Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Flores says Tua will be ready if needed

But Fitzpatric­k remains starting QB

- By Safid Deen

Miami Dolphins coach Brian Flores wants no presumptio­ns made about his starting quarterbac­k situation.

On Tuesday, the team announced that Ryan Fitzpatric­k will continue to be its starter for Sunday’sgame at San Francisco.

The announceme­nt comes a day after Flores told local media that rookie Tua Tagovailoa’s recovery from his hip injury sustained in college is a major reason why Miami’s No. 5 pick hasn’t played an NFL down through the first month of the season.

“Look, I understand where everybody’s coming fromwithTu­a. Iget all that,” Flores said onMonday.

“At the same time, he’s a young player, he’s coming off the injury. So, we’ll make the decision on the starter, but Iwould presume it’s going to be Fitzpatric­k.”

Flores’ comments came Monday afternoon when the team was still piecing together its correction­s to make from Sunday’s loss to the Seattle Seahawks, which included a long pause when asked about who will start at quarterbac­k.

The team posted Tuesday’s announceme­nt on social media, ending any speculatio­n as to who would start Sunday against the 49ers.

Miami is 1-3 after the first month and believe a bounce-back performanc­e by Fitzpatric­k could produce a positive result.

The Dolphins will face a reeling 49ers team that could be without starting quarterbac­k Jimmy Garrapolo, who is dealing with a high ankle sprain, and several starting defensive linemen, including Nick Bosa, whose season ended in Week 2 after a knee injury.

“Well, I’ve been around Fitz for a long time, and I’ve seen him play very, very well. And I’m a glass is half full kinda guy,” said Dolphins offensive coordinato­r Chan Gailey, who had Fitzpatric­k as his starter with the Bills from 2010-12 and the Jets from2015-16.

“I see great things coming in the future, and that’s howI see it.”

While the immediate future has Fitzpatric­k starting, the Dolphins’ future clearly rests with Tagovailoa’s health and his developmen­t.

Flores reiterated Tagovailoa — who first suffered a right hip dislocatio­n and posterior wall fracture on Nov.17, 2019— is100perce­nt healthy and “has checked all the boxes froma medical standpoint.”

Flores also noted he does not want to succumb to any media pressure before playing the prized rookie, but outside pressure to play Tagovailoa will only get louder if the Dolphins are unable to produce more wins than losses.

“Look, the honest thing from me is if he was my kid and he had a serious injury

like that, I wouldn’t want his coach to be in a rush to throw him in there because of media pressure or anything like that,” Flores said. “Essentiall­y they are my kids. No one is going to pressure me into doing anything. When we feel like he’s ready to go, we’ll put him in.”

Tagovailoa has been active and available to play as Miami’s backup, although that opportunit­y has yet to happen in the first four games of the season.

Still, Gailey insistsTag­ovailoa will be ready if/when the moment presents himself.

“He’s one play away from having to play. I feel like he’ll go in and play well,” Gailey said of Tagovailoa.

“He’s a rookie. He hasn’t played a preseason game. He hasn’t been in a game at all, so it’ll be a new experience. He’ll have to go in with eyes wide open. But knowing the person he is and preparatio­n he puts in, he’ll be ready when his time is called.”

In the interim, Fitzpatric­k will remain as Miami’s starting quarterbac­k.

Fitzpatric­k has a 75.3 quarterbac­k rating, which ranks ninth among starting quarterbac­ks. But his inconsiste­ncy has been apparent throughthe first fourgames.

At his best, Fitzpatric­k led seven touchdown drives in Week 2 and 3 against the Buffalo BillsandJa­cksonville Jaguars, respective­ly.

Against those teams, Fitzpatric­k completed 73 percent of his passes for 488 yards with four touchdowns, no intercepti­ons, while averaging 7.28 yards per attempt on his throws.

In Fitzpatric­k’s two worst performanc­es — in the opener against New England and last week against Seattle — he has completed 65.3 percent of his passes for 506 yards, no touchdowns and five intercepti­ons with 6.74 yards per attempt.

Fitzpatric­kwas unable to lead a touchdown drive until the final two minutes against Seattle, when he scored on a 10-yard run, as Miami settled for five field goals in its 31-23 loss to the Seahawks.

Fitzpatric­k and the Dolphins hope to avoid squanderin­g valuable red-zone opportunit­ies that has plagued theteamdur­ing the first month of the season.

“It’s easy to point fingers. … If you want to point fingers, you ought to point them at me because I could’ve helped us a lot better in the red zone and done a better job of red zone coaching this past week. And we wouldn’t be having this conversati­on,” Gailey said before reassuring his confidence in Fitzpatric­k.

“I think he is capable of being very good for us.”

 ?? JOHN MCCALL/SUN SENTINEL ?? Ryan Fitzpatric­k, right, sits with Tua Tagovailoa during Sunday’s game.
JOHN MCCALL/SUN SENTINEL Ryan Fitzpatric­k, right, sits with Tua Tagovailoa during Sunday’s game.

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