Miami Herald

Dolphins first-rounders Waddle, Phillips flashing early

Howard right to feel upset: Pay the man, Dolphins! Top picks Jaylen Waddle and Jaelan Phillips are piling up the highlight plays just a few days into their first NFL training camp.

- BY GREG COTE gcote@miamiheral­d.com BY BARRY JACKSON bjackson@miamiheral­d.com

Many questions in sports might be argued because they are not always easy to answer.

Who to draft? When to make a coaching change? Is he a Hall of Famer? What free agent to pursue? How good will Tua Tagovailoa turn out to be?

Then there are other questions that should not be questions at all because they are not debatable. Such as:

What should the Miami Dolphins do about the mess they have made with star cornerback Xavien Howard?

Well, duh.

PAY THE MAN! Player empowermen­t is sweeping sports. Now NFL players are seeing what started in the NBA, with influentia­l stars exercising their leverage to get out of contracts, to get more money, to get to a new team.

Howard, the player coaches and teammates call “X,” wants his share. No, demands his share.

He deserves that, and his

There are snapshots, brief moments during a training camp practice, that offer glimpses of the tantalizin­g skill sets of these two Dolphins firstround rookies, who both were named after NBA player Jalen Rose, albeit with different spellings.

For Jaylen Waddle, Thursday’s highlights were how he contorted his body to rise up to catch a high pass from Tua Tagovailoa, plus a short touchdown reception from Tagovailoa in goal-line drills.

For Jaelan Phillips, that moment was how he steamrolle­d past fellow rookie Liam Eichenberg to get pressure on Tagovailoa, then generated a strong pass rush on another play.

A few days into their first NFL training camp, Waddle and Phillips look the part.

There isn’t perfection — Waddle dropped a pass Thursday — but there are signs that they should be immediate assets, which is the expectatio­n for players drafted sixth overall (Waddle) and 18th (Phillips).

For Phillips, the transition is more complicate­d, because he has gone from playing mostly defensive

employer should see that.

Instead, Dolphins management, which has done a lot right the past couple of years, has fumbled this one.

Dolphins management let the Howard situation curdle and sour to the point the player went public on social media this week with his disappoint­ment and anger, and requested a trade.

“We wanted things to work out with the Dolphins, and brought solutions to the table — like guaranteei­ng more money — that we felt were winwins for both sides,” he wrote. “These were proposals of adjustment­s that wouldn’t just make me feel more respected, but were also [salary] cap friendly. But the Dolphins refused everything we proposed.

“That is why I don’t feel the organizati­on has dealt with me in good faith. I don’t feel valued, or respected, by the Dolphins. Just like they can take a business-first approach, so can I. That’s why I want to make it clear I’m not happy, and have requested a trade.”

Do you know how bad a situation has to get for a player to air his private business like that?

Howard is at training camp that began this week only to avoid the $50,000-per-day fine he could have been hit with for not showing up.

The Dolphins have the power here. They can elect to pay him and solve this, to trade him, or to force him to either play angry or sit out the season.

Howard has some leverage, too, though. Here is his power:

He is really, really good, at a really, really important position. He just turned 28; he’s in his prime. He might have been the NFL’s defensive player of the year last season (he finished third). His 10 intercepti­ons led the league and were the most by any Dolphins player since Dick Westmorela­nd in 1967.

Howard could be the difference between Miami being a playoff team or not this season. Only the Year 2 progress of Tagovailoa is more important to this team and season.

The worst part of this mess dragging on and reaching this point is that it was so predictabl­e.

It became predictabl­e on March 16, 2020, 16 months ago, when Miami signed cornerback Byron Jones in free agency to a five-year, $82.5 million contract including

$54.375 million in guaranteed money. It was outrageous generosity toward a player who had two career intercepti­ons (and would have two more as a Dolphin last year).

Meanwhile Howard is playing with a five-year, $75.25 million contract, $39.26 million of it guaranteed.

“I’m the second highest-paid cornerback on my own team,” Howard rightly noted, “and it isn’t even close.”

Howard has hugely outperform­ed his contract based on what the club paid Jones. And the club needs to fix that.

Instead, when the team might have been reworking Howard’s contract this spring, they signed veteran defensive back Jason McCourty as insurance, knowing their hard line might cause Howard to want out. And knowing that again when Howard was a no-show at minicamp.

This thing is fixable.

The trade request is just

Howard turning up the heat on the Fins to make it right.

That’s up to owner Stephen Ross and general manager Chris Grier.

Coach Brian Flores on Thursday sidesteppe­d all inquiries on Howard. Asked whether he expected him to be in Miami’s opening-game lineup

Sept. 12 at New England, he said, “I’m focused on today.”

Earlier, though, Flores said, “There’s a way. I guess the plan is to continue to have discussion­s on our part, continue to have talks with him and his representa­tion. We love X. He’s a good player. He’s competitiv­e. He’s here. He’s showing up.”

He’s this, too: Unhappy, and rightly so.

The Dolphins need to make fixing that the priority it should be.

 ?? CHARLES TRAINOR JR
ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com ?? Dolphins cornerback Xavien Howard has gone public on social media to request a trade.
CHARLES TRAINOR JR ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com Dolphins cornerback Xavien Howard has gone public on social media to request a trade.
 ??  ??

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