BAMAPHIN 22
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It's time to start taking away possession, certainly more than the 19 times it did last season - more than only two other NFL teams.
"It's not their ball," Wake said. "When the ball is in the quarterback's hands, it's our ball. When it's in the air, it's our ball. When the running back has it, it's ours. Get it on the ground, get it out of his hands, take it out of the air."
That last part may prove most challenging. Grandmothers would freely send out the Dolphins defensive backs with wet hair and no coats in Antarctica; that's how slim the chance that they would catch anything. In the absence of thievery, there's been mockery.
"Shoot, we had one guy drop about eight picks," linebacker Karlos Dansby said. "I've never seen anything like that in my life. His hands got to stay on the Jugs machine."
Does that guy have the initials S and S?
"Definitely," Dansby said of cornerback Sean Smith. "It just goes to show you, the plays are there to be made, we've just got to make them. Shoot, I dropped two picks myself, so I can't rag on him without putting me in the same hat."
Dansby said that with the scheme designed by coordinator Mike Nolan and the unit's overall talent, takeaways should come naturally.
"We don't have to do anything out of character to get it done," Dansby said.
That's easier said than done, of course, or the Dolphins would have done it already. The Dolphins had only 11 interceptions last season, and three were by Jason Allen, who's no longer around.
The four starting defensive backs had one apiece, which could have been doubled if Smith had held onto any number of others, including a gift against Baltimore.
It wasn't just the starting secondary either. Benny Sapp blew one against Buffalo. Nolan Carroll flubbed one against Cleveland. Even lineman Kendall Langford botched one against the Jets.
"Last year was crazy," safety Yeremiah Bell said. "We were in the right position a lot of times.
"Interceptions are sometimes harder than they appear. It depends on what position your body is in when you see the ball. It's easy to track a ball once it's thrown and you can see it. But you're running and trying to cover a guy and you turn your head and the ball is there at the last minute, and you stick your hands out, and you drop it. You want to catch those but, still, it's hard to do."
Bell recalls dropping "a couple."
"You may get one opportunity a game to get an interception," Bell said. "It's golden. Your body can be in the most messed-up position, but you get your hands on it, so you've still got to make it count."
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