Miami Herald

Gailey taking it ‘one day at a time,’ not thinking about 2021

- BY ADAM H. BEASLEY abeasley@miamiheral­d.com

Chan Gailey turns 69 years old in three weeks, so it’s natural to wonder about his future plans.

He was away from football for three years in what he assumed would be the start of his retirement before Brian Flores asked him to run the Dolphins’ offense in 2020.

Gailey hadn’t been asked about his vision for his time back — how long he planned on coaching, etc. — and if that vision has since changed.

Until Tuesday.

“It’s been very interestin­g with COVID and everything that’s going on,” Gailey said. “It has been so interestin­g this year. It’s been a challengin­g year in many ways. No, I don’t have a plan. I’m taking it really one day at a time right now. I just take it one day at a time. I haven’t thought about [2021].”

Whenever Gailey does retire again, Flores has some potential candidates on his staff who could step in. The two most obvious: tight ends coach George Godsey and running backs coach Eric Studesvill­e.

Flores in the past has praised Studesvill­e as a possible future offensive coordinato­r or head coach in the league.

But it’s Godsey’s star which has really risen this year. The past month, in addition to coaching Dolphins tight ends, he’s worked closely with the quarterbac­ks on game days — even after QBs coach Robby Brown returned from COVID-19 protocols.

Brown wouldn’t give too many details when asked about how his role has changed throughout the season, but did say there is “constant communicat­ion” among the offensive staff on Sundays.

He added: “Everybody’s got a role in what they’re looking for and what they’re doing. Nothing’s changed a whole lot there.”

With injuries to De

Vante Parker and Jakeem Grant, the Dolphins couldn’t afford any more bad receiver news this week. And yet, they got it Tuesday.

Practice squad wideout Kirk Merritt has been placed on the reserve/ COVID-19 list, meaning he either tested positive for the virus or came in close contact with someone who had. Receiver Andre Patton took his place on the practice squad.

With Isaiah Ford cleared to practice Wednesday, Merritt’s news is just one more data point suggesting Ford will play Sunday against the Patriots.

Here’s another: The Dolphins did not name

Ford as one of their three protected practice squad players this week. They made the same choice with

Antonio Callaway a few weeks back before permanentl­y promoting Callaway to their 53-man roster.

The Dolphins’ protected players this week: tight end

Chris Myarick, quarterbac­k Reid Sinnett and long snapper Rex Sunahara.

Meanwhile, Mike Gesicki remained on the active roster two days after suffering a shoulder injury that put his availabili­ty for this weekend in doubt. If the Dolphins elect at some point to put Gesicki on injured reserve, he would miss at minimum the next three games.

●Danny Crossman brought perhaps the league’s best special teams unit Week 14, but the group didn’t look like it Sunday against the Chiefs.

Jason Sanders missed a 45-yard field goal and Crossman’s punt coverage unit allowed a long return for a touchdown. In a sixpoint loss, that 10-point swing might have been decisive — a fact not lost on Crossman.

“When you leave points on the field with a missed field goal or the other team is able to generate points, you’re really never going to be happy,” he said. “Of course, you’re always going to be disappoint­ed.”

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