Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

In quickness, health

Best comparison for Tua’s progress? Here’s an idea that fits the big picture

- Dave Hyde

MIAMI GARDENS — Everyone’s looking for a comparison, a parallel, some glint of good reflection to say who Tua Tagovailoa could become if this all works out for him and the Miami Dolphins.

Drew Brees is the standard. Same 6-foot-1 (on tip toes) height as Tua. Same average arm. Same lack of foot speed. Now Brees is retired and on his way to the Hall of Fame.

Buffalo’s Josh Allen is mentioned. Sort of. Allen’s 6-5 frame, cannon arm and running skills are physical traits Tua doesn’t have. But Allen struggled as a rookie, got a better team around him and now he’s a star. So there’s that.

Of all the comparison­s for hope, this one strikes the proper tone: the 2018 Kansas City Chiefs offense. The full concept. It’s a bit hard to take at first glance considerin­g (gulp) Patrick Mahomes played quarterbac­k. But stay with those hoping to connect the dots.

“If you go and rewatch that season, there’s a lot of big plays in there — a ton of yards-after-catch,’’ ESPN quarterbac­k expert Dan Orlovsky was saying the other day. “It’s all Patrick

catch [the shotgun snap from center] and throw, catch and throw, catch and throw.

“I believe that’s something Tua excels at. Catch and throw. It’s understand­ing what’s before the snap and eliminatin­g options. If we get to the line of scrimmage

— if [Will] Fuller, Jaylen Waddle, [DeVante] Parker and Hunter Long and Mike Gesicki are out there — these guys are options. Tua’s going to have the ability to cross three of them off before the ball even gets snapped. Then he’s playing super-fast.”

He’s looked that way at his best in preseason.

“He was like [NBA guard] Chris Paul running the pick-and-roll or Steve Nash running the pickand-roll. Very much in the control aspect, delivering the right ball at the right time to the right guy. Getting to the right spot. That’s what Patrick did in 2018.”

Again, it all breaks down some with that last line. Mahomes, after all, threw for 50 touchdowns that year. But, come on, no one was saying he’ll be Brees for a career or Mahomes for a season.

It’s about concepts. And the concept of what this offense will look like around Tua had to be the

front-line battlegrou­nd inside Dolphins meetings this offseason.

This led to the departure of Chan Gailey and the arrival of a two-coordinato­r offense shrouded in such mystery that coach Brian Flores won’t say who calls the plays.

The Gailey-must-go crowd was a bit much. His offense scored the most points for this franchise since 1985. That covers nearly 15 years of Dan Marino. Not bad, huh?

But points weren’t the point. Tua was. And there was the odd metric in Gailey’s offense. Tua was much better with the “12” personnel (one running back, two tight ends, two receivers) than the “11” personnel (one running back, one tight end, three receivers).

A small thing, you might say. The numbers said something else. All the analytics people crunched them too. For instance, Warren Sharp, who consults with a few pro teams, showed Tua had a 49 percent success rate and threw for 6.3 yards per attempt out of “11” personnel.

Out of “12” personnel, he had a 62 percent success rate and 7.9 yards per attempt.

To put that in better perspectiv­e, Tua’s 7.9 yards per attempt out of “12” personnel would have tied him fifth in the league with Allen. The 6.3 yards

per attempt in “11” personnel would tie for 29th with Pittsburgh’s Ben Rothlisber­ger.

That gets us to this preseason and new offense. Tua ran 14 preseason plays out of the “11” personnel — his weaker formation last year. He ran only five out of the “12” personnel.

So the Dolphins weren’t showing anything. Or working on a weakness. Or, come on, it’s preseason.

Here’s the point: The concepts behind Tua’s offense might matter as much as he does. The rookie Waddle isn’t Kansas City’s Tyreek Hill. Gesicki isn’t tight end Travis Kelce. And Tua certainly isn’t Mahomes. But some ideas are the same.

“The more concepts that allow him to get to the line of scrimmage and erase options, the faster he can play,’’ Orlovsky said.

Everyone thinks their young quarterbac­k is great this time of year. Mac Jones in New England. Justin Fields in Chicago. Trevor Lawrence in Jacksonvil­le. Joe Burrow in Cincinnati. Tua with the Dolphins.

Are they all great? History says no. But you see why the might — what they are on their best days. The 2018 Chiefs? The names don’t fit starting with Tua. But the concept does.

 ?? MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Dolphins receiver Albert Wilson runs hard during practice July 31.
MICHAEL LAUGHLIN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Dolphins receiver Albert Wilson runs hard during practice July 31.
 ??  ??
 ?? SUSAN STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Miami Dolphins coach Brian Flores and quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa redrew the offense this offseason.
SUSAN STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Miami Dolphins coach Brian Flores and quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa redrew the offense this offseason.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States