Miami Herald (Sunday)

Multiple reasons why Fins’ defense has regressed

- BY BARRY JACKSON bjackson@miamiheral­d.com

So how does a Dolphins defense that returned most everybody — and added a Pro Bowl pass rusher at midseason — regress from pretty good to one of the league’s bottom-fifth units in many key statistica­l categories?

The Dolphins have gone from sixth in average points permitted per game in 2020 (21.1) to 15th last season (21.9) to 27th this season at 24.6. Among AFC teams, only the Houston Texans relinquish as many points per game as Miami. The Dolphins are slightly better, 23rd, in yards allowed per game (357.6).

The Dolphins retained most of this defense based on the assumption that their strong work over the final nine games last season (during which they permitted a leaguebest 15.5 points per game) was a reflection of how good they were, not the mediocrity of seven of the nine quarterbac­ks they faced during those games

(Tyrod Taylor, Joe Flacco, Cam Newton, Mike Glennon, Zach Wilson, Ian Book and Mac Jones).

But injuries and other factors have led to a significan­t regression, despite strong play from several players, including

Christian Wilkins, Jaelan Phillips, Zach Sieler

and undrafted rookie

Kader Kohou.

Exploring nine reasons for the defensive unraveling:They’re the league’s worst defense on the road.

The Dolphins are permitting 31.5 points per game on the road; Seattle is next worst at 28.4. As perspectiv­e, the AFC East rivals Bills and Jets yield 18 points per game on the road, New England 21.1.

On the road, the Dolphins are permitting a stunning 109.9 passer rating (better than any individual quarterbac­k in the league and far higher than the 84.6 they allow at home), 6.0 yards per play (compared to 4.8 at home) and 16 touchdown passes and one intercepti­on on the road (compared with 8 and 6 at home).

In Buffalo, the defense “got embarrasse­d in their own minds,” coach Mike McDaniel said.

And here’s one more tidbit: On the road, the Dolphins sack the quarterbac­k on only 5.4 percent of his dropbacks, compared with 7.3 percent at home.

The Dolphins have played more top quarterbac­ks on the road (Lamar Jackson, Joe Burrow, Justin Herbert, Josh Allen) than they have at home (only Allen and to a lesser extent, Kirk Cousins). But there’s more to it than that.

Losing four key players to injuries: Byron Jones, Brandon Jones, Emmanuel Ogbah and Nik Needham.

Though undrafted rookie starting cornerback Kohou has exceeded anybody’s reasonable expectatio­ns, don’t underestim­ate the loss of Byron Jones after March surgery and a subsequent setback that has sidelined him all season. McDaniel said he’s not counting on a return this season.

The defensive philosophy was built around the notion of having two shutdown corners: Jones and

Xavien Howard.

And even though Ogbah was having a quiet year (one sack), he led the league in passes batted down the past two years, to go along with 18 sacks.

Needham’s injury has left the Dolphins scrambling to find a third corner. And the Dolphins’ blitzes have been far less effective since losing Brandon Jones, whose seven sacks led all NFL safeties from the start of 2021 through mid October 2022.

They can’t “get off the field” on third downs. The Dolphins are allowing opponents to convert 43.7 percent of their third downs into first downs, which is sixth worst in the league. That’s up from

41.1 last year. The Chargers were 9 for 18 against the Dolphins on third down, and the Bills converted 8 of 14 this past weekend.

The pass defense has unraveled.

Part of that is the byproduct of the loss of two defensive starters (Byron Jones and Brandon Jones, who had been muchimprov­ed in coverage, improving his passer rating against by 28 points this year). Also hurtful was the October loss of Needham, who played more than 50 percent of the snaps even when Byron Jones and Howard were healthy last year.

And Howard’s difficult season — partly a result of groin injuries — cannot be glossed over. Last season, Howard permitted an 88.2 passer rating against him with five intercepti­ons.

This season, it’s 125.5 and one intercepti­on. That passer rating is fourth highest in the league against cornerback­s targeted at least 40 times. He’s also allowed 15.8 yards per reception, second highest among corners who have permitted at least 30 receptions.

“I definitely got to play better for my expectatio­ns I have for myself,” he said Thursday, admitting he was surprised to be named to the Pro Bowl for the fourth time.

And though Kohou has been very solid (87.8 passer rating against), here’s the corrosive effect of losing Byron Jones and Needham:

Keion Crossen, who played just two percent of the Giants’ defensive snaps last season, has had to play 32 percent this season as Miami’s No. 3 corner (that 32 percent is the highest of his five-year career) and he’s allowing a 133.6 passer rating against him and 15.4 yards per reception on 16 catches.

Overall, Miami’s pass defense is permitting a 98.2 passer rating, compared with 85.4 last season. Only Arizona, Kansas City and Las Vegas have yielded a higher rating this season.

The linebacker­s, except for Duke Riley, also have poor passer ratings in coverage, including 107.6 against Jerome Baker and 117.5 against Elandon Roberts. The linebacker­s continue to struggle to defend tight ends and running backs.

Lack of takeaways. Only the Saints, Raiders and Giants have fewer intercepti­ons than the Dolphins’ seven. Their

0.9 takeaways per game are third-fewest in the league.

The pass rush isn’t as good as it was expected to be.

Though the Dolphins are slightly above average in sacks (tied for 13th with 35), their 20.2 pressure rate is 21st and they’re 18th in quarterbac­k knockdowns per pass attempt.

Bradley Chubb, who had 26 sacks in 49 games for Denver, has 2.5 in six games and just 12 tackles as a Dolphin.

“I want to be more dominant, taking over games,” Chubb said Thursday. “That’s the reason they brought me here.”

Every defensive lineman on the Dolphins has combined for just seven sacks, two fewer than defensive end Ogbah had on his own last season.

The Dolphins don’t get to the quarterbac­k nearly enough with four-man rushes, and their blitzes this year (particular­ly without Brandon Jones) are less effective than a year ago.

The red-zone defense isn’t good enough.

Of the 50 times that teams have penetrated Miami’s 20-yard line, they’ve scored touchdowns on 31 of them.

That 62 percent is seventh-worst in the league. Last year, the Dolphins permitted TDs on only 52 percent of opponents’ forays into the red zone.

Lack of dominant play at linebacker.

Baker hasn’t been bad; he’s 16th among 83 linebacker­s ranked by PFF and he’s 43rd in the NFL with 89 tackles. Roberts, rated 69th of 83 by PFF, has had several stops on short-yardage situations.

But Miami could badly use a Pro Bowl-caliber linebacker who consistent­ly impacts games. Finding help at the position must be an offseason priority; it’s unclear what the Dolphins have in third-round rookie Channing Tindall, who has played nine defensive snaps all season.

Consider this: The Dolphins’ inside linebacker­s don’t have a single takeaway this season. Defensive coordinato­r Josh Boyer has blitzed Baker far less than he did two years ago, and his sacks have dropped from seven to four.

With the Dolphins having limited cap space (less than $5 million) this offseason, the question is whether they try to clear out space to add a difference-making inside linebacker.

Their best players need to play better, and too many coaching decisions haven’t worked out.

Boyer, a Brian Flores

hire, stands very much at risk of losing his job after the season.

“Some of the things that we’ve done, I would say, are below expectatio­ns,” Boyer said. “I’ll start with myself on that.”

But it would be presumptuo­us to say Flores’ absence explains the defensive decline. The Dolphins and Boyer say Boyer called plays for every game last season, and he has again this season.

One difference, noted by linebacker Duke Riley: Flores sometimes popped his head in defensive meetings with input/ suggestion­s, while McDaniel doesn’t. Flores might change a call during a game; McDaniel gives Boyer total authority.

A few calls have been glaringly poor — including dropping several players into the end zone on a 3rd and goal from the 17 against the Chargers; Los Angeles gained 16 yards and scored on the ensuing play.

Too many blitzes haven’t yielded the desired results.

And the mediocre linebacker play and Boyer’s aggressive scheme — with the edge players coming hard around the edges — often leaves them vulnerable in the middle of the field against mobile quarterbac­ks, as Josh

Allen has repeatedly exposed.

“People have been more in-tuned to some of our blitzes,” Boyer said.

And Boyer probably should have played Andrew Van Ginkel more; his snaps have dropped significan­tly this season.

But the Dolphins’ Pro Bowl players also need to play better, starting with Howard and Chubb.

Second-year starter Jevon Holland has dropped from fourth last season to 36th this season among all safeties, per PFF. He’s allowing a 111.9 passer rating in his coverage area, with 18 completion­s for 231 yards and three touchdowns.

This defense simply must play better to close the season against teams that are in the bottom half of the league in scoring: Green Bay (22nd), New England (17th) and the

Jets (23rd).

Barry Jackson: 305-376-3491, @flasportsb­uzz

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Dolphins cornerback Xavien Howard, here chasing Vikings receiver Justin Jefferson, has permitted a bloated 125.5 passer rating against him with only one intercepti­on this year.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Dolphins cornerback Xavien Howard, here chasing Vikings receiver Justin Jefferson, has permitted a bloated 125.5 passer rating against him with only one intercepti­on this year.
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