Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

A 10-step program

Dolphins must tackle these issues

- dhyde@sun-sentinel.com; On Twitter @davehydesp­orts;

Well, it’s that time of year when, once again, I fearlessly state what the Dolphins do to win the offseason.

There’s just one problem: I don’t feel so fearless with answers this February.

I don’t even know the question this time. Is this regime trying to save jobs, and make the playoffs, which is possible considerin­g some of the unimpressi­ve teams that did again this past season?

Or are they trying to build a sustained contender? That brings in another set of parameters. Like making longerrang­e personnel decisions and possibly drafting a quarterbac­k, which I’m not pushing. They’d probably have to trade up. effectivel­y burn two drafts to do so. This mediocre and aging roster needs that youth.

There’s just no easy way to put Humpty Dumpty back together again for next year. The offensive line has questions at every position. Their best players are either over 30 next season (Ndamukong Suh and Reshad Jones) or unsigned (Jarvis Landry).

Quarterbac­k Ryan Tannehill comes off knee surgery and, at 30, has shown goodness but needs that elusive step to greatness. The defensive coordinato­r mentioned a need to get someone to cover tight ends, meaning the two safeties (Jones, T.J. McDonald) and linebacker (Kiko Alonso) they’ve invested heavily in can’t do it.

Add it all up and the Dolphins are a collection of players more than a well-constructe­d team. That’s on Mike TannenThey’d

baum’s front office. So how to solve things this offseason?

You can’t. You’re not catching New England in the AFC East as long as Tom Brady and Bill Belichick stay. You’re trying to catch Buffalo as one of the fortunate teams that slip in the playoffs. So know the mission, cross your fingers and …

1. Make some obvious salary cuts. Julius Thomas ($6.5 million), Lawrence Timmons ($5.5 million), Ja’Wuan James ($9.3 million) give you some breathing room from the salary cap. Not much. You’d have about $31 million to spend now. Center Mike Pouncey is another question. He can’t practice much. He celebrated playing 16 healthy games. With a decent roster, you’d save $8 million by cutting him.With a better roster, I’d cut him. But there are enough issues and not much money without adding another need. So Pouncey returns – at a pay cut in a smart world.

2. Pay Jarvis Landry. The Dolphins have spent the last two years trying not to be in this situation. They talked with teams of trading Landry last spring and again before the trade deadline. Why? He’s very good. He’s one of the team’s best players. But you’re paying top money for a slot receiver who averaged 8.8 yards a catch. Smartly assembled teams don’t do that. Then again, better teams don’t desperatel­y need a receiver like the Dolphins do Landry. Transition-tag him to set the market value and then pay him. Cost: About $14 million.

3. Bring back this offensive line. Again, not a perfect world. But if you look over the final six games, the line was fine with Sam Young at right tackle and Ted Larsen at left guard. There’s similar a fear to the Heat going 30-11 to finish last season and distorting optimism. But what are the options? James would be the best tackle out there and get $10 million a year. Instead, sign or draft a guard, center and tackle. Maybe that tackle is your first pick. But ...

4. Draft linebacker Roquan Smith with the 11th overall pick. He’s brings speed, youth and athleticis­m to the 28th-rated defense that needs all of that. He also fills the glaring need of someone to cover tight ends. Yes, that means you’re passing on the top quarterbac­ks, which means …

5. Draft a quarterbac­k in the second or third round. Lamar Jackson Mason Rudolph? Kyle Lauletta? Luke Falk? Quarterbac­ks are coach Adam Gase’s specialty. Whoever you take is your back-up this season. And the hope for tomorrow.

6. Realize there’s no one to spend big money on in free agency. This class is meh. That’s fine, too. The Dolphins don’t have much money to spend. So don’t re-work a lot of contracts and push problems like Suh’s big money until tomorrow. Take the pain now. It’s a good off-season not to have the annual free-agent splash the Dolphins make.

7. Show you’ve learned a lesson, Exhibit A: Don’t sign another injured, aging tight end. The Dolphins poured nearly as much into Jordan Cameron and Thomas over the past three years as the Patriots did for Rob Gronkowski. Don’t look at Jimmy Graham or Tyler Eifert. Bring back Anthony Fasano, develop A.J. Derby and the mysterious­ly underused MarQueis Gray and see if Wisconsin’s Troy Fumagalli is around in, say, the third round.

8. Re-sign defensive end William Hayes. A small move. A non-news move. And another risky one considerin­g he’s 34 and suffered a season-ending injury last year. But the defense was better when he was in it. Again, the little money you have is chipping down.

9. Show you’ve learned a lesson, Exhibit B: Don’t do any deals with Philadelph­ia. They’ve made you look silly the last two years.

10. Did I mention cross your fingers?

 ?? JOSHUA L. JONES/AP ?? Drafting Georgia linebacker Roquan Smith (3) with the 11th pick would go a long way to shore up a group that allowed too many tight ends to gain big chunks of yards against the Dolphins in 2017.
JOSHUA L. JONES/AP Drafting Georgia linebacker Roquan Smith (3) with the 11th pick would go a long way to shore up a group that allowed too many tight ends to gain big chunks of yards against the Dolphins in 2017.
 ??  ?? Dave Hyde
Dave Hyde

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