Miami Herald

Dolphins’ alarming offensive struggles against playoff teams continued against the Bills

- BY ANDRE FERNANDEZ afernandez@miamiheral­d.com Andre C. Fernandez: @FernandezA­ndreC

While injuries have taken a huge toll on the Dolphins in recent weeks, the struggles of their offense continue to be alarming as Miami limps into the postseason following a 21-14 loss to Buffalo.

On Sunday night, while its depleted defense made four key stops, the offense was shut out in the second half and could not take advantage of those extra opportunit­ies to come back.

“They did much better than we did across the board,” coach Mike McDaniel said. “It’s very disappoint­ing starting with, I’m always looking at myself. We did some things that were selfinflic­ted wounds and we didn’t play with the same throwing, catching, blocking we normally do. We got out-executed substantia­lly.”

After taking a 14-7 lead at halftime, the Dolphins were held to three first downs in the second half. Two came on Miami’s final drive with one via penalty on a pass-interferen­ce call that moved the ball into Bills territory at the 40-yard line.

Two plays later, Tua Tagovailoa was intercepte­d on a throw into double coverage intended for Chase Claypool that safety Taylor Rapp hauled in to seal the win for Buffalo.

The Dolphins mustered only 57 total yards in the second half and went 0 for 4 on third down.

“I think Buffalo did a good job possessing the ball, especially that third quarter,” left tackle Terron Armstead said. “Just weren’t able to get first downs and sustain drives to get more plays, more reps, more opportunit­ies.”

Tyreek Hill, who caught seven passes for 82 yards and a touchdown, was not on the field on the play that resulted in the gamesealin­g intercepti­on after dropping a pass and taking a hard hit on the previous play.

“We had a concept for the coverage and Taylor Rapp was a little further outside of Chase Claypool than Tua recognized and he and Chase didn’t connect,” McDaniel said. “That’s a hard play to make, and I could have put them in a better position to do it. You win or lose as a team. You win as a group and you lose as a group and they out-executed us for sure.”

While the loss was frustratin­g, it wasn’t a unique example of the Dolphins’ offensive struggles in recent weeks and throughout the season against some of the top teams in the NFL.

The absence of injured starting running back Raheem Mostert and wide receiver Jaylen Waddle have contribute­d to some of their recent woes.

But the Dolphins have averaged 16.5 points against the six playoff opponents with winning records they faced this season, and went 1-5 against them. The lone victory came Dec. 24 against Dallas — a game in which Miami got 15 of its 22 points from kicker Jason Sanders. Miami averaged 325.7 total yards and 217.2 passing yards in those games.

The Dolphins averaged 36.1 points this season in their other 11 games — all against opponents with losing records. Miami averaged 442.5 total yards in those games and 301.9 passing yards.

On Sunday night, Miami was outgained 473275 and 345-167 in passing yardage. The total yards were their secondlowe­st output of the season and fewest since they were held to 244 yards in a 31-17 loss at Philadelph­ia on Oct. 22.

“I think we did have opportunit­ies,” Tagovailoa said. “We just had to make the best out of those opportunit­ies. Missed throw, miscommuni­cation on some plays, you just can’t do that.”

Tagovailoa, who completed 17 of 27 passes for 173 yards, one touchdown and two intercepti­ons, finished with a season-worst 62.7 passer rating. During the Dolphins’ past three games, Tagovailoa completed 63 of 102 passes for 703 yards, four touchdowns and four intercepti­ons.

In those six games against playoff teams, Tagovailoa completed 132 of 203 passes for 1,394 yards, seven touchdowns and six intercepti­ons. In the 11 games against teams with losing records, Tagovailoa went 256 for 357 passing for 3,230 yards, 22 touchdowns and eight intercepti­ons.

Tagovailoa finished as the NFL’s passing yardage leader (4,624 yards), and became the first Dolphins quarterbac­k to do so since Dan Marino in 1992.

But Sunday night’s game marked the first time this season Tagovailoa threw multiple intercepti­ons in consecutiv­e games. He threw two INTs in last week’s 56-19 loss at Baltimore.

“We need him not to turn the ball over and still be aggressive while doing that,” McDaniel said. “That’s the name of the game for every quarterbac­k and that’s what Tua does. If there’s a player that I feel very confident can handle things when they don’t go his way, that’s Tua. That’s the player he is. That’s what you want from your QB. He takes full accountabi­lity. I look forward to him getting back out there.”

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com ?? Bills wide receiver Trent Sherfield makes an acrobatic catch in the end zone for a TD in the second quarter.
DAVID SANTIAGO dsantiago@miamiheral­d.com Bills wide receiver Trent Sherfield makes an acrobatic catch in the end zone for a TD in the second quarter.

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