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The Season is SLOWLY slipping away

PASQUALE

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We never saw this coming? Or did we?

Yet here we are, staring unbelievably at our Miami Dolphins dismal 1-3 record at the quarter pole, wondering if this is all there is to the hype, or if a corner has yet to be turned.

If we carefully and objectively sift through the ashes of the latest nightmare, a 17-15 loss to the lowly Houston Texans, we will find a team that is slowly (VERY SLOWLY) improving.

The problem here, of course, is that there are only 16 games in a season. At our current rate of “improvement”, 2007 NFL Draft talk will begin before Halloween.

Who could have imagined it? Who ever thought we’d be facing this early music again, given all the dramatic changes since the infamous crash and burn of 2004?

Yes, I know…in today’s NFL, you never count any team out. And, honestly, the Dolphins just have too much talent to be playing this poorly.

Yet reality smacks us in the face like a wet towel. The product on the field is inexcusably lousy.

I’m an optimist but, right now, it is difficult to see how these Dolphins have a prayer of defeating the Patriots and Jets on the road these next two weeks. Not when we stink out loud against the likes of the Bills and Texans and, arguably, the Titans….creampuffs all them!

Offensively, they’re among the worst in Dolphins history. The loss of Scott Linehan and, perhaps, Gus Frerotte has obviously been more costly than anyone expected.

In the end though, it takes coaches and players to fix the problems.

Start with the coaches. New offensive coordinator Mike Mularkey and his staff have done a terrible, terrible job in fielding a winner. The line is surrendering sacks at a record-breaking pace, the receivers can’t make plays, (Ronnie Brown) is not involved nearly enough, and (Daunte Culpepper) is still struggling to find himself.

As a whole, the offense simply lacks identity and purpose. Once again, it is fair to question whether Mularkey was the right man for the Dolphins job. Mularkey’s a smart guy but was it a wise decision by Nick Saban to splice Mularkey’s philosophy onto Scott Linehan’s system and expect everything to jell in just one offseason?

Or, did Saban privately expect that it would take this long?

This we know: only eight teams scored fewer points than Mularkey’s 2005 Bills. At their current pace, the Dolphins will fall well short of those anemic Bills.

Saban’s not going anywhere but Mularkey can’t be anywhere else but on the hot seat right now given the autonomy (and salary) Saban gave him to get the job done.

The same can be said for Culpepper, though it is fair to question the wisdom of him starting the season given his all too obvious health issues.

His play in the preseason, what little there was of it, appears to have been a mirage. The truth of the matter is that he is not sufficiently recovered to help the Dolphins win games now. And, given the porous pass protection in front of him (more on that in a minute), his lack of mobility is more troublesome.

The end result has been indecisive play. To his credit, he is learning to better function within his current limitations. Saban even said he was the offensive player of the week. However, the bottom line is that Culpepper has, thus far, been more of a problem than a help.

Is a less than full-strength Culpepper better than a full-strength Joey Harrington?

In the judgment of the coaches, the answer is apparently “yes”. Keep in mind that Saban is a long term thinker. As such, he probably sees benefit in continuing to play Culpepper now so that he will be ready for the future.

Of course Saban won’t come out and say that but neither will he damage the team’s long term investment in Culpepper by benching him.

As for the offensive line, things just haven’t improved. Yes, right guard has been a revolving door that the opposition has taken advantage of. But that can’t be the only cause of the flood of insufficiently checked pass rushers and an absence of holes to run through. And, since Saban won’t tell us who’s been naughty or nice (outside of Vernon Carey—nice), we are left to speculate.

In all fairness, it is difficult to specifically lay blame on individuals without knowledge of the protection schemes. What we do know is that, without an effective offensive line, nothing on offense works well. Bottom line.

Defensively, the Dolphins continue to make mistakes, especially in the undermanned secondary. Yet it is hard to lay the weight of this 1-3 mess on the defense when they have pitched a winning effort in every single game this season.

Yes, I know they gave up 14 fourth quarter points to the Texans. But when you hold the opposition to 17 points, you should win the game when the other team’s defense is the worst (worst!) in the NFL.

Guys like Zach Thomas and Jason Taylor have to be questioning their teammates, the coaches, everything. They expected the team to be moving forward, to be improving. Yes, they’re “team first” guys and always will be. But they’re human, too.

So are are all of us fans. :goof:

Last year the Dolphins went 3-7 before the lights came on, too late to make the playoffs. These Dolphins need an epiphany, and soon, or else 2006 will end with another playoff miss just like 2005, 2004, 2003, and 2002.

When? I feel it will start on Sunday versus the Pathetics, (but who my to say they will or they won't. IT IS ALL UP TO THEM IF THEY WANT TO OR NOT).

Just my way of coping. Thanks reading.
 
I enjoyed your post and agree with most of your acessments,after that long thought out thread i will not disgrace with a few disagreements, but i would like to know your opinion on this,, are we really from top to botton one of the worst teams in the league that is slowly improving to become less than average or are we agood team that has yet to find itself,,, i hope for the latter but i'am really beginning to wonder.
 
I can't see any way in God's green earth that we beat the Patriots in Foxboro next Sunday. They know they can just blitz the hell out of us and we won't be able to do anything on offense. It may get ugly. Culpepper may not have any legs left after next Sundays game. How many sacks will the Pats have? 10 or 12.
 
djphinfan said:
I enjoyed your post and agree with most of your acessments,after that long thought out thread i will not disgrace with a few disagreements, but i would like to know your opinion on this,, are we really from top to botton one of the worst teams in the league that is slowly improving to become less than average or are we agood team that has yet to find itself,,, i hope for the latter but i'am really beginning to wonder.


To me, right now the Dolphins do not have an identity. So I believe and hate to say it but, they are improving to be an average team. Some of the personnel on our team are not very good. Therefore, they are trying to get it right.
 
DefensiveEnd#76 said:
I can't see any way in God's green earth that we beat the Patriots in Foxboro next Sunday. They know they can just blitz the hell out of us and we won't be able to do anything on offense. It may get ugly. Culpepper may not have any legs left after next Sundays game. How many sacks will the Pats have? 10 or 12.


I hate to say your right but, your right. I say 7.:fire: :boohoo:
 
PASQUALE said:
To me, right now the Dolphins do not have an identity. So I believe and hate to say it but, they are improving to be an average team. Some of the personnel on our team are very good. Therefore, they are trying to get it right.

They have an identity. It's called "lack of talent." Aging defense. Gutless O-line. Dispicable secondary. We have a few scattered talented offensive players, but this team as a whole is lacking youth, athleticism, and talent.
 
FINStradamus said:
They have an identity. It's called "lack of talent." Aging defense. Gutless O-line. Dispicable secondary. We have a few scattered talented offensive players, but this team as a whole is lacking youth, athleticism, and talent.


I agree 100%. They should be a better product than what they have displayed. They should be ashamed of themselves.:boohoo: Especially the O-Line!!
 
FINStradamus said:
They have an identity. It's called "lack of talent." Aging defense. Gutless O-line. Dispicable secondary. We have a few scattered talented offensive players, but this team as a whole is lacking youth, athleticism, and talent.

Add, "incredibly inept coaching staff" and this post hits the nail on the head.
 
Pasquale,

Good post, but the season started slipping away dramatically when we lost to the Bills. At that point, it was obviousl to me that this was a bad football team. That first pass attempt vs the Bills when DC went to throw the ball and it went backwards summed up our whole sorry season. Ineptitude, at just about every position.

And I don't agree that you can't count teams out in the NFL. I can stand here today confidently and say the Raiders season is over. Same with the Browns. Same with the Titans and Texans. And unfortunately, we are in the same boat with those teams.

And yes, Mularkey is substandard. And so is the oline. And the secondary, and Culpepper...but who is responsible for those coaches, players, units? I'd say the buck stops with Saban. And if we've had enough time to realize Mularkey must go, then I'd say we've had more than enough time to realize that Saban isn't going to lead this team anywhere. He's had 20 games and we are now older, slower, and worse than when he got here.

You accurately point out that we gave up 14 4th quarter points to the Texans. Thats really all we need to know about this team.

But I've been a fan of this team for over 35 years. And Saban is the coach. I'll be rooting like hell for him to win on Sunday. Then, after the game, and the Patriots have handed us our ***....I'll come back here and point out every pathetic deficiency that STILL plagues this team. And I hope that the chorus will grow until finally its heard and acted on....Hire someone who is serious about building this team into a winner.
 
FINStradamus said:
They have an identity. It's called "lack of talent." Aging defense. Gutless O-line. Dispicable secondary. We have a few scattered talented offensive players, but this team as a whole is lacking youth, athleticism, and talent.

Well said.....I agree.
 
Hey what is this? the club of the fans who thought we were going to win the superbowl this year? omg
Building a successful team needs a lot of time... thank god you are not the owners of the team

HAVE PATIENCE
 
Simone007 said:
Hey what is this? the club of the fans who thought we were going to win the superbowl this year? omg
Building a successful team needs a lot of time... thank god you are not the owners of the team

HAVE PATIENCE

This is NOT the club of fans who thought we would win the SB this year. This is the club of fans who thought we should be improved this year. OMG, building a successful team needs yearly IMPROVEMENT, not one 9-7 season, then a 3-13 season, then a 10-6 season, then a 4-12 season. I pray to God that I had you as a boss. I could totally suck in my job and yield no results and I could still keep my job because "I just needed more time".

HAVE STANDARDS!
 
TampaFinsFan01 said:
This is NOT the club of fans who thought we would win the SB this year. This is the club of fans who thought we should be improved this year. OMG, building a successful team needs yearly IMPROVEMENT, not one 9-7 season, then a 3-13 season, then a 10-6 season, then a 4-12 season. I pray to God that I had you as a boss. I could totally suck in my job and yield no results and I could still keep my job because "I just needed more time".

HAVE STANDARDS!

So you would fire Nick Saban now and then honestly think a competent coach is going to ever come work for you?
 
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