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Dolphins need Lawson to deliver

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Miami Dolphins defensive end Shaq Lawson made a money grab this offseason, and there’s absolutely no shame in that since that’s what free agency is designed for.

The Dolphins offered the former Buffalo Bills first-rounder $30 million over three years, giving the defensive lineman an opportunit­y to become a full-fledged starter playing for his old Clemson position coach Marion Hobby, and Lawson jumped at the opportunit­y.

“It ended up being the warm [weather] or the cold, so I ended up coming here,” Lawson said, comparing his Dolphins contract with the deal Buffalo offered to re-sign its leading sack producer (6.5) from 2019. “But it was a close decision.”

Problem is, that money — the $20.8 million in fully guaranteed salary being paid over the first two seasons — came with the task of addressing Miami’s biggest need on defense, serving as an edge setter and primary pass rusher.

Miami’s right side edge spot was

the major missing piece last season, and Lawson’s addition was supposed to allow Dolphins coach Brian Flores to turn up the volume on his hybrid 3-4 defense, which struggled tremendous­ly last season.

However, Lawson’s struggles were glaring in the season-opening loss to the New England Patriots.

The Patriots repeatedly tested Lawson’s ability to make the right decisions, running the quarterbac­k read-option at him and fellow newcomer Emmanuel Ogbah, and those zone reads produced a whopping 217 rushing yards and three touchdowns.

“I was hard on myself,” said Lawson, who finished the game with three tackles and one quarterbac­k hit in 60 snaps. “As a leader, as a defensive line, period, it starts up front and all the guys on the d-line. We took full responsibi­lity for not stopping the run. We just hold ourselves accountabl­e and we’ve got to continue to do better and stop it this week.”

Lawson is well aware of the challenge Miami faces this week in trying to contain Josh Allen, a quarterbac­k with similar skill sets to

New England’s Cam Newton, because he played the previous two seasons with Allen in Buffalo.

“He’s a dog,” Lawson said of Allen. “I said that when I was there. The guy is a dog and that’s what you need at quarterbac­k. … He’s grown a lot. Just watching his film now, he looks a lot better than he was last year — 10 times better. Throwing the ball — the guy can already run — and just a strong, physical guy. Just a dog.”

Allen led the Bills in rushing last week, gaining 57 yards and scoring a touchdown on 14 carries in Buffalo’s 27-17 win over the New York Jets. In 29 career games, Allen is averaging 5.7 yards per attempt and has scored 18 rushing touchdowns.

But more importantl­y, Allen seems to have toned down on the inaccurate throws that plagued him earlier in his career, completing 33 of 46 passes (71%) while throwing for 312 yards and two touchdowns against the Jets.

If Allen delivers another three-touchdown performanc­e against the Dolphins, it will be tough for Miami to win Sunday’s home opener against the revamped Bills — and could force Flores and his staff to rethink some of the team’s personnel choices on defense.

“There were just a couple of correction­s that we needed to correct on each play. Obviously, we could coach it better, we could play it better,” defensive coordinato­r Josh Boyer said when asked about defending the zone reads that gave the Dolphins problems. “I think the thing that will help us defensivel­y — whether it’s coaching, playing — is just being consistent on a playafter-play basis. It really comes down to everybody just doing their individual job.”

The Dolphins believe facing similar quarterbac­ks in back-to-back weeks could pay dividends.

“Anytime you get a chance to see how a quarterbac­k runs and does certain things and certain plays, you get a better understand­ing of how to defend them and how they were attacking us,” Dolphins linebacker Kyle Van Noy said. “I think we’ll be ready for all of those this week because we got a good challenge [last] week, and Josh Allen is just as big a problem as Cam Newton running the ball.”

The hope is that daily practices against Allen and Buffalo’s offensive line will provide Lawson and the Dolphins an edge — one that can help the Dolphins properly set the edge this time around.

 ?? WINSLOW TOWNSON/AP ?? Patriots quarterbac­k Cam Newton has words with Dolphins defensive end Shaq Lawson last Sunday in Foxborough, Mass.
WINSLOW TOWNSON/AP Patriots quarterbac­k Cam Newton has words with Dolphins defensive end Shaq Lawson last Sunday in Foxborough, Mass.
 ??  ?? Omar Kelly
Omar Kelly

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