Miami Herald

Man-to-man issues plague struggling Dolphins secondary

- BY DANIEL OYEFUSI doyefusi@miamiheral­d.com

One of the final plays of the Dolphins’ 30-28 loss to the Atlanta Falcons last Sunday might have been a microcosm of a defense that struggled throughout the 2021 season.

Holding on to a one-point lead, the Dolphins were in a Cover-1 defense, a man-to-man concept with one deep safety — in this

The Dolphins defense has been burned repeatedly in man-to-man coverage against receivers this season, after leading the league in takeaways in 2020.

case, rookie Jevon Holland — covering the middle of the field. Their top cornerback, Xavien Howard, was matched up on the outside with Atlanta’s phenom, rookie tight end Kyle Pitts.

Pitts ran a go route, streaking downfield, and Howard followed step for step. But quarterbac­k

Matt Ryan lofted a perfectly placed ball into the hands of Pitts, and Holland wasn’t able to arrive in time to dislodge the ball. The completion placed the Falcons well within field-goal range, and they shortly thereafter kicked the game-winning score.

One of the biggest disappoint­ments in the Dolphins’ 1-6 start to the season has been the defense, which led the league in takeaways in 2020 and was the bedrock of the team’s success in a 10-6 campaign last season. The unit has particular­ly fallen short in man-to-man defense, a staple under head coach Brian Flores.

“I don’t think you want to be the same thing over and over against people,” defensive coordinato­r Josh Boyer said, “so you try to change the picture — whether that’s changing the front or changing the coverage, especially against a lot of the good quarterbac­ks that we face. We always try to apply pressure to them and apply pressure to the offensive line. I

think a good mix of calls is always kind of what you’re looking for.

“The other thing is when you do something over and over again, teams prepare for it and they have a lot of plans for it,” Boyer added. “It’s not one of those things that you can consistent­ly year after year do the same thing over and over again.”

Players and coaches have emphasized in the past that successful coverage is just as dependent on the pass rush up-front as it is on the players in the secondary. Through

Flores’ tenure, he’s generally relied on blitzing to generate pressure. According to Pro Football Reference, Miami’s blitz rate has dropped from 40.8 percent (second-highest rate in the NFL) in 2020 to 32.2 percent (fifth-highest rate) in 2021. The change in blitz rate has been followed by a dip in pressure; in 2020, the Dolphins had a 24.8 percent pressure rate (11th). In 2021, that number has decreased to 23.2 percent (18th).

The Dolphins haven’t drasticall­y altered the rate at which they’re in man-toman as opposed to zone defense, but their success in man coverage has diminished from the 2020 season to 2021.

According to Sports Info Solutions, the Dolphins defense was in Cover 1 on 196 opposing dropbacks in 2020, second only to Cover 3, a zone concept with one safety covering the middle of the field.

On plays using Cover 1, the defense allowed opponents to complete 56.6 percent of passes for 1,419 yards and seven touchdowns. The unit was able to intercept five passes and register 17 sacks when in a Cover-1 defense.

Through seven games of the 2021 season, the Dolphins defense has already allowed five touchdowns in Cover 1 and is on pace to allow 500 more yards. The unit has intercepte­d one pass and registered five sacks so far in a Cover-1 defense.

“At the end of the day, we’re definitely a man team,” Howard said.

“Zone helps also, so we just try to mix different coverages up.”

Though the Dolphins returned their bookend cornerback­s, Howard and Byron Jones, neither has played at the level of their 2020 seasons. The two have dealt with their respective injuries but neither has used it as an excuse for a drop-off in play.

Jones said the secondary has covered well but hasn’t finished plays in the same manner as last season.

“We’re covering,” Jones said, “but in terms of getting the ball out or getting another intercepti­on or changing a [pass breakup] to an intercepti­on and stuff like that, I think we could do a better job of, especially in man coverage because we are a defense that’s predicated on playing man.”

With the Dolphins facing the Buffalo Bills and quarterbac­k Josh Allen, who has dominated his matchup with Miami’s defense, the question of whether to blitz and when to play man-to-man is of utmost importance.

In seven games against the Dolphins, Allen has had his most success facing man coverage. He’s completed 58 percent of his passes with 12 touchdowns and one intercepti­on against Cover 1 and Cover 0, a man-to-man concept with no deep safety in the secondary. Conversely, he has completed 83 percent of his passes but thrown just two touchdowns with two intercepti­ons against Cover 2 and Cover 4, zone concepts that have two deep safeties covering half the field.

“He’s very comfortabl­e in that offense right now,” linebacker Jerome Baker said. “They’re hitting on all cylinders. We’ve got to switch it up on him. We have to give him different looks. Honestly, it’s going to be a tough one. We’ve got to go out there and execute. We can have all the schemes we want, different packages, pressures and whatever, but it doesn’t matter if you don’t go out there and execute.”

Daniel Oyefusi: DanielOyef­usi

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? Dolphins’ bookend cornerback­s Xavien Howard, above, and Byron Jones haven’t played at the level of their 2020 seasons, although both have dealt with injuries.
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com Dolphins’ bookend cornerback­s Xavien Howard, above, and Byron Jones haven’t played at the level of their 2020 seasons, although both have dealt with injuries.

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