The Tyreek Hill detainment incident continues to grow in Florida
The incident that saw Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill handcuffed and detained before the game with the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday is mushrooming.
Defensive lineman Calais Campbell said after the 20-17 win that he was also handcuffed and detained during the situation.
Dolphins DL Calais Campbell just told me he was detained in handcuffs by police this morning trying to deescalate the Tyreek Hill matter. He says never in his 17-year career or life has he had anything like that happen.
I asked Tyreek Hill why he believes police put him in handcuffs: “I have no idea. I wasn’t disrespecting. I didn’t cuss.” When told the police officer has been placed on administrative leave, Hill says, “That should tell you all you need to know.”
I asked Hill why police pulled him over: “They said I was speeding. Reckless driving or whatever.” He says he was taught in those situations to put his hands on the wheel and listen. He says he believes he was respectful & did not use his name to try to get out of the situation.
Tua Tagovailoa connected with the Cheetah who did the rest on an 80-yard play that brought the Dolphins within 17-14 in their home opener.
They didn’t show the full “celebration” on the broadcast, but after Hill acted like he was handcuffed, Jaylen Waddle came up behind him and led him off the field while holding Hill’s wrists behind his back. https://t.co/sHIXegneq2
Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill was detained outside Hard Rock Stadium by police
Not the way a fleet wide receiver wants to start his NFL gameday. Miami Dolphins wideout Tyreek Hill was handcuffed and detained on Sunday en route to Hard Rock Stadium for driving violations.
Tyreek Hill wad cited for reckless driving after being pulled over for speeding, per @JeffDarlington. Hill and a police officer had a verbal altercation that led to the receiver being put in handcuffs. Hill’s agent Drew Rosenhaus said his client will play today.
Not really sure what’s going on here, but it appears that Tyreek Hill has been arrested outside of Hard Rock Stadium, just hours before the #Dolphins kick off against the Jaguars 😳 pic.twitter.com/NFrbWSozsz
Jalen Ramsey will earn beacoup bucks for playing CB in Miami
The game of can you top this at any NFL position continued on Friday when the Miami Dolphins made Jalen Ramsey the highest-paid DB in the league for the second time.
The AFC East team gave Ramsey a contract that is valued at $24.1 million per season. That number beats the $24 million per year extension the Denver Broncos delivered to Patrick Surtain II earlier this week.
Breaking: Jalen Ramsey and the Dolphins have reached an agreement on a three-year extension worth $24.1 million per year to make him the highest-paid CB in NFL history for the second time in his career, sources told @AdamSchefter. pic.twitter.com/vrJhvMlHSq
Schefter added Ramsey is guaranteed to earn $55.3 million starting this season, which ensures he will have the highest career earnings for a cornerback in league history.
The Dolphins showed Tyreek Hill they appreciate the wideout
The Fish went fishing on Saturday and caught their star receiver with a big deal. Tyreek Hill and the Miami Dolphins agreed on a three-year contract worth $90 million. There is $65 million guaranteed added on to his existing contract.
Hill was just named the No. 1 player in the NFL’s top 100. Last season, he caught 119 passes for a league-leading 1,799 yards and 13 touchdowns in 16 games.
Hill had 119 receptions for 1,710 yards in 2022, his first season with Miami after spending six years with the Chiefs/
Tua Tagovailoa gets a huge extension from the Dolphins
The Miami Dolphins and Tua Tagovailoa have eliminated contract issues, for the time being. The quarterback and AFC South team came to terms on a four-year contract extension worth $212 million on Friday.
The #Dolphins and their QB Tua Tagovailoa have a deal!
Sources tell me and @MikeGarafolo they’ve agreed to terms on 4-year, $212.4M contract extension to lock him in long-term. At long-last, Miami’s franchise QB is paid like it. 💰 💰 💰 pic.twitter.com/rW5sTJzBQo
The contract comes with $167 million in guarantees. The $53.1 million average on Tagovailoa’s deal is the highest on a four-year extension in NFL history.
Tagovailoa has thrown for 12,639 yards and 81 touchdowns in four seasons since being chosen in the first round out of Alabama.
A former college punter is campaigning for a chance to boot for the Dolphins
Everyone doesn’t get to live their dream or have a chance to hope it plays out in the NFL. Former Middle Tennessee State punter Kyle Ulbrich is doing his best to get an opportunity.
Ulbrich was outside Miami Dolphins training camp making a case for the team to add him to their roster or simply give him a tryout.
Miami already has Jake Bailey on its roster. Bailey was a Pro Bowler in 2020 with the New England Patriots.
Ulbrich averaged a career-best 47.1 yards per punt for MTSU in 2023. He only was able to get three punts out of 72 to stop inside the 20, which isn’t quite NFL quality.
Marlin Briscoe, who broke the modern color barrier for pro quarterbacks, never got the opportunities his talent deserved.
After a rookie season in 1968 when he set a franchise record for touchdown passes for the Denver Broncos that stands to this day, Marlin Briscoe was in for a rude awakening.
That season, Briscoe stood in relief for injured starter Steve Tensi, and in 11 games and five starts, completed 93 passes in 214 attempts for 1,589 yards, 14 touchdowns and 13 interceptions. The pick total and 41.5% completion rate imply that the Nebraska-Omaha alum had some things to work on at the quarterback position, but Briscoe put up his first-year totals in an American Football League in which Tensi himself completed just 40.3 percent of his passes and threw five touchdowns to eight interceptions, and John Hadl of the San Diego Chargers was the league’s most prolific quarterback with a 47.3% completion rate, 27 touchdowns and 32 interceptions.
It was not the nature of the AFL in 1968 to have quarterbacks with the efficiency that would be required in the modern game—those quarterbacks were throwing it deep more often and playing against defenses that could be far more aggressive.
So, Briscoe’s statistics weren’t out of the ordinary for his league, and certainly for his experience. He had been selected in the 14th round of the 1968 AFL draft as a defensive back and was only allowed to compete as a quarterback—the position he played very well in college—because Al Caniglia, his college coach, told him to ask for an adaptation to his contract.
The first starting QB in pro football to break the color barrier 👏
“[Caniglia] told me, ‘Listen, Denver is one of the only teams in the [AFL] that practices in the city, where the media and fans can watch,” Briscoe recalled in William C. Rhoden’s Third and a Mile. “See if you can insert a little trial—two or three days—at quarterback in your contract.’ I thought it was a great idea. When [assistant coach] Stan Jones came to negotiate the contract, I said, ‘You know, I’ll sign the contract if Denver gives me a three-day trial. All I want to do is test my skills out for three days.”
Jones agreed that it was a good idea, though head coach Lou Saban and director of player personnel Fred Gehrke disagreed. The schism produced a holdout situation in which Briscoe threatened to go get a teaching job instead of accepting Denver’s $15,000 contract offer. Saban and Gehrke agreed to Briscoe’s terms, and though he generally got half the number of throws the other potential quarterbacks received in training camp, he made enough of an impact for the Denver Post to write an article about him.
After the season, Briscoe returned home to Nebraska to get his degree. His cousin called him from Denver to inform Briscoe that the Broncos had signed a quarterback named Pete Liskie from the Canadian Football league, and, word was, the team was having quarterback meetings without him.
“So, I took a clandestine flight to Denver,” Briscoe remembered. “I stood outside the coach’s office, and out walks Steve Tensi, Lou Saban, quarterbacks coach Hunter Anderson, Pete Liske, and a couple [other] quarterbacks. They couldn’t even look at me. If I didn’t think it was wrong for a man to cry, I’d have cried. I was that hurt. I just turned and walked out. I knew I wasn’t in their plans. It was like I’d never played that first year.”
In Saban’s mind, it appeared to be so.
“Marlin was an exceptional athlete, but he didn’t have great size. He was always throwing out of a well. I figured his best position was receiver, but we were searching for a quarterback. In the four and a half years I was with the Broncos, we never found a guy who could take over the position. We brought in quarterbacks by the dozens. It didn’t make much difference what their backgrounds were, I was going to play whoever could win—because if you don’t win, it’s over.”
Well. The Lou Saban era in Denver lasted from 1967 through 1971, and in that time, 10 different quarterbacks had at least one passing attempt for the team. Among those quarterbacks, Briscoe led the pack in touchdown percentage, passer rating, quarterback rating, and passing yards per game. The Broncos had a 2-3 record in the games he started, but Briscoe was clearly the best quarterback on a series of bad teams.
In a 21-14 win over the Miami Dolphins, Briscoe brought his team back from a 14-0 deficit, running six times for 29 yards and two touchdowns — including the game-winner.
“I did what I thought I had to do,” Saban said in Jeff Miller’s Going Long. “He went down to Miami a year later and played receiver and did very well. People said, ‘You were right.’ You’ve got to look out for the product, what’s best for the team.”
Briscoe stayed in the NFL as a receiver through the 1976 season, catching 224 passes for 3,537 yards and 30 touchdowns. He made the Pro Bowl in 1970 with the Bills with 57 receptions for 1,036 yards and eight touchdowns, and he was a part of the Miami Dolphins’ Super Bowl teams in 1972 and 1973, including the only perfect season in NFL history in 1972.
But the denial of opportunity at the quarterback position never left Briscoe—it always haunted him. Don Shula made him the Dolphins’ emergency quarterback in 1972 after Bob Griese was injured and veteran Earl Morrall took over. As Briscoe later said, “If I was good enough to be an emergency quarterback, why weren’t other teams willing to give me a chance?”
Hall of Fame receiver Paul Warfield remembered in Third and a Mile that the Dolphins did have one specific trick play in which Briscoe would be able to throw the ball.
“I was the slot receiver. Marlin lined up one yard off the line. The quarterback would throw him a quick hitch pass—actually, a lateral. I’d run downfield toward one of the two defenders, under control, kind of like a blocker. As soon as they came toward me, I’d release downfield, and Marlin would deliver the football. It put tremendous pressure on the defense, put them in a bind.”
The racial component is the clear and obvious reason for Briscoe’s enforced departure from the quarterback position, and it was quite clear that neither league was ready for a starting Black quarterback in 1968. In Briscoe’s case, there’s also an element of inflexibility about the position that went on at the time that got in his way.
In the late 1960s, a scrambling quarterback was still thought to be a Bad Thing. Hank Stram of the AFL’s Kansas City Chiefs had installed a moving-pocket offense combined with play action for quarterback Len Dawson that was quite effective, but functional mobility wasn’t considered a universal advantage for quarterbacks as it is today.
And while Briscoe was able to use his mobility to overcome his height disadvantage by creating throwing lanes on the run, he was a couple of generations ahead of his time with that idea—it’s obviously a common practice nowadays for quarterbacks, and if Briscoe came along in 2018 instead of 1968, his story would likely be radically different. He was a pioneer, and like a great many pioneers in any field, he found the terrain inhospitable and adaptation difficult as the forces arrayed against him were more powerful and entrenched that he was.
Briscoe became a mentor to some of the Black quarterbacks who followed in his wake, rooming with Shack Harris in Buffalo and talking with Joe Gilliam after Gilliam’s brief starting stint with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1974. All we can do is wonder how he would have fared given the opportunities he deserved.
Larry Csonka has every right to stand up for the undefeated Dolphins team he starred on
Larry Csonka was a huge part of the 1972 Miami Dolphins, the only team to have a perfect season in NFL history.
So, it is understandable when the great running back would become upset when question about the team and its place in history.
Csonka apologized for becoming upset. The reality is questioning a team that is the only one to accomplish an undefeated season has become tired. Give those Miami Dolphins all the credit they deserve.
I did lose my cool here but I stand by my point – we achieved perfection and are the only team to do so in the first 100+ years of professional football. My teammates and I already knew this whether the NFL recognized it or not. That said, I am grateful the NFL finally ratified… pic.twitter.com/3FiFSaQipa
Why are defensive tackles more important in today’s NFL than they’ve ever been before? Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar are here with the answers.
In today’s NFL, with as much quick game as teams are using, it’s more important than ever to get to the quarterback as quickly as possible. Often, the shortest distance between the line of scrimmage and the quarterback is a straight line, and when your edge-rushers don’t have time to get home, it’s up to your interior defensive linemen to make those sacks and pressures happen.
It’s why the NFL has placed an increasing importance on those inside guys, and the money has gone up accordingly.
In 2019, there were 15 interior defensive linemen with in-season cap hits of more than $10 million, led by Aaron Donald at $17,108,000. In 2024, there are 22 such players. Now, a lot of those contracts are ones in which the cap hit happens to explode in this league year, but the point still stands – the NFL is placing an increased financial priority on interior defensive linemen.
It’s also why NFL is paying more centers and guards more money and selecting more higher in the draft, as well.
In this week’s “Xs and Os with Greg Cosell and Doug Farrar,” the guys get into all the reasons why interior defensive linemen are of such crucial importance, the techniques they use to pester enemy quarterbacks, and the best players at creating pressure in the shortest possible time.
You can watch this week’s “Xs and Os” right here:
You can also listen to and subscribe to the “Xs and Os” podcast on Spotify…