Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Hyde: Gesicki needs to grow

After so-so year, Dolphins’ Gesicki needs to seize an opportunit­y

-

DAVIE — On Team Makeover, no one arrives more made over in April than tight end Mike Gesicki. He discarded his Dolphins rookie No. 86 for his college No. 88. “[It] got me here,” he said. “Got to go with it.” He’s also weighs in at 253 pounds, more than 10 pounds above his rookie playing weight, without feeling any loss of speed. “That’s the idea,” he said. Here’s the larger idea: The Dolphins need a new and improved game from Gesicki — from all the Gesickis on this sagging roster, really. All the discussion and most of the outside hope for upgrades centers on next week’s draft for obvious reasons.

But the other significan­t way to advance the talent is by improving those who are still here.

Can former No. 1 pick DeVante Parker, the Ryan Tannehill of receivers, finally take the proverbial next step in his fifth season? Will Charles Harris show some signs of a first-round defensive end with a new staff with a new system? Do young defenders such as linebacker Raekwon McMillan and cornerback Cordrea Tankersley apply

with more consistenc­y the talent they’ve flashed at various times?

Then there’s Gesicki. The Dolphins have five tight ends on the roster right now in the hopes they have enough. One is New England Patriots veteran Dwayne Allen, who is more blocker than receiver and has accompanie­d coach Brian Flores from Foxborough to lead a young group.

Gesicki is the only player for whom the Dolphins invested something substantia­l, that being a second-round pick. His athleticis­m was off the charts too. It still is.

But his stats — 22 catches for 220 yards and no touchdowns — show something was missing.

Gesicki knows. Work and want-to isn’t an issue. This is the guy who put a greaseboar­d in his hotel room last training camp to go over plays. He watched video of all his plays in the offseason.

“Saw a lot of good, a lot of bad,’’ he said. “[There is] a lot of stuff to improve on, and a lot I can take in and bring into my game this year. That was expected.

“Twenty-two years old, playing my first season in the NFL, learning on the fly, doing something I haven’t been asked to do ... [but] I’m someone who can be my biggest critic. I was able to go back and learn from some of the things.”

He sounds different and looks different. Will that translate into a better second season?

“I think I’ve put myself in a positon to not only be effective in the passing game but also in the running game,’’ he said. “I feel like I’m in much better shape than I was at this time last year. That’s when I’ll be at my best — when I play fast.

“Last year, especially when I got here, the heat took me by surprise and I wasn’t in great shape. I need to run by people and make plays in the passing game. It took a while to get into that shape to get there. I feel pretty good.”

Asked what he’s working on, he said blocking (“focus on technique”), and “refine my routerunni­ng, that kind of stuff. Honestly, I’ll give you the same answer for the next 25 years if you ask me. That’s what it is.”

There are role models across the Dolphins practice field for the Gesickis on this roster. Laremy Tunsil is considered a lock-down left tackle now, but there were serious doubts if he’d ever get here until the second half of his second season.

Xavien Howard wasn’t on track to be a top cornerback due in good part to health issues until the end of his second season. Entering his fourth year, he’s in line for a big payday.

The added opportunit­y for the Gesickis is roster teardown this offseason, which means they’ll get every chance to show something. General manager Chris Grier liked these players enough to draft them.

Flores was asked about Gesicki, but his words could apply to a half-dozen highly drafted players whose careers are at a crossroads.

“We see what everyone else sees,’’ Flores said. “He has size, he has speed, he can catch the ball. There’s things that everyone can work on. He’s working on those things and he’s done a good job these last couple of days.”

Next week, the Dolphins get an injection of hope with the draft. The new talent will be a headline, just as Gesicki was last spring. What the Dolphins need is a few of the Gesickis on the roster to become good stories again.

 ??  ??
 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? Dolphins tight end Mike Gesicki runs drills Wednesday during the team’s voluntary minicamp.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP Dolphins tight end Mike Gesicki runs drills Wednesday during the team’s voluntary minicamp.
 ??  ?? Dave Hyde
Dave Hyde

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States