Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

At the head of the class

Jets got a QB, Pats an offensive coordinato­r, but neither looks better than Dolphins in East

- Dave Hyde

Buffalo didn’t help a leaky defense.

New England didn’t lessen owner Robert Kraft’s entertaini­ng impatience with Bill Belichick.

The New York Jets made the biggest move and enter 40-yearold virgin territory with Aaron Rodgers.

But the Miami Dolphins won the offseason in the AFC East. They sit on the edge of training camp with the best look in the NFL’s best division.

So we enter the peacock phase of this Dolphins era, where the road through training camp will be paved with legitimate­ly great expectatio­ns.

This isn’t new here, but it’s long forgotten territory. You need to go back decades, to when Dan Marino was the franchise, not inside the franchise, to think the Dolphins could play into the deepest parts of the NFL season.

How are they going to cope with this?

Better yet: How will South Florida cope with this?

Nobody expected the Dolphins to win more than a playoff game over the past two decades. That was the bar, and even that was too high to reach.

Three wild-card playoff appearance­s in 20 years — all losses. That’s this franchise’s footprint.

So how are the on-paper Dolphins suddenly the best in the division and, by extension, in contention for the Super Bowl?

They tanked for two years and assembled draft picks for tomorrow. No team in the league had more draft capital than the Dolphins in 2020 and 2021.

They then flipped that idea completely, starting last offseason, and traded for today. No NFL team in history had less draft capital over a two-year stretch than the Dolphins of 2022 and 2023.

Throw in coach Mike McDaniel wanting and owner Steve Ross paying this winter for the best defensive coordinato­r in the game, Vic Fangio. Everyone asks why he came here — the roster, the weather, the possibilit­ies — when so many teams wanted him.

Let’s talk like adults. Money was the clincher.

So the youngish, offensive-minded McDaniel got the perfect complement in the veteran, defensive-minded Fangio. Throw in the addition of cornerback Jalen Ramsey to the developed parts in recent years, and the Dolphins have a readyfor-prime-time defense that’s paid accordingl­y.

The money is stacked across the roster too. There will be a reckoning down the line for that, but not this year. These Dolphins may not inflate the attention and expectatio­n on this season, but they’ve pushed all their chips into this season.

Their opening and obvious question is quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa, starting with his health. That has to play out. But no team has more speed or playmakers around its quarterbac­k or a better offensive scheme to help. Just look around this division. The Patriots have a real offensive coordinato­r again in Bill O’Brien but haven’t caught up to the idea that star receivers are franchise-changing players. Somewhere in there is Kraft’s annual lament that they haven’t won a playoff game in four years.

It’s hard to imagine Belichick on even a warm seat, but Buffalo’s Sean McDermott is on a hot one.

Buffalo squeaked by the Tua-less Dolphins last year in the playoffs before getting blitzed by Cincinnati. That makes two consecutiv­e ugly outs for Buffalo. Its defense didn’t resolve much this offseason either.

The Bills remain the anti-Dolphins, the team that puts everything on quarterbac­k Josh Allen. He’ll try to do it all again this year, just as Rodgers will in New York.

Rodgers is coming off his worst season in Green Bay. He’ll turn 40 during the season. You have to get him if you’re the Jets, but this can go either way.

Add it all up, walk around the offseason decisions and full rosters, and the Dolphins enter training camp with the best look in the best division. It’s been a long time since you could think that and an even longer time since expectatio­n matched reality.

Belichick and Tom Brady owned the division for 17 years; Buffalo has the past few years.

There’s no pushover this year; no heavyweigh­t either. But the Dolphins begin training camp July 26 with more on their side than anyone. How they cope with that will be part of the answer.

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 ?? JOE CAVARETTA/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Miami Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel will oversee a team ready to win big this season.
JOE CAVARETTA/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Miami Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel will oversee a team ready to win big this season.

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