Dolphins Offseason Thread (Mandatory Mini-Camp 6/10 - 6/12) | Page 14 | FinHeaven - Miami Dolphins Forums

Dolphins Offseason Thread (Mandatory Mini-Camp 6/10 - 6/12)

I have one question for you if you believe in man made “climate change”. What is the ideal temperature supposed to be?
There's no single "ideal" temperature for Earth, as life can thrive in a wide range of conditions. However, a new study suggests that 20 degrees Celsius (68 degrees Fahrenheit) might be an optimal temperature for many species.

The current concern is the rate of change in Earth's climate, rather than a specific ideal temperature. The IPCC, the global climate experts group, has also established a benchmark of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times as a limit to prevent worsening and potentially irreversible effects of climate change.
 
He also knows this love for hunting helps him as a football player.

Obviously, anyone capable of taking down a boar brings an element of nasty.

But he also points to the patience of mainstream hunting. Sitting in the woods. Staying calm. Waiting to strike. There are parallels, and all of this is exactly what the Dolphins need. In August, Sieler was rewarded with a three-year, $30.75 million deal. He moves exceptionally well for a human his size. In the wild card loss to Buffalo last year, Sieler scooped up a Josh Allen fumble and returned it for a touchdown in one fell swoop of athleticism uncommon for any 300-pounder. We’ve seen more such movement this fall, such as getting on his high horse to track down the mobile Tyrod Taylor. He got to the QB near the sideline, dove, tripped him up, forced an incompletion.


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Six games in, he’s playing the best football of his life. Sieler is already up to 22 tackles and four sacks. Two of which came in that 31-16 win over the Giants. (The Dolphins had Sieler mic’d up.)

Last week, against Carolina, he shook free to sack Bryce Young on third and 18.

Ash knows his friend’s personality gives this star-studded team balance.

“He doesn’t really care what his role is or what he’s asked to do,” Ash says. “He is going to do it at the best of his ability and really just take ownership of that role. Even going back to his days at the Ravens where he probably felt like, ‘Oh man, I could really help them out here.’ You never heard him complain once about playing time or ‘this person’s getting more reps because they were drafted higher’ or any of those things. He just kept working.”

Unsurprisingly, he’s tight with another ass-kicker you know well: Wyatt Teller. The Cleveland Browns’ mauling guard was actually hunting with Sieler in Florida when he took down that 10-foot gator. They share a love for football’s violence. Yet, there’s no hesitation. The true key to his rise? Sieler cites his “mentals.” How he thinks through those 60 snaps in a game. Sieler takes technique to heart, and credits Dolphins defensive line coach Austin Clark for helping him see a new game.

What Sieler loves most about the NFL is that any lineman, any play can get the best of you.

Each snap is its own game within the game. Sieler processes all film study, scans the line for all potential clues, the ball is snapped and — as he says — “chaos ensues.”

Here, he breaks down a typical play:

“You get the defensive call, you get the front, you get lined up, you get ‘OK, they’ve got this package in, they’ve got this in, there’s this down-and-distance on this part of the field. You take all that in — ‘alright’— and then that last second, you just take that last breath right before that ball snaps. It’s almost like a second of silence and then just ‘Boom!’ The ball snaps and just you go from there. You’re right. You’re wrong. You react.”

Alignment on the line of scrimmage alone can win or lose a play.

“That inch, 2, 3, 4 inches of difference is the whole world. It’s all about angles.”

Leverage is then gained or lost in a millisecond. In this sense, like Atlanta Falcons vet Calais Campbell, he views defensive line play as a game of Texas hold ‘em. Sieler studies the man in front of him as if they’re at a poker table — Is this stance a true sell? Is it a fake? The more he plays, the less he is fooled. Which means he more often than not wins those critical inches. To the point now where Sieler lives in an actual house. That wasn’t case early in his NFL career. Back when he was toggling on and off the 53-man roster — when Sieler lived in a self-described world of “Are you in the NFL? Are you not?” — he lived in a RV. It’d make nomadic NFL life easy.

The lack of WiFi wasn’t ideal. Sieler needed to stick around the Ravens facility to access the Internet. But he loved living at a campsite, for $900/month, “in the middle of nowhere.” Out in the woods, Sieler could watch deer walk all around him each day. When the Dolphins picked him up, Sieler settled into an RV campground on an intercoastal for $1,200/month. He’s a practical man. Towing his entire life with him always made more sense than shuffling in and out of apartments through the NFL madness. Hannah was always cool with it, too. A basketball player at Alabama, she fully understood the sacrifice Sieler was pouring into this sport — and the fact that he’s so freakin’ competitive.

Sieler admits he cannot shut it off.

The college kid who struggled setting a fantasy lineup is now trying to wreck your fantasy matchup.

Nor can he sit still.

Even after inking that whopper of a contract, he’d much rather install everything with his own bare hands. Be it the speaker system in his car, the fencing around their property or their entire security system. Sieler burrowed into the attic himself to handle all electronic wiring. It’s the engineer in him. If their vehicles need any work done? Hell no, they’re not calling the mechanic. Sieler handles it. (“I’ll do it myself. I know it’s done right.”) A refreshing perspective in a world where we all simply press a button on our phone to get anything we need, right down to food and transportation.

He enjoys heading south to the Florida Keys, to Marathon, and going fishing with a buddy. The loss of cell service, out on the Atlantic, is viewed as a blessing. All conversation is face to face. Nobody’s on their phones. Other times, he’ll throw on some classic rock and work on his 2013 Jeep Wrangler. Doesn’t matter if it’s 95 degrees. Sieler pulls the axles, lifts it, finds something, and it brings him total peace. Of course, he’d try changing a wheel with the Red Bull Racing team at the F1 Miami Grand Prix.


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Fresh air, he knows, is good for the soul.

That’s why any spare time Sieler does have is spent building up his foundation, Sieler Safe Haven, which helps get kids outside. He has taken a quadriplegic child out to hunt gator, iguanas and deer. He loves taking kids from Miami who never spend time in the great outdoors to central Florida and the Everglades. Soon to be a father himself, Sieler knows the pitfalls that loom.

Society pushes everyone to become addicted to screens — young.

Technology isn’t all terrible. This conversation, after all, is taking place over Zoom. But as Sieler notes, screens become the ultimate time-suck.

“For kids and adults,” he says. “How many times does someone just started scrolling and you just get lost in it and it’s all of a sudden half-hour goes by? That’s why I love to hopefully spark a passion with kids. To go out in the woods. Especially when you have no service. I love that. Then you have no connection.”

No, Sieler won’t be planting a cell phone anywhere at Hard Rock Stadium. No backflips for him. He’ll stick to assisting Christian Wilkins with his Power Ranger-themed celebration.

And that’s what gives this Miami Dolphins team a perfect balance. Another record seems to fall every time Mike McDaniel’s offense takes the field. Fun, to be sure. But they’ll need such yeoman grunts to exchange body blows with teams such as the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday night. Teams that choose to bludgeon.

Bully ball awaits.

They’ll need Zach Sieler.

“I’m a competitor,” Sieler says. “I want to be the best every single day — and to not stop.”
Since he can handle boars, does that mean he can deal effectively with "Lemmings" too? - LOL
 
There's no single "ideal" temperature for Earth, as life can thrive in a wide range of conditions. However, a new study suggests that 20 degrees Celsius (68 degrees Fahrenheit) might be an optimal temperature for many species.

The current concern is the rate of change in Earth's climate, rather than a specific ideal temperature. The IPCC, the global climate experts group, has also established a benchmark of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times as a limit to prevent worsening and potentially irreversible effects of climate change.
Man does nothing to affect something that has occurred for BILLIONS of years. The sun controls everything. Hey Mr Clean and Ghost - how many times in the last 12,000 years has there been no ice caps on the planet??? And what would need to occur for the polar caps to disappear. Look into that. Also I am more concerned with the ever increasing weakening of Earths magnetic fields, and we are right on time for our next magnetic pole shift - which will be extinction level event - which Clean and Ghost will cheer on.

and anyone quoting the IPCC is completely bent over and probably has never thought for themselves, ever, and probably still wearing masks from Convid, and social distancing, too.
 
Man does nothing to affect something that has occurred for BILLIONS of years. The sun controls everything. Hey Mr Clean and Ghost - how many times in the last 12,000 years has there been no ice caps on the planet??? And what would need to occur for the polar caps to disappear. Look into that. Also I am more concerned with the ever increasing weakening of Earths magnetic fields, and we are right on time for our next magnetic pole shift - which will be extinction level event - which Clean and Ghost will cheer on.

and anyone quoting the IPCC is completely bent over and probably has never thought for themselves, ever, and probably still wearing masks from Convid, and social distancing, too.
 
PFF article on players who could be the best at their position soon…we really dropped the ball on this one. Seems like he would’ve been better at FS for us but we had Holland there. Wonder what it would have looked like with Jones as FS

S BRANDON JONES, DENVER BRONCOS

Jones was one of the most underrated free agent signings in the NFL last offseason. His first year in Denver was terrific, as he posted an 89.8 coverage grade that ranked third in the NFL. While many will be skeptical of a sudden breakout from a player in his fifth NFL season, they should be optimistic about Jones’ abilities because he wasn’t even used optimally last season.

Less than 55% of Jones’ snaps last season came as a true free safety. On those snaps, he recorded a 90.6 coverage grade, best in the NFL. When aligned anywhere else, that number drops to 64.6, which ranks outside the top 30 safeties.

Denver has decided to complement Jones with another free agent acquisition, Talanoa Hufanga, who is a more natural box safety. Increasing the number of snaps where Jones is playing in his most comfortable alignment could unlock another level of production for him.

 
Ya the planet is warming on its own. Brilliant stuff. If you wonder why no one you know respects your opinion, it’s not hard for me to understand why.
For those of you that want "the truth", we have only recovered from a "mini-ice age", coupled with the "Maunder Minimum" (dearth of solar activity as denoted by fewer sunspots for a prolonged period of time).

In the year 800 AD the Scottish people were growing grapes and making wine in Scotland. They can now do it again and have been doing it for the last 20 or so years.

This is because the temperatures of the planet have returned to where they were ~ 1300 years ago.

As an important aside, the claims by the "climate control warriors" have all been taken out of perspective to the point they are false. The source of a lot of earths heat comes from seismic activity caused by the earths shrinking crust compressing the earths molten metal core, thereby fracturing and producing more volcanic activity. The pacific ring of fire has been considerably more active the last 75 years.

Claims that the Greenland ice cap has been shrinking were countered by measurements made by NASA that showed that Greenlands ice cap had grown by a depth of 7 inches since it was last measured.

If you want to worry about something, worry about our next ice age - we are about 200,000 years overdue. One Geological theory claims that if the "Atlantic Conveyer" (the water flow around the Atlantic Ocean) switches direction and quits flowing under Africa and switches to flowing around South America, then a new ice age will begin.

Guess what just started to happen in the last 5 years?

The "Atlantic conveyer started to switch directions. When this happened, the flow across Antartica shifted of the warmer water in the Atlantic Conveyor flowing under the Ross Ice Shelf resulted in some huge "breaking off" of sections of the ice shelf. If the geological theory about the shifting of the Atlantic Conveyer proves to be correct, the ice age has just started.

Global warming my ass!!!
We simply recovered from a mini-Ice age and may be on the verge of a new ice age, which is geographically long overdue.

Sleep tight, or sleep "tite" - whichever works the best for you. - LOL
 
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On the Rookie Mini Camp roster, among the list of coaches, I noticed a couple of changes. Chandler Henley is now listed as Senior Offensive Assistant and was previously Assistant QB coach. Brent Callaway is the Strength & Conditioning Coach, and I think he is new. Dave Puloka, who used to have that title, is now the Director, Player Performance. There was an Assistant strength and conditioning last year, Adam Lachance, who is no longer listed. Callaway apparently came to Miami from Exos Sports (@EXOSsports) / X
 
For those of you that want "the truth", we have only recovered from a "mini-ice age", coupled with the "Maunder Minimum" (dearth of solar activity as denoted by fewer sunspots for a prolonged period of time).

In the year 800 AD the Scottish people were growing grapes and making wine in Scotland. They can now do it again and have been doing it for the last 20 or so years.

This is because the temperatures of the planet have returned to where they were ~ 1500 years ago.

As an important aside, the claims by the "climate control warriors" have all been taken out of perspective to the point they are false. The source of a lot of earths heat comes from seismic activity caused by the earths shrinking crust compressing the earths molten metal core, thereby fracturing and producing more volcanic activity. The pacific ring of fire has been considerably more active the last 75 years.

Claims that the Greenland ice cap has been shrinking were countered by measurements made by NASA that showed that Greenlands ice cap had grown by a depth of 7 inches since it was last measured.

If you want to worry about something, worry about our next ice age - we are about 200,000 years overdue. One Geological theory claims that if the "Atlantic Conveyer" (the water flow around the Atlantic Ocean) switches direction and quits flowing under Africa and switches to flowing around South America, then a new ice age will begin.

Guess what just started to happen in the last 5 years?

The "Atlantic conveyer started to switch directions. When this happened, the flow across Antartica shifted of the warmer water in the Atlantic Conveyor flowing under the Ross Ice Shelf resulted in some huge "breaking off" of sections of the ice shelf. If the geological theory about the shifting of the Atlantic Conveyer proves to be correct, the ice age has just started.

Global warming my ass!!!
We simply recovered from a mini-Ice age and may be on the verge of a new ice age, which is geographically long overdue.

Sleep tight, or sleep "tite" - whichever works the best for you. - LOL
Who knew you are like the Polar Opposite of some guy who invented the internet?

Is it the truth and is it convenient? 😂
 
Ya the planet is warming on its own. Brilliant stuff. If you wonder why no one you know respects your opinion, it’s not hard for me to understand why.
So, are you telling us the planet didn’t warm and cool before humans?

Is that your scientific assessment?
 
On the Rookie Mini Camp roster, among the list of coaches, I noticed a couple of changes. Chandler Henley is now listed as Senior Offensive Assistant and was previously Assistant QB coach. Brent Callaway is the Strength & Conditioning Coach, and I think he is new. Dave Puloka, who used to have that title, is now the Director, Player Performance. There was an Assistant strength and conditioning last year, Adam Lachance, who is no longer listed. Callaway apparently came to Miami from Exos Sports (@EXOSsports) / X

I hope this leads to some changes in some of our strength and conditioning philosophies and routines. We’ve consistently been unlucky with injuries so not sure how much of that is actual luck and if there are things we can do better from this aspect. I think there are but we shall see.
 
I hope this leads to some changes in some of our strength and conditioning philosophies and routines. We’ve consistently been unlucky with injuries so not sure how much of that is actual luck and if there are things we can do better from this aspect. I think there are but we shall see.
The person who advised Tua allegedly, to gain weight and keep gaining weight to play the position should be fired
 
An inside look at the enemy camp:



Here are 8 quick observations from Jets rookie camp — what we saw and what it might mean heading into the next phase of the offseason.

1. Good attendance. This portion of the offseason is voluntary, as are the entirety of OTAs before mandatory minicamp in June. Impressively, Glenn said that there was about 90 percent attendance in the first phase of offseason workouts and that they’re at around 94 percent participation for Phase Two.

“Outstanding,” Glenn said. “Those guys have done a hell of a job of understanding what we’re trying to create … I give those guys a lot of credit … (for) just buying into what we’re selling. When you get a new regime that’s what you want: to get the trust of your players. These guys know exactly what we want to do.”

2. Justin Fields’ leadership. One of those participants is particularly important: new starting quarterback Justin Fields, signed to a two-year, $40 million deal this offseason to take over for Aaron Rodgers. When the Jets drafted Taylor, Fields was one of the first to reach out and welcome him. Fields has participated in the team’s workouts, attended a couple Knicks games and is quickly endearing himself to his teammates. On a young team with only four players older than 30, the Jets need someone to emerge as a leader; Fields is starting to show he can fill that role.


Glenn noted Fields’ quiet confidence, calling it “unshakable” — and thinks that extends to his leadership style too.

“Even though he’s not the most vocal person, he’s active with his body language,” Glenn said. “He’s active with his one-on-one conversations. If he has to stand in front of the guys and say something, he will. He won’t talk just to talk, because sometimes when you do that players around you can get deadhead. But he says things when it needs to be said. He’s a really good athlete, he works his butt off in the weight room. He’s another guy that’s doing everything he can to improve. And whatever advantage he can get from coaching, strength and conditioning, being on the field, he’s going to take that advantage and run with it. I’m happy with where he’s at.”

3. Membou looks the part. The first-rounder was hyped for his athleticism and movement skills and that flashed, even in this setting. He gets to his spots quickly, plays with strength and finishes his blocks. It’s hard to truly evaluate offensive linemen with such limited contact in these practices, but the early returns are promising.

“I could easily (call him a) dancing bear but everyone says that,” Glenn said. “He’s an agile, gifted big man with measurables that everybody wants when it comes to offensive linemen and he’s only going to get better. He wants to work, he wants to be good, he wants to compete, he has all those traits we look for when it comes to an O-lineman. He’s nasty.”

4. Taylor is going to quickly become a top target for Fields. The LSU product was getting more attention for his jersey number on Day 1 (No. 46) than for how he looked on the field. Well, he switched to No. 85 by Saturday — the same number as Jets legend Wesley Walker — so that nonsense can be put to rest.

In the portions of practice open to media, there were some reps of 11-on-11 drills early but not enough to extrapolate very much since they mostly ran a conservative offense of running plays and short passes. Still, Taylor didn’t drop anything thrown his way and even had a catch-and-run on Friday from undrafted quarterback Brady Cook that would have gone for a big gain in a game. It will be interesting to see Taylor against experienced, NFL-sized defenders in the coming weeks and during training camp.

“Mason is exactly who we thought he was,” Glenn said. “He has dynamic movements. He can really catch the ball. He does a good job catching the ball away from his body. He’s quick to bring it in and go north and south.”


5. Arian Smith knows what people are saying. The Jets caught some flak for drafting Smith when they did in the fourth round, a perceived reach because of what he struggled with at Georgia: drops, as in 10 of them in 2024. He doesn’t shy away from discussing it. Smith admitted that focus was an issue at times for him last year.

“It’s not technique — there’s no special technique to catching the ball, you just gotta catch it,” Smith said. “It’s me being worried about other things other than catching the ball.”

One thing is undeniable when it comes to Smith: speed. He timed at a 4.36-second 40-yard dash at the combine but said he actually ran a 4.28 at one point in college. It was easy to see that the past few days. On Friday during team drills, he caught a ball on a slant and quickly burst upfield for a big gain. He’s working to expand his repertoire and prove that he’s more than just a go-route receiver.

“Arian has some juice doesn’t he?” Glenn said. “He can run and he’s bouncy and he’s a really good athlete. I thought the first day he went out and he was focused on seeing through the ball and making sure he can bring it in.”

Smith, who said he idolized DeSean Jackson, said that “I can be so much better than just speed.”

6. Tyler Baron is an intriguing pass rusher. The fifth-round rookie out of Miami did a nice job going against veteran offensive tackle Obinna Eze, who has been on NFL rosters for a couple years now. Baron won his matchups, showed some twitchiness and physically looks the part. The Jets are lacking for depth at defensive end, so there will be a chance for Baron to push for a situational pass-rushing role right away.

7. A familiar face trying out. Giovanni Williams might already know a little something about what it takes to be successful in a Jets uniform — he’s the brother of Quincy and Quinnen Williams, after all. The linebacker from Miles College was at rookie camp as one of the Jets’ tryout players, pushing to get added to the 90-man group.


He called it “bittersweet” wearing the same uniform his brothers have been wearing the last few years — bitter because he’s trying to forge his own path, sweet because he can lean on Quincy (also a linebacker) for advice on how to succeed in this defense.

“I just think it’s outstanding that he has a Jet jersey on,” Glenn said. “It’s a beautiful story.”

8. A UDFA standing out. Running back Donovan Edwards was the highest-rated player in the Jets’ UDFA class after a productive career at Michigan — and he flashed in Friday and Saturday’s practices too, showing some burst in the running game and making some plays as a pass-catcher. His path to the roster will be in the passing game and if he can contribute on special teams.
 
Who knew you are like the Polar Opposite of some guy who invented the internet?

Is it the truth and is it convenient? 😂
FYI - The internet was invented by the U.S. government to connect some college science departments from different universities together in order to more efficiently support some government funded science projects.

As more & more folks got to use this connection its popularity exploded. All internet growth rode on the back of those inter-university connections owned by our government. That is why the government has a legal base for tracking and listening to any traffic on any communications tied directly or even indirectly to that original communications structure.

As I recall, it was - and is still - called the Arc net.
 
So, are you telling us the planet didn’t warm and cool before humans?

Is that your scientific assessment?

Of course it did. The difference is that now it’s rapidly heating do human interference.

The fact that you simply don’t care isn’t a good enough reason to exacerbate the problem.
 
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