Draft a QB and win games. The article is about legitimate Super Bowl contenders. We're actually on the list. http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap10...olts-jay-cutlers-bears-among-title-contenders Sure, it reeks of someone who doesn't watch our games, but that's what these kind of articles are always like. It's surprising what wins and a shiny new QB can do for a team's image. Just felt it was interesting to note the changing perceptions. I always found it interesting that no matter how bad Mark Sanchez played, he and the Jets still got fairly good coverage. All along, it may not be that the media was anti-Miami. Maybe we just sucked.
I think from a perception standpoint, the national media finally tuned in and saw our rookie Qb play almost near the level of the best Qb prospect ever, having one of the best rookie performances ever.
If the running game can come back and accompany what Tannehill is now doing, that'll keep the defense fresh and high-powered opposing passing games off the field, and this team truly will have a chance to make some noise in the playoffs IMO.
I'd rather fly under the radar. Besides, players always use the ole "nobody believed in us" line as motivation.
I understand what you`re saying to a point, but if we truly want to reach the next level we have to start winning the games that we`re expected to win on a consistent basis. (I.E. road favorites) .Flying under the radar means you sneak up and steal wins when nobody expects you to. The upper echelon teams dominate when they`re fully expected to.Big difference in a teams character.
The best way to gain media attention is to hope your marquee player signs an endorsement deal with Nike, Gatorade or a car manufacturer. The other best way is to play in New York or Boston.
Yes because a Rookie QB threw for 433 yards against our D without his best receiver that hurts the confidence I had just a bit.