Miami Herald

ESPN analyst: QB Tagovailoa should not play until November

- BY ADAM H. BEASLEY AND BARRY JACKSON abeasley@miamiheral­d.com

The Dolphins remain noncommitt­al about their plans this season for Tua Tagovailoa but haven’t ruled out him playing significan­t snaps in 2020.

If they do, they’d be making a big mistake, according to ESPN analyst Dan Orlovsky, who spent more than a decade as an NFL quarterbac­k.

“There’s no reason, no justifiabl­e reason, to put Tua on the field in September, October or early November,” Orlovsky said during a national conference call Wednesday. “You’re not going to make a playoff run with Tua. You’re an improved football team. Your head coach and your general are fighting for their jobs.

“The young man is 160 or 180 days removed from questions being tied to, ‘Will he ever walk again?’

There’s no preseason football. Can we allow him get comfortabl­e moving in his body first in an NFL environmen­t of practice. The worry of, ‘Can my hip really hold up? Can we get him a full year of rehab of getting his body completely strong to withstand those beatings? For that reason, if I was [GM Chris] Grier or [coach Brian] Flores, I would have already come out and said there’s no chance that Tua is going to start any of our first 12 games. No chance.”

Flores has not heeded that advice. While the Dolphins’ second-year coach is determined to lower the volume surroundin­g his new star quarterbac­k, he has not ruled him out from even starting the opener — at least publicly. Most expect Ryan Fitzpatric­k to be Miami’s Week 1 starter, but if Fitzpatric­k struggles and Tagovailoa excels in practice, it’s not inconceiva­ble that the Dolphins make a quarterbac­k change early in the season.

Orlovsky, who is part of ESPN’s new-look “NFL Live” lineup along with Marcus Spears and others, has long argued that the

Dolphins should redshirt Tagovailoa — which isn’t a popular take among Dolphins fans, and even some of his peers. All believe caution is in order given Tagovailoa’s many surgeries — including last November’s

to fix a major hip injury — but few have gone as far as Orlovsky has in essentiall­y advocating for Tua to go in bubble wrap this season.

“Realistic expectatio­ns for Tua should be very low,” he said Wednesday.

The preseason schedule — or more accurately, lack thereof — is one of many factors working against Tagovailoa. Wednesday was his first full-team practice as a pro. COVID-19 has been a major disruption to the NFL offseason, and Orlovsky and Spears expect play to be rough for the first few weeks of the NFL season.

And yet …

“[The NFL is] going to be intent on finishing the season,” said Spears, a former Cowboys defensive end. “… You can have all the prep and planning you want to have, but COVID is going to reach the NFL. Players are going to come down with COVID. The NFL I think is going to present the informatio­n to us publicly that they’re going to move forward and just go about either having to replace guys or playing without them.“

The Dolphins claimed two players off waivers on Wednesday — cornerback Breon Borders, a former undrafted player from Duke who played one game for Washington and 11 for Jacksonvil­le last season with one start, and former FAU defensive tackle Brandon Bryant, who appeared in four games for Cleveland last season and had three tackles.

 ?? Courtesy of Miami Dolphins ?? Dolphins first-round pick Tua Tagovailoa went through a full-team practice Wednesday for the first time as a pro. ‘Realistic expectatio­ns for Tua should be very low,’ ESPN analyst Dan Orlovsky said of Miami’s rookie quarterbac­k.
Courtesy of Miami Dolphins Dolphins first-round pick Tua Tagovailoa went through a full-team practice Wednesday for the first time as a pro. ‘Realistic expectatio­ns for Tua should be very low,’ ESPN analyst Dan Orlovsky said of Miami’s rookie quarterbac­k.

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