Dolphins WR and TE ratings in Madden NFL 23

EA Sports released the first positional rankings

As we’re all collectively crossing the end of another long offseason in the coming weeks, football fans are looking forward to the newest installment of the Madden video game series.

We’ve seen some early looks of new Miami Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel in the game, and it doesn’t look half bad. However, everyone knows the gameplay and the ratings are the aspects of the game that are much more important and frequently discussed.

On Monday, EA Sports, the publishers of the game, released the wide receivers and tight end ratings for Madden NFL 23, and the Dolphins have a top 10 player at each position.

Here’s a look at most of Miami’s wide receiver and tight end ratings for launch and how they compare to other players at the same position:

  • Tyreek Hill – 96 overall (No. 3 WR)
  • Mike Gesicki – 86 overall (No. 7 TE)
  • Jaylen Waddle – 84 overall (t-No. 27 WR)
  • Cedrick Wilson Jr. – 75 overall (t-No. 85 WR)
  • Preston Williams – 72 overall (t-No. 120 WR)
  • Lynn Bowden Jr. – 70 overall (t-No. 148 WR)
  • Adam Shaheen – 68 overall (t- No. 56 TE)
  • Durham Smythe – 68 overall (t- No. 56 TE)
  • Trent Sherfield – 68 overall (t-No. 190 WR)
  • Cody Core – 67 overall (t-No. 208 WR)
  • Hunter Long – 66 overall (t-No. 69 TE)
  • Erik Ezukanma – 66 overall (t-No. 223 WR)
  • River Cracraft – 65 overall (t-No. 241 WR)

There will be more ratings coming out before the game’s release on August 19.

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2022 Dolphins positional preview: No big changes at TE this year

The only new face is UDFA Tanner Conner.

The Miami Dolphins are preparing for the start of Mike McDaniel’s first training camp as a head coach in the next few weeks. Once the team returns to Miami Gardens, they will begin competing against each other in practice and a couple of other teams (Philadelphia and Tampa Bay) in joint practice sessions.

For now, it’s time to assess the roster and see where the team stands at each and every position.

After looking at quarterbacks, running backs and wide receivers earlier this week, we’ll discuss the tight end group that hasn’t had many changes to it from the end of last season.

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Durham Smythe joined Mike Gesicki at TE University summit

This was a great opportunity for Miami’s TE2.

Travis Kelce, George Kittle and Greg Olsen, three of the most impressive tight ends in the last decade, hosted their second annual TE University summit in Nashville, Tennessee last week.

Tight ends from around the league gathered together to teach and learn some of the best tricks of the trade with legends like Dallas Clark helping out with some on-field work.

It was already known that the Miami Dolphins were going to have one tight end in attendance in Mike Gesicki. However, Durham Smythe, Miami’s second tight end on the depth chart, posted on social media saying that he took part as well.

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Smythe, who’s entering his fifth NFL season, set career-highs in receptions (34) and receiving yards (357) in 2021. Having the opportunity to learn from and with some of the best players at his position should benefit him entering 2022. Hopefully, he picked up some tricks that will help him get into the endzone after failing to do so last year.

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Dolphins TE Durham Smythe has been unsung and unheralded

The fifth-year tight end might see a jump in production in 2022.

Throughout an NFL roster, there are players beyond the superstars that hold extreme value for their clubs. The unsung heroes whose names may not be mentioned nearly as much as some of their teammates.

It’s these role players and timely situational specialists that are more valuable than they are popular on a national scale outside their fan base.

When looking at the Miami Dolphins roster, you can look at several position groups where examples of these players continue to simply do their jobs.

The tight end room for Miami has been successful to an extent the past several years with the battery of Mike Gesicki and his partner-in-crime, Durham Smythe. While it’s Gesicki who gets the fanfare as well as the franchise tag recently, it’s Smythe, who compliments his best friend, that will make this tight end group efficient in 2022.

Smythe has proven just that in his last few seasons as a pro, following being drafted out of Notre Dame in the same selection process as Gesicki. The Dolphins spent their fourth-round pick on Smythe in 2018 and recently re-signed him this offseason to the tune of two years and $7 million.

The efficiency mentioned earlier, especially in 2020 and 2021, translated to an 89.7% and 82.9% catch rate in those seasons, respectively. His career rate is 76.8% and, to take it a step further, it’s Smythe’s timeliness of his receptions that truly shows his value to the Dolphins.

Something else of note is his consistent upward trend in his yards per target. Increasing yearly in his output, Smythe has gone from 4.5 to 4.6 to 7.2 and last season finished with 8.7 yards per target. Mix in a few other factors in this equation like a maturing quarterback, an improved offensive line and a coaching staff that’s built to make tight ends, Smythe may have his best season yet…and the same goes for Gesicki.

Of course, the volume will go to Gesicki, but don’t discount the progression of Smythe as well, as both players will be under the coaching of a new position coach, Jon Embree.

Embree has a laundry list of outstanding tight ends as well as projects who have had career seasons while he was their coach. Smythe should benefit from his tutelage and, like Gesicki, should increase the touchdown production.

Smythe only has a pair of scores from the 2020 season to his record, but that should certainly change in 2022, as the Dolphins will more than likely spend a bit more time targeting the tight ends in a plus territory as well as the red zone, which is something that was lacking in the last few seasons.

Along with his blocking, leadership and seeming dedication to keeping Gesicki entertained, Smythe should see yet another spike in production in 2022.

Smythe finished 2021 catching 34 of his 41 targets, with 15 leading to first downs. He produced 357 yards and played in all 17 games last season. In 2020, the quarterback rating when he was targeted was 119.5, and last season, it was a respectable 92.8.

A fresh offensive staff, a newly minted contract and a positional guru at his disposal should equal a loud season from an otherwise quiet key to the Dolphins’ offense.

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Dolphins have a number of unsung heroes in all three phases

The fanbase should be showing more love to these guys.

Every football team needs a few stars in order to be legitimate contenders in the NFL. However, sometimes it’s the role players and unsung heroes sprinkled across rosters that could be the difference between playoff contention and Super Bowl contention.

Football is the quintessential team game, with three phases needed for success. The Miami Dolphins have several players scattered across the offense, defense and special teams who may not have their names mentioned as much as others, yet their value is immeasurable for team success.

Let’s start with a player who’s silently become one of the league’s most underrated and consistent defensive linemen. Zach Sieler, who was picked up on waivers in 2019 after a year in Baltimore, has fit in nicely in a defensive line rotation and even earned himself a payday from the Dolphins in 2020 with a three-year extension. Sieler played in all 17 games in 2021 and had 62 total tackles. He added a pair of sacks, recovered two fumbles and forced one while being the consummate run-stuffer.

Sieler was PFF’s 2021 highest-graded Miami Dolphins player at 84.8

Moving over to offense, the Dolphins are two years removed from having the franchise’s most prolific season at the tight end position ever, thanks to the output from Mike Gesicki, Adam Shaheen and Durham Smythe combining for 91 receptions, 1,061 yards, and 11 touchdowns in 2020.

Last season, Smythe played in every game and had career highs in catches, yards, and first downs. He wasn’t able to find the endzone, but that’s not something Smythe cares too much about. Recently re-signed during this off-season, Smythe is extremely valuable as he proved last season with his constant reliability. When thrown to in 2021, quarterbacks had a quarterback rating of 92.8%, and Smythe caught 82.9% of his targets. He reeled in 34 receptions last season, and 15 went for first downs.

Finally, we look at special teams. This slot was ready for Mack Hollins, but the gunner extraordinaire/wide receiver will be playing for the Las Vegas Raiders in 2022. However, a current captain leads the Dolphins’ special teams unit, and, in his upcoming third season in Miami, Clayton Fejedelem is a safe bet to retain the “C” on his jersey.

A team-appointed captain for his tenure in Miami thus far, Fejedelem was in on 85% of the Dolphins’ special teams snaps in 2021. He was among the team leaders in special teams tackles last season and should continue his leadership role in 2022.

Miami does have other role-players of heavy value, including depth defensive lineman, Adam Butler, who played admirably filling in for the injured Raekwon Davis early in the season. Butler had an excellent second half of the year, gathering a pair of sacks and three passes defended after Week 8.

Let’s also not forget versatile offensive lineman, Michael Deiter, who was praised by the Dolphins brass at the recent league meetings. The Wisconsin product can play any position on the line and showed promise at center before an injury limited to just eight games in 2021. If not center, Deiter will be a factor in camp battles on the right side at guard or even tackle.

Honorable mentions go to re-signed linebackers Duke Riley and Elandon Roberts, who are high-motor, energetic veterans who tend to make momentum-building plays. Roberts has a knack for noisy hits, and Riley plays two phases of the game and was among the team leaders in special team tackles last season.

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Breaking down Dolphins TE Durham Smythe’s new contract

About half of the money is guaranteed.

After the Miami Dolphins opted to place the franchise tag on tight end Mike Gesicki, there was a large contingent of the fanbase that believed that would spell the end of Durham Smythe in Miami.

However, Smythe re-signed with the Dolphins just days after free agency opened, and it was reported by none other than his best friend, Gesicki.

Smythe has been the second tight end in Miami’s offense, and in 2021, he set career-highs in receptions (34) and receiving yards (357). That growth with his increased opportunities would have made him a clear target to re-sign, but with the Dolphins spending a third-round pick on Hunter Long in the 2021 draft, it was believed that the former Fighting Irish would be replaced by a younger, cheaper option.

The contract that Smythe signed this offseason is for two years and is worth $7 million in total. He will make $5.25 million in salary over the next two seasons ($2 million in 2022 and $3.25 million in 2023) with the entirety of his 2022 salary being guaranteed. Smythe also received a $1.5 million signing bonus and is set to earn $250,000 worth of per-game roster bonuses in 2023.

After this season, if Long takes a step up and proves he could be the second tight end, Miami could move on from Smythe before the 2023 season and incur only $750,000 (the prorated signing bonus) in dead money.

At this point, the Dolphins are just well prepared for something to happen to their tight end group.

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Mike Gesicki reports that Dolphins are re-signing TE Durham Smythe

Did you expect this to be announced any other way?

The Miami Dolphins have put a lot of resources into bringing back members of the 2021 roster, and they are continuing to do so.

According to tight end Mike Gesicki, the Dolphins have re-signed tight end, and his best friend on the team, Durham Smythe to a two-year deal. ESPN’s Field Yates added that the deal will pay him $8 million over the two years.

Smythe, 26, had the best season of his young career in 2021, setting career-highs in receptions (34) and receiving yards (357). He will likely continue to fill his role as the second tight end in the room, but he may give up some reps to Hunter Long as he continues to grow.

Gesicki and Smythe spent the past year campaigning to get each other more recognition and new contracts, and both men are now locked up for at least 2022.

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Dolphins free agent profile: Should Miami bring Durham Smythe back

What does the future hold for the tight end?

The start of the 2022 NFL league year is just over two weeks away, meaning the beginning of free agency is right around the corner. The Miami Dolphins, along with every other team in the league, have started laying the groundwork for what they’d like to do.

There are 28 players that are expected to become unrestricted, restricted or exclusive-rights free agents that were on the Dolphins roster last year, including tight end Durham Smythe.

Miami originally drafted Smythe in the fourth round of the 2018 draft out of Notre Dame. Coming out of college, he was labeled as a run-blocker without much upside in the receiving game, but in recent years, he’s bringing more in that aspect.

This past season, Smythe, as the team’s second tight end behind Mike Gesicki, recorded a career-high 34 receptions for 357 yards.

Going into 2022, Smythe is set to become an unrestricted free agent, and the Dolphins only have Adam Shaheen, Cethan Carter, Hunter Long, and John Lovett under contract. This should show everyone that there’s a serious need for help at the position.

Smythe hasn’t exactly lived up to the blocking tight end moniker, but he can hold his own. That may make him a better scheme fit for Mike McDaniel’s offense than Gesicki, who is also a free agent this offseason.

The Dolphins drafted Long in last year’s draft seemingly in preparation for the two tight ends hitting the market this offseason. However, he could provide some of that versatility that Smythe brought.

When you look at the solid tight end options in free agency this year, it wouldn’t be too surprising to see the Dolphins move on from Smythe and find someone who can do just a bit more to fill those roles.

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TE Mike Gesicki is still requesting that the Dolphins pay Durham Smythe

The bromance is alive and well.

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The offseason is here for all 32 teams, and the start of the 2022 NFL free agency period is just around the corner.

Miami has 28 pending free agents who could find themselves back with the team, with another organization, or out of the league. While the bigger names like Emmanuel Ogbah are getting the most attention, lesser-known guys like Durham Smythe could be a pretty significant loss if he were to sign with another team.

Smythe and fellow tight end Mike Gesicki, who is also set to be a free agent, had some great moments last season that included Gesicki campaigning for Smythe to receive an extension.

On Tuesday, Gesicki picked up his efforts again by responding to the Dolphins’ tweet that celebrated Smythe’s season.

At this point, the Dolphins’ tight end talent isn’t great on their roster, as they only have Adam Shaheen, Cethan Carter, and Hunter Long under contract. Those three combined for 15 receptions and 134 yards in 2021.

Smythe was a capable second tight end last year, as he set career-highs in receptions (34) and receiving yards (357). Miami may want that role to be taken by Long in his second season, but his ability to do so is far from a guarantee.

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Grading the Miami Dolphins tight ends after their 2021 season

Miami got some solid performances from tight ends this year.

The Miami Dolphins have ended their 2021 season with a winning record, but they missed the postseason yet again and fired their head coach.

Now, it’s time to reflect and talk about the players who impacted the outcomes on the field.

We’ll be going through different positions over the next week or so and reviewing how they played in 2021. After starting with the rookies, quarterbacks, running backs, and wide receivers, we’ll take a look at the guys who tend to work the middle of the field and help with some blocking. These are the grades for the Dolphins tight ends during this campaign.