http://www.rantsports.com/nfl/2014/...utm_medium=HUBRecirculation&utm_term=NFLMiami
Nice read...here's a little bit of it.
"With enough talent to finish in the top 10 in most statistical categories, but enough uncertainty to potentially suffer serious regression, the Dolphins’ defense, led by coordinator Kevin Coyle, is, without a doubt, a boom-or-bust unit entering training camp.
The biggest reason for optimism, no doubt, is a high-ceiling pass rush. The Dolphins’ pass rush was solid in 2013, producing the 11th-most sacks in the NFL and finishing fifth in accumulative team pass-rushing productivity by Pro Football Focus’ estimate. But it hasn’t even scratched the surface of its potential.
Led by Cameron Wake, who somehow remains one of the most underrated players in the sport, the Dolphins will terrorize opposing passers in 2014 if everything falls into place, forming the league’s most dangerous pass rush."
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PhinFan1968 To 2020, and BEYOND! Club Member
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Could certainly happen. I like that people are finally seeing what I saw in Olivier Vernon when he was drafted. Hes raw but man can he get after that QB. If he can just take it up another notch we got ourselves our next stud DE. Dion being out hurts us a bit but I think all the moves the front office has made points to Miami as a team thats going to get sacks and turnovers more then having effective yardage stats. Its being designed as a bend but dont break style thats going to get after the QB. Even Earl Mitchell fits that description as well in that hes a good interior pass rusher.
On a different note a rotation of Odrick, Mitchell and Starks (in any order) kind of works against traditional thinking that you need a true "over" NT. As the league becomes more and more about the pass, the interior pass rushers have to evolve as well. Im glad we've caught on to that quicker then a lot of other teams. -
It's too bad we're ranked 32nd and we haven't even played a down!
Tone_E, Da 'Fins, Rocky Raccoon and 2 others like this. -
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PhinFan1968 To 2020, and BEYOND! Club Member
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Nice read, man the season needs to start already. At least give me some training camp notes damn it!!!! 2 days, 2 days.
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BTW off topic, but I just watched the NFL yearbook on the dolphins season. Man that play that Michael Thomas made in your sig picture was pure excellence. Never mind the was the biggest play at the biggest moment, the execution was perfect. Then they show Brady motioning like he had the catch, oh what a heart stopping game.
DPlus47, PhinFan1968 and 77FinFan like this. -
If you look at past SB teams you most commonly see certain positions/elements that excel during those teams magical seasons.
QB
pass rush
Safety (basically TO differential, but most often due to a safety or safety tandem having a great season)
pass catchers
Those four positions/elements coming together during one season are far and away the most commonly recurring denominators in teams that successfully make a championship run. And you almost never see a team make such a run without those elements. Even the '72 Dolphins which were famous for their run game had one of the most efficient pass games in history that season. I saw a correlation analysis several years ago and having a QB and pass rusher (DE or LB) were the most highly correlated positions (+90% and 80% respectively) followed by Safety and WR (>70% each) if I recall correctly. I expanded the WR category to include TE since they're often just big WRs in today's game. I think next was C at about 60%. Every other position was hit or miss. Obviously the probowl isn't proof positive of a player having a great season since there is popularity element to it, but I do believe it is indicative of which positions you need to get great production out of for a championship run. It also meshes with win probability stats that show that passing more efficiently than your opponents (either through a great pass offense or great pass defense or a combo of both) is far and away the stat most correlated with winning.
Having said all that, this Dolphin team has the talent at those critical positions to potentially put together a championship run. Tannehill has shown more than flashes of being special. A good to very good pass rush unit seems to be just scratching the surface of their potential. They have a S in Jones who played at a probowl level just two seasons ago (and personally I think Thomas has the natural instincts to be special). And Wallace and Clay are certainly capable of producing probowl seasons (technically so is Hartline). And once Pouncey gets back you could even add the fifth most correlated position. Obviously potential on paper doesn't mean anything by itself, but the potential is at least there. The biggest factor in how and whether theses elements can reach their potential is the coaching. IMO a good coach can mask OL deficiencies if they're more creative than just keeping a back in and repeating "execute better". We saw that most recently with Seattle last season who's OL was as bad or worse than Miami's most of the year but were hidden/protected through read options, rollouts and such. Fortunately, Lazor brings hope on offense and Coyle does the same on defense.
In summary, while none of this guarantees anything, the elements are there. It certainly wouldn't be surprising for Tannehill, the pass rush, Reshad Jones and Wallace or Clay to have probowl level years. It also wouldn't be surprising if Lazor were to introduce some of the Philly offense to great effect or for Coyle to bring the D back to what we saw two seasons ago or even a few times last season. Some may say that hoping for all of those to happen is wishful thinking and it may be, but reality is that it happens every year for some team. Often for teams with less obvious talent or reason for optimism in all of those elements. Most often it's some team that gets on a run at the right time with an efficient passing offense and a killer pass rush. IMO the talent particularly at QB/pass catchers, DL and in Lazor would hardly make such a run a stretch. So while there are always reasons for pessimism, there are also reasons for optimism. Which side you fall on probably says more about you than the team.HULKFish, jdang307, DPlus47 and 1 other person like this. -
I like Miami's interior pass rush with Odrick and Starks, and Cameron Wake remains one of the very best in football so they should have a good rush.
There's something missing with respect to Earl Mitchell's pass rush.
We'll see if Olivier Vernon develops further than he did in 2013 but in 2013 he was not a very good pass rusher overall. He racked up sacks randomly, a lot of them cleanup sacks, but didn't pressure the passer with high efficiency.
Dion Jordan is suspended 4 games and that will impact him especially with this coaching staff that seems all too willing to put him on a shelf for any excuse. I would say Dion will have 4 games he's missing and another 4 games where his progress/playing time is disrupted. -
Maybe Mitchell, Starks, and Odrick would be better off trying to beat people to the spot, I haven isolated Solai's game last year and all his reps, but man did we stink against the rush, maybe just holding your ground isn't enough against offenses like New England and the bills, I'm really not sure what Mitchell lacks in Paul Solai's skills will be a detriment to us considering he makes up for it with skills that Solai doesn't have..
Considering the abuse we took against the run, I have to say I'm ready for true 4 3 players.. -
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77FinFan likes this.
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But those are only coming in flashes. Most other times it's the kind of "effort" and chase stuff you're referring to. And his pressure rate is just not high regardless of the sack count. Pressure rate is a MUCH better indicator of things to come than pure sack count or sack rate. Sack counts/rates are hugely subject to sample issues. Pressure rates are much more stable and predictive of future success.
His pressure rate just wasn't high. It was about 9.0%. For example, Cameron Wake's is nearly twice that. -
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During the early and middle part of last season, Vernon played well and he had the majority of his sacks during this period of the season . Toward the end of the season, he basically disappeared and he only had one sack over the last four weeks of the season.
In fact he had five of his sacks the first time he played against the Patriots, Bills ,and Jets. This included 3 sacks against the Jets in their first meeting. Over the last three games which were against these same three teams, he had zero sacks and played badly, especially in the Jets and Bills games.
I think Vernon was merely a product of the fact teams were so concerned with Wake early last season that Vernon didn't get much attention and he played against just one blocker on most plays. Once Wake was injured and teams became more aware of Vernon, his play on the field declined quite a bit.
Hopefully he can come back and play at a more consistent level throughout the entire 2014 season, but I think he will probably end up being just an average DE in the NFL over the coming years. I would not be surprised if his nine and a half sacks in 2013 end up being his highest season sack total during his entire NFL playing career.Itsdahumidity likes this. -
Again, pure SACK counts are all but meaningless to me. Studies showing when the sacks occur aren't going to mean much to me. Sometimes they come in waves or bunches, sometimes they come consistently. When they come, what part of the season in which they come, and how often they come is all just a RANDOM function of a player's pressure rate. The pressure rate is what tends to be more stable and sticky.
That said, you are correct that his pressure rate dropped off the planet in the final four games. He went from a 10.8% pressure rate in the first 12 games to a 3.8% pressure rate in the final 4 games. He was terrible. -
Da 'Fins Season Ticket Holder Staff Member Club Member
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Of course Jordan was just a rookie. That counts for something. When OV was a rookie his pressure percentage was a lousy 7.3%. He made improvement but he's still not an efficient pass rusher. His sack totals just make him look that way. -
PhinFan1968 likes this.
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The Dolphins currently have just one star in Wake. That's a problem. The pass rush will be awesome if Jordan emerges as a game changer. OV is a solid player, but we have enough solid players. Good starters will get you a few wins but they won't get you over the hump into the postseason towards title contention. Jordan has more star potential on the edge than OV, imo, and it's studs that move the needs on a team and make a unit great. -
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Anyways, the actual point of my post is that championship teams have elite players at important spots. We need more than just 32 year-old Wake, and I think Jordan has that potential to become a featured splash type of player. -
As for the Dolphins, Wake is clearly top 5 at his position. I would also say that Grimes is top 5 although I wouldn't say CB is an impact position. Going into last year most had Reshad Jones and Pouncey as a top 5 players at their position. I don't believe you specifically need top 5. IMO what you need is very good play in that one season at impact positions. By 2009 nobody would have considered Safety D. Sharper a top 5 player, but he had a great season that year. You actually see that a lot where a player isn't generally considered a top 5 guy but has a great year for a SB team. -
PhinFan1968 To 2020, and BEYOND! Club Member
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I'm not scared of anything on the pats except Brady, Revis, and Gronk...that's it..
We must get to him, cannot sit back in zones, must press small receivers, and bring the heat...playing zone against Brady is like waiting to get tortured. -
PhinFan1968 To 2020, and BEYOND! Club Member
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I don't think it's fair to put the run problems on Soliai or to isolate him thinking it will tell you much because he will look bad and you'll blame him when a big part of the REAL reason was a putrid offense.
Big NTs get tired when Offenses cannot keep the ball and put that big NT on the field for long stretches with 3 and outs in between.
29 Miami 28:27
That was our AVG time of possession last season. Ranked 29th in the league.
Now in the last three games (which were ****ing putrid) we were even WORSE than that at 26:34 (which would be good for 31st in the league as an average).
So, yeah, you could even watch a Pro Bowl NT (which Soliai isn't, imo, but he *is* an above average NT) and isolate them on film and they'd look like **** if their offense never held the ball so they could rest.DPlus47 likes this. -
Tempted at LT but just don't feel like you have to go first round, and impact is watered down on OL where one talented guy is useless unless all five guys protect... whereas one great DL can still get to the QB even if the other three fail to do so. -
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Ironically, the versatility which is his most impressive trait also indirectly makes him seem less productive when we isolate just one stat rather than what he allows the whole defense to do because he is on the field. -
rafael likes this.
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