South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

DOLPHINS GAMEDAY

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KEYS TO THE GAME

Offensive diversity: This is where coach Mike McDaniel’s offensive creativity must reemerge. Opponents have figured out ways to limit the Dolphins offense whether it’s been San Francisco, the Los Angeles Chargers, Buffalo or Green Bay. McDaniel must make a counter move, and so far we haven’t seen any.

The Dolphins could start by involving tight end Mike Gesicki in the passing game or utilizing the run more often. In the passing game, wide receivers Tyreek Hill (franchise-record 113 receptions) and Jaylen Waddle (67 receptions) are the offensive leaders by a wide margin. Next on the list is wide receiver Trent Sherfield (28) and Gesicki (26). As for the running game, the Dolphins are last in the league in rushing attempts (331). This offense must diversify.

Bill Belichick taking away something offensivel­y:

Along the lines of the Dolphins offense becoming more diverse, there’s the pressure of responding to whatever New England’s Belichick takes away, as is his yearslong trend. If Belichick decides to focus on taking away Hill (good luck on that), the Dolphins are in big, big trouble. If Belichick decides to focus solely on Hill and Waddle, allowing the Dolphins to run the ball or pass to other players, which would be a good defensive strategy, the Dolphins offense faces a huge challenge. Belichick will have something up his sleeve. Perhaps he takes away the middle of the field in the Dolphins passing game, perhaps he jams Hill and Waddle at the line of scrimmage to throw off the timing of the passing game. The Dolphins offense absolutely must have an answer to whatever Belichick attempts.

Dolphins’ gut check: Like it or not, we’re seeing the substance of this team. And a four-game losing streak and a winless December make people start using the term “choke,” as in the Dolphins can’t take the pressure. There’s no other explanatio­n. The Dolphins definitely should have beaten Green Bay, a losing team that came into their house in a crucial December game. And they needed to win one of those games on that three-game road trip against San Francisco, the Chargers and Buffalo. Now they find themselves in the tough position of needing to win a road game.

And, by the way, the Dolphins are 3-5 on the road this season and will likely be starting backup quarterbac­k Teddy Bridgewate­r. Yes, these final two games will test the substance of this Dolphins team and if the answers are undesirabl­e, heads could roll in the offseason. At this point it doesn’t appear such changes would start at the top with general manager Chris Grier or McDaniel, but heads could roll.

Dolphins’ QB performanc­e:

Forget statistics such as touchdowns, intercepti­ons and passer rating. The backup quarterbac­k who starts at New England, whether it’s Bridgewate­r or rookie Skylar Thompson, must keep this game close into the fourth quarter. That’s it.

Yeah, it’d be nice if the starting quarterbac­k throws for 300 yards, three touchdowns and no intercepti­ons. But that’s unlikely. Keep the game close, don’t make silly errors, and get the ball in the hands of the playmakers. Those are the things the Dolphins seek from their starting quarterbac­k this week. Do your part, don’t try to do too much.

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