Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Dolphins shouldn’t put it all on Parker

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Let’s be honest with ourselves for a moment. Canwe saywe’re surprised DeVante Parker is dealing with another injury? The Miami Dolphins have only benefited from Parker having one healthy season during his five-year, onegame tenure with the team. So what exactlywou­ld make anyone conclude that the healthy year Parker had last season— the one when he delivered1,202 receiving yards and nine touchdowns on 72 catches— would be the new normal? And that the injury-plagued seasons the Dolphins’ 2015 first-round pick had his rookie year (foot), 2016 (back), 2017 (quadriceps) and 2018 (hamstring) wouldn’t happen again?

Last Sunday Parker tried to play through a left hamstring injury he’s been nursing for the past 2 1⁄2weeks, but the former Louisville standoutwa­s forced to sit out the second half of Miami’s 27-11 loss to theNewEngl­and Patriots.

He practiced on a limited basis Wednesday, but the Dolphins are taking await-and-see approach on his availabili­ty for Sunday’s home opener against the Buffalo Bills.

The Dolphins’ passing game struggled because of Parker’s absence, mainly because a healthy Parker is a difference-maker, an elite receiver. And an injured Parker is an ordinary one.

That’swhy Miami needs to focus its efforts on getting Parker fully healthy before itworries about getting him back on the field because he’s not dominant when he’s got something nagging him.

The Dolphins should shut Parker down for the next two games— Sunday’s contest against the Bills and a Thursday night road game against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars nextweek — and give his soft-tissue injury 18 days to heal before trying to

play him again in the Oct. 4 home game against the Seattle Seahawks.

“We’ll just try to take it one day at a time,” coach Brian Flores Wednesday about Parker’s hamstring injury. “Sometimes guys turn around quickly.

“If it takes more time, then that’s what it is. We’ll just try to make the best decision for DeVante and obviously for the team.”

Flores’ team must figure out howto produce an efficient passing attack without Ryan Fitzpatric­k’s favorite target, and that requires a couple of Miami’s reserves to step up. Some of them need to prove they belong on the Dolphins’ 53-man regular-season roster.

Jakeem Grant’s speed has always been tantalizin­g. He’s a dynamic return specialist (four career touchdowns), but the 5-foot-7, 171-pound receiver hasn’t proved he’s anything more than a gimmick player on offense in his four previous seasons.

“Everybody runs a route differentl­y,” offensive coordinato­r Chan Gailey said Tuesday. “Jakeem [Grant] is a good player, but he runs things differentl­y than DeVante does andwe don’t have time on task from last year with ‘Fitz’ and Jakeem likewe do ‘Fitz’ and DeVante.”

Isaiah Ford, whom the Dolphins have spent three seasons developing on the practice squad, is often praised for his intellect. The developmen­tal slot receiver knows all three receiver positions and can supposedly play them seamlessly.

But is the former Virginia Tech standout ready to produce the first-down reception that keeps a drive alive or score his first NFL touchdown?

MackHollin­s, a formerNort­h Carolina standout who led the NCAA in yards per reception as a junior (24.8 average) and averaged 20.6 yards per catch during his college career, has the size (6-4, 221) and toughness needed to seamlessly replace Parker as Miami’s starting split end.

But for one reason or another — usually injuries— Hollins’ career didn’t take off in his first three seasons with the Philadelph­ia Eagles, who eventually cut him late last season, opening the door for Miami to claim the 27-year-old.

If therewas ever a time for any of these three receivers to establish themselves as NFL playmakers, it’s now.

And if they can’t make plays in Parker’s absence, then the Dolphins have all the evidence they need tomove on and start investing playing time in youngsters such as Lynn Bowden Jr, the 2020 third-round pick Miami

traded to acquire from the Raiders earlier this month, and rookieMalc­olm Perry, the formerNavy quarterbac­k Miami’s grooming to be a slot receiver.

TheDolphin­s better figure

something out because this season will start circling the drain if nobody steps up and Miami’s forced towait for Parker to be healthy again this year— ormaybe even next year.

 ??  ?? Omar Kelly
Omar Kelly
 ?? MIKE STOCKER/SUN SENTINEL ?? Dolphins receiver DeVante Parker catches a pass during practice Wednesday. He has been dealing with a hamstring injury.
MIKE STOCKER/SUN SENTINEL Dolphins receiver DeVante Parker catches a pass during practice Wednesday. He has been dealing with a hamstring injury.

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