Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Flores names Tua starter for rest of ’21

- By Omar Kelly

Brian Flores has said several times that Tua Tagovailoa is “our quarterbac­k,” recycling the statement every time the Deshaun Watson rumors have been brought up to the Miami Dolphins coach since the spring.

With Tuesday’s NFL trade deadline approachin­g and the Watsonto-Miami talk still lingering, Flores took it a step further and acknowledg­ed that Tagovailoa will be Miami’s starter for the rest of the year, with the quarterbac­k’s health being the only qualifier.

When asked to make a commitment that Tagovailoa would start all season, Flores did so with a “yeah.”

It wasn’t an over-the-top endorsemen­t for Tagovailoa, who owns a 7-6 record as a starter heading into Sunday’s AFC East road game against the Buffalo Bills. But it was a fairly sound commitment to Miami’s 2020 first-round pick, who earlier this week raised concerns about the Dolphins’ commitment to him by saying he doesn’t “not feel wanted.”

Tagovailoa has completed 69.5 percent of his passes, throwing for 835 yards and seven touchdowns in the four games he’s played this season. But he’s thrown four intercepti­ons and has a 95.1 passer rating, which ranks him the 18th best quarterbac­k in the NFL.

“When I say he is our quarterbac­k that is me saying we’re committed to him,” said Flores, who made the controvers­ial decision to bench veteran starter and team captain Ryan Fitzpatric­k and replace him with Tua six games into the 2020 season.

However, Flores wouldn’t say that Miami isn’t interested or was no longer pursuing Watson when directly asked Friday. The Dolphins have on-going trade talks with the Houston Texans, who would seemingly like to move Watson before the trade deadline.

Watson, a three-time Pro Bowl

deal worked out for Watson, but the reported that the deal won’t be consummate­d until Watson’s legal troubles are behind him.

Until then, Tagovailoa will remain the quarterbac­k behind center, and the Dolphins hope to see continued growth from the former Alabama standout.

“We have moved the ball fairly effectivel­y the past few weeks. We can build on that,” Flores said when asked to evaluate Tagovailoa’s performanc­e in losses to Jacksonvil­le and Atlanta, the two games since the quarterbac­k’s return from the rib injury he suffered the last time Miami faced the Buffalo Bills. The Dolphins face the Bills again on Sunday at 1 p.m., this time in Buffalo.

Tagovailoa has thrown three troublesom­e intercepti­ons, and two of them last week that cost the Dolphins points that could have turned last week’s 30-28 fourth-quarter loss to the Falcons into a victory.

“That is part of the learning process. There are a lot of decisions that he has to make to put us in good position and he has made a lot of them,” Flores said evaluating Tagovailoa. “He is fighting, clawing and scrapping to put us in a good position.”

 ?? JOHN MCCALL/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa warms up before his game against the Falcons at Hard Rock Stadium.
JOHN MCCALL/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa warms up before his game against the Falcons at Hard Rock Stadium.

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