Receiver Brian Hartline, asked by Jacksonville writers this week about what it’s like playing here, said: “It will be interesting to see if I’m going to enjoy watching this team get better and get onto a better situation or I might find myself in another offense.”
Asked what he meant by that, Hartline pointed out his contract is expiring. But he strongly suggested he wants to stay: “The organization’s great. I love playing for my coaching staff [and] I think we’re headed on the right track.”
Read more here: http://miamiherald.typepad.com/sports-buzz/#storylink=cpy
This could be interesting. It sounds to me like Hartline might be expecting a pay grade higher than his talent level. If he was a bigger part of the solution and a clutch, go to guy he would have shown a lot more of that in the last 4 years. The WR crew has to be upgrade, it will be upgraded, and I doubt that Ireland will want to pay him more than what a 3 or 4 caliber WR should get. Maybe that one huge game went to his head in an otherwise unremarkable season .
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IMO Hartline should be re-signed at a rate comparable to the significantly above-average #2 receivers in the league.
oakelmpine, Dolfan330, Pandarilla and 8 others like this. -
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IMO, no way is Hartline even a bordeline #1. He's not even close. He's an average at best #2, very good #3 and should be paid that way.GreysonWinfield, mbsinmisc, dolfan22 and 1 other person like this. -
I think the thing about Brian Hartline is where are you going to find a replacement?
(On any street corner, you *******. Hartline is stupid and boring and slow and wasn't drafted high and doesn't hit ANY women)
I think it's hard to find a player you know will be productive and fit the system who you can reasonably slot financially as a #2 receiver in free agency, and drafting one is going to leave at least a very big hole short term and result in a holding pattern at wide receiver. -
I just don't want to over pay his stupid, boring, slow, low-drafted, non-hitting-women ***.Pandarilla and Aqua4Ever04 like this. -
I think it's also worth mentioning that Hartline still has upside. He's playing with a rookie quarterback not lighting the world on fire, in his first year of an offense, and didn't have any training camp/preseason.oakelmpine likes this. -
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oakelmpine likes this.
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dolfan22, Hiruma78, PhinsRDbest and 1 other person like this.
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Pay him Bess + inflation money. Otherwise let him walk if you don't plan to go heavy in free agency and try to recoup a pick. If some team is foolish enough to give him a solid contract we could get a late 4th for him.
PhinsRDbest and ToddPhin like this. -
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dolfan22 likes this.
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They are productive only because they don't scare anyone, yet our lack of weapons means shutting them down is easy and consequence free.
Teams can shut Bess and Hartline down anytime they want, but they don't because they don't respect them, and that would be...mean, cruel, and unsporting?
That doesn't mean you should denigrate Hartline or Bess come up with ridiculous theories for their success or performance or success because they don't get your juices flowing as a fan.
Brian Hartline is a pretty average starting "#1" wide receiver, and he's quite a bit above average league-wide. Denying this I think pretty clearly contradicts Hartline's performance this year, and the actual in-practice performance of #2 wide receivers. The number of teams with two 1,000 yard wide receivers, or who have the capability to reasonably produce that is much lower than you and others seem to believe.Anonymous, Stringer Bell and shouright like this. -
They'd be adequate in reduced roles, but as a starting tandem they're weak and they hamper the entire offense. One less than threating WR on the field is plausible, two is a problem. I'm curious to see what happens when Ross and the FO are asked to vote on how good Hartline really is with checkbook in hand. That should be interesting. And as to the whole 1000 yard thing, if you think that it's ridiculous to think that the third most productive WR in the team is averaging SIX YARDS PER GAME and that effects Hartline's productivity- well, you're entitled to your opinion. -
Give him something comparable to what Bess got.
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Well, it goes both ways and Tanehill certainly isn't without fault. I don't really see a hate fest when it comes to Bess and Hartline, just a general consenus that we'd be best served as a team by increasing the WR talent level and having both of them play lesser roles. Hartline and Bess are pretty much what they have been for the last 4 or 5 years- decent wide receivers. They're larger pieces to the offense this year because Chad Johnson got canned, Naane flamed out and Marlon Moore is a non factor.
Truth be told, both Bess and Hartline have performed better this year than I expected. But that doesn''t change anything in terms of our WR crew being one of the worst, if not the worst in the NFL and in dire need a talent infusion. And if we have to spend big money and draft picks on that position, that pretty much indicates that the incumbents aren't getting the job done. Creeping towards 1000 yards doesn't make either one of them playmakers, just competent receivers on a team that is utterly devoid of a legitimate third option. Hopefully Rishard Matthews can change that.dolfan22 and Aqua4Ever04 like this. -
I don't think any GM would be satisfied with the overall composition of the Dolphins receiving targets, but Hartline/Bess as being unacceptable in any meaningful role is not something that is really supportable by anything tangible. Not by the composition in terms of talent of highly successful passing offenses, or for that matter anything that doesn't fall under a measure of fan hype.
What then? Are opposing defenses being charitable?
If either of them were going to end up with 130+ target workloads, then that would be worth consideration. It's not a particularly big stretch that Brian Hartline is as productive as he is next year as a #2. -
Ironically, the raw rookie (without BM) without a true # 1 WR, is only 91 total passing yards (for #1-#3 WR, BH, DB and MM) behind last years numbers... and that was with Mat Moore and Henne too...
Not bad for a rookie don't you thinK... -
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"There is no measurement of "threat". The idea that Hartline and Bess produce only because they're not considered threats does not stand up to the fact by that measure with have nothing close to other threats. If Brian Hartline and Davone Bess are not drawing adequate scrutiny from defenses, no one is.
What then? Are opposing defenses being charitable?"
-- First of all, that second sentence of yours makes almost no sense.
Second, as to the concept of being a receiving threat both Bess & Hartline have a whopping combined 2 touchdowns and aren't exactly consistent go-to receivers in clutch time. Stating that there is "no measurement of threat" is just semantic nonsense.
Third, opposing defenses aren't being charitable- they're often putting 8 men in the box and stifling/constricting our offense to the point that it's been described as a terminal red zone offense, because Hartline and Bess are not threats and do not stretch the field. 1000 yards receiving on the year isn't some kind of magical number, it's around 60 yards/game over the course of a 16 game season, and there is always garbage time yardage to consider. It's not necessarily a reflection of prime time, clutch play- or either receiver being a legitimate threat. -
It sure as **** isn't Reggie Bush. He does a good enough job taking himself out of games.
Also putting a safety in the box doesn't have a tremendous amount to do with respecting or not respecting either the passing or run game in the modern NFL. It's as much a method as improving your pass defense as anything in the modern NFL. -
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He should look at Antonio Brown's extension, then ask for half of that.
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Disgustipate likes this.
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Antonio Brown has one noteworthy year of production in his NFL career:
2011- 69 receptions, 1,108 yards, 2 touchdowns.
Brian Hartline is on pace for the following this year:
76 receptions , 1138 yards, 1.23 touchdowns
Somehow, Antonio Brown is double as good as Brian Hartline. Why? Because he's not currently on the Dolphins? Because his name has been on TV more? The intellectual argument is so much less developed than the emotional it isn't even remotely funny. -
-- H&B are decently productive because they are decent receivers and there are no other WRs to take up any slack, leaving almost the entire body of work to those two. 60 yards per game or so isn't anything to write home about - it's not just the quantity of yards that counts, it's the quality. Bess had a good game against Seattle, Hartline had his career game. Other than that both have been pretty vanilla, but Hartline did have a couple other 100 yard games, which was nice. Defenses are loading the box and trying to take away the running game, to answer your question.
-- Touchdowns aren't an end all and be all measuring stick, but they are important. As to the issue of them not being go-to or clutch receivers, you didn't touch that one- no surprise there, because they aren't.
-- You keep harping on this point that I'm saying B&H are productive because defenses don't respect them- that's not the case. What I am saying, repeatedly, is that we basically have no 3rd or 4th WR options, so B&H are dividing nearly the entire WR yardage pie between themselves. There are for all intents and purposes no other WR options. Opposing defenses are disrespecting B&H, loading the box and playing tight to the LOS, which has an effect on our running game and our short passing game because we can't regularly stretch the field. That's the major consequence of defenses not respecting B&H, but logic would dictate that having a S close to the LOS should make life easier on B&H. And what price do the defenses pay? Giving up 60 relatively inconsequential "whoopey doo" yards to B&H per game? Big deal. And of course the whopping 2 TDs.
--As to this:
"Also putting a safety in the box doesn't have a tremendous amount to do with respecting or not respecting either the passing or run game in the modern NFL. It's as much a method as improving your pass defense as anything in the modern NFL."
You're kidding, right? If that safety isn't being used to blitz, 8 in the box is a reflection of choosing to defend the run because the deep passing threat isn't so great.
Is your point of view basically that since B&H might get 1000 yards receiving each- 60 yards per game or so- while being piss poor at scoring TDs and rarely game changers- and therefore must be very good WRs? And the main evidence is this 1000 yard mark? Consider that question rhetorical, because I don't want to spend any more time on this. They are average receivers- Bess is an average 3rd down slot receiver who shouldn't be starting and Hartline is a decent #2 at best. And I repeat, at best. in my book he's a 3 or 4. Jmo of course.dolfan22, Bpk and Rhody Phins Fan like this. -
Sometimes I think you're better off using posts like the one responded to above to identify whom to put on ignore, rather than responding to them. -
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This is just like the James Jones debate. The guy has 9TD's on a team with a plethora of receiving threats and over 600 yards, but because one number is smaller than the other, Hartline must be better and all TD's must be disregarded because I say so.jim1 likes this.
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