How far head of 2019 pace are the 2020 Miami Dolphins?

How far head of 2019 pace are the 2020 Miami Dolphins?

The Miami Dolphins have, throughout the course of the first 9 weeks of the 2020 NFL season, surpassed a lot of expectations. And with the Dolphins lapping the standard set by this very same football team just one year ago, Miami should be well on their way to reshaping how the football world perceives their program.

Sleep on the Miami Dolphins at your own risk — this 2020 version is far from the miserable 2019 squad that had to scrap their way to 5-11. How much better? We’re glad you asked. Here’s a look at the 2020 Dolphins through 8 games versus the 2019 Miami Dolphins through 8 games of last season’s schedule.

2020 Points per game: 27.8
2019 Points per game: 12.9

Difference: +14.9 points per game


2020 Total points: 222
2019 Total points: 103

Difference: +119 points


2020 Points allowed per game: 20.1
2019 Points allowed per game: 32.0

Difference: -11.9 points per game


2020 Total points allowed: 161
2019 Total points allowed: 256

Difference: -95 points


2020 Yards per game: 322.9
2019 Yards per game: 262.3

Difference: +60.6 yards per game


2020 Passing yards per game: 225.8
2019 Passing yards per game: 198.5

Difference: +27.3 yards per game


2020 Rushing yards per game: 97.1
2019 Rushing yards per game: 63.8

Difference: +33.3 yards per game


2020 Yards allowed per game: 384.3
2019 Yards allowed per game: 402.4

Difference: -18.1 yards per game


2020 Passing yards allowed per game: 252.5
2019 Passing yards allowed per game: 251.6

Difference: +0.9 yards per game


2020 Rushing yards allowed per game: 131.8
2019 Rushing yards allowed per game: 150.8

Difference: -19.0 yards per game


2020 Turnovers per game: 1.13 
2019 Turnovers per game: 2.13

Difference: -1.00 per game


2020 Turnovers forced per game: 1.75
2019 Turnovers forced per game: 0.50

Difference: +1.25 per game


2020 Sacks allowed: 14
2019 Sacks allowed: 32

Difference: -18


2020 Defensive sacks: 20
2019 Defensive sacks: 12

Difference: +8


2020 Wins: 5
2019 Wins: 1

Difference: +4

The only measured figure above that featured a worse result in 2020 for the Miami Dolphins is passing yards allowed per game — and that makes sense. When opposing teams aren’t up by 3 scores late in the game and must chase down the Dolphins on the scoreboard, they’re going to get hollow yards. The Los Angeles Rams game is a great example. Revisiting this at the end of the season should be a treat for Miami fans; given the progress the team has already shown and what lies ahead for the taking.

But for now, Miami will continue to prove week in and week out that they’re not a pushover anymore and lap the expectations of the 2019 club.

How improved is the Dolphins’ starting lineup versus 2019?

How improved is the Dolphins’ starting lineup versus 2019?

What a difference a year makes. The Miami Dolphins are now just two days away from the one-year anniversary of the team’s opening game of the 2019 season — a 59-10 defeat at the hands of the Baltimore Ravens. That Ravens game kickstarted so much of the angst and criticism against the Dolphins for their ambitious rebuilding efforts, but now that the team is on the other side of that painful year there’s little doubt Miami had a vision in mind.

You don’t need to look any further than just how much better this team’s starting lineup projects to be in 2020 versus that opening game against the Ravens. Let’s take a look at who returns as a starter and how much better off Miami is in each phase of the game.

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Offensive Skill Players

Here is the starting skill group versus the Baltimore Ravens on September 8, 2019:

QB: Ryan Fitzpatrick
RB: Kalen Ballage/Kenyan Drake
WR: DeVante Parker
WR: Preston Williams
WR: Albert Wilson
TE: Durham Smythe/Mike Gesicki

And the Dolphins’ projected starting skill group for Week 1 of 2020 versus the Patriots:

QB: Ryan Fitzpatrick
RB: Jordan Howard/Matt Breida

WR: DeVante Parker
WR: Preston Williams
WR: Jakeem Grant
TE: Mike Gesicki

This group is pretty much chalk. Newly acquired WR Lynn Bowden Jr. and fellow rookie Malcolm Perry loom as depth pieces early on this season but the Dolphins generally speaking did the least work on the skill group (aside, of course) of adding QB Tua Tagovailoa with a top-5 pick and addressing the running game. Miami’s backfield has more depth than it did a year ago and more persistent production than what Drake could produce.