Miami Herald

Analysts put onus on Dolphins’ McDaniel to adjust to ‘blueprint’

- BY BARRY JACKSON bjackson@miamiheral­d.com Barry Jackson: 305-376-3491, @flasportsb­uzz

Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel has carved out a reputation as an offensive savant.

He types up new play concepts on his iPad at 2 in the morning when his wife “is annoyed that my screen is too bright.”

He runs plays that veteran NFL quarterbac­ks have never seen before, including placing Tua Tagovailoa in the shotgun but play-faking and having him turn his back to the defense, a strategy that paid dividends earlier this season.

He earned praise from Browns coach Kevin Stefanski for the uniqueness to his schemes.

McDaniel said in the spring that “being creative and innovative ... is part of the job.”

But the parade of plaudits has stopped with this two-game offensive collapse, and now McDaniel must tap into that creativity and uplift Tagovailoa

from his worst stretch since McDaniel arrived and rescued him from doubting disciplina­rian Brian Flores.

And he must do it in the toughest of circumstan­ces: Saturday night at Buffalo, in cold, potentiall­y snowy conditions.

“After watching that Chargers-Dolphins tape, we’re gonna find out just how good a coach/play designer/adjuster Mike McDaniel is really fast here,” ESPN’s Dan Orlovsky said on Twitter.

All season, McDaniel has regularly added new wrinkles to the offense. Fullback Alec Ingold said he has seen nothing like it in his career.

“It’s exciting coming into work every day and we’re doing stuff that’s new,” Ingold said. “And that’s what keeps you on your toes. We’re creating football plays and it’s fun. You never know what you’re going to get.”

But more is clearly needed now, after the world could see the Chargers — with a porous, banged-up defense — stifling the Dolphins’ attack by clogging the middle of the field with extra defenders.

While other teams often have played a soft zone against Miami, the Chargers stuck to the Dolphins receivers like magnets, using press man with plenty of help. They blitzed Tagovailoa on only six of his 28 dropbacks. He went 8 for 22 when he wasn’t blitzed, 2 of 6 when he was.

The Chargers played man coverage on 52 percent of Tagovailoa’s dropbacks, and Tagovailoa was 4 for 15 on those throws. Tagovailoa faced man coverage only 30 percent of the time in previous games, per ESPN.

This was “the blueprint to stop this Miami offense, not San Francisco two weeks ago,” Orlovsky said. (The 49ers played a lot of zone and Tagovailoa simply missed throws.)

With Tagovailoa’s accuracy and timing with receivers off the past two weeks, the answer cannot simply be trying more sideline routes that stretch the field.

There needs to be something else, whether it’s screens (there haven’t been many the past two weeks) or more shallow crossers, or more quick designed rollouts, or wheel routes to running backs, or gimmick plays or something defenses haven’t seen yet from this offense, perhaps with new wrinkles to the pre-snap motion that worked so well for

Miami earlier in the year.

Or, at the very least, accentuati­ng short passes early in the game to get Tagovailoa into a rhythm. Tagovailoa is at his best when he gets the ball out quickly.

Per Next Gen Stats, Tagovailoa was 3 for 13 when he took at least 2.5 seconds to throw on Sunday, the worst completion percentage by any player in a game on those throws this season

“Tua gets impatient because all of the plays he has seen work for such a long period of time this season aren’t [working against the Chargers] and then the forces come,” Orlovsky said.

Former NFL coach Herm Edwards, back with ESPN after Arizona State fired him in September, said Monday: “What would help him and help this offense is if they ran the ball a little more. That would give him the ability to play-action pass and get those linebacker­s and those guys to suck up on the line of scrimmage. “

Here’s something else that is needed: Maximizing Mike Gesicki, who has gone from top five in the league in receiving yards by tight ends (780 on 73 catches last season) to a non-factor in the past three games (no catches on three targets and just 24 for 269 for the season). McDaniel was non-committal on Monday when asked if he needs to increase Gesicki’s involvemen­t.

This is something we didn’t expect to hear after what had been a wonderful run with McDaniel and Tagovailoa:

“I never thought I would say this in a million years,” ESPN analyst and former Jets coach Rex Ryan said. “But [Chargers coach] Brandon Staley outcoached this Dolphins team so badly in this game it’s amazing. How about you run it down the Chargers throat like every other team has?”

Each week this season, McDaniel and offensive coordinato­r Frank Smith have installed some fresh nuance, to keep the Dolphins from becoming predictabl­e.

“I don’t think there’s any concepts we didn’t run in training camp that we’re doing,” Ingold said. “But there will be wrinkles every week, or a play will build off another play. Or we will add a shift or motion onto things. It’s always changing, evolving. That’s where it keeps guys mentally in it. It’s unusual, especially with the amount of content we have to constantly learn.”

CHATTER

McDaniel acknowledg­ed he’s not counting on cornerback Byron Jones returning this season.

Jones hasn’t played since March leg surgery. McDaniel is unclear on the status of Eric Rowe (who left the Chargers game with a hamstring injury) but expressed optimism that

Tyreek Hill, battling an ankle injury, will play Saturday at Buffalo.

UM quarterbac­k Tyler Van Dyke signed an NIL deal with billionair­e John Ruiz and plans to return to UM next season, per Ruiz.

Caleb Martin and

Udonis Haslem are the two Heat players who become trade eligible on Thursday, but neither is going anywhere. Victor Oladipo and Dewayne Dedmon become trade eligible on Jan. 15, but Oladipo has the right to veto any trade this season.

The Marlins are awaiting a response on their offer to Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner, who hit .278 with 13 homers and 81 RBI last season.

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