WEBVTT - Drive Time: Dolphins Commanders All 22 Review

0:00:00.440 --> 0:00:05.040
<v Speaker 1>Drive Time with Travis Wingfield begins. Now, let me check

0:00:05.080 --> 0:00:10.360
<v Speaker 1>your pulse if you're not far though. What is up? Dolphins?

0:00:10.440 --> 0:00:13.319
<v Speaker 1>And welcome to the Drift Time Podcast, part of the

0:00:13.360 --> 0:00:18.240
<v Speaker 1>Miami Dolphins podcast network, covering your team, your Miami Dolphins.

0:00:18.239 --> 0:00:21.439
<v Speaker 1>How's it going everybody? I am your host, Travis Wingfield.

0:00:21.600 --> 0:00:23.680
<v Speaker 1>And on today's show, you know what time it is,

0:00:23.720 --> 0:00:25.759
<v Speaker 1>It's time to check out the all twenty two from

0:00:25.800 --> 0:00:29.120
<v Speaker 1>Dolphins forty five Commanders fifteen. We're gonna break down the

0:00:29.120 --> 0:00:32.040
<v Speaker 1>biggest plays of the game, the top five individual tapes.

0:00:32.080 --> 0:00:34.320
<v Speaker 1>I'll go through the entire offense and defense and tell

0:00:34.320 --> 0:00:36.800
<v Speaker 1>you who's shined in this one. We'll talk about the

0:00:36.840 --> 0:00:40.200
<v Speaker 1>schematics of it, what the Dolphins can build upon going forward.

0:00:40.360 --> 0:00:42.880
<v Speaker 1>We'll look at key stats and snap counts, the entire

0:00:43.000 --> 0:00:46.360
<v Speaker 1>recap the aftermath from another big Dolphins victory from the

0:00:46.400 --> 0:00:49.640
<v Speaker 1>Baptist Health Studios inside the Baptist Health Training Complex. This

0:00:49.880 --> 0:00:56.320
<v Speaker 1>is the Drive Time Podcast. Maybe so we get this

0:00:56.400 --> 0:01:00.280
<v Speaker 1>game or this game recap podcast started with the big

0:01:00.280 --> 0:01:02.760
<v Speaker 1>plays right, and it got off to a pretty quick

0:01:02.760 --> 0:01:05.959
<v Speaker 1>start in that regard the first quarter seventy eight yard

0:01:06.040 --> 0:01:09.440
<v Speaker 1>touchdown pass from two of the Tyreek and third play

0:01:09.440 --> 0:01:11.280
<v Speaker 1>of the game. What's cool here is you see Devon

0:01:11.440 --> 0:01:13.880
<v Speaker 1>h Chan motion out to the boundary the short side

0:01:13.880 --> 0:01:16.760
<v Speaker 1>of the formation, and the linebacker follows him. And you

0:01:16.800 --> 0:01:20.200
<v Speaker 1>probably won't find a bigger indicator of man coverage than that.

0:01:20.280 --> 0:01:22.600
<v Speaker 1>The linebacker chasing the running back to the perimeter and

0:01:22.640 --> 0:01:25.240
<v Speaker 1>frankly a Chan smokes him and might have had a

0:01:25.280 --> 0:01:28.440
<v Speaker 1>long touchdown of his own. But what this motion reveals

0:01:28.480 --> 0:01:30.880
<v Speaker 1>is the man coverage on Tyreek Hill and the slot.

0:01:31.480 --> 0:01:33.679
<v Speaker 1>And we're not going to pass that up ever, And

0:01:33.720 --> 0:01:36.039
<v Speaker 1>we've been money on these slot fades. Right. You also

0:01:36.040 --> 0:01:37.840
<v Speaker 1>see two will make a hand gesture to Reek and

0:01:38.120 --> 0:01:41.560
<v Speaker 1>Braxon over there after that backer follows DeVaughn. So my

0:01:41.640 --> 0:01:45.000
<v Speaker 1>guess is, hey, man coverage, let's throw Tyreek deep. I

0:01:45.040 --> 0:01:46.280
<v Speaker 1>don't know what to call this, come on in huddle

0:01:46.280 --> 0:01:48.280
<v Speaker 1>mount in the meeting rooms, but that's what it looks like.

0:01:48.480 --> 0:01:51.000
<v Speaker 1>No safety help and the slot corner I was outside leverage,

0:01:51.000 --> 0:01:53.920
<v Speaker 1>which Tyreek uses to his advantage. He's playing off, but

0:01:54.000 --> 0:01:57.440
<v Speaker 1>Tyreek turns it into press. These are the little nuanced

0:01:57.440 --> 0:01:59.640
<v Speaker 1>details of Tyreek scan. It's so good he turns it

0:01:59.680 --> 0:02:02.800
<v Speaker 1>into by going and getting him going, attacking the middle

0:02:03.040 --> 0:02:05.760
<v Speaker 1>of his jersey. Then it's a stab step to the outside,

0:02:05.760 --> 0:02:08.520
<v Speaker 1>which forces him to do a double foot jump skip

0:02:08.520 --> 0:02:11.280
<v Speaker 1>step to the perimeter to prevent the outbreaker. And once

0:02:11.320 --> 0:02:13.560
<v Speaker 1>he does that, that's all Tyreek needs. Put the foot

0:02:13.560 --> 0:02:16.040
<v Speaker 1>in the ground, hit the gas and the way he

0:02:16.040 --> 0:02:18.280
<v Speaker 1>turned it into press, and pitch the shutout on the

0:02:18.320 --> 0:02:20.800
<v Speaker 1>re route five yards down the field. And for Tua

0:02:20.880 --> 0:02:22.480
<v Speaker 1>to see this play out in real time and see

0:02:22.560 --> 0:02:25.480
<v Speaker 1>him get that win. The hands separate when he's literally

0:02:25.520 --> 0:02:27.880
<v Speaker 1>five yards off the ball where he wins that little

0:02:27.919 --> 0:02:30.560
<v Speaker 1>move at the minus twenty seven yard line. And the

0:02:30.600 --> 0:02:33.520
<v Speaker 1>craziest part is Tua actually does a little mini shoulder

0:02:33.600 --> 0:02:36.760
<v Speaker 1>roll pumped to the stick that influences the safety and

0:02:36.800 --> 0:02:38.799
<v Speaker 1>you can see this thing play out. It's a testament

0:02:38.880 --> 0:02:42.079
<v Speaker 1>to Tua's mastery of the position at just twenty five

0:02:42.160 --> 0:02:44.680
<v Speaker 1>years old, because he knew the look, he knew the coverage,

0:02:44.680 --> 0:02:47.040
<v Speaker 1>he knew the rotation, he knew where to sell the

0:02:47.080 --> 0:02:49.480
<v Speaker 1>goods to move the defense the way he wanted to

0:02:49.840 --> 0:02:52.360
<v Speaker 1>and then the dime throwing a vertical and all this

0:02:52.480 --> 0:02:56.280
<v Speaker 1>happens inside of two seconds. It's insane quarterback play. But

0:02:56.320 --> 0:02:59.600
<v Speaker 1>back to Tyreek, I mean the you know creating a

0:02:59.680 --> 0:03:02.680
<v Speaker 1>press situations when the cornerback is off as impressive. The

0:03:02.680 --> 0:03:05.240
<v Speaker 1>in flight adjustment probably the best in the business. On

0:03:05.280 --> 0:03:07.600
<v Speaker 1>these throws, you have to have landmarks, and Tua told

0:03:07.639 --> 0:03:10.320
<v Speaker 1>us as much in his postgame presser. He's shooting for

0:03:10.360 --> 0:03:13.280
<v Speaker 1>the numbers on these throws. So Tyreek stacks the defensive

0:03:13.280 --> 0:03:15.440
<v Speaker 1>back where you get around him and then get on

0:03:15.600 --> 0:03:18.960
<v Speaker 1>top of him so that his ability to run a

0:03:19.000 --> 0:03:20.760
<v Speaker 1>full line sprint and put the head down is not

0:03:20.800 --> 0:03:23.400
<v Speaker 1>possible because he'll run into you that stacking, get on

0:03:23.440 --> 0:03:25.959
<v Speaker 1>the same plane as the cornerback, and then look back.

0:03:26.040 --> 0:03:28.040
<v Speaker 1>There's the football right and stride at the forty five

0:03:28.120 --> 0:03:30.320
<v Speaker 1>yard line and you know the rest. Show him your

0:03:30.360 --> 0:03:33.359
<v Speaker 1>tail lights. Ten pass pro was perfect five on four.

0:03:33.480 --> 0:03:36.160
<v Speaker 1>Good slide to deal with Washington's slants coming from the

0:03:36.160 --> 0:03:38.160
<v Speaker 1>offense is left to the right. They just picked it

0:03:38.240 --> 0:03:41.760
<v Speaker 1>up cleanly to not even a breath on him touchdown.

0:03:42.160 --> 0:03:44.400
<v Speaker 1>How about we do it again this time for sixty

0:03:44.520 --> 0:03:46.560
<v Speaker 1>yards back to Tyreek hill. Once again, it starts with

0:03:46.640 --> 0:03:49.640
<v Speaker 1>unbelievable pass protection. Once again, the Commanders bring a fifth

0:03:49.640 --> 0:03:51.960
<v Speaker 1>and you can't pick it up better than Miami did

0:03:52.000 --> 0:03:55.000
<v Speaker 1>on this play. First off to Ron Armstead herases a

0:03:55.080 --> 0:03:57.360
<v Speaker 1>one on one and actually runs him off the screen

0:03:57.400 --> 0:03:59.760
<v Speaker 1>to Baltimore, Like, bro, if you have the game pass,

0:04:00.040 --> 0:04:03.320
<v Speaker 1>pull this stuff up. It is hilarious. Tron ragged all

0:04:03.360 --> 0:04:05.520
<v Speaker 1>of this man. It's comical the way his head is

0:04:05.520 --> 0:04:08.400
<v Speaker 1>like a bobblehead getting whipped around because he's just controlling him,

0:04:08.640 --> 0:04:11.600
<v Speaker 1>almost like you know, a fifteen year old bully on

0:04:11.640 --> 0:04:14.800
<v Speaker 1>a ten year old kid. Like it's comical. They simulate seven,

0:04:14.880 --> 0:04:17.640
<v Speaker 1>but two back out, don't blitz to it, by the way,

0:04:17.920 --> 0:04:20.840
<v Speaker 1>the correct they correctly adjust. The offensive line does, and

0:04:20.920 --> 0:04:23.520
<v Speaker 1>Durham releases into the route right when his man bills,

0:04:23.720 --> 0:04:26.160
<v Speaker 1>and then Austin and Rob hit a double team. Connor

0:04:26.160 --> 0:04:28.520
<v Speaker 1>picks up a blitzer and runs him to West Virginia

0:04:28.560 --> 0:04:30.400
<v Speaker 1>on the other side of the map, and Liam takes

0:04:30.400 --> 0:04:33.400
<v Speaker 1>the other blitzer and Stone walls him in his steps,

0:04:33.560 --> 0:04:35.880
<v Speaker 1>and then Raheem comes across and hits the chip away

0:04:35.880 --> 0:04:38.760
<v Speaker 1>from Tua, and the pocket adjusts a little bit on

0:04:38.800 --> 0:04:41.719
<v Speaker 1>this play because Tua has to slide a little bit

0:04:41.760 --> 0:04:43.520
<v Speaker 1>from his left to the right where the overload winds

0:04:43.600 --> 0:04:46.720
<v Speaker 1>up coming from with that pressure, and he incorporates his

0:04:46.800 --> 0:04:50.200
<v Speaker 1>mechanics into the slide it's the cleanest footwork in the

0:04:50.320 --> 0:04:53.839
<v Speaker 1>entire game. It's like one hitch step, the foot kicks

0:04:53.880 --> 0:04:56.960
<v Speaker 1>out and then he establishes that plant base, all within

0:04:57.040 --> 0:05:00.400
<v Speaker 1>one motion while generating this crow hop action. It allows

0:05:00.440 --> 0:05:02.640
<v Speaker 1>him to load up and shoot this thing fifty yards

0:05:02.720 --> 0:05:06.159
<v Speaker 1>downfield for a handoff for an easy touchdown from the

0:05:06.200 --> 0:05:08.880
<v Speaker 1>far hash right on the numbers. Like, come on, man,

0:05:09.160 --> 0:05:11.680
<v Speaker 1>and guess what I just I don't get it, and

0:05:11.760 --> 0:05:13.800
<v Speaker 1>I never have gotten it. I get it even less now.

0:05:14.120 --> 0:05:16.719
<v Speaker 1>But for those that were, you know, getting their tweets

0:05:16.720 --> 0:05:18.960
<v Speaker 1>off about what a bad touchdown throw it was, which

0:05:19.040 --> 0:05:22.039
<v Speaker 1>is hilarious, Like imagine getting mad at a player for

0:05:22.080 --> 0:05:23.520
<v Speaker 1>hitting a home run that scrapes the top of the

0:05:23.520 --> 0:05:26.159
<v Speaker 1>fence and gets out, Like shut up, nerd, you know,

0:05:26.640 --> 0:05:28.920
<v Speaker 1>just shut up, nerd. But anyway, you don't know what

0:05:28.920 --> 0:05:31.359
<v Speaker 1>you're talking about anyway, because you don't know the basic

0:05:31.400 --> 0:05:35.160
<v Speaker 1>principles of football, which is it's middle field closed. That

0:05:35.240 --> 0:05:36.840
<v Speaker 1>means you can't throw to the middle of the field.

0:05:36.839 --> 0:05:39.400
<v Speaker 1>A single high safety means you can't throw the post route.

0:05:39.560 --> 0:05:41.480
<v Speaker 1>So why would two put it over there? There's no

0:05:41.560 --> 0:05:43.839
<v Speaker 1>way you want to throw a post inside the numbers,

0:05:43.960 --> 0:05:47.719
<v Speaker 1>or I should say middlefield closed inside the numbers. TI week,

0:05:47.960 --> 0:05:50.880
<v Speaker 1>Tyreek wins the inside release again and then takes it

0:05:50.880 --> 0:05:52.960
<v Speaker 1>back to the numbers. It's the exact same look as

0:05:53.000 --> 0:05:55.080
<v Speaker 1>the first play. It's the exact same play, but Tyreek

0:05:55.120 --> 0:05:57.279
<v Speaker 1>messes it up. If he stacks the corner and tracks

0:05:57.279 --> 0:05:59.520
<v Speaker 1>it that way, it's gonna look the exact same But

0:05:59.640 --> 0:06:02.080
<v Speaker 1>because he's All World, he can mess up like that

0:06:02.240 --> 0:06:05.560
<v Speaker 1>and still make it a sixty yard touchdown. Headwhip find it,

0:06:05.600 --> 0:06:08.360
<v Speaker 1>show them your telllights once again. Oh I'm having fun.

0:06:08.680 --> 0:06:10.480
<v Speaker 1>I love the all twenty two this year to all

0:06:10.480 --> 0:06:12.479
<v Speaker 1>playing out of his mind and after every throw to

0:06:12.560 --> 0:06:14.279
<v Speaker 1>have made in this game, he would hold the pose

0:06:14.360 --> 0:06:17.800
<v Speaker 1>like talk about feeling yourself Steph Curry style. It's impressive

0:06:17.839 --> 0:06:19.560
<v Speaker 1>to watch him when he's playing at this level. How

0:06:19.560 --> 0:06:21.720
<v Speaker 1>about Andrew Van Ginkles pick six Before we go to

0:06:21.720 --> 0:06:24.200
<v Speaker 1>the top five tapes here, you look at Sam Howse

0:06:24.240 --> 0:06:26.880
<v Speaker 1>passing charts by formation and a lot of times when

0:06:26.920 --> 0:06:29.440
<v Speaker 1>they go empty, it's gonna be quick game and probably

0:06:29.440 --> 0:06:31.920
<v Speaker 1>screen game behind the line of scrimmage. So they come

0:06:31.920 --> 0:06:33.960
<v Speaker 1>out and empty, and I feel like that's where Van

0:06:34.000 --> 0:06:36.240
<v Speaker 1>Ginkle's study paid off right there. If they go empty

0:06:36.880 --> 0:06:38.760
<v Speaker 1>pretty good chance. They screen it and what do you know,

0:06:38.839 --> 0:06:40.680
<v Speaker 1>they do it and he knew it the entire way.

0:06:41.400 --> 0:06:44.640
<v Speaker 1>Usually in football, a big play is eleven guys doing

0:06:44.680 --> 0:06:47.279
<v Speaker 1>a job. But everyone else in the field here probably

0:06:47.320 --> 0:06:49.320
<v Speaker 1>could have just stood there and watched this happen, because

0:06:49.320 --> 0:06:52.359
<v Speaker 1>it would have happened either way. Just great instincts, great preparation,

0:06:52.440 --> 0:06:54.839
<v Speaker 1>and a great job finishing a catch. It cannot be

0:06:54.880 --> 0:06:57.640
<v Speaker 1>easy catching a football thrown by an NFL quarterback. They're

0:06:57.640 --> 0:06:59.680
<v Speaker 1>supposed to go twelve yards and you pick it off

0:06:59.680 --> 0:07:01.320
<v Speaker 1>point Blake at five yards. It's got a little bit

0:07:01.320 --> 0:07:03.360
<v Speaker 1>of mustard on at that point. My top five tapes

0:07:03.400 --> 0:07:06.719
<v Speaker 1>Tyreek Hills number one. I've been noticing that I don't

0:07:06.800 --> 0:07:09.440
<v Speaker 1>always have a ton of individual notes on Tyreek. It's

0:07:09.480 --> 0:07:12.640
<v Speaker 1>because he's always littered throughout the big plays category. We

0:07:12.680 --> 0:07:14.400
<v Speaker 1>talk about his game in there, but I mean it's

0:07:14.440 --> 0:07:17.200
<v Speaker 1>more of the same. He uses his league best speed

0:07:17.480 --> 0:07:21.240
<v Speaker 1>to accentuate his league best nuance. That's a quote for you,

0:07:21.320 --> 0:07:22.840
<v Speaker 1>Big Seth. I know you'll write that down and text

0:07:22.880 --> 0:07:25.280
<v Speaker 1>me about it later. Justin Jefferson is right there with

0:07:25.360 --> 0:07:28.560
<v Speaker 1>him in that regard. But he knows how to do everything,

0:07:28.600 --> 0:07:30.920
<v Speaker 1>how to create the release that he wants, how to

0:07:30.920 --> 0:07:33.200
<v Speaker 1>set up the defensive back for the access that he wants.

0:07:33.200 --> 0:07:35.240
<v Speaker 1>If he wants to get outside, he knows how he

0:07:35.280 --> 0:07:38.240
<v Speaker 1>has to move to create that outside access, the speed

0:07:38.240 --> 0:07:40.560
<v Speaker 1>to turn big plays into full field touchdowns. Ween, I'm

0:07:40.560 --> 0:07:43.040
<v Speaker 1>talking about thirty yard catching runs here, we're talking about

0:07:43.040 --> 0:07:46.680
<v Speaker 1>seventy yard touchdowns. He never ever ever drops these Like

0:07:46.960 --> 0:07:49.760
<v Speaker 1>have we seen him drop a long ball? I don't

0:07:49.800 --> 0:07:52.120
<v Speaker 1>recall one. We just don't miss when we get them.

0:07:52.240 --> 0:07:54.080
<v Speaker 1>I mean to count on one of these just about

0:07:54.120 --> 0:07:57.760
<v Speaker 1>every single game. We are so so spoiled. And again

0:07:58.040 --> 0:08:00.160
<v Speaker 1>he blocks his ass off in the game. Again. He's

0:08:00.200 --> 0:08:02.960
<v Speaker 1>the real deal in every sense. What a football player.

0:08:03.200 --> 0:08:05.440
<v Speaker 1>I don't think I've ever seen a better athlete with

0:08:05.520 --> 0:08:07.720
<v Speaker 1>my own eyes. I don't know, man, I feel like

0:08:07.720 --> 0:08:10.080
<v Speaker 1>I'm gonna tell my grandkids about watching Tyreek Hill in

0:08:10.120 --> 0:08:13.360
<v Speaker 1>practice every day. It's wild. He had twenty six point

0:08:13.400 --> 0:08:17.560
<v Speaker 1>two yards per target in this game. Eight is a

0:08:17.600 --> 0:08:20.720
<v Speaker 1>good number. He's three xt it, you know it's a

0:08:20.720 --> 0:08:23.720
<v Speaker 1>good number. Two yards per route ran he had eight

0:08:23.800 --> 0:08:25.920
<v Speaker 1>point seven to two. He almost four and a half

0:08:26.040 --> 0:08:28.800
<v Speaker 1>xit he yeah, four and a half, almost eighty two

0:08:28.880 --> 0:08:31.360
<v Speaker 1>yards after the catch. He averaged sixteen point four yards

0:08:31.440 --> 0:08:34.120
<v Speaker 1>just after the catch. He had a good yards per

0:08:34.120 --> 0:08:36.440
<v Speaker 1>catch average just after the catch. My second tape is

0:08:36.440 --> 0:08:38.600
<v Speaker 1>to a tongue Bai Looa. I thought this was his

0:08:38.679 --> 0:08:42.360
<v Speaker 1>best game since the Chargers opener, both insanely high bars.

0:08:42.360 --> 0:08:44.840
<v Speaker 1>Denver's not bad either. I say that because I thought

0:08:44.840 --> 0:08:47.200
<v Speaker 1>his pocket management was as good as we've seen in

0:08:47.240 --> 0:08:50.960
<v Speaker 1>the NFL by anybody, And strangely enough, on his third throw,

0:08:51.200 --> 0:08:53.760
<v Speaker 1>the one after the long touchdown pass to Tyreek, it's

0:08:53.800 --> 0:08:55.840
<v Speaker 1>a swing to Tyreek where he takes a hit and

0:08:55.880 --> 0:08:58.920
<v Speaker 1>the ball short hops him. He tried that little ball

0:08:58.960 --> 0:09:01.400
<v Speaker 1>fake that has been so effective this year getting defenders

0:09:01.440 --> 0:09:04.120
<v Speaker 1>off their feet. But good on forty seven for Washington

0:09:04.160 --> 0:09:06.400
<v Speaker 1>for not taking the cheese. He ran through it and

0:09:06.480 --> 0:09:08.679
<v Speaker 1>put a big hit on Tua, but man Tyreek had

0:09:08.679 --> 0:09:11.160
<v Speaker 1>the sideline on that play might have been another long

0:09:11.200 --> 0:09:13.320
<v Speaker 1>touchdown if it works out. They got in because the

0:09:13.320 --> 0:09:17.040
<v Speaker 1>guy who showed running with the motion man the slide

0:09:17.040 --> 0:09:19.559
<v Speaker 1>motion that Tyreek is on converts to a blitz and

0:09:19.600 --> 0:09:21.280
<v Speaker 1>then Raheem couldn't get back in front of him. So

0:09:21.320 --> 0:09:23.440
<v Speaker 1>it's a good defensive call and it puzzled to it

0:09:23.520 --> 0:09:26.720
<v Speaker 1>for just long enough to get the incompletion, but that

0:09:26.840 --> 0:09:29.680
<v Speaker 1>was pretty much it for confusing too, I thought he

0:09:29.720 --> 0:09:32.640
<v Speaker 1>missed one spot throw to Durham smythe on a play

0:09:32.679 --> 0:09:34.680
<v Speaker 1>that he threw to Ingold out wide that was a

0:09:34.720 --> 0:09:37.439
<v Speaker 1>loss on the play. But other than that, those were

0:09:37.440 --> 0:09:39.400
<v Speaker 1>not only two misses for Tua on the entire day.

0:09:39.840 --> 0:09:42.040
<v Speaker 1>The next throw he has is a rip to Wattle

0:09:42.040 --> 0:09:44.920
<v Speaker 1>between a trio of defenders, just a perfect N sync

0:09:45.000 --> 0:09:48.640
<v Speaker 1>shot into the window at the right time that throttles wattles,

0:09:49.520 --> 0:09:53.360
<v Speaker 1>Throttle's wattle throttle wattle down to protect him from a

0:09:53.360 --> 0:09:56.160
<v Speaker 1>big shot sixteen yards on third and five. And like,

0:09:56.200 --> 0:09:58.200
<v Speaker 1>here's my thing, man, going back to this whole like

0:09:58.520 --> 0:10:01.240
<v Speaker 1>sixty yard touchdown gate, which the stupidest thing I've ever heard.

0:10:01.240 --> 0:10:03.440
<v Speaker 1>I've never seen a quarterback criticize for a sixty yard

0:10:03.480 --> 0:10:06.760
<v Speaker 1>touchdown play, you know, like especially when the balls like

0:10:06.800 --> 0:10:09.400
<v Speaker 1>going vertical like a screen pass whatever. But I just

0:10:09.400 --> 0:10:11.720
<v Speaker 1>don't know what we're doing. There is not a better

0:10:11.840 --> 0:10:14.320
<v Speaker 1>landmark thrower in the game than Tua. He's been put

0:10:14.320 --> 0:10:16.480
<v Speaker 1>in the football where it needs to go and when

0:10:16.520 --> 0:10:19.079
<v Speaker 1>it needs to go there Since I don't know, twenty

0:10:19.120 --> 0:10:22.120
<v Speaker 1>seventeen National Championship game, probably earlier at Saint Louis High

0:10:22.160 --> 0:10:26.040
<v Speaker 1>School back in Honolulu. I just wish it were more

0:10:26.080 --> 0:10:29.400
<v Speaker 1>appreciated how he plays the game, these emphatic thoughts that

0:10:29.440 --> 0:10:32.240
<v Speaker 1>he's being dragged along by Tyreek like it is what

0:10:32.280 --> 0:10:34.160
<v Speaker 1>it is, it ain't gonna change. But in a league

0:10:34.160 --> 0:10:37.960
<v Speaker 1>where you've pivoted all the way to these almost permanent,

0:10:38.000 --> 0:10:40.400
<v Speaker 1>too high structures, that can limit some of the crazy

0:10:40.440 --> 0:10:43.000
<v Speaker 1>traits he types of throws, Like I talked in the

0:10:43.000 --> 0:10:45.640
<v Speaker 1>past about how the Josh Allen throws that he you know,

0:10:45.760 --> 0:10:48.199
<v Speaker 1>hits the highlight reels, and all these throws that Drake

0:10:48.240 --> 0:10:50.480
<v Speaker 1>may at Unc is making, or that Justin Herbert made

0:10:50.480 --> 0:10:52.400
<v Speaker 1>his rookie year, which were they all great throws and

0:10:52.440 --> 0:10:54.240
<v Speaker 1>they're a cool trait to have, and they definitely can

0:10:54.520 --> 0:10:56.839
<v Speaker 1>help an offense when things bogged down. But I used

0:10:56.840 --> 0:10:59.040
<v Speaker 1>to say those are three percent throws back then. That's

0:10:59.080 --> 0:11:01.600
<v Speaker 1>before the league pivot to playing in a way that

0:11:01.840 --> 0:11:04.880
<v Speaker 1>minimizes the opportunity for those throws to even exist. And

0:11:04.920 --> 0:11:08.000
<v Speaker 1>what is accentuated by the way defenses play now is

0:11:08.040 --> 0:11:11.280
<v Speaker 1>more precision, it's more processing. I feel like we should

0:11:11.320 --> 0:11:14.040
<v Speaker 1>appreciate that when we have a quarterback who's probably the

0:11:14.080 --> 0:11:16.680
<v Speaker 1>best at those two things. I shouldn't say we the

0:11:16.720 --> 0:11:20.359
<v Speaker 1>people who do the breakdowns who I really respect, Kyle Krabs,

0:11:20.520 --> 0:11:23.120
<v Speaker 1>Brian Baldinger, Lewis Riddick, the list goes on and on,

0:11:23.200 --> 0:11:26.360
<v Speaker 1>Chris Kaufman, like all these guys that I know know football.

0:11:26.840 --> 0:11:30.960
<v Speaker 1>They appreciate it. Maybe I just wish it were more universal.

0:11:31.120 --> 0:11:33.200
<v Speaker 1>And that's why I defend this quarterback tooth and nail

0:11:33.240 --> 0:11:34.839
<v Speaker 1>like I do. And you know, Seth and OJ kind

0:11:34.880 --> 0:11:36.559
<v Speaker 1>of got amy on the postgame show for it a

0:11:36.600 --> 0:11:38.440
<v Speaker 1>little bit, and I explained to them it's because I

0:11:38.480 --> 0:11:40.920
<v Speaker 1>want perception to catch up to reality. And I feel

0:11:40.920 --> 0:11:42.640
<v Speaker 1>like the only way that's gonna happen is if Tua

0:11:42.679 --> 0:11:45.400
<v Speaker 1>puts up like video game numbers. And he was doing

0:11:45.400 --> 0:11:47.200
<v Speaker 1>that for a while and now he's still a top

0:11:47.200 --> 0:11:49.480
<v Speaker 1>five quarterback in the NFL, but the numbers have not

0:11:49.600 --> 0:11:52.200
<v Speaker 1>quite you know, come along with that in terms of

0:11:52.240 --> 0:11:54.960
<v Speaker 1>like five thousand passing yards and fifty touchdowns. That's what

0:11:55.040 --> 0:11:57.679
<v Speaker 1>I wanted to help disprove the narrative. It's not gonna happen,

0:11:57.720 --> 0:11:59.640
<v Speaker 1>but I feel like the tape should do that. I

0:11:59.640 --> 0:12:01.079
<v Speaker 1>feel like being nine to three should do that. I

0:12:01.120 --> 0:12:03.880
<v Speaker 1>feel like scoring, you know, thirty forty points a game

0:12:04.040 --> 0:12:06.079
<v Speaker 1>should do that. Let's go back to the breakdown. That's

0:12:06.200 --> 0:12:11.160
<v Speaker 1>that was an off script, tyrant tyrade. So the wattle drop,

0:12:12.080 --> 0:12:14.520
<v Speaker 1>oh man, that's a Touchdoffee catches that. I think it's

0:12:14.559 --> 0:12:18.120
<v Speaker 1>a good shot of Tua's improvisation. But what I liked

0:12:18.440 --> 0:12:20.800
<v Speaker 1>about it the most was how patient he was with it,

0:12:20.840 --> 0:12:23.200
<v Speaker 1>because the Commanders dropped eight on that play, and there

0:12:23.280 --> 0:12:24.840
<v Speaker 1>was a couple of throws that he could have tried.

0:12:24.880 --> 0:12:26.680
<v Speaker 1>In fact, I would venture to say that he did

0:12:26.720 --> 0:12:28.960
<v Speaker 1>try earlier in the season, but he got off of

0:12:29.000 --> 0:12:32.280
<v Speaker 1>them and didn't challenge those windows because hey, yeah, those

0:12:32.320 --> 0:12:34.200
<v Speaker 1>twenty yard players are awesome when we get them, but like,

0:12:35.000 --> 0:12:36.520
<v Speaker 1>if we have to lose one or two of those

0:12:36.559 --> 0:12:38.280
<v Speaker 1>a game and it saves us a turnover a game,

0:12:38.440 --> 0:12:41.079
<v Speaker 1>let's do that instead. Like it's it's funny because I

0:12:41.120 --> 0:12:43.160
<v Speaker 1>love I love his aggressive nature more than anything, but

0:12:43.280 --> 0:12:45.400
<v Speaker 1>I appreciated the patients here, especially in a game like this,

0:12:45.480 --> 0:12:47.840
<v Speaker 1>and especially with the defense you have, Like we don't

0:12:48.080 --> 0:12:49.680
<v Speaker 1>the forty points is fun, but we don't always have

0:12:49.720 --> 0:12:51.400
<v Speaker 1>to score forty. Man, you probably just need thirty to

0:12:51.520 --> 0:12:53.680
<v Speaker 1>beat almost every team in the NFL with how good

0:12:53.679 --> 0:12:57.040
<v Speaker 1>this defense is so anyway, so on those looks, sometimes

0:12:57.120 --> 0:12:58.680
<v Speaker 1>the best move where you can buy time is just

0:12:58.679 --> 0:13:00.640
<v Speaker 1>to get your guys running away, away from a broken

0:13:00.679 --> 0:13:03.360
<v Speaker 1>structure because coverage eight in coverage is tough to beat.

0:13:03.559 --> 0:13:05.319
<v Speaker 1>And so here he does a good job and man

0:13:05.360 --> 0:13:08.280
<v Speaker 1>like he has one guy to beat. Assuming that Tyreek

0:13:08.280 --> 0:13:10.200
<v Speaker 1>makes a block from a premo position for a key

0:13:10.200 --> 0:13:12.720
<v Speaker 1>block and waddles off to the races two, it gets

0:13:12.720 --> 0:13:14.720
<v Speaker 1>out of the pocket, hits him the chest, drops the football,

0:13:15.000 --> 0:13:17.480
<v Speaker 1>probably a seventy five yard touchdown if he makes that catch.

0:13:17.559 --> 0:13:19.920
<v Speaker 1>Tough to see. And we were so close from like

0:13:19.960 --> 0:13:22.280
<v Speaker 1>a four hundred and fifty yard day from Tua because

0:13:22.280 --> 0:13:24.080
<v Speaker 1>that swing of Tyreek that he missed, that was to

0:13:24.200 --> 0:13:27.360
<v Speaker 1>his fault. The wattle drop the post route to waddle

0:13:27.440 --> 0:13:29.800
<v Speaker 1>after that, and this time this was a good player

0:13:29.800 --> 0:13:32.440
<v Speaker 1>for Washington, making good play. Cameron curl middle of the

0:13:32.440 --> 0:13:34.600
<v Speaker 1>field open again. That's the time to go for the

0:13:34.600 --> 0:13:37.800
<v Speaker 1>post right middlefield closed, No, no, middlefield open, split safeties.

0:13:37.920 --> 0:13:39.760
<v Speaker 1>Throw the ball between them, just like we did against

0:13:39.760 --> 0:13:42.040
<v Speaker 1>the Buffalo Bills last year to beat them down here

0:13:42.080 --> 0:13:44.240
<v Speaker 1>in September when the sun was too hot. Shut up

0:13:44.280 --> 0:13:47.200
<v Speaker 1>about the sun. The boundary safety is not getting vertical

0:13:47.240 --> 0:13:49.480
<v Speaker 1>on this play, and so that's where the side that

0:13:49.520 --> 0:13:52.160
<v Speaker 1>wattle is on. And Tua loads up to rip this

0:13:52.200 --> 0:13:55.720
<v Speaker 1>thing off the backside because of Tyreek running an over

0:13:55.880 --> 0:13:58.600
<v Speaker 1>route that looks like it's gonna occupy that safety, so

0:13:58.800 --> 0:14:01.160
<v Speaker 1>too a nose in his mind. I've got Tyreek on

0:14:01.200 --> 0:14:03.319
<v Speaker 1>this over route, and Cameron Curl showed me that he's

0:14:03.320 --> 0:14:06.000
<v Speaker 1>gonna buzz that over route, which opens up that post

0:14:06.080 --> 0:14:08.600
<v Speaker 1>wide open, and he turns this thing loose. But right

0:14:08.640 --> 0:14:11.400
<v Speaker 1>when he steps into the throw, Cameron Curl recognizes it,

0:14:11.440 --> 0:14:13.920
<v Speaker 1>pivots and gets on his horse and goes an mpeds

0:14:13.960 --> 0:14:16.440
<v Speaker 1>waddle's path through the football because otherwise I think it's

0:14:16.440 --> 0:14:19.440
<v Speaker 1>a run through cruise in walk in touchdown for another

0:14:19.480 --> 0:14:22.120
<v Speaker 1>long play. Great play, Cameron Curl, you prevent this from

0:14:22.160 --> 0:14:24.560
<v Speaker 1>having one more bit of fireworks on this day. We

0:14:24.600 --> 0:14:26.360
<v Speaker 1>also had a twenty four yard play on a dig

0:14:26.440 --> 0:14:29.240
<v Speaker 1>route the Tyreek. There's a nickel defender between the numbers

0:14:29.240 --> 0:14:31.640
<v Speaker 1>and the hash at fifteen yards. The play's not open

0:14:31.640 --> 0:14:33.600
<v Speaker 1>at all. But what does Tua do? And I put

0:14:33.600 --> 0:14:35.520
<v Speaker 1>it on Twitter for you guys to go see. Tua

0:14:35.560 --> 0:14:37.600
<v Speaker 1>looks out to the numbers and throws the ball inside

0:14:37.880 --> 0:14:40.240
<v Speaker 1>on a no look. Nastiest no look through I've ever

0:14:40.280 --> 0:14:42.240
<v Speaker 1>seen in my entire life. He moved him out of

0:14:42.240 --> 0:14:44.520
<v Speaker 1>the way by throwing no look. Kwan Martin runs the

0:14:44.560 --> 0:14:47.560
<v Speaker 1>opposite direction and he replaces where he is with the football.

0:14:47.960 --> 0:14:51.720
<v Speaker 1>Completely ridiculous. The pocket management was completely ridiculous all day long.

0:14:51.920 --> 0:14:53.720
<v Speaker 1>Third and twelve pressure in the a gap with a

0:14:53.800 --> 0:14:56.120
<v Speaker 1>body falling into his left Get this trash away from me.

0:14:56.360 --> 0:14:59.280
<v Speaker 1>He moves the football to his other hip, his off

0:14:59.360 --> 0:15:01.480
<v Speaker 1>hip to protect it. Two heads in the ball, move

0:15:01.480 --> 0:15:03.920
<v Speaker 1>it to the other side, slide away, and immediately gets

0:15:03.920 --> 0:15:06.280
<v Speaker 1>his feet back a line square to his target and

0:15:06.400 --> 0:15:09.280
<v Speaker 1>rips this dig to Jaalen Wattle sixteen yards first down.

0:15:09.680 --> 0:15:13.440
<v Speaker 1>Elite stuff. On the following drive, the play you've seen

0:15:13.480 --> 0:15:15.840
<v Speaker 1>a million times, the little side step, rip a dart

0:15:15.880 --> 0:15:19.440
<v Speaker 1>to Julian Hill, who he knew was gonna be open

0:15:19.520 --> 0:15:21.680
<v Speaker 1>because that's who was hot. That's when the blitzer came

0:15:21.720 --> 0:15:23.520
<v Speaker 1>off of And that's why you don't throw the vertical

0:15:23.600 --> 0:15:25.720
<v Speaker 1>route to Wattle, who got wide open because he was hot.

0:15:25.720 --> 0:15:27.680
<v Speaker 1>Free runner had to make a miss, put the ball

0:15:27.720 --> 0:15:30.040
<v Speaker 1>in the place of the blitzer. Perfect. There you go.

0:15:30.280 --> 0:15:32.720
<v Speaker 1>The third and twelve, we didn't get onto his last drive.

0:15:32.960 --> 0:15:35.360
<v Speaker 1>He throws this corner route to Tyreek between the half

0:15:35.360 --> 0:15:37.880
<v Speaker 1>field safety and the cloud corner in this cover two. Look,

0:15:38.120 --> 0:15:40.680
<v Speaker 1>that's the honey shot, right the honey hole thirty yards

0:15:40.720 --> 0:15:43.040
<v Speaker 1>far Hash and I bring it up because we didn't

0:15:43.360 --> 0:15:45.520
<v Speaker 1>complete it. Tyreek did knock get his feet down, but

0:15:45.960 --> 0:15:47.720
<v Speaker 1>I think you've been told that he cannot make that

0:15:47.800 --> 0:15:50.800
<v Speaker 1>throw by some people, and he can, and he did

0:15:51.400 --> 0:15:54.200
<v Speaker 1>his location time and time again. Had to rip an

0:15:54.240 --> 0:15:56.280
<v Speaker 1>absolute shot to cray Craft on the move with a

0:15:56.320 --> 0:15:58.840
<v Speaker 1>man in his face off RPO action where you don't

0:15:58.880 --> 0:16:01.000
<v Speaker 1>have the right grip in the football. Couldn't have walked

0:16:01.040 --> 0:16:03.000
<v Speaker 1>it down there any better. Even the next play, they

0:16:03.000 --> 0:16:05.720
<v Speaker 1>interrupt the lane on a bubble screen to Waddle, so

0:16:05.760 --> 0:16:08.440
<v Speaker 1>he just throws a little wide outside ball that leads

0:16:08.480 --> 0:16:10.840
<v Speaker 1>Waddle into the catch and run. Like, give me this

0:16:10.920 --> 0:16:13.840
<v Speaker 1>Tua every single week and I'll show you a Super

0:16:13.880 --> 0:16:17.040
<v Speaker 1>Bowl champion ten weeks from now. He was two for

0:16:17.120 --> 0:16:18.920
<v Speaker 1>four on deep throws for one hundred and thirty eight

0:16:18.960 --> 0:16:21.440
<v Speaker 1>yards and two touchdowns. He now has more deep touchdowns

0:16:21.440 --> 0:16:23.880
<v Speaker 1>and deep passing yards on twenty plus air yard throws

0:16:24.040 --> 0:16:26.720
<v Speaker 1>than any quarterback in football can go figure ten plus

0:16:26.800 --> 0:16:28.880
<v Speaker 1>airyard throws. He was six for ten total with two

0:16:28.960 --> 0:16:31.480
<v Speaker 1>hundred and three yards and two touchdowns. When they blitzed him,

0:16:31.520 --> 0:16:33.720
<v Speaker 1>he was three for four with eighty one yards when

0:16:33.720 --> 0:16:35.920
<v Speaker 1>he in a touchdown. When they was pressured, he was

0:16:35.960 --> 0:16:38.480
<v Speaker 1>three for six with twenty eight yards to is your

0:16:38.520 --> 0:16:40.480
<v Speaker 1>second best tape and a great game from him. Let's

0:16:40.480 --> 0:16:42.360
<v Speaker 1>go ahead and take our first break right there. Come

0:16:42.400 --> 0:16:44.040
<v Speaker 1>back on the other side. We'll go ahead and do

0:16:44.080 --> 0:16:46.880
<v Speaker 1>tapes three, four and five and the offense. That's next

0:16:46.960 --> 0:16:49.680
<v Speaker 1>Drag Time podcast to your host, Travis Wingfield. Brought to

0:16:49.720 --> 0:16:55.200
<v Speaker 1>you by Auto Nation. Tua always takes up a lot

0:16:55.240 --> 0:16:57.120
<v Speaker 1>of time in the podcast here because I like to

0:16:57.120 --> 0:16:59.280
<v Speaker 1>try to break down the quarterbacks game and show some

0:16:59.360 --> 0:17:01.080
<v Speaker 1>nuance to a orderback who has some of the most

0:17:01.160 --> 0:17:04.280
<v Speaker 1>nuanced in the NFL. We move along here after Tyreek

0:17:04.320 --> 0:17:06.640
<v Speaker 1>and Tua and the big play breakdowns with Liam Eichenberg,

0:17:06.680 --> 0:17:08.240
<v Speaker 1>who's our third top tape. And I really want to

0:17:08.240 --> 0:17:10.480
<v Speaker 1>throw the entire offensive line here, but we can't do that.

0:17:10.760 --> 0:17:12.320
<v Speaker 1>I know, Seth and OJ gotta tell me I give

0:17:12.359 --> 0:17:14.199
<v Speaker 1>out way too many game balls. You're right, I do.

0:17:14.359 --> 0:17:17.520
<v Speaker 1>But we'll here we'll keep it to Liam Eichenberg. I

0:17:17.840 --> 0:17:20.000
<v Speaker 1>haven't seen the entire offensive line that good in a

0:17:20.000 --> 0:17:22.200
<v Speaker 1>long time. It's just awesome. And it's also the best

0:17:22.160 --> 0:17:24.840
<v Speaker 1>game I've ever seen Liam Eichenberg play in his life.

0:17:24.960 --> 0:17:26.720
<v Speaker 1>And I said that about the last two tapes as well.

0:17:26.720 --> 0:17:28.720
<v Speaker 1>What a progression that has been, huh? And you know

0:17:28.800 --> 0:17:31.360
<v Speaker 1>it's he's been everything the opposite of what he was before,

0:17:31.400 --> 0:17:33.720
<v Speaker 1>where he's not in sync. Things were flying open. The

0:17:33.720 --> 0:17:36.159
<v Speaker 1>feet never made sense. They never matched with the hands.

0:17:36.359 --> 0:17:39.440
<v Speaker 1>He was too wide, he was too narrow. Everything operates

0:17:39.480 --> 0:17:41.520
<v Speaker 1>now with Liam and Unison. When the hands go, the

0:17:41.520 --> 0:17:44.119
<v Speaker 1>feet go. He's stabbing that one arm reach shot on

0:17:44.160 --> 0:17:47.320
<v Speaker 1>the downfield shoulder, locking it in and staying a step

0:17:47.359 --> 0:17:50.600
<v Speaker 1>ahead of the sprint to the perimeter of a three

0:17:50.680 --> 0:17:54.120
<v Speaker 1>technique like he's running those guys out of the play completely.

0:17:54.160 --> 0:17:56.679
<v Speaker 1>He's shuffling inside against a game to cut off a

0:17:56.720 --> 0:17:59.040
<v Speaker 1>rush lane for the looper to keep too a clean

0:17:59.080 --> 0:18:02.080
<v Speaker 1>I mean, I've gotten no other words. Awesome, awesome stuff

0:18:02.119 --> 0:18:04.640
<v Speaker 1>for Liam Eichenberg. One pressure on twenty six pass blocking

0:18:04.640 --> 0:18:06.760
<v Speaker 1>snaps for him, in fact, two pressures allowed over his

0:18:06.840 --> 0:18:10.040
<v Speaker 1>last three games. That's fantastic. Number four as Andrew Van Ginkle,

0:18:10.080 --> 0:18:12.480
<v Speaker 1>and his production probably stopped when it did because they

0:18:12.520 --> 0:18:15.040
<v Speaker 1>began to commit a second blocker to him on every

0:18:15.080 --> 0:18:18.359
<v Speaker 1>single play. They couldn't handle him. His explosiveness was getting

0:18:18.359 --> 0:18:20.800
<v Speaker 1>the right tackle to overset, which he would exploit with

0:18:20.840 --> 0:18:24.159
<v Speaker 1>an inside move. Did it twice. But then when they

0:18:24.160 --> 0:18:26.560
<v Speaker 1>started getting more rushes from the three technique in that gap,

0:18:26.560 --> 0:18:28.680
<v Speaker 1>as a result, he would open up some more one

0:18:28.760 --> 0:18:30.760
<v Speaker 1>v ones and he would impact the play as a result.

0:18:31.040 --> 0:18:34.119
<v Speaker 1>Just an outstanding rush plan, outstanding reaction and study for

0:18:34.200 --> 0:18:38.040
<v Speaker 1>Andrew Van Ginkel, big time playmaker who finishes those splash plays.

0:18:38.359 --> 0:18:41.000
<v Speaker 1>Elite tape from Gink six pressures led the team three

0:18:41.080 --> 0:18:43.639
<v Speaker 1>stops in addition to a pick six and a SEC. Yeah,

0:18:43.680 --> 0:18:46.520
<v Speaker 1>that'll do it. My fifth top tape goes to Jaylen Ramsey.

0:18:46.560 --> 0:18:49.520
<v Speaker 1>He's probably substantially higher if they ever tried him one time.

0:18:49.560 --> 0:18:51.680
<v Speaker 1>In fact, after the game, he said that Hal wasn't

0:18:51.720 --> 0:18:53.400
<v Speaker 1>feeling it that they thought he was going to try

0:18:53.400 --> 0:18:54.879
<v Speaker 1>them more often. He didn't feel it this game like

0:18:54.880 --> 0:18:57.040
<v Speaker 1>he usually does the rest of the season. To give

0:18:57.080 --> 0:18:58.880
<v Speaker 1>him those three hundred and thirty year in passing games.

0:18:58.920 --> 0:19:01.679
<v Speaker 1>But I guess that just means that Ramsey was so

0:19:01.720 --> 0:19:03.560
<v Speaker 1>good that they couldn't even conceive the idea to throw

0:19:03.600 --> 0:19:05.399
<v Speaker 1>at him. So maybe he should go higher Anyways, I

0:19:05.400 --> 0:19:07.920
<v Speaker 1>don't know, but he had one of those quiet dominant days.

0:19:08.240 --> 0:19:10.480
<v Speaker 1>Guys like had no pop coming out of their breaks

0:19:10.520 --> 0:19:12.040
<v Speaker 1>because he was usually on top of them and they

0:19:12.040 --> 0:19:14.359
<v Speaker 1>didn't have room to operate. The thing I didn't know

0:19:14.960 --> 0:19:17.680
<v Speaker 1>was how fast he is in playing bump and run

0:19:17.720 --> 0:19:19.959
<v Speaker 1>with recovery speed. Like I knew he was fast, but

0:19:20.000 --> 0:19:22.280
<v Speaker 1>he can show you inside access. He can play trail

0:19:22.320 --> 0:19:24.639
<v Speaker 1>technique and give you something and then he trusts his

0:19:24.760 --> 0:19:27.639
<v Speaker 1>speed and you know, ball tracking to get back in

0:19:27.720 --> 0:19:30.159
<v Speaker 1>the play to make the play. We saw it on

0:19:30.240 --> 0:19:32.159
<v Speaker 1>third down and the flea flicker against the Raiders a

0:19:32.200 --> 0:19:34.560
<v Speaker 1>couple weeks back, where he went vertical down the field

0:19:34.560 --> 0:19:36.960
<v Speaker 1>with Devonte Adams. He did a few times in this one.

0:19:37.040 --> 0:19:39.520
<v Speaker 1>He mirrors routes, he plays off in zone, He plays

0:19:39.520 --> 0:19:43.120
<v Speaker 1>press like C. K. Parrott. On Twitter, Chris Kaufman had

0:19:43.119 --> 0:19:46.200
<v Speaker 1>this research where Ramsey's played two hundred and fifty nine

0:19:46.240 --> 0:19:48.600
<v Speaker 1>snaps this year and on those snaps, the defense gives

0:19:48.640 --> 0:19:51.240
<v Speaker 1>up four point five yards per play, and it's three

0:19:51.280 --> 0:19:53.400
<v Speaker 1>point eight yards per carry and just four point eight

0:19:53.440 --> 0:19:56.720
<v Speaker 1>yards per pass. That's crazy. They've taken it away eight times,

0:19:56.760 --> 0:19:59.760
<v Speaker 1>eight turnovers and allowed eight touchdowns with those snaps and

0:20:00.080 --> 0:20:02.520
<v Speaker 1>have allowed a twenty three percent first down rate. Like

0:20:02.800 --> 0:20:06.000
<v Speaker 1>enough said, thirty coverage snaps, eleven yards allowed, one for

0:20:06.080 --> 0:20:09.199
<v Speaker 1>two passing my close, but no cigar category goes to

0:20:09.359 --> 0:20:13.320
<v Speaker 1>the entire offensive line besides Liam again, Zach Seeler, Duke Riley,

0:20:13.400 --> 0:20:16.280
<v Speaker 1>cater coo who Xaviing Howard and Deshaun Elliott will come

0:20:16.320 --> 0:20:18.160
<v Speaker 1>back to those guys. Let's go ahead and go back

0:20:18.160 --> 0:20:20.399
<v Speaker 1>to the offensive notes here though, because I just loved

0:20:20.720 --> 0:20:23.800
<v Speaker 1>the use of different motion, some of those orbit motions,

0:20:23.840 --> 0:20:27.440
<v Speaker 1>return motions, creating matchups with eight chans, you know, flexibility,

0:20:27.840 --> 0:20:31.520
<v Speaker 1>creating different looks pre snap to contend with every single week.

0:20:31.560 --> 0:20:35.160
<v Speaker 1>And man, that twenty one personnel package that features Raheem

0:20:35.200 --> 0:20:38.720
<v Speaker 1>and Devon the fast twenty one personnel, that's going to

0:20:38.760 --> 0:20:41.560
<v Speaker 1>be deadly. Man. They're creating some big pass play opportunities

0:20:41.600 --> 0:20:44.000
<v Speaker 1>down the fields with these running backs, especially to Devon Ah,

0:20:44.160 --> 0:20:46.400
<v Speaker 1>and keep an eye on those going forward. This game

0:20:46.640 --> 0:20:50.000
<v Speaker 1>was just everything I wanted from the offense. The Dolphins

0:20:50.359 --> 0:20:53.240
<v Speaker 1>hit those inbreakers behind the second level. They dialed up

0:20:53.280 --> 0:20:56.560
<v Speaker 1>deep play action, Tua made checks to exploit man coverage.

0:20:56.600 --> 0:20:59.080
<v Speaker 1>They protected well, they ran it well. They didn't miss

0:20:59.119 --> 0:21:00.880
<v Speaker 1>a beat when guys went down, and they never put

0:21:00.880 --> 0:21:03.879
<v Speaker 1>the football in harm's way. And they did create some

0:21:04.320 --> 0:21:06.560
<v Speaker 1>or I should say, do some new creative stuff to

0:21:06.600 --> 0:21:10.080
<v Speaker 1>generate space offensively. The first down throw early in the

0:21:10.080 --> 0:21:12.840
<v Speaker 1>game to Wattle, it's a glance on third down on

0:21:12.880 --> 0:21:15.560
<v Speaker 1>the second drive of the game. Hchan motions out and

0:21:15.640 --> 0:21:18.000
<v Speaker 1>hooks up right in front of the nickel whose zone

0:21:18.040 --> 0:21:20.359
<v Speaker 1>drops in the play and he's trying to get depth

0:21:20.400 --> 0:21:22.399
<v Speaker 1>to impact the throw to Wattle, but he draws up

0:21:22.440 --> 0:21:25.480
<v Speaker 1>to Chan and creates the space for Wattle to operate in.

0:21:25.800 --> 0:21:28.040
<v Speaker 1>I just haven't seen them go to that throw from

0:21:28.080 --> 0:21:30.840
<v Speaker 1>that look. It's just so fun to watch McDaniel and

0:21:30.880 --> 0:21:33.320
<v Speaker 1>the staff find new ways to get their best stuff

0:21:33.840 --> 0:21:37.160
<v Speaker 1>out there every single week. They were so consistently able

0:21:37.200 --> 0:21:40.320
<v Speaker 1>to create and exploit these creases. They just have answers

0:21:40.359 --> 0:21:43.399
<v Speaker 1>like those wall off the get depth mike linebackers. We

0:21:43.480 --> 0:21:45.240
<v Speaker 1>just have so many ways to attack those guys in

0:21:45.240 --> 0:21:47.399
<v Speaker 1>the middle of the field, Like Fred Warner saw it

0:21:47.480 --> 0:21:49.399
<v Speaker 1>last year, and I thought we missed some plays in

0:21:49.400 --> 0:21:51.199
<v Speaker 1>that game, even though he did take some of it

0:21:51.240 --> 0:21:53.959
<v Speaker 1>away with some length and depth, but he couldn't get

0:21:54.000 --> 0:21:55.879
<v Speaker 1>to all of it. But to stretch them with the

0:21:55.880 --> 0:21:58.240
<v Speaker 1>bread and butter right that fifteen to twenty yard zone

0:21:58.400 --> 0:22:01.040
<v Speaker 1>we'd love to throw the football into. That changes the

0:22:01.040 --> 0:22:03.760
<v Speaker 1>way you fit the run defensively. But from that depth,

0:22:04.119 --> 0:22:06.760
<v Speaker 1>they also have to protect against over routes going across

0:22:06.800 --> 0:22:09.520
<v Speaker 1>the formation, the glance, that little quick slant route. We've

0:22:09.600 --> 0:22:11.680
<v Speaker 1>hit some corner routes off of these looks, and that's

0:22:11.720 --> 0:22:14.639
<v Speaker 1>not even accounting for the underneath opportunities it creates, Like

0:22:14.680 --> 0:22:16.960
<v Speaker 1>when you hit Tyreek on a mesh concept, which that

0:22:17.000 --> 0:22:19.560
<v Speaker 1>third and two conversion where he and Smyth intersect and

0:22:19.600 --> 0:22:21.840
<v Speaker 1>Smith kind of naturally picks off the linebacker and frees

0:22:21.920 --> 0:22:24.560
<v Speaker 1>up Tyreek for an easy first down. I don't know

0:22:24.600 --> 0:22:27.000
<v Speaker 1>how you defend it. I'm going to explain a thought

0:22:27.000 --> 0:22:28.520
<v Speaker 1>I have here on our rookie running back when I

0:22:28.560 --> 0:22:31.119
<v Speaker 1>get to him. But man, I know the natural reaction

0:22:31.240 --> 0:22:34.000
<v Speaker 1>to this is to point out the Dolphins record against

0:22:34.000 --> 0:22:37.639
<v Speaker 1>teams with winning records. But I'm telling you this this

0:22:37.760 --> 0:22:40.600
<v Speaker 1>tape that I'm watching the sequential nature of watching these

0:22:40.640 --> 0:22:43.399
<v Speaker 1>tapes week to week multiple times, and how it's all

0:22:43.480 --> 0:22:46.959
<v Speaker 1>kind of added up to this cumulative product. You were

0:22:47.000 --> 0:22:49.320
<v Speaker 1>going to have to be on your stuff to beat

0:22:49.320 --> 0:22:51.600
<v Speaker 1>this Dolphins football team, and if they don't shoot themselves

0:22:51.640 --> 0:22:53.920
<v Speaker 1>in the foot, if they limit the penalties and cut

0:22:53.920 --> 0:22:56.360
<v Speaker 1>down the turnovers like they did this game, you might

0:22:56.400 --> 0:22:59.920
<v Speaker 1>have to go full on Felix Hernandez twenty twelve against

0:22:59.920 --> 0:23:02.479
<v Speaker 1>the Tampa Bay Rays and throw a perfect game like

0:23:02.800 --> 0:23:05.280
<v Speaker 1>this is a ninety five mile an hour fastball with

0:23:05.440 --> 0:23:07.840
<v Speaker 1>an eighty eight mile per hour change up to complement

0:23:07.880 --> 0:23:10.560
<v Speaker 1>that that looks the exact same until it dives off

0:23:10.640 --> 0:23:12.720
<v Speaker 1>right at your knees in front of the plate. It's

0:23:12.800 --> 0:23:16.840
<v Speaker 1>that level of overwhelming have to contend with basically playing

0:23:16.840 --> 0:23:19.119
<v Speaker 1>a guessing game. Let's go ahead and talk more about it.

0:23:19.160 --> 0:23:21.000
<v Speaker 1>So the eligibles to von h Chian, you never want

0:23:21.000 --> 0:23:23.240
<v Speaker 1>to make it too much about a rookie, right, but

0:23:23.320 --> 0:23:25.280
<v Speaker 1>I just think that there's a different element that he

0:23:25.320 --> 0:23:27.919
<v Speaker 1>adds to the offense. It's tough to describe his first

0:23:27.960 --> 0:23:30.719
<v Speaker 1>touch where he took that pop pass and got wide.

0:23:31.119 --> 0:23:34.120
<v Speaker 1>The man is running full speed parallel to the line

0:23:34.160 --> 0:23:36.600
<v Speaker 1>of scrimmage and then has a crease between Alec and

0:23:36.640 --> 0:23:40.119
<v Speaker 1>Tron Armstead that you could barely fit a human body between,

0:23:40.160 --> 0:23:42.640
<v Speaker 1>and he hits it with conviction and barely loses any

0:23:42.640 --> 0:23:45.080
<v Speaker 1>speed at all. And on that wet track he did that.

0:23:45.240 --> 0:23:47.000
<v Speaker 1>It doesn't make sense how he does this, the way

0:23:47.000 --> 0:23:49.040
<v Speaker 1>that we get our blockers on the perimeter, and the

0:23:49.040 --> 0:23:51.760
<v Speaker 1>way that he goes so fast and sees it so well.

0:23:52.240 --> 0:23:54.560
<v Speaker 1>I don't know, man. I think this is a catalyst

0:23:54.600 --> 0:23:56.719
<v Speaker 1>that makes the offense something that you have to just

0:23:56.800 --> 0:23:59.440
<v Speaker 1>hope to contain. I mean, he's played four full games

0:23:59.440 --> 0:24:02.080
<v Speaker 1>this year. Those games we averaged five hundred yards per game,

0:24:02.320 --> 0:24:04.439
<v Speaker 1>or more than that, over forty yards per game, and

0:24:04.440 --> 0:24:06.920
<v Speaker 1>he's compiled six hundred and twenty one yards for scrimmage

0:24:06.960 --> 0:24:09.600
<v Speaker 1>in those games and nine touchdowns. How do you argue

0:24:09.600 --> 0:24:11.920
<v Speaker 1>with that? I mean, when you run this double post

0:24:12.000 --> 0:24:14.520
<v Speaker 1>concept where Tyreek and Jalen remove all the corners and

0:24:14.560 --> 0:24:16.479
<v Speaker 1>the safeties out of the side, and it puts eight

0:24:16.600 --> 0:24:18.600
<v Speaker 1>chan one on one on a swing route versus a

0:24:18.640 --> 0:24:21.240
<v Speaker 1>linebacker who you know he's going to make miss every

0:24:21.280 --> 0:24:25.000
<v Speaker 1>single time. It's like a gifted fifteen yard play. It's

0:24:25.040 --> 0:24:26.919
<v Speaker 1>a lot to deal with, man. As far as a

0:24:26.920 --> 0:24:29.520
<v Speaker 1>ball carrier, he had fifty five yards after contact. He

0:24:29.560 --> 0:24:32.080
<v Speaker 1>forced three mess tackles and average three point twenty four

0:24:32.160 --> 0:24:36.840
<v Speaker 1>yards after initial contact. I thought, Raheem moster, you know

0:24:36.880 --> 0:24:39.320
<v Speaker 1>earlier I made a fastball change up reference and on

0:24:39.359 --> 0:24:42.240
<v Speaker 1>those perimeter runs, that's how I view twenty eight and

0:24:42.280 --> 0:24:45.000
<v Speaker 1>thirty one. Eh Chan glides in a way that puts

0:24:45.000 --> 0:24:47.320
<v Speaker 1>you in like decision time mode in terms of how

0:24:47.359 --> 0:24:50.080
<v Speaker 1>you'll deal with his speed and Raheem just gets north

0:24:50.119 --> 0:24:53.480
<v Speaker 1>and south like he makes you make another type of decision,

0:24:53.600 --> 0:24:55.920
<v Speaker 1>and if you choose wrong and he runs you over,

0:24:56.119 --> 0:24:58.040
<v Speaker 1>then he'll run away from you after the fact. But

0:24:58.160 --> 0:25:01.280
<v Speaker 1>his physicality on the perimeter is something that most cornerbacks

0:25:01.320 --> 0:25:03.879
<v Speaker 1>are not interested in dealing with. I just love his

0:25:03.960 --> 0:25:07.120
<v Speaker 1>feel too for when to be patient and to get

0:25:07.160 --> 0:25:09.520
<v Speaker 1>back across the grain, back across the flow of those

0:25:09.520 --> 0:25:12.120
<v Speaker 1>wide zone plays, and he looks fresh man, those little

0:25:12.160 --> 0:25:14.240
<v Speaker 1>jump cuts where his feet come down and get right

0:25:14.240 --> 0:25:16.960
<v Speaker 1>back to chopping. He ran through John Allen for his

0:25:17.080 --> 0:25:19.200
<v Speaker 1>touchdown run. Just put a shoulder down, ran through a

0:25:19.240 --> 0:25:22.080
<v Speaker 1>three hundred and fifteen pound defensive tackle. Fun combo of

0:25:22.119 --> 0:25:24.680
<v Speaker 1>speed and power, fitting type of guy to beat Ricky

0:25:24.680 --> 0:25:27.720
<v Speaker 1>Williams touchdown record. Huh forty one yards after contact, three

0:25:27.800 --> 0:25:29.959
<v Speaker 1>miss tackles forced, and he averaged three point seven two

0:25:30.080 --> 0:25:33.960
<v Speaker 1>yards after contact per run. So running backs are pretty good.

0:25:34.040 --> 0:25:36.440
<v Speaker 1>Jaalen Wattle just continues to get open down the field.

0:25:36.440 --> 0:25:39.560
<v Speaker 1>The explosive play is coming, man, it's so close. They

0:25:39.640 --> 0:25:42.240
<v Speaker 1>prevented one with a tremendous play by the safety, another

0:25:42.280 --> 0:25:45.240
<v Speaker 1>by interfering with Wattle. He sold that cornerback a bill

0:25:45.280 --> 0:25:47.560
<v Speaker 1>of goods on the double move on the DPI and

0:25:47.720 --> 0:25:49.879
<v Speaker 1>was about to run right past him. He continues to

0:25:49.880 --> 0:25:51.639
<v Speaker 1>block his butt off, and I love the way he

0:25:51.680 --> 0:25:54.520
<v Speaker 1>celebrates with his teammates. I would take fifty three Jaalen

0:25:54.560 --> 0:25:56.679
<v Speaker 1>wattles if I could just two point four to eight

0:25:56.800 --> 0:25:58.680
<v Speaker 1>yards per route. Ran is actually very good, but six

0:25:58.720 --> 0:26:01.199
<v Speaker 1>point five yards per target was his lowest of the season.

0:26:01.560 --> 0:26:04.480
<v Speaker 1>Alec Ingold another awesome game from him, Just so many

0:26:04.520 --> 0:26:06.959
<v Speaker 1>final pieces of the run blocking puzzle where he squares

0:26:06.960 --> 0:26:08.840
<v Speaker 1>it up and knocks it down and makes the play happen.

0:26:09.080 --> 0:26:12.719
<v Speaker 1>And then I also put down Durham, Julian Hill, River, Craycraft,

0:26:12.800 --> 0:26:16.040
<v Speaker 1>Cedric Wilson, Braxon, Burios. Shout out to each of you guys,

0:26:16.119 --> 0:26:18.399
<v Speaker 1>because you block your butts off every game and it

0:26:18.440 --> 0:26:21.240
<v Speaker 1>makes a massive difference. Headrick Wilson a huge block on

0:26:21.359 --> 0:26:24.800
<v Speaker 1>the first eight chance touchdown run. How about the offensive line,

0:26:24.800 --> 0:26:28.679
<v Speaker 1>man general thought here on how much I love what

0:26:28.760 --> 0:26:32.040
<v Speaker 1>our athleticism up front affords us. The run action we

0:26:32.119 --> 0:26:34.320
<v Speaker 1>saw over and over two would set up a give

0:26:34.400 --> 0:26:36.800
<v Speaker 1>and then flip the ball back the other direction. Such

0:26:36.800 --> 0:26:39.320
<v Speaker 1>a cool design, and they have different designs like this

0:26:39.400 --> 0:26:41.320
<v Speaker 1>every single week. They are cool to watch. But you

0:26:41.400 --> 0:26:44.439
<v Speaker 1>get split flow action into that dummy handoff, so you

0:26:44.520 --> 0:26:46.600
<v Speaker 1>always have to have a reason to make the defense

0:26:46.640 --> 0:26:49.480
<v Speaker 1>believe what you're faking. Right, So they bring durham Smyth

0:26:49.520 --> 0:26:52.119
<v Speaker 1>across on that dummy handoff and you just see the

0:26:52.160 --> 0:26:56.199
<v Speaker 1>commander's defense hesitate a step. That's all it takes for

0:26:56.320 --> 0:26:58.359
<v Speaker 1>Raheem to win the corner. They went at it a

0:26:58.359 --> 0:27:00.400
<v Speaker 1>few times, and a couple of time occasions they shot

0:27:00.400 --> 0:27:02.080
<v Speaker 1>it from the front side and blew it up. But

0:27:02.119 --> 0:27:03.760
<v Speaker 1>it's just so cool to watch how Mike and the

0:27:03.800 --> 0:27:08.080
<v Speaker 1>staff mess with the defenses processing like they have offensive

0:27:08.080 --> 0:27:10.360
<v Speaker 1>line that makes it happen too because of their athletic ability.

0:27:10.440 --> 0:27:13.080
<v Speaker 1>Let's actually go quick order here individually, so Austin Jackson

0:27:13.119 --> 0:27:14.720
<v Speaker 1>is a pain in the ass to play man. He

0:27:14.880 --> 0:27:17.800
<v Speaker 1>knows what you do best, and he attacks it. He

0:27:18.160 --> 0:27:21.080
<v Speaker 1>knows how to initiate the action in the game like

0:27:21.119 --> 0:27:23.359
<v Speaker 1>he goes and gets things. He also gets under guy's

0:27:23.359 --> 0:27:26.600
<v Speaker 1>skins like they were frustrated and then getting stonewall only

0:27:26.640 --> 0:27:29.280
<v Speaker 1>added to that. Playing against Austin Jackson, He'll get you

0:27:29.280 --> 0:27:31.320
<v Speaker 1>a little bit out just through the echo of the whistle.

0:27:31.560 --> 0:27:35.800
<v Speaker 1>Connor Williams business as huge, man. I mean high level reach, blocks,

0:27:35.920 --> 0:27:39.760
<v Speaker 1>perfect communication inside and protection. I don't watch enough league

0:27:39.760 --> 0:27:41.920
<v Speaker 1>wide film. I just watch the Dolphins play to make

0:27:41.960 --> 0:27:44.160
<v Speaker 1>this claim, but I'd be surprised if there are many

0:27:44.160 --> 0:27:47.080
<v Speaker 1>centers better, if any at all. Rob Hunts Pierre strength

0:27:47.160 --> 0:27:49.160
<v Speaker 1>is my favorite thing to watch on the entire offensive line.

0:27:49.160 --> 0:27:52.200
<v Speaker 1>He's back at it again, Daniel. That Michael or blindside

0:27:52.240 --> 0:27:54.480
<v Speaker 1>block was hilarious. Carries a dude from the far hash

0:27:54.600 --> 0:27:56.400
<v Speaker 1>all the way out to the numbers and just buries him.

0:27:56.520 --> 0:27:59.560
<v Speaker 1>What a freaking football player. Kean Smith can play dude

0:27:59.600 --> 0:28:03.399
<v Speaker 1>like I did not do. Shaquill O'Neil was not familiar

0:28:03.400 --> 0:28:04.960
<v Speaker 1>with your game, young man. Back in training camp, I

0:28:04.960 --> 0:28:06.680
<v Speaker 1>thought he wasn't gonna make the roster, and we've come

0:28:06.720 --> 0:28:08.639
<v Speaker 1>close to it, but his get off might be the

0:28:08.640 --> 0:28:10.960
<v Speaker 1>best on the entire team. His block on that last

0:28:11.000 --> 0:28:13.280
<v Speaker 1>touchdown something I'm not sure there's ten offensive tackles in

0:28:13.280 --> 0:28:15.680
<v Speaker 1>the league that can execute that from an athletic standpoint.

0:28:15.840 --> 0:28:17.840
<v Speaker 1>And then Lester Cotton also got some movement in this game.

0:28:17.880 --> 0:28:20.240
<v Speaker 1>I thought his best showing of the year. It's not

0:28:20.280 --> 0:28:21.920
<v Speaker 1>a great commander's front, so take it with a grand

0:28:22.040 --> 0:28:24.240
<v Speaker 1>salt in terms of all the production, but this line's

0:28:24.240 --> 0:28:26.240
<v Speaker 1>coming together in a big, big way for the stretch run.

0:28:26.480 --> 0:28:30.679
<v Speaker 1>PFF gave out four pressures. Raheem, Hunt, Liam and Connor

0:28:30.680 --> 0:28:33.240
<v Speaker 1>all had one apiece, just two QB hits on the day.

0:28:33.320 --> 0:28:36.200
<v Speaker 1>Dominant dominant day, so much fun as it was for

0:28:36.280 --> 0:28:38.280
<v Speaker 1>the defense as well. We'll take our last break right here,

0:28:38.360 --> 0:28:40.200
<v Speaker 1>come back on the other side and do that. Next

0:28:40.480 --> 0:28:43.160
<v Speaker 1>Draft Time podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought to you

0:28:43.200 --> 0:28:49.840
<v Speaker 1>by Autoation. Final segment here recapping the Dolphins forty five

0:28:49.960 --> 0:28:52.960
<v Speaker 1>to fifteen victory in Washington. Picking it up here with

0:28:52.960 --> 0:28:55.560
<v Speaker 1>the defensive notes as far as the all twenty two goes,

0:28:55.560 --> 0:28:58.080
<v Speaker 1>and I thought Vic Fangio and the defensive staff was

0:28:58.160 --> 0:29:01.239
<v Speaker 1>equally as creative as the doll offensive staff was. They

0:29:01.240 --> 0:29:03.080
<v Speaker 1>had a little bit of success on that first drive

0:29:03.440 --> 0:29:05.840
<v Speaker 1>the Commanders did, and then start mixing up with a

0:29:05.920 --> 0:29:09.400
<v Speaker 1>cat blitz. The unleashes Cater Kohu for a TfL playing

0:29:09.440 --> 0:29:11.560
<v Speaker 1>behind the last scrimage where he is fantastic, and then

0:29:11.680 --> 0:29:14.720
<v Speaker 1>Vic cover zero zero him up, peels back Gink and

0:29:14.800 --> 0:29:17.520
<v Speaker 1>Christian Wilkins in the hook zone with all reliable Brandon

0:29:17.640 --> 0:29:20.240
<v Speaker 1>Jones getting a big hit on the quarterback to enterrupt

0:29:20.280 --> 0:29:22.640
<v Speaker 1>the pass and get the defense off the field. The

0:29:22.720 --> 0:29:25.160
<v Speaker 1>bliss was so effective that Needham was actually looking for

0:29:25.200 --> 0:29:27.840
<v Speaker 1>at a free run, but Robinson the running back had

0:29:27.840 --> 0:29:29.880
<v Speaker 1>to pick somebody up. He chose Nick and how it

0:29:29.960 --> 0:29:33.160
<v Speaker 1>gets planted by Jones as a result. How about how

0:29:33.200 --> 0:29:35.120
<v Speaker 1>you come out of the game with Terry McLaurin not

0:29:35.200 --> 0:29:38.040
<v Speaker 1>catching a pass. He's played it now seventy nine games

0:29:38.080 --> 0:29:40.640
<v Speaker 1>in his career and only one other time that he

0:29:40.680 --> 0:29:42.960
<v Speaker 1>failed to record a reception, and that was a game

0:29:43.000 --> 0:29:45.120
<v Speaker 1>two years ago in which he played forty percent of

0:29:45.160 --> 0:29:47.280
<v Speaker 1>the snaps. He played eighty two in the game on Sunday,

0:29:47.440 --> 0:29:49.200
<v Speaker 1>they mix it up on him man. Sometimes it was

0:29:49.320 --> 0:29:51.840
<v Speaker 1>Ramsey one v one with press. He saw a man

0:29:51.920 --> 0:29:53.880
<v Speaker 1>everywhere he goes. And other look which is a zone

0:29:53.920 --> 0:29:55.840
<v Speaker 1>man combination where you cover one guy with man. It's

0:29:55.880 --> 0:29:58.440
<v Speaker 1>like boxing one kind of in basketball. He got x

0:29:58.440 --> 0:30:01.520
<v Speaker 1>manned up, he ran into brackets fun just a masterful

0:30:01.600 --> 0:30:04.560
<v Speaker 1>job limiting one of the game's premier weapons in Terry McLaurin.

0:30:04.800 --> 0:30:07.800
<v Speaker 1>There's a level of effort this defense gives that when

0:30:07.840 --> 0:30:11.160
<v Speaker 1>I watch other defenses versus our offense back to back,

0:30:11.520 --> 0:30:13.920
<v Speaker 1>it stands out to me like Andrew van Geekle taking

0:30:13.920 --> 0:30:16.440
<v Speaker 1>on a crack block and Christian Wilkins is getting doubled

0:30:16.440 --> 0:30:18.680
<v Speaker 1>and walled off on an outside run. But they still

0:30:19.560 --> 0:30:21.920
<v Speaker 1>strain to get to the perimeter to meet the running back.

0:30:22.080 --> 0:30:24.200
<v Speaker 1>And part of that happens because cater Coohu beats a

0:30:24.200 --> 0:30:26.640
<v Speaker 1>block and David Long does a great job pushing the

0:30:26.680 --> 0:30:29.320
<v Speaker 1>outside shoulder of his blocker to force the running back

0:30:29.360 --> 0:30:31.560
<v Speaker 1>to bang it up inside. And that's where Gink and

0:30:31.560 --> 0:30:34.080
<v Speaker 1>William or Wilkins effort are paid off in the biggest way.

0:30:34.320 --> 0:30:37.040
<v Speaker 1>It's just consists in every week this defense works for

0:30:37.120 --> 0:30:39.880
<v Speaker 1>everything they get up front. Zack Seeler probably had more

0:30:39.960 --> 0:30:43.000
<v Speaker 1>immediate wins in Sunday than he has all year. He

0:30:43.040 --> 0:30:44.720
<v Speaker 1>was very close to the top five in this one.

0:30:44.880 --> 0:30:46.560
<v Speaker 1>It looked to me like they are really prepared for

0:30:46.600 --> 0:30:48.600
<v Speaker 1>his power. So he was just slanting inside of that

0:30:48.680 --> 0:30:51.600
<v Speaker 1>a gap with the crossover step and his patented swim

0:30:51.680 --> 0:30:54.120
<v Speaker 1>or dip rip combo. He also just flat out would

0:30:54.120 --> 0:30:56.280
<v Speaker 1>pull the left guard's arms down a few times, almost

0:30:56.320 --> 0:30:58.720
<v Speaker 1>like big brother little brother, like, hey, put those arms down.

0:30:59.000 --> 0:31:01.320
<v Speaker 1>It was kind of funny to me. He consistently moved

0:31:01.320 --> 0:31:03.560
<v Speaker 1>how off his spot. Five pressures for him was second

0:31:03.560 --> 0:31:05.760
<v Speaker 1>on the team behind Van Ginkel. I think it's worth

0:31:05.760 --> 0:31:07.880
<v Speaker 1>mentioning that Chubb and Wilkins had a big role in

0:31:07.960 --> 0:31:13.080
<v Speaker 1>Sealer's solo sack. I'd say that five times fast. Chubb

0:31:13.120 --> 0:31:15.680
<v Speaker 1>forced Holle to tuck the football and move, and Seeler

0:31:15.800 --> 0:31:18.040
<v Speaker 1>met him because he had turned free on a pick

0:31:18.080 --> 0:31:21.000
<v Speaker 1>stunt that Wilkins created to occupy and hold both the

0:31:21.040 --> 0:31:23.480
<v Speaker 1>offensive lineman. Gink gets doubled. So that's your four man

0:31:23.640 --> 0:31:26.840
<v Speaker 1>rush just doing good team work across the board. Chubb

0:31:26.880 --> 0:31:29.560
<v Speaker 1>had four pressures, Wilkins had won in the game. Ogbop.

0:31:29.920 --> 0:31:32.120
<v Speaker 1>We have so much power on this defense, but that

0:31:32.240 --> 0:31:34.440
<v Speaker 1>sack might have been the best display of it all year.

0:31:34.720 --> 0:31:36.880
<v Speaker 1>He just engaged the right tackle and then took him

0:31:36.880 --> 0:31:39.240
<v Speaker 1>for a walk. Right into the quarterback's lap, like sheer

0:31:39.280 --> 0:31:42.440
<v Speaker 1>power your off ball linebackers. I love the way David

0:31:42.480 --> 0:31:45.000
<v Speaker 1>Long shows patience, Like there's a run stuff where the

0:31:45.040 --> 0:31:49.040
<v Speaker 1>gap inside opens up on duo, which is two double

0:31:49.080 --> 0:31:50.840
<v Speaker 1>teams at the point of attack, which then they have

0:31:50.920 --> 0:31:52.680
<v Speaker 1>to get off of and climb up to the linebackers

0:31:52.720 --> 0:31:55.280
<v Speaker 1>to hit those second level blocks. So he's clean, but

0:31:55.400 --> 0:31:57.920
<v Speaker 1>he can't get attached to the second level because he

0:31:58.040 --> 0:32:00.760
<v Speaker 1>just goes in and condenses and grapes off of the

0:32:00.760 --> 0:32:03.440
<v Speaker 1>double team, like get yourself in tight to that double team.

0:32:03.600 --> 0:32:05.280
<v Speaker 1>That way, they can't come off that level and get you.

0:32:05.320 --> 0:32:06.960
<v Speaker 1>And he just scrapes off of it and goes and

0:32:06.960 --> 0:32:08.680
<v Speaker 1>makes the play for a big collision right at the

0:32:08.720 --> 0:32:10.520
<v Speaker 1>line of scrimmage. There was a rap where he ran

0:32:10.560 --> 0:32:13.800
<v Speaker 1>the shallow crossing coverage with sam with Curtis Samuel and

0:32:13.920 --> 0:32:16.560
<v Speaker 1>like he was step for step, like it went incomplete.

0:32:16.640 --> 0:32:19.160
<v Speaker 1>So really good game here from David Long. Three stops

0:32:19.200 --> 0:32:21.920
<v Speaker 1>and three pressures boom. That's really good stuff there from him.

0:32:21.960 --> 0:32:24.320
<v Speaker 1>Jerome Baker sucks to watch him get knocked out. I

0:32:24.320 --> 0:32:25.800
<v Speaker 1>thought he was in the middle of the ones better

0:32:25.840 --> 0:32:28.959
<v Speaker 1>career runs of his entire Dolphins career, he had been

0:32:29.000 --> 0:32:31.440
<v Speaker 1>effective in all three phases. I'm eager to get an

0:32:31.520 --> 0:32:32.960
<v Speaker 1>update on him, but it was good to see him

0:32:32.960 --> 0:32:36.600
<v Speaker 1>talking about being okay on Twitter. Duke Riley and how

0:32:36.640 --> 0:32:39.240
<v Speaker 1>about stepping in for Baker Man. I knew Duke was fast,

0:32:39.600 --> 0:32:41.920
<v Speaker 1>but I think maybe I forgot. I don't know, because

0:32:41.960 --> 0:32:43.760
<v Speaker 1>he would stay with his man in coverage, then peel

0:32:43.800 --> 0:32:46.320
<v Speaker 1>off and go pursue the quarterback. He took on blocks

0:32:46.320 --> 0:32:48.840
<v Speaker 1>with ferocity and key and diagnosed as good as he

0:32:48.920 --> 0:32:51.480
<v Speaker 1>has ever as a Miami Dolphin. All up and down

0:32:51.520 --> 0:32:54.360
<v Speaker 1>this roster, there are guys stepping in and not missing

0:32:54.400 --> 0:32:56.880
<v Speaker 1>a beat. That's another sign of a really good football

0:32:56.920 --> 0:32:59.200
<v Speaker 1>team here in Miami. He led the team with five

0:32:59.240 --> 0:33:01.680
<v Speaker 1>stops only to play half the game on thirty one snaps.

0:33:01.960 --> 0:33:04.720
<v Speaker 1>Great job Duke in the second, darry xaviing Howard's playing

0:33:04.760 --> 0:33:06.280
<v Speaker 1>the best football he has in a couple of years.

0:33:06.280 --> 0:33:08.400
<v Speaker 1>If he asked me, and it's the scheme change to me,

0:33:08.480 --> 0:33:11.440
<v Speaker 1>sticky coverage, really really good feel for the system. I

0:33:11.520 --> 0:33:13.920
<v Speaker 1>just love the way that his relationship with help, you know,

0:33:14.320 --> 0:33:17.120
<v Speaker 1>funnel to linebackers, funnel to safeties, seems to get better

0:33:17.160 --> 0:33:19.880
<v Speaker 1>every single week. And you know, he was getting up

0:33:19.920 --> 0:33:23.280
<v Speaker 1>there in age, the growing injuries were accumulating, and he

0:33:23.400 --> 0:33:26.720
<v Speaker 1>seemingly was, you know, getting tested by man coverage last year.

0:33:26.880 --> 0:33:28.920
<v Speaker 1>Now he's getting eyes in the quarterback a little more,

0:33:29.040 --> 0:33:31.400
<v Speaker 1>playing a lot more zone. He's more effective. I think

0:33:31.400 --> 0:33:33.920
<v Speaker 1>it could also prolong his career, especially with how he's

0:33:33.960 --> 0:33:36.800
<v Speaker 1>looked this year in the system. Thirty coverage snaps, twelve

0:33:36.880 --> 0:33:40.440
<v Speaker 1>yards allowed on two for three passing, cater Coho was

0:33:40.520 --> 0:33:42.880
<v Speaker 1>very close to top five tapes. We see him blitz

0:33:42.880 --> 0:33:44.320
<v Speaker 1>a little bit more and it's kind of like a

0:33:44.360 --> 0:33:46.280
<v Speaker 1>trump card of sorts this year, Like, you know, think

0:33:46.320 --> 0:33:48.280
<v Speaker 1>back to the sack he had on Justin Herbert. He

0:33:48.280 --> 0:33:51.240
<v Speaker 1>had a similar rep where Sam Howe hands it off

0:33:51.240 --> 0:33:53.120
<v Speaker 1>so he flattens and makes the play on the running

0:33:53.120 --> 0:33:55.480
<v Speaker 1>back at the line of scrimmage. But like, if you

0:33:55.480 --> 0:33:57.440
<v Speaker 1>need a big play, just blitz cater Coho. And he

0:33:57.480 --> 0:33:59.440
<v Speaker 1>was also great in coverage too. He did a great

0:33:59.520 --> 0:34:02.080
<v Speaker 1>job getting vertical on that first zero look of the

0:34:02.160 --> 0:34:04.680
<v Speaker 1>day where he stays right in the hip pocket of

0:34:04.720 --> 0:34:06.920
<v Speaker 1>Curtis Samuel, and then another man coverage rep on a

0:34:06.960 --> 0:34:09.360
<v Speaker 1>whip route to Logan Thomas where he just stayed in

0:34:09.400 --> 0:34:12.719
<v Speaker 1>that hip pocket again, target incomplete. I will say there

0:34:12.719 --> 0:34:15.280
<v Speaker 1>are some situations where I can see why Josh Allen

0:34:15.320 --> 0:34:17.080
<v Speaker 1>and the Bills go after him because he loves to

0:34:17.160 --> 0:34:20.480
<v Speaker 1>kind of run you into the hardest throw in the field.

0:34:20.480 --> 0:34:23.160
<v Speaker 1>But because Josh Allen can make those throws, it kind

0:34:23.160 --> 0:34:25.040
<v Speaker 1>of exploits him a little bit, if that makes sense.

0:34:25.080 --> 0:34:26.680
<v Speaker 1>But I'm curious to watch that rematch and see how

0:34:26.680 --> 0:34:29.279
<v Speaker 1>they go after that. X. Javon and Cater combined for

0:34:29.320 --> 0:34:32.920
<v Speaker 1>eighty seven coverage snaps, eight targets, four catches allowed, and

0:34:33.040 --> 0:34:35.840
<v Speaker 1>twenty nine yards third. That's point three to three yards

0:34:36.320 --> 0:34:38.560
<v Speaker 1>per coverage snap combined. You're not gonna win games doing

0:34:38.560 --> 0:34:42.000
<v Speaker 1>that against this defense. To Sean Elliott, some linebacker in

0:34:42.000 --> 0:34:43.399
<v Speaker 1>his game man, when he comes down to the box

0:34:43.440 --> 0:34:46.000
<v Speaker 1>against heavy personnel, he just loves sticking his face in

0:34:46.000 --> 0:34:47.880
<v Speaker 1>the fan and I love watching him play. He is very,

0:34:47.960 --> 0:34:50.600
<v Speaker 1>very good and run support. And then Brandon Jones, it's

0:34:50.600 --> 0:34:53.080
<v Speaker 1>some really impactful things in this game. Those two plays

0:34:53.120 --> 0:34:54.560
<v Speaker 1>in the first series. Hit a big stick on the

0:34:54.560 --> 0:34:57.040
<v Speaker 1>play where we lost backside contained and then did a

0:34:57.080 --> 0:34:58.800
<v Speaker 1>good job getting back over the top to put a

0:34:58.880 --> 0:35:00.920
<v Speaker 1>hit that limits that game. I just thought he looked

0:35:01.200 --> 0:35:03.080
<v Speaker 1>far better than he had earlier in the year. In

0:35:03.120 --> 0:35:06.200
<v Speaker 1>this defense, some snap counts for you guys here. Offensively,

0:35:06.600 --> 0:35:09.120
<v Speaker 1>the Lion was a shuffle once again. Hunt only played

0:35:09.160 --> 0:35:11.640
<v Speaker 1>sixty nine percent of the snaps. Keon Smith had to

0:35:11.640 --> 0:35:13.879
<v Speaker 1>play half the game because to Ron played half the game.

0:35:14.120 --> 0:35:17.239
<v Speaker 1>He also got Lester Cotton for nineteen snaps. Otherwise it

0:35:17.280 --> 0:35:19.360
<v Speaker 1>was Austin Liam and Connor going the distance. On the

0:35:19.400 --> 0:35:22.279
<v Speaker 1>offensive line. Tua just forty eight snaps in this game

0:35:22.320 --> 0:35:24.719
<v Speaker 1>because Mike White came in and gave you a thirteen. Offensively,

0:35:25.080 --> 0:35:27.319
<v Speaker 1>at the tight end position, Durham smythe his usual role

0:35:27.360 --> 0:35:30.680
<v Speaker 1>two thirds of the snaps, with Julian Hill getting fifty percent.

0:35:30.840 --> 0:35:33.280
<v Speaker 1>No no, no, sorry, that's Tyreek Kill thirty three percent

0:35:33.320 --> 0:35:36.040
<v Speaker 1>of the workload. Same workload for alec Ingold. So that's

0:35:36.080 --> 0:35:38.560
<v Speaker 1>your kind of heavy personnel, right Durham, Julian and alec

0:35:38.680 --> 0:35:41.120
<v Speaker 1>Ingold kind of blocking plus guys on this team. They're

0:35:41.120 --> 0:35:43.360
<v Speaker 1>getting some good work in Tanner Connors on nine snaps

0:35:43.360 --> 0:35:45.640
<v Speaker 1>in the game. Jeff Wilson got five. The other running

0:35:45.640 --> 0:35:48.200
<v Speaker 1>back split was let's see a Cham played thirty seven

0:35:48.239 --> 0:35:51.280
<v Speaker 1>snaps to Raheem's twenty three. Give the Vets some Restler,

0:35:51.320 --> 0:35:53.759
<v Speaker 1>he'd loved to see it. At receiver, Wondald led the

0:35:53.800 --> 0:35:57.400
<v Speaker 1>way with thirty seven snaps, Tyreek played thirty one snaps,

0:35:57.520 --> 0:36:00.720
<v Speaker 1>Burrios twenty five, Creve Craft twenty four, and I missed.

0:36:01.040 --> 0:36:03.920
<v Speaker 1>Cedric Wilson played thirty three snaps in the game. So

0:36:04.040 --> 0:36:06.520
<v Speaker 1>you kind of know the rotation by now, especially offensively,

0:36:06.520 --> 0:36:09.319
<v Speaker 1>it's it's pretty clear what it is. Roster and eighth

0:36:09.360 --> 0:36:11.799
<v Speaker 1>Chan kind of one A, one B, Durham Smyth plays

0:36:11.800 --> 0:36:13.799
<v Speaker 1>about two thirds of the snaps. Waddle and Tyree Green

0:36:13.840 --> 0:36:16.120
<v Speaker 1>to play the most snaps, with a variation who gets

0:36:16.120 --> 0:36:17.960
<v Speaker 1>the third and fourth most snaps. But you kind of

0:36:18.040 --> 0:36:20.040
<v Speaker 1>understand what it looks like on offense now twelve games

0:36:20.040 --> 0:36:22.759
<v Speaker 1>into the season. How about on defense Brandon Jones playing

0:36:22.800 --> 0:36:26.160
<v Speaker 1>every snap with Ramsey, Elliott and X playing ninety five

0:36:26.200 --> 0:36:29.120
<v Speaker 1>percent of your reps. That means Cater plays eighty nine

0:36:29.160 --> 0:36:30.959
<v Speaker 1>percent coming off the field for a couple of base

0:36:31.040 --> 0:36:33.799
<v Speaker 1>downs the other cornerback working the game. Needham gave you

0:36:33.880 --> 0:36:36.440
<v Speaker 1>nine snaps in the game, and Cam Smith played three snaps.

0:36:36.480 --> 0:36:39.239
<v Speaker 1>There at the very end, you also got let's see,

0:36:39.320 --> 0:36:41.720
<v Speaker 1>Van Ginkle gave you eighty five percent of the snaps

0:36:41.719 --> 0:36:43.520
<v Speaker 1>the same workload as Chubb on the day, so those

0:36:43.520 --> 0:36:45.719
<v Speaker 1>guys both kind of Chubb and Phillips roll though. You

0:36:45.760 --> 0:36:48.000
<v Speaker 1>see how that plays out. Ogbah gave you sixteen snaps,

0:36:48.000 --> 0:36:50.160
<v Speaker 1>so he kind of gets relegated back to the I

0:36:50.200 --> 0:36:52.440
<v Speaker 1>should say, promoted to the Van Ginkle role. There. We'll

0:36:52.440 --> 0:36:54.520
<v Speaker 1>see how that works out with JPP going forward, who

0:36:54.600 --> 0:36:56.520
<v Speaker 1>got three snaps late in this game of his own.

0:36:56.880 --> 0:36:58.919
<v Speaker 1>I see what else. David Long played eighty two percent,

0:36:59.000 --> 0:37:01.040
<v Speaker 1>a big bump from last week, but Jerome Baker was down.

0:37:01.040 --> 0:37:03.680
<v Speaker 1>That makes sense. Baker played twenty two and Duke played

0:37:03.680 --> 0:37:06.319
<v Speaker 1>thirty one snaps in the game. Sealer and Wilkins their

0:37:06.400 --> 0:37:08.759
<v Speaker 1>usual workload eighty two percent of the workloader for both

0:37:08.800 --> 0:37:11.320
<v Speaker 1>those guys. Rayquan played nineteen snaps in the game. So

0:37:11.360 --> 0:37:13.640
<v Speaker 1>many guys got snaps this week. Deshan Hand played eight,

0:37:13.680 --> 0:37:17.440
<v Speaker 1>and then Elijah Campbell, Channing Tyndall and camp Smith and

0:37:17.520 --> 0:37:19.600
<v Speaker 1>Jason Pierre Paul all got three snaps to close this

0:37:19.640 --> 0:37:21.799
<v Speaker 1>thing out. So there you go. That's your film notes,

0:37:21.840 --> 0:37:25.040
<v Speaker 1>your snap count, your stats, all that fun stuff. Always

0:37:25.040 --> 0:37:27.120
<v Speaker 1>love doing this podcast for you guys. A lot of work,

0:37:27.239 --> 0:37:29.200
<v Speaker 1>but it's always fun to help get to know this

0:37:29.239 --> 0:37:32.719
<v Speaker 1>football team even better than we already do. Next podcast

0:37:32.760 --> 0:37:35.360
<v Speaker 1>will be on Wednesday for the Titans preview, taking a

0:37:35.360 --> 0:37:37.760
<v Speaker 1>look at a team that's had a loss struggles lately.

0:37:37.920 --> 0:37:39.960
<v Speaker 1>We'll break that game down for you guys on Wednesday,

0:37:40.000 --> 0:37:42.360
<v Speaker 1>hopefully to get Lewis Riddick on the podcast as my

0:37:42.400 --> 0:37:44.720
<v Speaker 1>plan for Friday, but we'll keep you guys in tune

0:37:44.760 --> 0:37:46.439
<v Speaker 1>on that. In the meantime, you all please be sure

0:37:46.600 --> 0:37:49.160
<v Speaker 1>to subscribe, rate, review, all that fun stuff. Follow on

0:37:49.200 --> 0:37:51.920
<v Speaker 1>social at Winklean NFL. Check out the fish Tank podcast

0:37:52.000 --> 0:37:54.879
<v Speaker 1>with Seth and Juice, the YouTube channel for media Availabilities,

0:37:54.920 --> 0:37:57.840
<v Speaker 1>Dolphins Today, and so much more, and of course Miami

0:37:57.840 --> 0:38:00.359
<v Speaker 1>Dolphins dot com. Until next time, fins up the camera

0:38:00.400 --> 0:38:06.880
<v Speaker 1>and Daddy's Coming Home. M