Miami Herald

Wilson off to ‘spectacula­r’ start; toughest QB test yet for Miami

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

One of the unfortunat­e quirks of the NFL schedule is how seldom Dolphins fans get to see NFC teams in person.

But in the case of Seattle Seahawks quarterbac­k Russell Wilson — who will make just his second trip to Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday — perhaps it’s a good thing.

Wilson is playing a different game than anyone else right now, and will arrive in South Florida as the NFL’s best player and hottest quarterbac­k.

“This is a spectacula­r player,” Dolphins coach Brian Flores said Monday, the team’s first full day back to work after Thursday’s victory over the Jaguars.

“This guy is tough to defend. He makes really good decisions. He can extend plays. He’s accurate with the football. He pretty much knows what you’re in from a coverage standpoint because he’s seen a lot of exotic defenses. He’s one of the best players in the league, if not the best, so this will be an extremely challengin­g game for us.”

Especially since Wilson already has a blueprint for beating the Dolphins. He, like Josh Allen and Cam Newton, is a dual threat. But unlike Allen and Newton, he’s also one of the most accurate passers in football.

Wilson has been otherworld­ly to start his ninth NFL season, ranking first in touchdowns (14) and fourth in yards (925) through Sunday’s games. He has thrown just one intercepti­on in 103 attempts and has completed a staggering 76.7 percent of his attempts.

Back to the touchdowns: The 14 he has thrown are the most through three games in NFL history. He has had five touchdowns passes in back-to-back games, the first player to do it since Ben Roethlisbe­rger in 2014, according to ESPN Stats.

The Dolphins and Ryan Fitzpatric­k will probably have a better chance trying to keep up with the Seahawks than slowing them down, especially since Seattle has the league’s worst pass defense (allowing 430.7 yards per game).

And in a fun (albeit under-the-radar) twist, Sunday’s game is a matchup of two of the top six-rated quarterbac­ks, per ESPN’s QBR metric. Wilson (86.1 out of 100) is second. Fitzpatric­k (80.9) is sixth.

Even after a bounce-back game in Week 3, there are still real concerns about Miami’s defense. The Dolphins rank last in red-zone defense (opponents have scored touchdowns on 87.5 percent of their trips), 31st in yards per pass allowed (8.3), 26th in opponents’ passing rating (108.2), 25th in passing defense (265.7) and 25th in intercepti­on percentage (1.0 percent).

There are some reasons for optimism, however.

The Dolphins are 10th in scoring defense (21.7 per game), tied for 11th in sacks (seven), 11th in passing touchdowns allowed (1.3 per game), 12th in sack percentage (6.8 percent) and 16th in third-down defense (43.3 percent).

Plus, there’s a chance that cornerback Byron Jones — the team’s highest-paid player — plays after missing Thursday’s game with a groin injury. Flores said Monday that Jones is “making a lot of improvemen­t.”

Then there’s the travel aspect. The 2,724-mile flight from Seattle to Miami is the longest in the NFL this season. And the

Dolphins are particular­ly good at home against West Coast teams, going 8-2 in the last 10 years against clubs traveling from the Pacific time zone. Compare that to an ugly 62-88 in all other games — home, away or neutral.

Wilson has faced the Dolphins twice since entering the league in 2012. The Seahawks have won one (in Miami) and lost one (at home). In those games, he has completed 68.6 percent of his passes for 482 yards, three touchdowns and an intercepti­on for a passer rating of 96.2.

INJURY UPDATE

Jones was the only player not spotted at practice Monday. Cornerback Xavien Howard was working with a trainer.

Three players who have been dealing with injuries were present during the portion of practice open to the media (first 20 minutes): safeties Clayton Fejedelem and Kavon Frazier and tight end Adam Shaheen.

Also back: Rookie fifthround defensive end Jason Strowbridg­e, who was left home for the Jacksonvil­le game for reasons the team hasn’t explained. The team says he is in good standing, though he hasn’t been active for a game yet.

 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR AP ?? Russell Wilson, getting a hand from coach Pete Carroll, has thrown five touchdown passes in back-to-back games.
STEPHEN BRASHEAR AP Russell Wilson, getting a hand from coach Pete Carroll, has thrown five touchdown passes in back-to-back games.

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