You have believers in Henne. You have more skeptics. But the common ground for everyone is how this Dolphins regime rises or falls on Henne and a belief this new offense that allows him to audible and attack downfield is welcome.
Let the guy stand up. Let him have a real offense to work with. Let's see who he is or confirm who he isn't.
When you look at Henne's statistics, nothing suggests greatness. But the hope is how nothing suggested greatness in
Drew Brees entering his third season as a starter, either.
The Dolphins have started 15 quarterbacks since Dan Marino left, from veterans like
Chad Pennington to rookies like John Beck to reclamation projects like
Daunte Culpepper.
Henne gets the chance none of them did with this third year of starting. He gets the speed of Reggie Bush to help him. He gets a refocused Brandon Marshall to partner with after last year's "misrelationship,'' as Henne called it.
That's all healthy. It's all preseason hope. It's the kind of stuff that sounds good on the edge of as big a season opener as the Dolphins have had in a while. It still comes down to Henne being the player he believes he can be.