Dolphins should have no franchise tag candidates this offseason

They used it last year on Mike Gesicki.

On Monday, the NFL released their 2023 salary cap number, and, with that, came the announcement of the values of the franchise and transition tags for the upcoming league year.

The Miami Dolphins used their franchise tag in 2022 on tight end Mike Gesicki, paying him $10.93 million guaranteed for the year.

With the league year around the corner, the Dolphins will have to make a decision on whether or not to use either of the tags for this season.

While they have 31 pending free agents, none of them have proven enough to earn that type of money on the market this offseason. Gesicki is a free agent again, but his lack of production in Mike McDaniel’s offense should steer the team away from making the same mistake again.

The only player that could even have an argument made on their behalf to receive a transition tag would be running back Raheem Mostert at $8.429 million. He played well in his first season with Miami, but that should still be to steep for the Dolphins to pay at the position where there are constantly late-round draft picks and undrafted players succeeding.

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The history of the Miami Dolphins and the franchise tag

Who have they placed it on in the past?

The NFL introduced the franchise and transition tags back in 1993 when their collective bargaining agreement went into effect, and since then, teams have been able to keep players on one-year deals who were expected to become unrestricted free agents at the start of the league year.

A team could decide to have the player play on their tag, sign them to an extension, or trade them.

The Miami Dolphins have a couple of candidates that they could use either the franchise tag or transition tag this year, but what does history tell us they’re going to do?

These are the eight players the Dolphins have used one of the tags on since 1993.