Call & Times

All about speed: Dolphins’ Tyreek Hill makes fast impression

- By TIM REYNOLDS

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Tyreek Hill runs fast, talks fast, thinks fast. The standout wide receiver was not, however, a fast learner when he came to the Miami Dolphins.

The playbook may as well have been in a different language when Hill arrived in Miami from Kansas City this spring. He eventually went to receivers coach Wes Welker and revealed that he didn’t initially understand anything he was seeing.

“But once I learned the offense,” Hill said, “everything began to click.”

Hill’s days of not grasping the concepts within Miami’s playbook are over. And with Hill and Jaylen Waddle forming perhaps the NFL’s top speed duo at receiver, Miami hopes it has found a pairing that will give defenses nothing but headaches.

“Oh, they’re scared,” Hill said of those defenses, adding an expletive for good measure.

Hill has been in the NFL for six seasons, getting picked for the Pro Bowl all six times. And he has not been sitting idly during his first couple months as a member of the Dolphins.

There was his introducto­ry news conference in March in which he said the value of his new

contract — $120 million over four years, $72.2 million guaranteed — nearly made him cry. There was the podcast in June that ruffled some feathers when he said Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa was a more accurate thrower than Kansas City’s Patrick Mahomes, who has a Super Bowl ring and is generally considered one of the NFL’s best at his position.

And now the Dolphins are in camp, where Hill is making — what else? — a fast impression, opining on everything from those on the Miami roster who think they’re faster than he is (“He’s always chirping and talking about he’s the fastest,” running back Raheem Mostert said) to why he thinks linebacker Melvin Ingram shouldn’t wear jersey No. 6 (“you’re not LeBron, bro,” Hill said, though it fairness it should be noted that LeBron James switched from No. 23 to No. 6 again only last year).

“That’s just Tyreek’s personalit­y,” Tagovailoa said. “He’s going to speak how he feels at that very moment. He just believes what he says every time. If he feels he’s the best at this, he’s going to let you know out there on the field. If he feels someone is talking too much and he wants to go against them, he’s going to let them know what he’s going to do to them. That’s just his personalit­y. I think it’s fun to have that kind of personalit­y on the team.”

The personalit­y is enormous, without question.

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