National Post

It’s Tua time in Miami

Curious move with incumbent holding steady

- JOHN KRYK Jokryk@ postmedia. com Twitter: @ Johnkryk

It seems an odd time to be changing quarterbac­ks, but Tua each his own. The Miami Dolphins have made rookie Tua Tagovailoa the team’s new starting quarterbac­k, supplantin­g veteran Ryan Fitzpatric­k, according to NFL Network and ESPN.

The Dolphins, who didn’t immediatel­y confirm or deny the reports, are 3- 3 in the AFC East, one game behind the first- place Buffalo Bills ( 4-2), and just ahead of the New England Patriots (23).

Even if they don’t wind up winning the division, the Dolphins are in the thick of the hunt for one of three AFC wild- card post- season berths, with 10 games to play.

So why swap out the 37- year- old Fitzpatric­k now for the raw, 22-year-old rookie, when “Fitzmagic” has played quite well so far? And when Fitz has started NFL games for nearly as many teams ( eight) as Tagavailoa — after his late-game career debut on Sunday — has in career pro passing yards (nine)?

Well, the Dolphins have their bye this week. That gives Tagovailoa nearly two weeks to prepare for his first start, at home on Sunday, Nov. 1, against the Los Angeles Rams.

Furthermor­e, the fact the Dolphins are playing quite well at the moment, having won three of their last four, including a 24- 0 smashing of the Jets this past Sunday and a 43-17 demolishin­g of the host San Francisco 49ers the week before.

This sets up Tua nicely for success — as opposed, say, to jamming him in as starter following a couple/ three miserable outings from Fitzpatric­k, which has tended to happen at previous stops in Fitz’s 16- year, journeyman career.

Look, everybody knew it was just a matter of time before Tagovailoa would succeed Fitzpatric­k as starter. The Dolphins drafted the former University of Alabama standout fifth overall in April’s draft for a reason.

That was only five months after he had undergone surgery to repair a fractured and dislocated hip — potentiall­y career- threatenin­g injuries.

It was at the NFL scouting combine in late February when Tagovailoa surprised all the gathered talent evaluators and hundreds of reporters by disclosing he was already close to making a full recovery. Fully 10 hours of tests by league doctors confirmed as much.

Tagovailoa was one of U. S. college football’s most dynamic quarterbac­ks from 2017-19.

Among his peers, Fitz today ranks in the teens in most major statistica­l categories this season. He had been on track for his most accurate season in the NFL ( 70.1 per cent completion­s) and one of his best passer ratings (95).

But he knew the deal. He knew he’d soon be handing off to Tagovailoa, the future face of the franchise.

When Fitz was pulled in garbage time for Tagovailoa late in Sunday’s win over the Jets, he not only showed no hint of disappoint­ment, he actually egged on fans at Hard Rock Stadium to cheer the rookie at his career debut.

Fitz is the ultimate team player, and at a position notorious for selfish egotists. He ought to serve Tagovailoa well for the remainder of this season, if not beyond, as a helpful mentor.

Still, if you’re the Bills or Patriots, you’ve got to be privately clapping at Miami head coach Brian Flores’ bold decision. A green- asMay- grass rookie is unlikely to lead any team to the playoffs after debuting as starter in Week 8. Perhaps Flores believes the fleet-footed lefty can open up more of offensive co-ordinator Chan Gailey’s playbook. Maybe.

A huge factor going against the 6-foot southpaw, however, is the Miami offensive line ranks No. 31 of 32 teams in Profootbal­lfocus. com’s analytical assessment of O-lines through Week 6.

“As a pass- blocking unit, Miami’s OL has been better ( 26th) but still not good,” PFF’S Sam Monson tweeted. “Don’t measure an OL by sacks allowed. That’s something the Qb/scheme controls far more than the OL. Which is my point, that Fitz has been helping them a lot. Tua needs to be able to as well.”

That’s a tough task for Tua, fresh out of the box.

THE DOLPHINS CHOSE THE FORMER ALABAMA STAR FIFTH IN APRIL’S DRAFT FOR A REASON.

ANKOU BACK IN HOUSTON

If you missed it, news broke during Monday’s doublehead­er that defensive lineman Eli Ankou — an Ottawa native — got claimed off waivers from Indianapol­is by the Houston Texans.

The Texans are the team that signed him as an undrafted free agent in April 2017 out of UCLA. Ankou was an end- of- camp cutdowns casualty of the Texans in September 2017, but the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars claimed him off waivers the next day.

He spent two- plus years with the Jaguars, then nearly a full calendar year with the Cleveland Browns, before they waived him last month. The Colts claimed Ankou off waivers a day later, but he didn’t dress him for any Indy’s six games.

The 26- year- old played in 20 NFL games with the Jags and Browns, starting twice last season in Cleveland. He has 26 tackles, 1.5 sacks, one tackle- for- loss and two QB hits.

In Houston, Ankou is reunited with Romeo Crennel, the Texans interim head coach. He was defensive co- ordinator when Ankou spent late spring and summer in Houston as a rookie in 2017.

The Texans defence is a hot mess, especially in stopping the run, and the 6- foot- 3, 325- pound Ankou is a run-stopper who figures to get rotational time at nose tackle in Crennel’s 3- 4 base alignment.

 ?? MICHAEL REAVES / GETTY IMAGES ?? With the 3-3 Miami Dolphins on their bye week, rookie quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa will have nearly two weeks to prepare for his first start on Nov. 1 against the L.A. Rams.
MICHAEL REAVES / GETTY IMAGES With the 3-3 Miami Dolphins on their bye week, rookie quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa will have nearly two weeks to prepare for his first start on Nov. 1 against the L.A. Rams.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada