Miami Herald

Fins’ seemingly stable QB picture comes with uncertaint­y

- BY ARMANDO SALGUERO asalguero@miamiheral­d.com BY ADAM H. BEASLEY abeasley@miamiheral­d.com

The picture the Dolphins paint of their quarterbac­k situation is one of stability. And so Brian Flores seemed genuinely surprised when someone who doesn’t know the guarded coach’s feelings and intentions had the audacity to ask who starts at quarterbac­k when Tua Tagovailoa gets healthy.

“Yeah, yeah, if he’s healthy, he’s the guy,” Flores said after the Dolphins’ 20-3 victory over the New York Jets on Sunday.

“I don’t know how many ways we have to continue to say that. But you keep asking, I’ll keep answering the same way.”

And that should be that. Full stop.

The Dolphins are Tua Tagovailoa’s team.

Except it’s never quite so certain as that. There isn’t ever a full stop. The question actually came a week

The 111th edition of Jets-Dolphins revealed little we didn’t already know. The Jets are historical­ly bad.

The Dolphins’ defense is really, really good.

And Ryan Fitzpatric­k, right now, gives the Dolphins a better chance to win than

Tua Tagovailoa.

Will that matter once Tagovailoa recovers from the thumb injury that kept him out of Sunday’s 20-3 Dolphins road victory? Doesn’t seem that way.

“If he’s healthy, [Tagovailoa is] the guy,” Dolphins Brian Flores insisted late Sunday afternoon. “I don’t know how many different ways we have to continue to say that.”

More than he’d prefer.

And the questions won’t stop. Fitzpatric­k did his part to make it a debate Sunday.

He went 24 of 39 for 257 yards and two touchdowns a week after the Dolphins benched Tagovailoa for ineffectiv­eness. DeVante Parker was fantastic, catching eight passes for a season-high 119 yards. The Dolphins gained 345 yards and had 22 first downs on offense.

So no matter how much Flores wants the conversati­on to go away, the Dolphins’ quarterbac­k situation will be a flash point until Tagovailoa consistent­ly plays at a high level.

At 7-4, the Dolphins have a very good chance to make the playoffs — they’re the AFC’s sixth seed through Sunday’s games — but they’ll need high-level quarterbac­k play in the final months to beat the likes of Kansas City and Tennessee and Buffalo.

“Right now, at this time, Ryan Fitzpatric­k gives them a great chance to win football games,” CBS broadcaste­r James Lofton said late in the Dolphins’ latest win, their sixth in seven games.

The Dolphins’ offense Sunday was almost exclusivel­y Parker.

Fitzpatric­k threw him contested 50-50 balls that Tagovailoa, up until now, will not. Separation has never been Parker’s game. But he’s one of the league’s best when it comes to highpointi­ng balls with a defender on his back.

Another way to look at it: Parker had more receiving yards on passes thrown from Fitzpatric­k Sunday that he’s had on balls from Tagovailoa all season.

In Fitzpatric­k’s eight appearance­s this year, he’s targeted Parker 58 times, completing 40 of them for 526 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

Compare that to Tagovailoa, who has targeted Parker just 21 times in four

starts, good for 12 catches, 116 yards and two scores.

“A lot of people want to say, ‘Oh [Fitzpatric­k] takes chances, that’s why he throws intercepti­ons,’ ” said Dolphins tight end Mike Gesicki, who caught a 13yard touchdown pass from Fitzpatric­k Sunday. “He’s been pretty damn good when he takes chances, at least in a Dolphins uniform. DeVante today, how many times are you going to play him in man coverage?”

Too often. And Parker feasted on it.

It was a solid performanc­e made all the more impressive by how little heads up Fitzpatric­k got that he would be the starter. As late as Thursday the Dolphins expected Tagovailoa to recover enough from a fluke thumb injury he suffered in practice to be available.

But the injury got worse, with Tagovailoa experienci­ng soreness, swelling and weakness, according to NFL Network. It’s no sure thing that Tagovailoa will be healthy enough to play next week against the Bengals.

In stepped Fitzpatric­k, who just a month ago admitted he was heartbroke­n by news that Flores was benching him in favor of the rookie.

“It’s kind of been the story of my career,” Fitzpatric­k said. “It’s been so up and down and I’m in the lineup, and I’m out of the lineup, and I’m back in. For me, just trying to stay steady, just trying to provide the team with leadership and going out there when my number’s called and playing well, and that’s what I had to try to do in this situation.”

Thanks to steady, turnover-free quarterbac­k play, the Dolphins were the much better team Sunday. And yet, they still did plenty to keep it interestin­g.

Their pass protection unraveled in the second half and Matt Breida and Patrick Laird fumbled the ball in Dolphins territory on consecutiv­e possession­s.

But the Jets did nothing with that field position, gaining all of 9 yards on the two possession­s — the second of which Elandon Roberts ended with a fourth

down tackle of Frank Gore short of the marker.

It was a signature play from a defense that forced two turnovers, including Xavien Howard’s seventh intercepti­on, and held the Jets to three points in eight quarters in 2020.

“As a defense, when it comes down to fourthand-1s, it’s a lot on mentality,” Roberts said. “I look at it as if, a team wants to run the ball on fourth and 1, it’s disrespect­ful.”

There’s been nothing but respect and support from Fitzpatric­k for Tagovailoa’s role as the team’s starting quarterbac­k, even if it stings him personally.

“I think just in the quarterbac­k room in general, having each other’s backs and supporting each other ... [is] very important because it is such a tough position to play,” Fitzpatric­k said. “I’ve now been put in a different role and when my number’s called, I’m going to go out there and win games for this team. So [Flores] is the head coach and we listen and respect what he says and we go from there.”

 ??  ??
 ?? COREY SIPKIN AP ?? Dolphins tight end Adam Shaheen catches a 7-yard touchdown pass from Ryan Fitzpatric­k in front of Jets linebacker Neville Hewitt in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game. Fitzpatric­k went 24 of 39 for 257 yards and two touchdowns in place of injured starter Tua Tagovailoa.
COREY SIPKIN AP Dolphins tight end Adam Shaheen catches a 7-yard touchdown pass from Ryan Fitzpatric­k in front of Jets linebacker Neville Hewitt in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s game. Fitzpatric­k went 24 of 39 for 257 yards and two touchdowns in place of injured starter Tua Tagovailoa.

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