McDaniel: Fins not ‘good enough,’ changes coming

  • Marcel Louis-Jacques, ESPNOct 1, 2024, 01:27 AM ET

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      Marcel Louis-Jacques joined ESPN in 2019 as a beat reporter covering the Buffalo Bills, before switching to the Miami Dolphins in 2021. The former Carolina Panthers beat writer for the Charlotte Observer won the APSE award for breaking news and the South Carolina Press Association award for enterprise writing in 2018.

MIAMI — After his team’s 31-12 loss Monday night to the Tennessee Titans, “everything is on the table” for Miami Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel, who forecast changes to the NFL’s worst scoring offense through four games.

The Dolphins scored a touchdown late in the fourth quarter Monday to snap a 10-quarter drought without one, and they are averaging just 11.3 points per game. Their 1-3 start is their worst under Mike McDaniel, who said the team was “not even close to good enough.”

“I have to look at the tape. There was a tremendous disconnect between preparation and execution,” McDaniel said. “So, there was a multitude of contributors to it, I believe, but I have to check the tape out. Bottom line is it doesn’t matter what we’re doing behind the scenes. On the field, that’s not even close to good enough, so you just have to go back to the drawing board and assess very critically.”

Miami finished with just 184 total yards against the Titans, 85 of which came on its lone touchdown drive of the night. It converted on just 2 of 12 third-down attempts, dropping it to 3-of-24 over its past two games.

The Dolphins also committed 10 penalties, giving them 21 over the past two weeks.

Starting in place of the injured Skylar Thompson and Tua Tagovailoa, quarterback Tyler Huntley completed 14 of 22 passes for 96 yards. It was Huntley’s first start since signing with the team in Week 3, and several miscues with star wide receiver Tyreek Hill marred the signal-caller’s performance.

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Huntley was charged with a fumble on the Dolphins’ opening drive when a dropped pass by Hill was ruled a backward pass following a replay review. Huntley badly underthrew Hill on what could’ve been an 80-yard touchdown shortly before halftime then overthrew Hill for what would’ve been a 77-yard TD in the third quarter.

“You know, they’re great receivers,” Huntley said. “I’m a pretty good quarterback, so I just got to hone into being on time with them and get more reps on it. That’s the only way we’re going to build is if we get more reps.”

McDaniel said the Dolphins’ playbook was “abbreviated to an extent” for Huntley and that the former Pro Bowler “did some good things.”

Tagovailoa (concussion) remains on injured reserve for at least two more games, and the Dolphins have scrambled for answers without him. Wide receiver Jaylen Waddle said it’s up to the team’s playmakers to be “extra open” for their quarterback in situations like this, while fullback Alec Ingold said the responsibility for the team’s offensive struggles doesn’t just fall on the QB’s shoulders.

“It’s a performance-based industry. I think every man here has a job we have to execute,” Ingold said. “The quarterback is obviously a very important piece of that puzzle, but we need 10 other guys to be performing and executing. It’s a performance-based business that we’re all a part of, so I think it’s more than fair, and I think that’s where you know we’re doing the same thing internally. And to shy away from that because you’re not getting the results I think is weak-minded, and I think we have to we have to attack that; we have to lean into this uncomfortable moment to see what type of team we are and what type of human beings we are.”

Since 1966, 403 teams have started a season with three losses in their first four games; 25 of them made the playoffs that season, including the Super Bowl champion New England Patriots in 2001. However, only 12 of the 263 teams that started 1-4 made the postseason, so there is some historical pressure for the Dolphins when they play at New England in Week 5.

Safety Jevon Holland, who was on the 2021 Dolphins team that started 1-7 before finishing 9-8, said the experience a few seasons ago taught him how to approach Miami’s current slump.

“You really just got to stick together, kind of just revert back to all your fundamentals,” Holland said. “That’s what it is really about. Whatever is happening now or happening the week before, you just have to let it go and move on to the next week. You have to have a clear conscience and have an open conversation just about what needs to change or what needs to happen. Have a real conversation with each other and move on.

“That was, like, a main message was stick together, trust that it’s going to turn around at some point, and we’re just kind of in this slump.”

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