with his bass cleats in the ground that

0:31:10.560 --> 0:31:12.720
<v Speaker 2>allows him to continue to fight for position, which he

0:31:12.760 --> 0:31:15.160
<v Speaker 2>often won in this game. The way he attached to

0:31:15.160 --> 0:31:18.640
<v Speaker 2>Tron Armstead on Raheem most Heart's three yard touchdown run

0:31:18.760 --> 0:31:21.400
<v Speaker 2>and helped get tested some extra push he needed. Keep

0:31:21.440 --> 0:31:23.200
<v Speaker 2>an eye on this guy going forward. He's a big,

0:31:23.240 --> 0:31:25.200
<v Speaker 2>big boon in the running game. I think you're gonna

0:31:25.200 --> 0:31:27.840
<v Speaker 2>see a lot more of him. Just wanted to mention River,

0:31:28.560 --> 0:31:31.640
<v Speaker 2>said Reeke and Barrios, and I'm excluding a receiver here

0:31:31.680 --> 0:31:34.280
<v Speaker 2>because the effort just was not good enough. Yesterday. Long

0:31:34.320 --> 0:31:36.440
<v Speaker 2>touchdowns nice, but you better go block off the edge

0:31:36.480 --> 0:31:38.480
<v Speaker 2>and not give up on blocks. But they all the

0:31:38.520 --> 0:31:41.920
<v Speaker 2>four guys I mentioned all had critical crackbacks on crack toss.

0:31:42.240 --> 0:31:45.360
<v Speaker 2>Shout out to Cedric and Chosen for that matter, for

0:31:45.440 --> 0:31:47.640
<v Speaker 2>running full sprints to stay out in front of Chris

0:31:47.640 --> 0:31:49.760
<v Speaker 2>Brooks on his fifty yard run. I like that effort.

0:31:49.880 --> 0:31:52.640
<v Speaker 2>Let's bring it every single play, alec ingold climbing to

0:31:52.680 --> 0:31:54.920
<v Speaker 2>the damn safety and squaring him up ten yards down

0:31:55.000 --> 0:31:57.000
<v Speaker 2>the field. His ability to line up all over the

0:31:57.000 --> 0:31:59.680
<v Speaker 2>formation and hit different types of blocks is why he's

0:31:59.680 --> 0:32:01.360
<v Speaker 2>the best full back in the NFL. It's another one

0:32:01.360 --> 0:32:02.920
<v Speaker 2>of these key cogs of the engine.

0:32:02.960 --> 0:32:03.120
<v Speaker 3>Man.

0:32:03.160 --> 0:32:06.880
<v Speaker 2>We have so many unique players doing so many unique things. Gosh,

0:32:06.920 --> 0:32:09.960
<v Speaker 2>it is fun. Raheem moster. It's contact balance paired with

0:32:10.000 --> 0:32:13.840
<v Speaker 2>the ability to change directions while maintaining his acceleration and speed.

0:32:14.160 --> 0:32:16.840
<v Speaker 2>That is the genesis of how tackles get broken. My

0:32:17.000 --> 0:32:19.520
<v Speaker 2>man was in the grasp of two Broncos defenders on

0:32:19.520 --> 0:32:21.920
<v Speaker 2>that twenty yard touchdown run, just bounced off of it.

0:32:21.960 --> 0:32:24.320
<v Speaker 2>Then he rass the angle of two more defenders to

0:32:24.400 --> 0:32:27.680
<v Speaker 2>the pylon with his speed. Elite, elite stuff. Eleven miss

0:32:27.720 --> 0:32:31.480
<v Speaker 2>tackles forced three point three one yards after contact on average.

0:32:31.560 --> 0:32:34.160
<v Speaker 2>And then I also noted Chosen's move on the touchdown,

0:32:34.280 --> 0:32:36.640
<v Speaker 2>really nice double move, great route and then to run

0:32:36.680 --> 0:32:39.120
<v Speaker 2>away from the defensive back sideways to find the end zone.

0:32:39.280 --> 0:32:42.320
<v Speaker 2>Really good stuff. And Mike White through an absolute dot

0:32:42.360 --> 0:32:44.720
<v Speaker 2>on that play. Offensive line. Let's go ahead and go

0:32:44.760 --> 0:32:46.840
<v Speaker 2>back to Christian Wilkins here, who I asked about what

0:32:46.960 --> 0:32:49.440
<v Speaker 2>he's seen from the offensive line and their performance so

0:32:49.480 --> 0:32:50.040
<v Speaker 2>far this season.

0:32:50.200 --> 0:32:52.560
<v Speaker 1>No, absolutely, I'm locked in on game day. I have

0:32:52.600 --> 0:32:54.280
<v Speaker 1>a lot of fun watching on offense out there seeing

0:32:54.280 --> 0:32:56.280
<v Speaker 1>what those guys do. And whenever I get the chance

0:32:56.280 --> 0:32:57.560
<v Speaker 1>to see what they do, it's a lot of fun

0:32:57.600 --> 0:33:00.520
<v Speaker 1>because you know, well Joe caron there like messer, Rob

0:33:00.560 --> 0:33:01.800
<v Speaker 1>Hunt or something, but like, man, you lucky you don't

0:33:01.800 --> 0:33:03.280
<v Speaker 1>have to see me in the game or whatever. Just

0:33:03.320 --> 0:33:06.240
<v Speaker 1>like kind of having fun or whatever. But no, they've

0:33:06.280 --> 0:33:09.959
<v Speaker 1>been doing a great job, you know, just protected well

0:33:10.000 --> 0:33:11.760
<v Speaker 1>and you know, been able to move guys in the

0:33:11.840 --> 0:33:13.920
<v Speaker 1>run game. It's just just been cool to see because

0:33:14.120 --> 0:33:16.240
<v Speaker 1>you know, to be a you know, you see all

0:33:16.240 --> 0:33:17.760
<v Speaker 1>those guys kind of you know, just put work in

0:33:17.880 --> 0:33:20.240
<v Speaker 1>and kind of build from the off season in jail,

0:33:20.360 --> 0:33:22.440
<v Speaker 1>and you know, they's just good to see that, and

0:33:22.480 --> 0:33:24.560
<v Speaker 1>it's you know, I'm happy. You know they've been able

0:33:24.560 --> 0:33:26.560
<v Speaker 1>to do some good stuff and hopefully they can continue

0:33:26.560 --> 0:33:30.400
<v Speaker 1>building and continue to put together some good performances.

0:33:30.520 --> 0:33:33.240
<v Speaker 2>How about one pressure, no sacks and one hit on

0:33:33.280 --> 0:33:35.320
<v Speaker 2>two how about tarn arms it out in space that

0:33:35.440 --> 0:33:38.080
<v Speaker 2>second drive, he carried a linebacker ten yards down the

0:33:38.080 --> 0:33:39.720
<v Speaker 2>field to put him on his back side. Then he

0:33:39.800 --> 0:33:42.040
<v Speaker 2>pancake pass or ten seven yards down the field in

0:33:42.080 --> 0:33:45.480
<v Speaker 2>the twenty six yard a shant a Chan run. His hands,

0:33:45.520 --> 0:33:48.600
<v Speaker 2>his intelligence just always stand out on tape. Knock down,

0:33:48.680 --> 0:33:50.360
<v Speaker 2>the hands, lean into the run on that three yard

0:33:50.400 --> 0:33:53.120
<v Speaker 2>touchdown run, the way he anchored and shows patient hands

0:33:53.120 --> 0:33:55.920
<v Speaker 2>and pass protection. Elite tape from a future Hall of Famer.

0:33:56.120 --> 0:33:58.840
<v Speaker 2>I knowed Connor Williams's quickness. You see it all the

0:33:58.880 --> 0:34:01.440
<v Speaker 2>time on the second level reaches. But there's a snap

0:34:01.440 --> 0:34:03.760
<v Speaker 2>where the Broncos one tech jumps into the neutral zone

0:34:03.760 --> 0:34:05.920
<v Speaker 2>before the snap and he still cuts him off like

0:34:05.920 --> 0:34:08.959
<v Speaker 2>you're cheating and you're still getting cut off. Hilarious. Also,

0:34:09.200 --> 0:34:11.799
<v Speaker 2>Lester Cotton had a great seal on the sixty eight

0:34:11.880 --> 0:34:14.560
<v Speaker 2>yard a Chan run. Let's go ahead and hear from

0:34:14.640 --> 0:34:17.399
<v Speaker 2>Austin on Rob Hunt, who had a great game as well.

0:34:17.520 --> 0:34:19.400
<v Speaker 2>This guy is the best right guarden football right now

0:34:19.440 --> 0:34:21.640
<v Speaker 2>for my money. The way he's getting to the second level,

0:34:21.840 --> 0:34:25.600
<v Speaker 2>wiping dudes out, hitting key blocks, the point catching climb concepts.

0:34:25.800 --> 0:34:28.000
<v Speaker 2>Rob Hunt having a great year. Let's hear from Austin

0:34:28.080 --> 0:34:30.000
<v Speaker 2>Jackson and how he's grown and how he's seen that

0:34:30.080 --> 0:34:32.160
<v Speaker 2>growth in his fourth year as a dolphin.

0:34:32.880 --> 0:34:36.359
<v Speaker 3>It's just just an animal, just an animal. It's very

0:34:36.360 --> 0:34:41.000
<v Speaker 3>comfortable in the system, understands his angles, run targets and

0:34:41.120 --> 0:34:44.960
<v Speaker 3>run blocking. I think he's even began to set more

0:34:44.960 --> 0:34:48.319
<v Speaker 3>aggressive and pass pro so I've seen him clamp a

0:34:48.320 --> 0:34:49.560
<v Speaker 3>lot of guys at the line.

0:34:52.120 --> 0:34:53.719
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, he's just growing out of fast rate.

0:34:53.760 --> 0:34:56.320
<v Speaker 3>He's already, you know, a wonderful player.

0:34:56.600 --> 0:34:58.759
<v Speaker 2>Let's keep it rolling here onto the defensive side of

0:34:58.760 --> 0:35:00.759
<v Speaker 2>the football. I have no general notes. In fact, it's

0:35:00.760 --> 0:35:03.239
<v Speaker 2>going to be quick because the notes went to the

0:35:03.280 --> 0:35:06.480
<v Speaker 2>offense today. Christian Wilkins speaking of him, the way he

0:35:06.520 --> 0:35:09.040
<v Speaker 2>continues to get off double teams and ride the wave

0:35:09.280 --> 0:35:11.120
<v Speaker 2>down the line of scrimmage and then make a tackle.

0:35:11.239 --> 0:35:13.480
<v Speaker 2>There's not many guys that can do that. He's absolutely

0:35:13.560 --> 0:35:17.080
<v Speaker 2>unreal and the run before the field goal after we

0:35:17.120 --> 0:35:19.640
<v Speaker 2>turns it over on downs, you see Wilkins, and this

0:35:19.680 --> 0:35:22.279
<v Speaker 2>is why the ability to make these plays with the

0:35:22.360 --> 0:35:25.279
<v Speaker 2>light box defense we run is so paramount. He jumps

0:35:25.320 --> 0:35:27.680
<v Speaker 2>into the B gap, has his eyes on the back

0:35:27.760 --> 0:35:30.040
<v Speaker 2>and then sees the play going into the inside of

0:35:30.080 --> 0:35:32.239
<v Speaker 2>the formation and he jumps back over the top of

0:35:32.280 --> 0:35:34.279
<v Speaker 2>the blocker to take away the A gap and then

0:35:34.320 --> 0:35:37.360
<v Speaker 2>flows back outside and forces the back to bubble and

0:35:37.400 --> 0:35:40.080
<v Speaker 2>stretch that thing out, and that allows his entire cavalry

0:35:40.120 --> 0:35:43.000
<v Speaker 2>to arrive for a big tackle for loss. Elite player

0:35:43.280 --> 0:35:45.120
<v Speaker 2>Zach seeler Man when he gets the one on one

0:35:45.120 --> 0:35:48.040
<v Speaker 2>pass rush opportunities, he's just too much for guys to handle.

0:35:48.160 --> 0:35:51.360
<v Speaker 2>And it's the same complement of moves with power to swim,

0:35:51.400 --> 0:35:53.960
<v Speaker 2>to dip and rip. That trio of moves is too

0:35:54.040 --> 0:35:56.120
<v Speaker 2>much for people to handle. He crossed face on the

0:35:56.160 --> 0:35:58.480
<v Speaker 2>center and just bull doze his way into the backfield

0:35:58.520 --> 0:36:00.520
<v Speaker 2>on the first chance he got just like that and

0:36:00.560 --> 0:36:03.719
<v Speaker 2>buried Russell Wilson Emmanuel Ogball in the pick. Great job

0:36:03.760 --> 0:36:05.719
<v Speaker 2>staying with the play and running to the football to

0:36:05.760 --> 0:36:08.359
<v Speaker 2>make that interception one hand to grab two and how

0:36:08.400 --> 0:36:10.439
<v Speaker 2>great was it to see him bust out the dice

0:36:10.520 --> 0:36:12.640
<v Speaker 2>roll celebration again for the first time in a long time.

0:36:12.800 --> 0:36:15.600
<v Speaker 2>The closing speed and then the redirect as a free

0:36:15.640 --> 0:36:17.600
<v Speaker 2>runner on the quarterback. Those are hard sacks to get

0:36:17.600 --> 0:36:20.160
<v Speaker 2>on a guy like Russell Wilson, especially, who had been

0:36:20.160 --> 0:36:22.759
<v Speaker 2>evading them all day long, not for ogball. On this play,

0:36:22.760 --> 0:36:24.640
<v Speaker 2>he made the most of his opportunity. Let's go ahead

0:36:24.640 --> 0:36:26.560
<v Speaker 2>and hear from him on the pick and how pumped

0:36:26.560 --> 0:36:27.239
<v Speaker 2>he was to get that.

0:36:27.520 --> 0:36:30.160
<v Speaker 4>I mean, Deshaun made a great play, put his hands up,

0:36:30.160 --> 0:36:32.120
<v Speaker 4>he hit the ball and I think bounced off on

0:36:32.160 --> 0:36:33.879
<v Speaker 4>the Dare Helmett and all of a sudden I looked

0:36:33.880 --> 0:36:36.760
<v Speaker 4>to my left. I was like the ball was like spinning,

0:36:36.800 --> 0:36:38.600
<v Speaker 4>and I was like, oh, sonaw, I'm right there. So

0:36:38.680 --> 0:36:40.520
<v Speaker 4>I just kind of stretched my own mind and just

0:36:40.600 --> 0:36:40.840
<v Speaker 4>kind of.

0:36:40.800 --> 0:36:41.440
<v Speaker 1>Like grabbed it.

0:36:41.480 --> 0:36:43.960
<v Speaker 4>So it's kind of an easy, easy cash.

0:36:43.800 --> 0:36:47.520
<v Speaker 2>Though by just a couple more things here left linebacker's position.

0:36:47.640 --> 0:36:50.280
<v Speaker 2>I thought David Long had a fantastic tape. He's finding

0:36:50.320 --> 0:36:52.959
<v Speaker 2>his fits fast. He's sticking his nose in the face

0:36:52.960 --> 0:36:56.000
<v Speaker 2>of the fan, taking on blocks, chopping down ball carriers

0:36:56.120 --> 0:36:58.120
<v Speaker 2>on his tackle for loss. He did that thing that

0:36:58.200 --> 0:37:00.640
<v Speaker 2>I praised this offseason where he deeps the guard by

0:37:00.719 --> 0:37:03.080
<v Speaker 2>jumping the wrong gap and then peeling back out and

0:37:03.120 --> 0:37:05.600
<v Speaker 2>finding the right gap to quickly then flow downhill and

0:37:05.640 --> 0:37:07.880
<v Speaker 2>go make a play. Elite stuff on that third and

0:37:07.920 --> 0:37:10.440
<v Speaker 2>one stuff he made. And then in the defensive backfield,

0:37:10.480 --> 0:37:13.680
<v Speaker 2>I just am so enamored by cater Co, Who's game.

0:37:13.960 --> 0:37:16.920
<v Speaker 2>We talk about offense creating lanes on the perimeter in

0:37:16.920 --> 0:37:18.719
<v Speaker 2>the running game. Well, Co who is a guy that

0:37:18.760 --> 0:37:20.880
<v Speaker 2>you can't do that against because he makes another open

0:37:20.920 --> 0:37:23.960
<v Speaker 2>field tackle on Sunday. The next play he mirrors Courtland

0:37:23.960 --> 0:37:26.279
<v Speaker 2>Sutton's nine route, slaps the arm bar down when he

0:37:26.320 --> 0:37:28.680
<v Speaker 2>tries to make that outbreak on the fade route or

0:37:28.680 --> 0:37:31.280
<v Speaker 2>the go ball, stays in phase and then patiently plays

0:37:31.320 --> 0:37:34.399
<v Speaker 2>the catch point every week. Cater Co, who provides teaching tape,

0:37:34.400 --> 0:37:36.520
<v Speaker 2>He's awesome. It's the best cornerback of a team right

0:37:36.520 --> 0:37:39.120
<v Speaker 2>now for my money. Deshaun Elliott, second game in a row,

0:37:39.160 --> 0:37:42.319
<v Speaker 2>there's more thunder thunder? Are you telling this story? Ah

0:37:42.320 --> 0:37:45.359
<v Speaker 2>am I that's incanto. Second game in a row from

0:37:45.360 --> 0:37:48.080
<v Speaker 2>Elliott that I loved. He plays a combination of the

0:37:48.120 --> 0:37:50.239
<v Speaker 2>man and the quarterback really well where he kind of

0:37:50.280 --> 0:37:52.879
<v Speaker 2>keeps eyes on both. That pass breakup he had before

0:37:52.920 --> 0:37:57.040
<v Speaker 2>the Broncos first touchdown was textbook depth. Id the play, drive, makeup,

0:37:57.040 --> 0:37:58.799
<v Speaker 2>play on the football, and that I wanted to note

0:37:58.880 --> 0:38:00.759
<v Speaker 2>Justin Bethel continue to love they that he plays the

0:38:00.800 --> 0:38:03.160
<v Speaker 2>game just always in the right place. He's smart, He

0:38:03.160 --> 0:38:06.799
<v Speaker 2>squeezes the pile in the run game, anticipates the passing game.

0:38:06.920 --> 0:38:09.640
<v Speaker 2>He's been a nice fine so far. Some PFF numbers,

0:38:09.640 --> 0:38:13.279
<v Speaker 2>Ogball led the way with four pressures. Seeler, Wilkins had

0:38:13.280 --> 0:38:16.040
<v Speaker 2>three each, Chubb and Bake had two apiece, and then

0:38:16.080 --> 0:38:19.280
<v Speaker 2>for run stops, Long had three. Holland, Wilkins, and Bethel

0:38:19.320 --> 0:38:21.279
<v Speaker 2>all had two each. And I had one tape that

0:38:21.320 --> 0:38:24.520
<v Speaker 2>I particularly did not like, and it was Xavier and Howard.

0:38:24.560 --> 0:38:26.239
<v Speaker 2>I thought it was just rough. A lot of those

0:38:26.239 --> 0:38:28.880
<v Speaker 2>crossers that we gave up were him just bailing on

0:38:28.920 --> 0:38:31.960
<v Speaker 2>what looks like man everywhere he goes technique meg technique

0:38:32.120 --> 0:38:34.360
<v Speaker 2>to the backside of the formation. It's a very common

0:38:34.400 --> 0:38:36.120
<v Speaker 2>coverage in this defense, and he would just kind of

0:38:36.440 --> 0:38:38.480
<v Speaker 2>let him go and they would be all alone in

0:38:38.760 --> 0:38:41.560
<v Speaker 2>open space. Not a lot of urgency there to anticipate.

0:38:41.719 --> 0:38:44.920
<v Speaker 2>He's kind of been reactive more than anticipating, and it's

0:38:45.200 --> 0:38:46.960
<v Speaker 2>it's been a rough go through the first three games here.

0:38:46.960 --> 0:38:50.000
<v Speaker 2>Besides that great Pickie had against the Patriots. So some good,

0:38:50.040 --> 0:38:53.040
<v Speaker 2>some bad, mostly great. Let's go ahead and play one

0:38:53.280 --> 0:38:56.080
<v Speaker 2>two more sound clips here. First, Mike McDaniel, I asked

0:38:56.160 --> 0:38:58.279
<v Speaker 2>him about what I read in the Peter King colin,

0:38:58.320 --> 0:39:00.279
<v Speaker 2>which we're not gonna do around the web today because

0:39:00.320 --> 0:39:02.399
<v Speaker 2>I once again went forty minutes. But I did ask

0:39:02.480 --> 0:39:05.440
<v Speaker 2>McDaniel about why he allows players to give the pregame

0:39:05.480 --> 0:39:07.960
<v Speaker 2>speech not just before the games you'll hear from coach here,

0:39:07.960 --> 0:39:10.799
<v Speaker 2>but also before they break down meetings, team dinners, all

0:39:10.800 --> 0:39:13.720
<v Speaker 2>that stuff. Here's coach on his empowerment of players.

0:39:13.840 --> 0:39:16.520
<v Speaker 5>You know, generally, especially when we're about to play football,

0:39:18.320 --> 0:39:23.400
<v Speaker 5>you know, I'll have my my, my pieces of wisdom.

0:39:23.560 --> 0:39:26.640
<v Speaker 5>But the most impactful thing is when guys hear from

0:39:26.840 --> 0:39:28.799
<v Speaker 5>from each other, hear from the piers. So I ask

0:39:28.880 --> 0:39:32.640
<v Speaker 5>a lot of the captains in moments like that. And

0:39:32.680 --> 0:39:36.480
<v Speaker 5>it's not just exclusively before the game. You know that

0:39:36.600 --> 0:39:41.560
<v Speaker 5>they say the last words to each other the night

0:39:41.600 --> 0:39:46.000
<v Speaker 5>before the game, and you know pretty much every activity

0:39:46.000 --> 0:39:50.560
<v Speaker 5>that we have culminates with a team breakdown. So I

0:39:50.600 --> 0:39:56.960
<v Speaker 5>think guys guys take very serious the the the opportunity

0:39:57.000 --> 0:39:59.640
<v Speaker 5>they have when they're able to speak to the whole group,

0:40:00.520 --> 0:40:03.040
<v Speaker 5>and when you have a bunch of like minded guys,

0:40:03.960 --> 0:40:11.320
<v Speaker 5>you can really see adrenaline, emotion, just the overall attentiveness

0:40:11.600 --> 0:40:15.120
<v Speaker 5>of guys really perk up when when they're hearing from

0:40:15.120 --> 0:40:19.600
<v Speaker 5>their peers and who are able to give much more

0:40:19.680 --> 0:40:23.720
<v Speaker 5>powerful messages than any coach coach could deliver in my opinion.

0:40:23.920 --> 0:40:25.680
<v Speaker 2>And then to finish up here, I thought was important

0:40:25.680 --> 0:40:27.359
<v Speaker 2>to hear from a player on that regard, and who

0:40:27.400 --> 0:40:30.359
<v Speaker 2>better than Captain Christian Wilkins on how much players love

0:40:30.400 --> 0:40:32.080
<v Speaker 2>a coach that allows them to kind of deliver the

0:40:32.120 --> 0:40:34.000
<v Speaker 2>message there in the big moments.

0:40:34.239 --> 0:40:36.640
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, No, it's definitely just just that it's players driven.

0:40:36.760 --> 0:40:38.440
<v Speaker 1>I mean, we're the ones going out there on the

0:40:38.440 --> 0:40:41.000
<v Speaker 1>field having to compete, and it's just kind of like

0:40:41.040 --> 0:40:44.520
<v Speaker 1>a last last time, last second, just you know, just us,

0:40:44.520 --> 0:40:47.720
<v Speaker 1>nobody else, you know, and you know we have that time.

0:40:47.800 --> 0:40:49.359
<v Speaker 1>You know, guys can say what they want to say,

0:40:49.600 --> 0:40:51.600
<v Speaker 1>you know, kind of set the mindset, you know, what's

0:40:51.640 --> 0:40:53.399
<v Speaker 1>on their mind, what's on their heart. So I think

0:40:53.400 --> 0:40:55.640
<v Speaker 1>that's cool. It's definitely important for me, and I appreciate

0:40:55.640 --> 0:40:57.880
<v Speaker 1>it and I embraced it and definitely try to lock

0:40:57.920 --> 0:40:59.880
<v Speaker 1>in when other guys are speaking because it means a

0:40:59.880 --> 0:41:01.400
<v Speaker 1>lot to me just to kind of hear what my

0:41:01.480 --> 0:41:03.120
<v Speaker 1>team has got on their heart or on their mind,

0:41:03.160 --> 0:41:04.960
<v Speaker 1>and just you know, to kind of give you like

0:41:05.000 --> 0:41:06.799
<v Speaker 1>a little extra you know, before you go out there.

0:41:06.800 --> 0:41:08.399
<v Speaker 1>It's good to you know, I obviously hear from coach

0:41:08.480 --> 0:41:11.359
<v Speaker 1>or whoever, but then when it's the players, that's, you know,

0:41:11.520 --> 0:41:12.560
<v Speaker 1>that's more meaningful.

0:41:12.920 --> 0:41:15.520
<v Speaker 2>All right, Monday's always kind of feel like my game

0:41:15.600 --> 0:41:18.000
<v Speaker 2>day in terms of like pumping out this content and

0:41:18.000 --> 0:41:19.640
<v Speaker 2>trying to get to you guys fast. I hope that

0:41:19.800 --> 0:41:22.640
<v Speaker 2>was achieved today. It's about six o'clock when I finished taping.

0:41:22.640 --> 0:41:24.640
<v Speaker 2>We're approving ready to roll. So the podcast is coming

0:41:24.640 --> 0:41:27.680
<v Speaker 2>your way right now before Monday Night Football, and it'll

0:41:27.719 --> 0:41:30.000
<v Speaker 2>carry you all the way to the Wednesday night podcast,

0:41:30.040 --> 0:41:32.560
<v Speaker 2>the preview of Dolphins at Bills. Cannot wait to get

0:41:32.560 --> 0:41:34.560
<v Speaker 2>into that one. That's a ways off though you all

0:41:34.640 --> 0:41:36.759
<v Speaker 2>enjoy the podcast, enjoy some content on Twitter as well

0:41:36.760 --> 0:41:39.360
<v Speaker 2>as the three Takeaways on Miami Dolphins dot com. Also,

0:41:39.440 --> 0:41:42.279
<v Speaker 2>please be sure subscribe, rate, review, follow on social All

0:41:42.320 --> 0:41:44.200
<v Speaker 2>that stuff. Check out my guys in the fish Tank,

0:41:44.239 --> 0:41:47.520
<v Speaker 2>the YouTube channel for media Availabilities Dolphins a Day and

0:41:47.600 --> 0:41:49.920
<v Speaker 2>so much more content up there to try to stretch

0:41:49.920 --> 0:41:51.839
<v Speaker 2>the time here to get my music going. And of course,

0:41:51.920 --> 0:41:53.840
<v Speaker 2>last but not least, like I mentioned, three takeaways on

0:41:53.920 --> 0:41:56.720
<v Speaker 2>Miami Dolphins dot com. Until next time, Fin's up Carolina

0:41:56.760 --> 0:41:57.400
<v Speaker 2>Cameraan Yeatty

0:42:01.200 --> 0:42:03.839
<v Speaker 3>Seeks