When Bill Parcells and Jeff Ireland took over this team, they immediately began work constructing the offensive and defensive lines, also known as "the trenches."
Jake Long was a first overall pick. Richie Incognito was signed despite his history of behavioral issues (which he has corrected). John Jerry was drafted in the third round. Mike Pouncey was a first-round pick.
On the defensive side, Randy Starks was signed. Paul Soliai was franchised and then signed. Cameron Wake was signed. Jared Odrick was drafted in the first round.
Now, fast-forward to today, and what you see is that these moves are paying off in utter dominance in the ground game on both sides of the ball. This is the second week in a row we have looked very good running the ball, while being virtually unable to be run on.
Arian Foster had 79 yards on the ground against us, but only 3.0 yards per carry, which was well below his career average of 4.6. The Texans as a team averaged only 2.4 yards per carry against us, which is very poor.
The Raiders fared even worse. Darren McFadden averaged 2.0 yards per carry against us, well below his career average of 4.6, and he gained only 22 yards on the game. The Raiders as a team averaged only 1.6 yards per carry, which is horrendous.
On the offensive side of the ball, Reggie Bush rushed for 69 yards against the Texans, at 4.9 yards per carry, before the game got lopsided and the running game had to be abandoned.
Of course we know what Reggie Bush did yesterday against the Raiders. As a team, the Dolphins rushed for 263 yards and 6.1 yards per carry, which represents utter dominance on the ground.
Overall, what you see here IMO is that the focus we've put on those nine players in the trenches -- the five offensive linemen and the four defensive linemen -- is resulting in our ability to run the ball very well and to make other teams one-dimensional by taking away their running game.
This will be huge going forward with a rookie quarterback, and I submit it's what will enable us to be competitive in every game we play this year if we can protect the ball and keep from turning it over like we did against the Texans.
What you saw against the Texans was that we were competitive in a game against a very good team, based on large part on our play in the trenches, until we turned the ball over repeatedly and gave the game away. We ran the ball well and stopped the run, which allowed us to control the game and remain competitive against a very good team until our turnovers lost the game for us.
What you saw against the Raiders was that, when there were no turnovers at all against a poorer team, we simply dominated the game, fueled in large part by these same areas -- the offensive and defensive lines.
What this tells me is that we have the tools -- the players in the trenches -- to be competitive with any team in the league if we don't give the game away.
And that signals to me that this team has much more talent than many of us have thought.
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The play in these two areas should not go unnoticed. Even rookie Kheeston Randall has gotten into the act, playing pretty well in the space vacated by Tony McDaniel.
In his press conference yesterday, Joe Philbin said, "Our identity right now is we've got to run the ball effectively and stop the run."
This from a coach who - when he was hired - acknowledged that this is a passing league and the Dolphins would be throwing the ball around 60% of the time.
I think he would still like to get to that point offensively, but with a rookie QB and the state of our receivers/tight ends, he recognizes where our strength lies and is playing to it.
New York will very much be a litmus test for ground game. The Texans game convinced me we can line up and run on just about anybody, but the Jets add that schematic dimension to the equation.
Offensively it's a Tony Sparano offense. They want to run it and throw deep. That is exactly what Joe Philbin says we aim to stop defensively, stop the run and take away the deep ball. -
I agree. We have the best DT tandem in football, then you add Cam Wake to that mix, and yeah, you can argue that the Dolphins have the best defensive line in football. Long and Pouncey might be the best at their positions, and Incognito is very good. 3/5ths is not bad.
This reality suggests that this team is a lot closer than people think, and is the reason why you should be adding to this mix and not subtracting. -
This is the third time in, what, four years that we've beaten the Raiders, and by virtually the same score. Nothing's changed; the 2012 Dolphins have repeated the results of prior Sparano squads. That's not indicative of improvement, let alone being anywhere near close to the playoffs.
This team still lacks the game-changing talent necessary to become just merely good.cdz12250, MrClean, finfansince72 and 4 others like this. -
I'm worried about Long though.
He still shows up in the run game. But we're seeing him beaten and overpowered in pass pro.
I don't think he's quite right physically (again).Ducken, Mexphin, Tone_E and 1 other person like this. -
I'm not saying the Dolphins are good. I'm saying they are so lacking in true game-changing talent they cannot be considered merely good, let alone great. And forget about elite. In other words, the Dolphins are not very talented, therefore they are bad, and repeating the same results from the last two Raiders games doesn't change that.shouright likes this. -
The offensive line is far better than last years since they have at least put the parts in place on the right. Martin looked much better yesterday and Jerry had a good game. If they can get Jerry motivated and keep him that way we should be a pretty good offensive line for the foreseeable future. Now they need to stop getting Long dinged up in the preseason.
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The only thing I'm worried about is Odrick. While good in the run game, he has been non existent in the passing game. With the way to Soliai and Starks are playing inside, I don't see Odrick moving back inside or getting many snaps in there. I don't know what they are going to do with that situation. But Odrick is an extremely good talent and a really good pass rusher from the inside, and he is just being neutralized by this coaching staff. Again, not sure of their options though.Boik14 likes this. -
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It's still early, but after Week 2 it looks like it is not quite the passing league that it looked like last year. Compare the passing numbers of Brady, Brees, Rodgers, Stafford, Newton, etc. to last year and there is a big difference. Not sure why. But trends tend to come and go in the NFL and maybe power football isn't dead. We are very strong in the trenches and if we can avoid turnovers (and actually get a few), this season could play out very differently than most people thought. Again, it's early, but looking at the upcoming schedule virtually every game looks "winnable" except maybe the Niners game on the road. Even the Pats look vulnerable.
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Couple of stats
Reggie Bush is currently the NFL's second-leading rusher, and averaging a healthy 6.0 ypc.
The Dolphin defense is #4 in yards per game (53), and #1 in yards per attempt (2.2). Impressive considering the Dolphins two opponents ranked 2nd and 7th rushing in 2011.
One thing I've noticed thru two games, Cam Wake is lining up pretty consistently on the left side. Not just on third downs as in years past. And it doesn't matter if it's the strong side or not. I think you have to call him the LE now. Just interesting how we have the 260-pound guy known for pass rush over there and the 300-pound defensive tackle over left tackle.
As for John Jerry, Joe Rose said this morning that he's no longer being fined for his weight, which suggests he's officially on weight and no longer out of shape.Killer Bees, infiltrateib and shouright like this. -
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It's said/ironic that the talented areas on this team - run and run D - are now antiquated strategies for success in the NFL.finyank13 likes this. -
finyank13 likes this.
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Im not treating him like a normal 4-3 DE. Im treating him like Jared Odrick. Who is a really good pass rusher and a really good player. In 2 games he has been less then visible in the passing game. Which is the definition of mis-using him. When your 2nd best pass rusher is non-existent because hes playing out of position, again thats the definition of being mis-used.
Like I said that, with the way the interior has played, this coaching staff doesn't have much options. But how often are we seeing him being rotated inside where he is at his best? -
While Odrick isn't much of a passrusher, he is great against the run. Ultimately that helps the pass defense, even if its more an indirect effect.
Ideally, Shelby will continue to impress in the snaps he's given, and he will start getting more reps. But I don't think this is an issue that you necessarily look at negatively.GMJohnson, ToddPhin, Ohio Fanatic and 1 other person like this. -
1. Defenses having a full offseason and training camp with no silly lockouts.
2. Scab refs allowing contact downfield like its 80's style football. I heard Carl Banks talking about it on the Giants radio broadcast and I heard it mentioned during the Sunday Night game....these refs are allowing DB's to make contact downfield regularly. And when they do call something its been defensive holding not PI. Defensive holding is a 5 yard penalty and a first down while PI is at the spot of the foul. So if your a DB why not just a hold a guy when youre beaten instead of giving up the big play? We arent seeing big plays at the same rate we were (tell that to Eli Manning and his 510 yards yesterday lol) unless its via exceptional QB play. IMO defensive backs were playing scared the last few years but now theyre testing these replacement refs who arent used to calling NFL games and NFL rules necessarily and theyre getting away with things they couldnt get away with under the regular refs. -
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It was a honest question from me. At times watching from a bar its tough for me to see rotating on the inside -
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It's just it's literally that and a holding penalty people are claiming he's declined on which is kinda well questionable. -
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I do agree that a return to balance would be good for the league.... -
Fire Ireland for attempting to upgrade Columbo with a draft pick wth was he thinking?
On a serious note nice write up though OP. There are good signs of the pieces coming together if they maintain whats here and add to the puzzle next year I can see a tougher team hitting the field.
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