Miami Herald (Sunday)

Pundits praise trades; more deals are possible

- BY ADAM H. BEASLEY abeasley@miamiheral­d.com

Friday’s league-altering series of Dolphins trades gave all teams involved exactly what they wanted.

The San Francisco 49ers covet one of three players (a quarterbac­k makes the most sense, even if an source within the organizati­on told ESPN that “Jimmy [Garoppolo] is here to stay”), and gave up what was needed to make that happen.

The Philadelph­ia Eagles wanted to flip quality for quantity, believing the best way to address their many needs was to give up one premium pick for two really good ones.

And the Dolphins hoped to do both: Maximize value in a trade down without sliding too far to land one of the three or four best non-quarterbac­ks in the draft.

That would have been a lot easier for Chris Grier to do had the Eagles wanted to move up, not down. But he turned challenge into opportunit­y — and perhaps complicate­d the Patriots’ ability to move up for their quarterbac­k of the future — by getting John Lynch involved.

That ingenuity deserves praise — and Grier got much of it Friday.

A NFL Network’s Daniel Jeremiah: “I’m guessing that when they did all they did, going to 12 and back up to 6, they were able to get more and not have to drop back as far as they would have if they had just done the trade straight up with Carolina [at 8] or Denver [at 9]. I thought it was creative by Chris and a good job by him. And now we’re going to see a run on quarterbac­ks. They’re still probably going to get the guy they want if not the No. 2 option.”

Mel Kiper Jr., NFL Draft analyst: “This is the ideal scenario for the Dolphins, who are clearly committed to [Tua] Tagovailoa as their franchise quarterbac­k. They pick up extra prime assets and only move down three spots, which means they can still get one of the top wide receivers — [Ja’Marr] Chase, [Davonta] Smith and [Jaylen] Waddle — with the No. 6 pick or take a versatile weapon in [Kyle] Pitts. This team is built to contend in the

AFC East in 2021.”

Todd McShay, Kiper’s colleague at ESPN: “Put it this way: If Miami

[wasn’t] able to move out of No. 3, it likely would have been targeting

Chase, Smith, [Penei] Sewell or maybe even Northweste­rn tackle Rashawn Slater. Now the Dolphins pick up additional picks, including a future first-rounder, and will likely land the same player at No. 6. That’s a win.”

AA“NFL Live” co-host Marcus Spears: “You’re an absolute beast for getting this done. Now they’re starting to build the roster around [Tagovailoa].

Chris Grier, Brian Flores feel they’re in a great situation with Tua where they can add pieces and can come back later. … It’s amazing what they did. Phenomenal job.”

A recap of the two trades, because they were a bit confusing: The Dolphins sent the No. 3 pick to San Francisco and their first-rounder in 2022 plus this year’s 123rd overall to Philadelph­ia for picks No. 6 and 156 in 2021, San Fran’s compensato­ry third-rounder in 2022 and the Niners’ first-rounders in 2022 and 2023.

And Grier might not be done. There’s a scenario, albeit an unlikely one, in which the Dolphins trade down yet again, and pick up even more assets.

Every year features head-scratching picks in the top 10, and if a team or two ahead of Miami goes off the board for their selection, Grier might field calls from the Panthers or Broncos, knowing that he could move down a couple of spots and still get one of his top targets. Such a trade almost certainly would not happen, however, until the Dolphins are on the clock.

Grier also achieved a second, albeit unspoken,

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