What I said doesn't take away from the team scoring a rare number of points in two games. What I said was that it statistically skews the average in our favor because of the small sample size. I'm also implying that it's problematic to use the averages as they sit to compare us with other teams because of that skewing. Now if we score 30+ points in 6-8 games, then clearly I'm wrong. We'll see.
You specifically referred to the Oakland game as an outlier, when the truth is that NFL games should never be dismissed as outliers in a discussion of a team's overall performance. In a highly competitive league that plays a small number of games and in which scoring is highly variable from week to week, picking and choosing certain results as being more significant than others is quackery. And on top of that, when the team scored 33 points just three weeks prior, dismissing a 38 point performance against an objectively inferior opponent as an outlier is patently absurd.
Through four weeks, the Miami Dolphins have had two pretty good offensive performances, and two rather poor ones. In the next twelve games, Miami will almost certainly have more offensive performances that will be pretty good, and some that will be rather poor. However, the truth is that after four weeks, Miami has had just as many 'explosive' scoring performances (33+ points) as they've had in a full sixteen game season over any of the past 13 years. There's no projection or 'fluke' there. That's a simple fact: in four games, the Miami Dolphins have had as many dominant offensive performances as they typically have in a full sixteen game season.
You can either make the assumption that the Dolphins shot their wad in the first four games, or you can assume that the Miami Dolphins are likely to have their best offensive performance since 2001 (when they finished 8th in scoring) this season. Or you can assume nothing, which would be pretty silly on a discussion board. Personally, I assume that the Dolphins offense will continue to perform very well against teams that don't have outstanding defensive lines, and struggles against teams that do have outstanding defensive lines. This would fit the trend of the Joe Philbin/Ryan Tannehill era in Miami. However, I'm also going to assume that our good performances will be more productive, based on what I've seen in weeks one through four.
I think that's fair.