Orlando Sentinel

Jones: It’s time to step up

S eager to help defense thrive with big plays

- By Omar Kelly

ATLANTA — Reshad Jones admits that he hadn’t felt like himself most of this season.

The confidence was there, but the elite player wasn’t.

It has been a long road back from the shoulder injury that limited the Miami Dolphins’ starting safety to six games last season.

But Jones’ performanc­e in last Sunday’s 16-10 win over the Tennessee Titans proved that the skills which got him a five-year, $60 million contract extension this offseason are still there.

Jones, who is four games into his seventh season as a Dolphins starter, recorded seven tackles, half a sack, one quarterbac­k hit and recovered two fumbles — one of which he turned into a 38-yard touchdown.

The former University of Georgia standout hopes to double down on his playmaking prowess in his Atlanta homecoming when the Dolphins face the Falcons at 1 p.m. on Sunday inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

“I’m going to have to play like that for our defense to be as good as we can be,” said Jones, who has 30 family members and friends attending the game. “My main focus is to remain consistent. I know I’m one of the elitecalib­er safeties in this league. I have nothing to prove, but what I need to do is stay consistent so I can help this team win.”

By consistent Jones means producing gamechangi­ng plays, like his 16 career intercepti­ons and the four touchdowns he’s scored as a defender.

Turnovers, sacks, forced and recovered fumbles are how Jones, whose nickname is G5, judges himself.

Jones, who needs two sacks to surpass Yeremiah Bell (11) to become the alltime leader for most sacks in franchise history from a defensive back, realizes Miami’s young secondary leans heavily on his instincts and play-making ability, which often comes from improvisat­ion.

And the Dolphins’ defense has been putting him in position to thrive.

“The fact that he’s a really good blitzer and when we pressure him, it’s something that he’s really made some money on,” head coach Adam Gase said. “Just having him back there, the intensity, the way that he goes about his business day in and day out, he’s a true pro. … Just having him on the field makes a big difference.”

But Miami’s secondary needs to tighten up its coverage for Jones and the defense to make more plays. The Dolphins’ secondary is allowing quarterbac­ks to complete 73.3 percent of passes attempted. Only the Cleveland Browns are allowing a higher percentage (74.0) of passes to be completed so far this season.

And only 10 teams enter Sunday’s games allowing a higher yards per attempt average (7.3) than the Dolphins, which means Miami’s defense must play better in pass coverage if they want to be viewed as one of the NFL’s elite defenses.

Jones blames the struggles, which have led to opposing quarterbac­ks producing a 106.1 passer rating — the fourth worst cumulative rating in the NFL — on the need for tighter coverage from the cornerback­s and linebacker­s.

That’s the reason rookie cornerback Cordrea Tankersley will start his third game of the season against the Falcons. And Lawrence Timmons’ return from his suspension has helped.

 ?? SETH WENIG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dolphins S Reshad Jones (20) recorded seven tackles, half a sack, one quarterbac­k hit and recovered two fumbles last Sunday against Elijah McGuires (25) and the Jets.
SETH WENIG/ASSOCIATED PRESS Dolphins S Reshad Jones (20) recorded seven tackles, half a sack, one quarterbac­k hit and recovered two fumbles last Sunday against Elijah McGuires (25) and the Jets.

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