Teams Miami Dolphins - The Fins

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ROBBED!!!! Damn refs cost the Dolphins this game against the Steelers! Should be 4-2 instead of 3-3 because the refs couldn't be bothered doing their damn jobs of looking for who recovered the fumble due to that horrible incorrect last TD call. These aweful NFL refs must have been taking NBA ref classes because they keep ginving every benefit of the doubt to the favourites. Utter bullshit!
 
ROBBED!!!! Damn refs cost the Dolphins this game against the Steelers! Should be 4-2 instead of 3-3 because the refs couldn't be bothered doing their damn jobs of looking for who recovered the fumble due to that horrible incorrect last TD call. These aweful NFL refs must have been taking NBA ref classes because they keep ginving every benefit of the doubt to the favourites. Utter bullshit!

Yeah i'm not happy. With that many cameras at the game, how can they not see who recovered the fumble????
 
I'm just posting now so that the Dolphins appear at the top of page one! :>
 

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As Adam Schefter noticed this week, the Dolphins have trotted out 16 QBs since Dan Marino retired in 2000: Jay Fiedler, Damon Huard, Ray Lucas, Brian Griese, A.J. Feeley, Sage Rosenfels, Gus Frerotte, Joey Harrington, Daunte Culpepper, Cleo Lemon, Trent Green, John Beck, Chad Pennington, Chad Henne, Tyler Thigpen, and now, Matt Moore.

Here is copy of a great publication I collected back in the day.. still undetermined (at the time) which team to follow.

FootballDigest069.jpg
 
Maybe the Dolphins will finally learn something & invest a 1ST ROUND pick on a QB!

The last 2 QB's they drafted in the 1st round are in the HOF Marino & Griese!

FYI - plenty of 2nd round picks that didn't work out!
Traded a 2nd for AJ Feely
Traded a 2nd for Culpepper
Drafted John Beck in the 2nd
Drafted Chad Henne in the 2nd
Drafted Pat White in the 2nd

How well did those pickups work out?????

Suck For Luck is on......
 
Fins passed on him twice! That makes it worse.

Also passed on Aaron Rodgers for Ronnie Brown
 
Something to be ecstatic about, all you Dolphins fans. Not only 3 win streak, and smashing opponents each of those wins, but Matt Moore is playing at an elite level.

I remember his college coach saying that if he got a chance in the NFL he's just as talented as Brady etc and 'could' surprise in time.

Matt Moore is the new Kyle Orton

Dolphins quarterback Matt Moore is the new Kyle Orton. I mean that as a compliment.

He’s the guy no franchise fully wants starting in Week One, but he’s proven that he belongs in the NFL. Moore probably has a higher ceiling than Orton, who has won 33 games as a starter and is earning $9 million this year.

Moore would be getting even more attention if he didn’t play for a 3-7 team. Consider Moore’s numbers the last three weeks:

He’s completed 51-of-73 passes (69.8%) for 613 yards (8.39 yards-per-attempt) with six touchdowns and one interception. The Dolphins have won three straight games by a combined score of 86-20.

To put the yards-per-attempt average in perspective, that number would rank in the top five among quarterbacks this season. Moore has completed a lot of nice touch passes into small windows.

“He is everything we need him to be. He is doing a great job. He’s a huge, huge, difference-maker,” running back Reggie Bush said via the Miami Herald.

Moore is already inspiring some talk in Miami about whether he should have a future with the team. At worst, he looks like a fine candidate to pair with a first round pick that is Miami’s true “quarterback of the future.”

The Dolphins signed Moore through 2012, so his play probably means the team won’t bother to re-sign Chad Henne. We’re not saying Moore is an elite player, but he’s made a name for himself the last month.

Moore can really get noticed on Thanksgiving if he beats Dallas, the team that first signed Moore as an undrafted free agent before cutting him in training camp.
 
Surely not?

Movement Starts in Miami to Save Sparano

On Sunday, I noted the Dolphins have to be one of the best 4-8 teams of all time.

Their recent surge has sparked the early stages of a movement in Miami that was unimaginable when the Dolphins were 0-7. There is some momentum towards keeping Tony Sparano.

Edward Pope of the Miami Herald wrote a column on Monday saying to bring back coach Sparano and G.M. Jeff Ireland for another season.

Armando Salguero of the same paper isn’t so sure, asking if the Dolphins lack talent or did they just underperform early in the season?

This is the perfect question to ask. Even though Sparano has his team playing well now, why have they lost so many games during which they looked like the better team? This has been a recurring theme during Sparano’s tenure.

The Dolphins players have come out strongly in support of Sparano.

“He needs to stay, man,” linebacker Karlos Dansby told Ben Volin of the Palm Beach Post. “I’m going to push for him. We just started slow. We have a great coach.”

Volin notes that players credit the turnaround in part to lightening up on players in practice. It’s fair to wonder if a better coach would have changed gears a little earlier.

“His methods are obviously working,” outside linebacker Cameron Wake said of Sparano. “On the fun meter, I think we’re at the top of the league. Swag meter, too.”

Well, there it is. Ranked No. 1 on the swag meter. It would be tough to let go of Sparano if that holds.
 
Why I ask "surely not"...

Why didn't they play like this from the start and be 8-4 not 4-8? It's always frustrating when a generally bad or underperforming team and HC, suddenly puts it together at the end of a season when they have no shot at the playoffs, then they bring him back and retain such and such players thinking next year it will grow from there, but instead they continue to be bad or underperforming....especially when you also have a shot at a 1st round franchise QB, but the average back-up ends up playing really well, so they don't draft the QB and then that average QB gets exposed the following year and it's another missed opportunity and wasted year.
 

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Fans etc were calling for Alex Ferguson's head in his 4th season in charge of Man Utd. People were saying Belicheck's poor communication skills at the Browns would see the end of his HC career. Mark Thompson nearly got the arse from Geelong just before their great run.

What matters is how they've playing recently.
 
Dolphins GM Jeff Ireland confirmed Tuesday that he's seeking an upgrade on Matt Moore at quarterback this offseason.
"We need a quarterback that can lead us over the hump," Ireland said. "This is a quarterback league. We have to do our best to make our position better." Moore deserves a chance to compete for the starting job in 2012, but it's hard to fault the organization setting its sights on a franchise-caliber QB (Matt Flynn is the obvious candidate to follow Joe Philbin to Miami). At the very least, Moore's strong second-half has earned him perhaps a decade in the league as a high-end backup.
Related: Matt Flynn
Source: Miami Herald
Jan 24 - 1:25 PM

List prospective names.
 
Miami Dolphins: Owner Steve Ross Unfiltered

Somehow, in the world wind that was the NFL’s owner’s meets earlier this week, we missed a message Miami Dolphins owner Steve Ross intentionally wanted sent to YOU, the fan.

Dolphins owner Steve Ross wants a "more transparent" team.

Ross has talked about his team becoming more transparent, and the Dolphins are making strides in that direction (strides doesn’t mean they’ve achieved it….baby steps people).

Here is Ross’ statement direction to his team’s fan base.

“I would just want to thank the really good fans. We’re going to be engaging with you a lot more the fans. I think you’re going to see a different organization. You saw what we did here when we visited newspapers. We’re going to be a lot more responsive and I think you’re going to see that in the future.”

Here’s EVERYTHING Ross has to say to the media at the NFL owner’s meetings on Monday.

I figured the hardcore Dolphins’ fans would prefer reading this straight, with no chaser.

Ross: “I thank you guys for coming and giving us this opportunity to talk to you and talk to our fans, which I think is very important. It’s been great to know and I think we’ve all seen it in the last week or two how passionate our fans are. I think that’s the good news and the bad news. I think it’s great they are passionate. We have great fans in South Florida and we all have one thing in common, we all want to see a winning football team. I guess everybody has ideas how do you get there but I’m very excited the way things are going on. We’ve had a lot of changes as you know. We have a new football coach. I think he once said, I’ve been speaking to him…he said you know, I thought it’d be great here but it’s even better than I thought it would be. I’m really enjoying being here and I think he’s very excited about what he’s doing and the direction he feels he can take this team and the great energy he’s really brought to our whole organization. We’ve also made some changes in the business side and Mike Dee is doing a great job from that standpoint. I think we probably have the best organization that the Dolphins have had in a long time. So I’m very excited about that. It also gives us a great chance to really engage in our fans. The time is right so I’m open to any questions and Mike (Dee) and Jeff (Ireland) are here and they can chime in.”

(On how he addresses the concern that the fan believe the organization is in disarray) – “I don’t think all the fans feel that way. I think there probably hasn’t been enough communication with them. We’re going to engage in that a lot more. I feel that with the changes we’ve had, I mean if people look at it today and they say hey, you haven’t gone out and gotten major free agents that maybe people thought you might have had. We look it at we’re in the process. Free agency has a period to run. I don’t know if there are a lot of major names out there but there’s the draft. There’s a whole plan that we have set forth. Some things go well; some things don’t go as you would have like them to go. I think you know what I’m referring to from that standpoint with regard to Peyton Manning. We’re looking to really take this football team to a different level.”

(On what Brandon Marshall did to concern him to not be on the team) – “That’s history. We want to go on. We wish him the best. That’s really behind us. It was a trade. He wasn’t cut and we think we got fair value. We think the football team is better for it.”

(On the decision to call the fan) – “I’m a passionate fan as they are. And when you really realize someone’s passionate enough they are going to go out and protest that’s the kind of person I want to talk to. I asked Mike (Dee) to find out who the fans were, who I could talk to somebody who’s that passionate.”

(On if he thinks this team is a playoff team or rebuilding) – “We think we have a fine nucleus. I think we’re excited about where we’re going. Rome wasn’t built in a day. When I came in here how poor the team was performing I think it’s done better. We were all very disappointed…I was like everybody else with the start we had last year. You saw what happen; you see the nucleus of this team. They continue to fight and I think they surprised everybody. I don’t think anybody’s ever had a turn around the last part of the season with a miserable start that they had. I think it tells a lot about the team and the personnel that we have. I think certainly we know where there are some weaknesses. We are looking at that. We look to really correct that.”

(On Coach Philbin in his tenure thus far) – “He’s much better than I even thought. I was excited about him. I wanted a coach that really came from a winning organization. The energy he’s brought to that, the staff that he’s assembled and the plan that he has, I think you’re going to see a lot more energy from this organization. I think you’re going to like the offense that he has. We all talked about offense. Everybody was always asking me do I want to open it up a little bit. I think we got the guy who really put together the best offense in the NFL. I think it’s very exciting. I think we’re going to see an exciting brand of football. We certainly have pieces we need to put together.”

(On how concerned he is with the perception of his franchise right now) – “You always want to be concerned. You listen to it. That’s why I really want to engage the fans. That’s why I made the phone calls. I think it’s unfair but look winning really resolves all issues. It’s like we haven’t lost anything. We all knew where we were at the end of the season. We’ve made some major changes and we’ll continue to look to upgrade the team anyway we can.”

(On the heat his General Manager has taken) – “I think it’s unfair. I don’t like it. I don’t think Jeff (Ireland) likes it. I think it’s unfair. I think the ideas were the fact that we didn’t get Peyton Manning. I think the fact that we are right in the middle of the process. It’s an unfinished product and I think to judge him at this point in time is not the right thing to do by anybody.”

(On if he reached out to more than one fan or just the one fan so far) - “I spoke to two fans.”

(On his decision to fire Tony Sparano and retain Jeff Ireland) - “I mean if you look at his past, I think he’s done a great job with the draft. He’s a great talent evaluator. He is somebody who is as hard working as anybody I’ve ever met. He’s as smart as they come with the football side. And I think the idea is what are you judging him on. I think that the team is certainly not the same team that it was when he started here. It’s a lot better. When people feel that you should be there, that’s when the greatest frustration always is. I think we’re a lot closer and you got to get the brakes but you play the game to win. I mean, I’m interested in winning football games.”

(On how to excite the fans and getting a franchise quarterback) - “Well we’re going to keep looking certainly for upgrading that. I’m very excited about Matt Moore. We got so many people that really liked what Matt Moore did last year and I think as he got more experience the team got better. That’s a good place to start with and if we could continue that, that’d be great. There’s a lot of good personnel on that team.”

(On if there a miscalculation on the interest level that Peyton Manning would have in the Dolphins) – “I felt like a lot of people, I met with his father earlier in December. We spoke about it. He loves South Florida. I think it came down to he wanted be placed where he didn’t know anybody in our house. He wanted to be comfortable. He’d been at two teams his whole life and I think he judged it based on the fact where he would feel most comfortable where he had familiar faces around him. Because that’s what he was used to. But you know we gave it a big effort. He was the only franchise quarterback out there that we saw and what he could do for that team. Look it.. I went after him. If I didn’t go after him I wouldn’t be interested in really winning. I want to win today not tomorrow. It didn’t happen.”

(On how much he has learned in the last three years about being an NFL owner) - “It’s a real experience. I’ve had more owners come up to me and say hey, I didn’t know what was going on for four or five years once you step in there. This is a different business. You can succeed in business. It’s a lot easier to do that then it is, and it’s not that easy to do that in these times, but it’s difficult to really win. You know what players you want but that doesn’t mean you can get them. And there are a lot of things that are just out of your control. We’re all competitive as hell and I haven’t lost in many things and I’m not planning on losing here.”

Here’s Jeff Ireland addressing some questions.

Jeff Ireland: (On if he should not have been as powerful in saying he was going to address the quarterback situation) - “I don’t have any second thoughts on trying to address the quarterback position. I made it very clear that quarterback position needs to play better for us to have the ultimate success. I think we have addressed the quarterback position. There was in our estimation, there was one franchise quarterback out there that became available. We took a shot at him. We didn’t sit on the sideline hoping and wishing. We went after him. We didn’t achieve that goal. Other than that I think a lot is to be said about Matt Moore and what he was able to accomplish last year with limited, no OTA’s, limited training, limited knowledge of the offseason. He finished us 6-9. I have a great respect. I have a lot of confidence in Matt Moore. The second part of the plan if we didn’t achieve the Peyton Manning aspect was to provide a competitive atmosphere at the quarterback position to raise the play of the quarterback position. We felt like we’ve done that. We weren’t going to be reckless and go after players that we didn’t definitively think can beat out Matt Moore. We weren’t going to do that. We want to provide competitive environment at the quarterback position to raise the game of either Matt Moore or the competitor and we feel like we’ve done that with a seasoned veteran. A guy that’s been started a lot of games in this profession. I feel like he’s got a lot left. So we feel good where we are at the quarterback position at this time.”

(On the scrutiny that’s been coming his way) - “Comes with the job. It’s not my first time to have a little adversity. I think adversity is the companion of a champion or the enemy of the weak. So I believe in that. With responsibility becomes visibility and you know like Steve (Ross) said we have some passionate fans, as passionate as any place I’ve ever been. They have a right to voice their opinion and we’ve got to do a better job of communicating with our fans and making sure that we’re a little bit more transparent of what we’re trying to get accomplished. Steve’s made that point as well and we’re going to try to do that. But at the end of the game it’s about finding football players and winning games. And right now we’re in the finding football process and five months from now we’ll be winning, hopefully winning games.”

(On the final plan) - “Well I am not going to get into exactly what the plans are, we’re right in the middle of free agency. We’re trying to prepare for the draft fellas. And we’re trying to attack our musts. I think we did a pretty good job of retaining Paul Soliai which was a must. Keeping the inside front for the most part intact. We felt like upgrading the secondary was a position of need for us, the cornerback position. So we addressed that need. We’re going to continue to attacking our musts whether it be from a depth perception. We needed depth at the offensive line. We needed some more special teams players. So we’re addressing some of those. Maybe not all musts. There’s several needs and wants but we’re keeping our philosophy intact and that’s going after value in free agency and continuing to build through the draft.”

Stephen Ross: (On Tim Tebow becoming available and if he considered bringing him here) – “We’ll I talked to the coach. He didn’t really fit our system and you’re not going to bring someone in just to sell seats. Therefore we kind of dismissed that early on because the coach has an idea where he wants to take this team and how it’s going to perform and you get players who can really fit in that system and Tim Tebow didn’t fit in that system.”

(On extending players’ contracts) - “Let me tell you, money will never be an issue for us becoming a winning football team that I can tell you right now. We have to live with the limitations of the salary cap as all teams do. Sometimes, you lose players. You have to put your money where you really think it’s going to make the biggest impact. But I think we have a lot of players expiring and we got to make sure we don’t make stupid mistakes by signing players with big names, with big salary bonuses that are really going to impact the cap. So you have to take that into consideration. The one thing I’ve learned in response to your question is this is one hell of a complex business. I got to tell you (laughing). Trying to figure out how you’re going to do things and maneuver things around within this system. And I think that’s very important and certainly those players that we know that are coming up we all know we want to retain them. We have to make sure we’re in a position to do that.”

Jeff Ireland: (On having a capable right guard and right tackle starters now on the roster) - “Well, like I said, we added some depth with Artis Hicks. I think he’s started somewhere along the line of 70 games in his career. He’s certainly something we needed to address more depth at the tackle position. We got John Jerry returning. We got Nate Gardner returning. We got Ryan Cook returning. We got some other young players there that have some upside so we feel fairly good at that position. But we’re going to continue to address the offensive line needs. That’s one must that we’re going to continue to do.”

Stephen Ross: “One of the great things when we were interviewing with Coach (Joe) Philbin was his emphasize on developing players and teaching technique and I think this is important. I think you’re going to see these players develop better than they have been in the past. I really have a lot faith in his ability and his belief that we have a good nucleus that he can develop to be a winning football team.”

(On Coach Joe Philbin’s development of players impact not signing big name free agents) – “Absolutely, it’s always better to do that. I think if at examples that we all look at clearly after evaluating him with what Green Bay has done. We should only get there. Question is; it starts this year. It’s great, but certainly it’s the best way to go. The best teams are really built through the draft. We want consistency here. I don’t want to come in one year and say hey we won it and back being below a .500 team. I want to be in the playoffs every year. I want to be in the hunt and you’re going to do that with consistency. You’re going to do that in the draft. You’re going to do that by being smart and having the right people there. I think we’re building a nucleus of that.”

(On not getting your first option as far as coaches and players, striking out on Jim Harbaugh, Jeff Fisher and Peyton Manning) – “You know what, I’ll do it again and again. I’m going to be bold and you know what you don’t lose for trying. And if I could find the right guy, I’m going to be bold and getting him. I can’t worry about losing because nothing ventured, nothing gained.”

Jeff Ireland: (On not trading up for the #2 pick in the draft, were you in the conversation) - “We had early conversations with them. I don’t want to get into depth of what we were willing to give up to obtain that pick. We had some early conversations with them, yeah.”

Stephen Ross: (On Cleveland willing to match that amount) - “I don’t want to say that what we did because we didn’t [get the pick].”

Jeff Ireland: (On talking about the Washington Redskin trading up for the #2 draft pick) -“That’s up to them. That’s the Washington Redskins and we’re the Miami Dolphins. And we got to conduct business the way we feel that’s right way to do business.”

Stephen Ross: (On players comments about the Miami Dolphins) – “I know one player that did that. You’re always going to find somebody that’s going to say something for whatever reason. Players might say that because they were dropped. They didn’t make the team. Other players came here and we didn’t meet their salary demands. People always want to say something because they like being in the spotlight often times. I know one thing, this is probably the best place in the NFL to play football and it will never stop us from getting another player in this organization. Players will want to play for this organization. The reputation that Coach (Joe) Philbin has and what he’s going to attract here and what we’re doing. I wouldn’t go with what one or two people might say.”

So, does any of this change your viewpoint at all about the team’s direction?
 
There's also a video discussion inside link...



Watt says he picked up Dolphins’ snap count from Hard Knocks

Posted by Mike Florio on September 11, 2012, 6:28 PM EDT
350x-128-e1347402358654.jpg

Do not ask for whom the bell tolls. The bell tolls for Hard Knocks.

Texans defensive end J.J. Watt delivered a potential death blow to the show on Tuesday, explaining on NBC Network’s Pro Football Talk that he picked up the Dolphins’ snap count by watching the show.

He was a little sheepish and guarded when explaining it to co-host Erik Kuselias, saying that the same information can be picked up from the preseason game broadcasts. But Watt said that it helped.

And that one line could provide future coaches and G.M.’s with the ammunition they need to push back against an owner who decides he wants to be a carnival barker.

Dolphins coach Joe Philbin said in June that the choice to do Hard Knocks was a football decision. Yes, it was. A bad football decision.
It did nothing to help the team win. It routinely televised embarrassing and sensitive moments involving players, driving a wedge between the organization and its most important employees and potentially making it harder (and costlier) to attract free agents to South Florida.

Though we love the show, no owner who wants to establish a football program that consistently wins games should ever want to do it. There’s nothing to gain, and plenty to lose.
 
There's also a video discussion inside link...



Watt says he picked up Dolphins’ snap count from Hard Knocks

Posted by Mike Florio on September 11, 2012, 6:28 PM EDT
350x-128-e1347402358654.jpg

Do not ask for whom the bell tolls. The bell tolls for Hard Knocks.

Texans defensive end J.J. Watt delivered a potential death blow to the show on Tuesday, explaining on NBC Network’s Pro Football Talk that he picked up the Dolphins’ snap count by watching the show.

He was a little sheepish and guarded when explaining it to co-host Erik Kuselias, saying that the same information can be picked up from the preseason game broadcasts. But Watt said that it helped.

And that one line could provide future coaches and G.M.’s with the ammunition they need to push back against an owner who decides he wants to be a carnival barker.

Dolphins coach Joe Philbin said in June that the choice to do Hard Knocks was a football decision. Yes, it was. A bad football decision.
It did nothing to help the team win. It routinely televised embarrassing and sensitive moments involving players, driving a wedge between the organization and its most important employees and potentially making it harder (and costlier) to attract free agents to South Florida.

Though we love the show, no owner who wants to establish a football program that consistently wins games should ever want to do it. There’s nothing to gain, and plenty to lose.

Sums it all up really. we suck lol
 
Sums it all up really. we suck lol
Pretty much

It's all about trying to draw a crowd

The crowds are dwindling, and they're failing in other markets

Problem is, the average fan in Miami is very poor, and there
Is little corporate strength, it is a holiday city

The organisation needs to work with the NFL to move home games to Saturday night, bringing in a new market

Secondly, they need to recruit from the CFL for the offensive and defensive line
They may not be as big of body, but are far more agile
They keep playing catch up, but, could easily be playing leader, as the game continues to evolve
 
Posting it here too....

Dolphins don’t deny leaked image is their new logo

new-dolphins-logo.jpg


An image of what appears to be a new helmet logo for the Dolphins recently emerged, via the fan site DolfansNYC.com.

On Wednesday, Dolphins CEO Mike Dee addressed the rumored logo leak on Twitter, without specifically denying that the leaked image is the new logo.

“Lots of buzz re logos,” Dee said. “Love the passion! We continue to explore a # of design alternatives…final decision by Draft.”

Of course, he didn’t admit it, either. It’s possible that the logo is simply one of several potential choices.

Either way, change is coming for the Dolphins. Their fans surely would prefer that change come in the form of improved performance.
 

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