Orlando Sentinel

When will Tagovailoa play?

Flores sounds against sitting QB all season

- By Safid Deen

Miami Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa may have an opportunit­y to repeat some history when he eventually makes his NFL debut.

After an expedited training camp, Tagovailoa will begin his NFL career as a backup to 16-year veteran Ryan Fitzpatric­k when the Dolphins kick off their 2020 season on the road against the New England Patriots on Sunday.

And just like he took the college football world by storm with his game-winning touchdown pass for Alabama in the 2017 national title game, Tagovailoa could possibly have an opportunit­y to come off the bench and lead the Dolphins to a victory at some point as a rookie — if he doesn’t win the job outright as the season progresses.

Dolphins coach Brian Flores will be faced with the tough decision, just like Alabama coach Nick Saban was, when it comes time to make a change to Tagovailoa at quarterbac­k.

But Flores does not deal in hypothetic­al scenarios. He laughs them off. And he hopes by having Tagovailoa on the active roster for the opener, that his rookie quarterbac­k will be prepared in the event he could be called upon to shake up the Dolphins offense.

“Everyone has to be ready to go. When your number is called you have to go in and try to be productive, and if you’re number is not called, you have to stay ready. That’s the approach I’d like all our players to take.”

One thing we do know is Tagovailoa will be ready, at least mentally.

Before Tagovailoa’s NFL career begins Sunday, football fans will be able to experience Tagovailoa’s rise to becoming the Dolphins’ next franchise quarterbac­k when his documentar­y, appropriat­ely named “Tua,” premieres on Saturday afternoon.

The documentar­y, which was postponed from its initial Sept. 6 premiere date due to a weather delay in a NHRA race broadcast, will air following the Louisiana Tech-Baylor game on Fox.

“Tua” takes a deep dive into Tagovailoa’s strong ties with his family, faith and Samoan culture, his rise as a quarterbac­k at Alabama, his extensive recovery process from the hip injury he sustained last November, leading up to the moment the Dolphins drafted him with the fifth pick in April’s draft.

Outside of his hip injury, the most significan­t moment in Tagovailoa’s career came during the 2017 national title game, where he replaced Alabama starter Jalen Hurts and led the Crimson Tide to a thrilling overtime victory.

The night before the game, Tagovailoa visited his parents, Galu and Diane, in their hotel room, almost as if he could feel the moment would come one day later.

“Mom, Dad, are you guys ready? Are you guys ready? He said, ‘Your lives are going to change tomorrow. All of our lives are going to change tomorrow,’” Diane Tagovailoa recalls.

“I told them that if I get my opportunit­y in this game that I promise you guys that our lives are going to change,” Tagovailoa said.

Tagovailoa went on to have one the best seasons for a quarterbac­k in college football history during his sophomore season in 2018. He was well on his way to potentiall­y becoming the No. 1 pick before suffering the gruesome injury while being sacked shortly before halftime against Mississipp­i State on Nov. 16, 2019.

“I asked Coach Saban because you want to go out there and you want to play,” Tagovailoa says of wanting to go back in for the final sequence up 35-7 in the second quarter.

“We were going to let him finish the first half. We weren’t going to play him in the second half. And then it was just devastatin­g,” Saban said.

Tagovailoa continues to progress from his hip dislocatio­n and posterior wall fracture. He has been a full participan­t in training camp and Dolphins practices this week in preparatio­n for the season opener.

And Flores has no qualms about giving him some action as a rookie, especially in a pandemic-affected season where player availabili­ty may be at a premium.

“I’m not really thinking about guys not playing. I’m trying to get guys ready to play,” Flores said when asked if he’s thought about sitting Tagovailoa for the year.

Tagovailoa may have to wait his turn before he makes his NFL debut.

But when it does come, potentiall­y more life-changing moments could come for Tagovailoa and the Dolphins, too.

“That’s the thing about Tua,” said former NFL quarterbac­k Trent Dilfer, who helped him prepare for the draft.

“When you’re around him, you know good things are coming.”

 ?? JOEL AUERBACH/AP ?? Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa drops back to pass during training camp practice on Aug. 17.
JOEL AUERBACH/AP Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa drops back to pass during training camp practice on Aug. 17.

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