The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Tua’s promotion stirs memories of Marino’s 1st start in 1983

- By STEVEN WINE AP Sports Writer

MIAMI(AP) » It was 1 p.m. on an October Sunday in 1983, and Miami Dolphins rookie Dan Marino was about to take the field for his first NFL start when veteran teammate Lyle Blackwood approached him on the sideline.

“I was always joking around too much,” Blackwood says in his Texas drawl. “Dan was as nervous as a cat in a room full of rocking chairs, and I said, ‘ Dan, this whole season is riding on your shoulders.’”

That’s the case now with Tua Tagovailoa, even if his teammates are too tactful to tell him so. The Dolphins are again promoting a first-round draft pick at quarterbac­k, and following a bye this week, Tagovailoa will replace Ryan Fitzpatric­k and make his first start Nov. 1 against the Los Angeles Rams.

Tua has thrown only two NFL passes, but he’s the Dolphins’ most heavily hyped draft pick since Dan became the Man. Hopes are high the former Alabama star will be the best of the 22 quarterbac­ks to start for Miami since Marino retired following the 1999 season.

There are more difference­s than similariti­es regarding the situation, however, and not just because Tagovailoa is left-handed.

In 1983, Marino joined a team that had reached the Super Bowl the previous season. Tagovailoa is taking the reins with Miami in Year 2 of a rebuilding project under coach Brian Flores.

The Dolphins are 3- 3, second in the AFC East and basking in consecutiv­e wins over the 49ers and Jets by a combined score of 67-17. But they’ve used three rookie draft picks in the offensive line, which raises questions about how well they can protect Tagovailoa’s surgically repaired right hip as he returns from the injury that prematurel­y ended his college career nearly a year ago.

Marino worked behind a veteran line anchored by future Pro Football Hall of Famer Dwight Stephenson. Unlike Tagovailoa, Marino played in preseason games as a rookie, and threw three touchdown passes subbing for David Woodley in the regular season before coach Don Shula made him the No. 1 QB.

Even so, there were glitches in Marino’s first start. He threw for 322 yards and three scores, but the Dolphins lost in overtime to the Buffalo Bills, and play calling was sometimes a problem.

“Shula forgot he had Dan on the field at one point,” says Nat Moore, a receiver on the 1983 team. “Shula was going after an official about a bad call and failed to send in the play. It was thirdand-13, and he realized the play clock was running out, so he started waving at Dan, and Dan said, ‘ What is that?’ “I said, ‘ That means call your own play.’”

“Dan called a play-action pass, but the bad part was we didn’t have a running back in the game. We didn’t want to waste a timeout, so I lined up at running back. Dan also called a left formation, and wenever ran that play froma left formation. But he throws a quick slant to Mark Duper for a first down anyway.

“Shula goes, ‘ What the hell was that? We don’t have that play.’ “I said, ‘ We do now.’” These days Marino is a Dolphins special adviser who prefers to stay in the background. An interview request was submitted to him this week, and — wait for it — he passed.

Joe Rose, who caught the first of Marino’s 420 touchdown passes, remembers the improvised completion to Duper and other frantic ad-libs in 1983. Simply calling the play is a big challenge for any rookie quarterbac­k, Rose says.

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