The Dolphins signed wide receiver Braxton Berrios just days after free agency opened. Berrios looks to utilize his dynamic skill set to improve coach Mike McDaniel’s playbook.
He joins a wide receiver group that includes the duo of Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle, who both ranked top 10 in the NFL a season ago in receiving yards. The offense is poised for a big play at any moment.
Miami fans have plenty to be excited about with this new addition, and here are some reasons why.
Touchdown Wire’s Doug Farrar and Mark Schofield with their tape and stat notes for the Touchdown Wire Week 17 NFL Matchup Podcast.
Every week, in preparation for their Touchdown Wire Matchup Preview Podcast, Doug Farrar and Mark Schofield put together a show rundown based on their own tape observations and statistical takeaways. We thought our readers would find it of interest, so here’s our matchup notes for Week 17 of the NFL season, and the playoff permutations thereof!
Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa recalls hard lessons from the past
“How you do anything is how you do everything.”
The words of Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s father have clearly stuck with him. As Tagovailoa enters the early stretches of his NFL career during the 2020 NFL season, there are plenty of pass lessons from Tagovailoa’s journey that can be applied to the here and now — and with a little bit of luck the Dolphins can see the successes of Tagovailoa’s past come into the present day as a result as well.
During a video interview with The Players’ Tribute, Tagovailoa speaks about his experiences playing for Coach Nick Saban at Alabama and his family dynamics with his father, who played a heavy hand in Tagovailoa’s development as a quarterback. The Miami rookie speaks about trips to the beach — not for fun, but rather to work out on the sand and practice footwork.
First or second-string made no difference to @Tua's work ethic.
He prepared for each game like he was the starting quarterback.
The @NFL rookie gives an inside look at the mindset driving his football career.
All of those hours of “lonely work”, as Tagovailoa puts it, helped bring him to the University of Alabama — and in his freshman season the left-handed quarterback found himself in a similar situation to where he is now with the Miami Dolphins: as a backup quarterback. Tagovailoa speaks about his freshman year and recalls how important it was for him to lean how to prepare week to week for the next opponent. One would figure he’s applying that some methodology to his process of getting better behind Ryan Fitzpatrick early on in his NFL career.
The Dolphins’ season is just one game old. But if the Dolphins continue to stumble out of the gate, we may see a transition much like the one Alabama made at halftime of the National Championship Game in early 2018 — the game that thrust Tagovailoa into the national spotlight. If Miami’s new franchise quarterback can draw upon and apply all his old lessons of the past to the year 2020, maybe he can bring a little bit of that magic on the field with him too — but he’s biding his time.
LSU quarterback Joe Burrow leads the way in this year’s draft class, followed by an abundance of impact wide receivers and linemen.
With the 2020 NFL Draft fast approaching, it is time to start finalizing draft boards. Not just for NFL teams, but for the team here at Touchdown Wire. Here is Touchdown Wire’s list of the top 25 offensive prospects in the 2020 draft class.
1. Joe Burrow, QB, LSU
The list begins with the player expected to be the first pick off the board when the 2020 NFL Draft begins. Joe Burrow led LSU to a national championship last season and rewrote record books along the way. But the reasons he is the top offensive player — in addition to positional value — are the traits he brings to the table as a prospect.
Competitive toughness. Accuracy. Pocket management. Plus the ability to do all the little things that matter at the position, such as manipulating defenders with his eyes and throwing with anticipation. The Cincinnati Bengals are this close to finally having their quarterback … unless a team breaks the bank to trade up to the first spot.
2. CeeDee Lamb, WR, Oklahoma
In a talented and deep wide receiver class, the players clustered near the top might just be a matter of personal preference. Lamb, Jerry Jeudy and Henry Ruggs III are all potential game-changers at WR. Lamb edges out the rest due to his combination of explosiveness, catch radius, route-running and ability after the catch. Some might knock him for a lack of elite speed, but with his route-running, ability after the catch and how he sets up defenders on his cuts and breaks, the little things he has mastered make up for the lack of 4.4 speed.
3. Jerry Jeudy, WR, Alabama
Football is a game of angles. Listen to Bill Belichick talk about angles in the blocking part of the game, and you will understand. That also matters for a wide receiver, how you set up and then break away from cornerbacks, how you exploit their leverage advantages, and how you attack their alignment off the line. Jeudy is a master at that part of playing wide receiver. He also brings great deep speed, elite hands and an ability to turn any play into a touchdown regardless of route. He was used predominantly as a slot receiver last season, but he has the short-area quickness and explosiveness to beat press when he transitions to the NFL.
4. Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Alabama
Obviously the medical picture might cloud Tagovailoa’s outlook in the draft, but based on what he can do on the field, the Alabama passer has to be considered one of the top offensive players in the draft. He possesses a lightning-quick release with a compact throwing motion, drawing comparisons to Jimmy Garoppolo in that regard. He also has the athleticism to extend plays outside of the pocket and keep a defense honest with what he can do as a runner. Tagovailoa is an accurate passer in the short and intermediate areas of the field, ideal for most NFL offenses. There are things he needs to clean up, such as his vision in the post-snap phase of the play, but if the medicals check out, he is a solid prospect at the game’s most important position.
5. Jedrick Wills Jr., OT, Alabama
Similar to the wide receiver position, the offensive tackle group has great talent at the top, so ranking the “Big Four” tackles might come down to a matter of scheme fit or team needs. We can start with Wills, the Alabama right tackle who has been a mainstay on their offensive line the past two seasons. He gave up a single sack and just five quarterback hits during his career with the Crimson Tide. Wills is also a dominant player in the run game, and he has the power to handle gap/man assignments but also the footwork and agility to function well in a zone blocking scheme. What might hurt him in the eyes of some is that he has spent his career at right tackle, and teams looking for a LT might look at someone with more experience at that spot.
6. Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia
If an NFL team is looking for that “plug and play” starter at left tackle, Thomas is likely their man. He was a focal part of the Bulldogs’ offensive line for the past three seasons and made the switch to left tackle prior to the 2018 campaign. Last year, his second at LT, he gave up just one sack and eight quarterback hurries, and did not allow a single QB hit. Thomas is also a force in the ground game. The Georgia offense did give him help, running a lot of play-action, and he often worked with a tight end aligned around him, but his traits and execution translate well to the pro game.
7. Henry Ruggs III, WR, Alabama
“Speed kills.” “You can’t teach speed.” Whatever your favorite sports cliche about speed is, dust it off and bring it to your evaluation of Ruggs. The Alabama wideout has speed to burn and showed that both on film and at the Scouting Combine, where he posted a blazing 4.24 40-yard dash. Ruggs has more than just the jets in his toolkit; he is a solid route-runner, tracks the ball well in the vertical game and is unafraid to work over the middle. But when you have the potential to take a simple slant route to the house on any given snap, you’re going to be coveted in the NFL.
8. Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa
The Iowa product is another dominant force at right tackle. Wirfs turned heads at the combine when he posted a 4.85 40-yard dash after weighing in at 6-5 and 320 pounds. For reference, that is a faster 40-yard dash than quarterback Jake Fromm, who ran a 5.01 40. Wirfs is another plug-and-play type of offensive lineman, coming from an offense at Iowa that ran a variety of rushing concepts and tasked him with a lot from a pass protection standpoint. He also has the chance to play both right and left tackle, having seen 161 snaps at LT last season. With his athleticism and strength, Wirfs could be a mainstay at tackle for the next 10 years for the team that drafts him.
Patrick Mahomes talked on HBO about learning how to read defenses. When? In the pre-snap phase. What happens on a given play for a QB?
Patrick Mahomes seems to have it all.
An MVP award last season. A Super Bowl MVP award this season with a ring he will soon get to put on his finger. The scary part? He might just be starting to tap into what he can become as a quarterback.
The Super Bowl Champion got a little bit of attention on Twitter this week, when a scene from an upcoming episode of HBO’s “The Shop: Uninterrupted” was made public. In the clip, Mahomes relays how “[he] didn’t understand how to read defenses until like halfway through last year. ” He went on to say that “I understood coverages, but how to be able to pick up little tendencies defenses do, stuff that Brady and them have…I was just playing.”
Bad news for the rest of the NFL: Chiefs’ QB Patrick Mahomes said he didn’t learn how to read defenses until halfway through last season. More on Saturday’s The Shop: Uninterrupted on HBO. https://t.co/h3kL9ocpLC
Now, part of the attention that followed came along the lines of “[h]e can’t read a defense yet?” As Twitter does. But what Mahomes is really diving into is how to decipher what a defense is doing, before the snap, so it is a good time to outline what happens in a quarterback’s mind over the course of a single play.