Actually you're looking field touchdown, miamis water drawn? What is up, Dolphans And welcome to the Drive Time Podcast, part of the Miami Dolphins official podcast network, covering your team, your were, Miami Dolphins, each and every day. How's it going everybody? It is Tuesday and I am your host, Travis Wingfield, and as always, I am here to bring you your
daily dose of Miami Dolphins football. On today's show, we are going to welcome in the venerable my guest today, Brett Coleman, the host of the Film Room on YouTube. We're gonna talk to him about this Dolphins defense, the personnel, the coaching, the scheme and all that married up to make a top six scoring defense this year in the National Football League. We'll talk about that, get a little
bit into the Shrine Bowl. Dolphins will be coaching at that with a few coaches, as well as the Senior Bowl. All of that and more on this Tuesday, January the nineteenth edition of the Drive Time Podcast, and the Senior Bowl starts next week. As rosters are being finalized with
Jim Naggy, the director of the Senior Bowl. He has been tweeting out position groups for both teams, one of course, that the Dolphins will be coaching in that game on Saturday, January thirty one, the other for the Carolina Panthers, who also coached the Senior Bowl. Plus, since we last talked, it was announced the Dolphins defensive backs coach Gerald Alexander, linebackers coach Anthony Campanelli, and Brendan Farrell and assistant coaching staff up on the defensive line will be coaching this
week at the Shrine Bowl. And I just can't get enough of that type of news as we continue to get good up close looks at prospects with projections in all rounds of this coming April's draft, and it's especially beneficial in an off season that promises to, like last offseason, be a bit different than we're used to. We're looking
at the Ryan Bowl roster go back. Every single year you can point to one or two guys on that list that winds up in Pro Bowls perpetually each season, So there's definitely some players to keep an eye on at that Shrine Bowl. Of course, last year we drafted Malcolm Perry in the seventh round, who had one touch in the Shrine Game and ran it for fifty two yards for a touchdown, So keep an eye on that
coming up this weekend. Speaking of the Senior Bowl and the Combine, the different looks of getting a look at prospects this offseason, Albert Brier wrote a story over the weekend about some potential changes to the Combine that we could see this year, with the biggest one being the absence of a central gathering place, i e. Indianapolis, So
check that out up on Sports Illustrated dot com. Albert Brier wrote the story, and before we get to my guest, how about that Divisional round weekend I think dubbed the best football weekend for the National Football League of the season because you typically get four pretty good games, at least three or two really good games. I thought we had too that were just you know what I'm gonna say. There were three game games that I was really cluded on,
the defensive battle between Buffalo and Baltimore. I can watch a seventeen thirteen game every single day of the week and leave the fifty to forty battles somewhere else. Those are not for me. I love the fact that every aspect, every element, every play is important. Defense, special team's offense, coaching decisions, all that stuff. I love when every single play is magnified to the utmost importance, and I think
you only get that in those defensive battles. As the Buffalo Bills take that one and wind up heading to the a f C Championship game where they're gonna face the Kansas City Chiefs, who pulled off that late when
there without their starting quarterback in the lineup. Chad Henny man on that third and fourteen rush where he picked up thirteen and a half yards before the fourth and one conversion that are Tyreek Hill, which was the same looking play the Chiefs ran against the Dolphins back in Week fourteen to convert and move the chains and eventually get that field goal that put us down by two
scores in that game. But man, that was a fun game to watch because with with Henny and they're making those big plays, and the and the Browns offense, you just kind of always thought that ba Aaker Mayfield is going to find a way to get that offense into the end zone and get that late lead, get that late steal of the victory there. It didn't happen. Now we have Kansas City and Buffalo in the a f
C Championship game. Over on the NFC side, that game from the Packers and Rams just never really felt like it was in danger for the Packers, who right now at this point to me seemed like not a flawless team. Nobody's a flawless team, but man, they are clicking on all cylinders. And then the Tampa Bay and New Orleans game. What a career for Drew Brees if this is the
end for him. Of course, he said he's gonna make his decision at a later date and announced that when he has that decision for us, But that was some of the speculation beforehand. And if this is the end for Drew Brees, what a frigging career it was for him. As Tom Brady and the Buccaneers go on to face the Packers in that NFC championship game. That's a good looking slate of championship games next Sunday, let's go ahead and finish up here and get to my guest for
this podcast. It is, after all, a Dolphins podcast here, the Drivetime podcast on the Miami Dolphins Podcast Network. Let's go ahead and welcome him, Brett Coleman and writing show gunn Now on the Drive Time Podcast is one of the best analysts in the game. You can find his work on his YouTube channel. It's called The Film Room. Over a quarter million subscribers, getting close to three hundred thousand subscribers. That's crazy. Make sure you hit that subscribe
button after this. On his YouTube channel, he is Brett Coleman. Brett, what's up man? Long time no talk? Yeah, happy to be back. I haven't talked Dolphins in a while. I think it was it might have even been before last draft we last talked. I think, I think so somewhere around there. I think we were talking about to a lot. Ironically, that was our guy. That was definitely our guy, and we we got him. He's here, he's signed, sealed, deliver.
But we're gonna talk about the other side of the football here today because and before we get into this, you had a tweet back in early September that was perfect. It was it was absolutely perfect. We're gonna cover that here in just one second. But first I want to have the the audience here kind of get to know you. I think we're gonna hopefully have you on more, Brett. I would love to talk to you more because I
really respect what you do. He does these these full feature episodes where he goes into and breaks it down and gives you both sides of the story. It's very very analytical, very objective. It's the film Room on YouTube, Brett. It's it's my favorite YouTube channel there is personally. I mean I watched, I watch them all. I learned a lot. That's the number one thing I look for, and football
content is learning. So I'm curious, Brett, where, like tell me your origin story because I know you told me a little bit about you know, how the channel got popular and what you were doing before that. Like, just give us a little bit of background to who you are and where you got or how you got to the stage of your career. Yeah. I actually, um, I started out working in the production side over at NFL Network.
I was there for five years, and the channels started out as kind of a proof of concept for my producers there. I was not intending to actually be, you know, the presenter of it. I wanted to produce basically these kinds of segments, but you know, for La Dati and Tomlinson or you know, Willie to get any any one of those, uh, you know, established Hall of fame, you know,
NFL players. I wanted to just basically, like you're was the film here, the stats, you know, let's do deep dives into topics A, B, and see and how they all relate to each other, you know, fifteen minutes segments and stuff like that. Um. And the feedback that I got there was absolutely true, which is that format is not great for television, which is more bite size type content. Uh. And so but these episodes that I was making just show my producers like, hey, here's kind of what I'm thinking,
so you can kind of visualize it. Those ended up getting popular out of nowhere. Uh. And I would only put one out maybe every two or three months. If I had an idea that I wanted to pitch and then all of a sudden I had eleven thousand subscribers or something. I barely even did. And my wife looked at me one day at least my Now, why if she wasn't my wife at the time, and she said, you know, you're not even trying here, and you're building a following, what would happen if you actually tried and
did this full time? Uh? And Uh? I spent three months building up you know, a catalog of content to release in draft season. I think it was seen draft. My last day NFL Network was the day before the Patriots Falcon Super Bowl. Dove into YouTube full time after that, and it's it's steadily grown ever since then. So you said something there that is really intriguing to me, and we're getting, you know, kind of into the weeds here.
But you said that your wife or then girlfriend, now wife was kind of saying, hey, look you might have something here. I think for most people in our positions, Brett, maybe the wife was not so on board. Like, for instance, I used to have a website where I evaluated every pass from every quarterback, every drop back, and I built this thing. I designed it and put it all up
and it was like a six month long project. And I would go upstairs into my little office and get to work, and my wife is like, there he goes for three wasted hours. We're not gonna ever get that time back again, or you know whatever. Maybe it wasn't as encouraging. That's that's awesome to hear that you had that and it worked out for you successful, And like I said, man, best in the game. I I learned
so much from watching your stuff. And that's why I wanted to bring you on here today to talk about this Dolphins defense because I think I referred to a video you made last year regarding some free agent acquisition or some draftable player, and you broke it down in a way that was so beyond what we normally see from just the box score or like what you know, generic ESPN level, like mainstream type of you know, scouting Prognosis might say you gave us factual inside looks at
the stuff. So I wanted to to bring you on talk about those Dolphins defense because if you go back to September Bright, I've got the tweet right here, it was September seventh at two o'clock and you said it was you retweeted somebody who asked, what's your possibly most out there prediction for NFL season that you're actually half confident in, and you said, Dolphins have a top seven
or eight defense and have a winning season. And in this threat, I was looking at it just now, and you actually got some more positive feedback than I was expecting. Of course, there was something that called you crazy and an absolute ludotic for saying that, But it turns out Miami had the sixth ranks scoring defense one ten games this year. How did that prediction come into your mind? And how do you think it played out that the
course of the season. It just to seemed logical to me, because when you looked at their last offseason, Uh, you know, they're coming off the first year under Flores, who ran a very Patriot style defense, a lot of man coverage, UM, you know, a lot of really nice creative inventor invented pressure packages. UM, a lot of multiple multiplicity in his fronts, but mostly sticking to odd fronts rather than even fronts, with a lot of three down stuff with linebackers moving
all over the place and dbs and man coverage. And I looked at that and I was like, Okay, it works, but a it takes a while for a defense to really hit its stride in that kind of system because you need the right talent to run it. Next thing, you know, you know your Parsavian, who I think was hurt in the first year pretty significantly. You pair him. You bring in Byron Jones. Uh, you draft a kid out of Texas, Brandon Jones. I believe his name is that.
I really like, you know, you bringing in Kyle van Noy knows this kind of system backwards and forwards, and they you know, they had some other young draft picks that I really really liked, um Strowbridge. I saw him down to the Senior Bowl last year. Venito Jones saw him the Senior Bowl. I like both of them a lot. Ray Kwon Davis out of Bamba. I thought it was an absolute animal. And they got him to play their nose position that turned out to, you know, kind of
picked up where he left off this year. He was phenomenal for them. Uh. And then they still had Wilkins from the year before, who I think is a really good three technique but actually overperformed what I what I thought. But he ended up being a very good addition as well. And so I looked at this defense and I'm like, Okay, you got really good corners, they could play man coverage. You have a front seven that can bring pressure and wave after wave after wave in a system that is
going to emphasize those two things. What's the missing piece here? Nothing? So I was like, this is gonna be a top ten defense just on talent and scheme fit alone. And if you put Tua or Ryan whoever was playing quarterback with some of the weapons that they had that I really liked. When there was Parker Gaziki, any of those guys, I was like, there's really not a whole lot of
holes on this team. Plus there in a your division this year, it just seemed completely logical to me that they were gonna be a great defense and overall really good team. And lo and behold they were. I had Miami down for ten and six. But of course if I say that, then you know it can't be trusted because I'm wearing a dolphin's hat right now as I talked to you on this podcast. So that's why we got trying to get someone else maybe a little more
objective here on the podcast. And I felt the same way you did, especially defensively, with the things they wanted to do on defense and the pieces they had to match. And I think, like you mentioned off the top, that all started with xaviing Howard, who was an All Pro pretty much any publication you look at, and the one that actually counts the a p AL Pro First Team
All Pro out their cornerback. But man Brett I thought Byron Jones was you know, he was damn good in his own right and doesn't have the ball production of xaviing House. That's why he doesn't get the maybe the big time publicity. But when you have those two cornerbacks that can play that way on the outside, like to explain to the fans what that does as far as how it frees up the ability to zero pressure. Maybe it frees up more flexibility for Bobby can Eric Roe,
who were pretty much interchangeable at times this year. What is those two cornerbacks being on the field pretty much every snap do for the rest of the defense. You know, if you have at least two corners that you know can hold up for two seconds, and you're throwing a zero pressure at someone, meaning you got no safeties, the no matter what, you're gonna be overwhelming the past protection of one extra guy who's going to get there in
two seconds. As long as the dvs can hold up in that window, you're either gonna force to throw away, You're gonna you're gonna force the quarterback to try to run to create something off schedule, or he's gonna have to throw a ball perfectly under pressure deep down the field, which is easier said than done. It's it's very hard to beat that look unless you have something special for it. We saw the Bills had something special for it. I think it was weeks seven team where they brought in
a wide receiver and protected with eight. Uh, and then you had John Brown one on one and I think it was Byron that gave up a touchdown on it. But to be fair to him, he was squatting on the route as if was gonna be thrown in two seconds, because that's what they're used to. And then John Brown just kept running. So there's ways to beat it, but you have to have a specific, perfect play call for it. Most teams did not. That's why they kept forcing turnovers,
that's why they kept picking guys off, forcing fumbles. Was getting all these crazy sacks just because he was coming on blocks because they schemed a butt for him. And it's such a nasty defensive look that, honestly, most teams don't know how to handle. Uh. And they just did it week after week after week, and then as we saw the season go on, they started to show it and then drop out of it and like and then they kind of forced teams into Okay, well now we're
just gonna protect with seven or eight. Then you drop out have seven and coverage against two receivers, there's nothing there and that ends the play by itself as well. So just kind of the mind games and how they built around those blitzes specifically because they had the corners to make them work. I thought was just fantastic to watch, a lot of fun. Like you mentioned the disguise and the coverage, and you mentioned that, you know, forcing them in the match for textion and then you drop out
seven in coverage. The best example of that was a pick that Xavian he had tended this year so that you can pick your poison there, but he picked against the Chargers and Justin Herbert where you know, they played man coverage a lot in the game and then they flip it and go cover three and he's squatting reading the quarterback jumps out of that or drives out of that zone and gets a big time pick there in the fourth quarter, and you know, you look at Justin Herbert,
Jared Goff, Jimmy Garoppolo, I'm probably missing a couple of others had their worst statistical days against this Dolphins defense, and you know, is that something that is sustainable? Do you build upon that? Like if the scheme is what the scheme is, how do you as a coach continue to kind of revamp that or update that, are build
on that and continue to have that success. Like it's you know, I don't want to like get to two ahead of myself here, but as their ways where an offense can say, oh, they do this, here's how we counter that and beat that, and how does Miami continue to, like you mentioned, build on top of that and keep
it going. It's really all about self scouting, which luckily for Dolphins fans, you have a coaching staff that's very, very good at that in terms of, Okay, assuming they're gonna keep most of the talent going in the next year, which I think they are just looking at contracts and personnelverything like that, they're probably gonna return most, if not all, of the the same guys for next year. So you need to have a coach that's very good at looking at
their trends of what they called last year. So they were at man coverage at which was tops in the league. Their blitz rate was also top five. I believe it
was fifth at forty. So if they look at those trends, they know that offensive coaches around the league are gonna look at those trends too, and so they need to start building in other looks off of when they were showing Blitz, off of when they were showing Man and then kind of introduced those next season to make people think that they're gonna just keep rolling out the same old stuff. And then you hit him with the CounterPunch. You mentioned the pick from Zavian against Herbert, exactly the
same thing. You know, you show one thing, next thing, you know, Zavians popping out over you know, out of nowhere in the seam area, picking off justin, uh, completely out of left field. I remember that because I watched the ends up version of the All twenty two on it and I was like, wow, he just literally popped in out of nowhere. He didn't even see him. So
it's it's that kind of stuff. It's about self scouting, recognizing the trends of the types of coverages they use, the types of fronts they use, the blitz percentages, and then just building in little things that show that and then do something else to make offensive staffs second guests themselves.
And then you can also build in some more flexibility on top of that based upon the type of I guess the type of front seven the Dolphins had this year, and that's kind of where I want to go with this next question for your Brett, because you mentioned, you know, bringing in new pieces this year. We had Kyle van Noy was a free agent import, Jerome Baker was in his third season with the Dolphins, Andrew van Gigle his second season. We Addie Land and Robert to get Shack
Lawson and Emmanuel Ogball into that mix as well. What did you make of this remade linebacker corps and their ability to show that pressure in multiple gaps and in his or anybody that does it better in terms of how this Dolphins defense gives simulated pressure looks in every single gap with a quarterback basically having no idea where it's coming from. Am I Crazier? Did Van Ginkle make at least one great play every single game? Like he
was always good for one? You know, I remember in the in the Chiefs game, you know, he accidentally got knocked down and then stood up and then you know, just threw his hands in the air and tipped and that was a pick, one of the three picks they
had on the day. But he was always in the right place, always at the right time, very rarely made mental mistakes, and in this kind of defense, that's really what it's about, you know, that whole do your job mentality of like, hey, just do what we tell you to do and don't miss up your assignment and we're probably going to have success as a unit. And they did.
The only real guys in this defense that I feel like freelanced a little bit was Van Noy, just because he knows everything about every single role in this system and he knew what he could get away with. Uh. You actually saw a noticeable don't want to see declined, but there was a little bump in the defense when he was out, just because he is that kind of freelancing X factor in a defense, and I think is
is very particular about what people do on the field. Um. But overall, I loved this whole linebacking court with how multiple they were, how discipline they were, um, how creative they were, especially Kyle but my god, he I think he had his best year as of pro this year, and that's saying a lot because he had some pretty good years up in New England. And then Baker I think has really I mean I liked him coming out of college, but he's turned into something else entirely for them.
This is one of the better linebacking corps I think in the league, even though none of them are really garnering national attention. But just as a whole, I really really like what I see. I typically take notes throughout the podcast to kind of give myself from I just want to ask you about her, to to interject my
own thoughts. It's hard for me because you mentioned van Noy, who I'm so glad you said that, because this guy continuously just he does the work that doesn't show U from the box score, and I think that it's very valuable what he provides this team, but maybe, like you mentioned,
doesn't get the national recognition. You mentioned Andrew Van Giggles jump from year one to year two watching that guy go in and beat blocks, whether it was split zone or you have a lead guard pulling in his face, and he found a way, you know, at two forty two to beat those types of blocks and get in
there and make an impact in the running game. And you also mentioned Jerome Baker, who for my money, is just I mean the pressure he puts on opposing passing games with his blessing ability in those a gaps, whether it's forcing and running back to come pick him up
or to force the quarterback office spot. I just thought all of those guys were invaluable for what they did this season, and it helped produce the number one third down defense in the NFL, just under conversion against the Dolphins defense, and it got the Dolphins twenty nine takeaways,
which also led the National Football League. One of the things that I sometimes I guess worry about in my paranoid fan type of perspective Brett is you look at some of the great defenses over over time and not saying this defense was, you know, the two thousand Ravens or the eighty five Bears or the two thousand two Buccaneers.
But when you have those dominant defensive years, it seems like sometimes you can kind of get that that dip back down in production because takeaways are difficult to replicate. But when it comes to third down defense and takeaways, how was Miami inherently able to be so good in both those areas and how do they keep that train rolling next year? I've always looked at the defense, is that that major in turning the ball over. You know the teen Bears, the early tens Texans, uh, you know
Underwage Phillips that just produced a whole bunch of turnovers. Um. You know the mid two thousands Bears as well, that had a bunch of it. It's it's all about mentality and effort, because tipped balls are going to happen. You know, random fumbles are going to happen. Like sometimes you don't even try to to to put yourself in a perfect position. You're just executing a normal assignment in the quarterback just doesn't see you and just throws you the ball. Do
you catch it? Are you there within five yards of a tip ball to dive and get it? You know, are you in the exact right spot you need to be on a fumble to recover it. It's a lot of people say, oh, it's about luck. Yeah, it's about luck, but you have to have the effort to put yourself in position to be lucky. If you're not showing effort, if you're not flying to the football, you know, if somebody is holding a guy up and you're not punching at the ball before the whistle is thrown on four progress,
guess what you're not You're not gonna four turnovers. So I'm not saying you're gonna do it every time, but every once in a while, if you're punching at the ball and every single play, you're gonna pop one out. So it's about effort, it's about a swarming mentality, and I truly believe that the defenses that are quote unquote
lucky at getting turnovers make their own luck. Like it's that is the difference I think between twenty nine takeaways and fifteen is just having the mentality to swarm the ball. And from the first day of training camp, but we saw these guys they the ball beyond the ground, they would sprint over to and pick it up, and it just kind of developed that that mindset of the football
is the most important. Even if the whistle blue, go get the football, because you never know at the end of the day it might put you in position to make a play in that way. I want to go ahead and finish up as far as the Dolphins kind of defensive roster overview here, because we didn't touch on a pair of guys that I think are underrated in what they do, and Eric Row and Bobby McCain and you know, I've referenced this in the podcast before one time.
Daniel Jeremiah does a great job on the Move the Sticks podcast, and he had brought up these principles that Belichick had way back when on the Patriots defense, and one of the things was that at safety. One of his notes was look for converted cornerbacks, guys that can they can cover and go back into the safety position and also rolling back there and play too high, play
single high, whatever it might be. And the Dolphins did that with Eric Row in twenty nineteen at the fifth game of the season, and Bobby McCain began the season as a free safety after playing nicol and outside cornerback his entire career. What do you make of those two guys and how the Dolphins were able to transition these two pretty much lifelong cornerbacks into productive safeties. I really love how they've kind of carved out very specific roles
for these guys. Particularly Row, at least for most of the year, was the tight end of racer. You know, Travis Kelsey gave him issues, but to be very Travis Kelsey gives everybody issues. Start really hold that against him. For most of the year. He was kind of their answer against big body quicker receiving tight ends. And he practices against Gisiki every day, so he gets a lot of good reps against guys that are that physically talented.
That's the way. I'm jealous that you get to watch and every day because I would love to see the practice tape of those two guys jumping forty inches in the air after the same ball. But you know, it's that's I think a perfect role for him. And then McCain talked about a guy that doesn't get enough national credit, one of the better free safeties in the league. They can also pump down and play in the slot if they need him to. Most of the time they didn't,
but he can absolutely do it. And I think, what's what's kind of heartbreaking. I don't want to, you know, sour the mood to people listening to podcast too much, But when you look at the entire season, there are two plays that I think kept Miami from making the playoffs. They both happened in the Chiefs game. It was the first time McCain got hurt. Tyreek got the ball around
the edge and uh, he made everybody miss. But McCain was not on the field for that one play because he had to go out, and then it was the this was in like that twenty one point you know, scoring frenzy and then a couple of plays later, Uh, you have a deep post from Tyreek where again McCain got hurt again. Uh. I can't remember if he came back in again a second time, but Clayton fled federalm I think is Howard pronounced his last name. He was
in for that one snap. They were playing a two high shell, and again it's like his first snap in the game. He's not used to Tyreek speed. He takes two steps forward, tyreear Tyreek runs I find for a deep post touchdown. I guess the coverage that honestly should not allow that play and if McCain was in, probably would not have allowed that play. And then that's that was the difference in the game, was those two touchdowns with Tyreek where McCain, unfortunately not even his fault, was
not on the field. And then when you look at the end of the season, if Miami won that game, which they probably really would have without those two plays, they would have made the playoffs. So I think the fact that McCain is that good of a free safety. Where him missing two snaps in the season is the difference between making the playoffs and not tells you a
lot about how great he is. And he got dinged up later and and played through the injuries and played through some of the pain there as well late in the season too, So so much respect for that guy. He's been a leader here and on this team for a long time now, and I know that he has the respect of the coaching staff and his teammates alike. So, Brett, it sounds like we have a future episode coming up on the Film Room, on on the film Room, because
you love this defense so much. We're gonna get that. Oh absolutely, sometime in the summer for sure. Um, you know, probably once we're in May and June and I get a little bit more time to actually really really do a deep dive. I'm talking like a twenty plus minute episode because there's a lot to go over when it comes to covering these guys, but uh, they're really fun.
I think you guys are gonna like it. Yeah, when you do that, we'll have to get you on the podcast here and promote it and get your takes as well to give us some content and give you some content as well. Out Brett, we really appreciate your time today, Brett. He is the host of the Film Room on YouTube at Brett Coleman. That's two tease, two l's and two ends, right, Brett, Yeah, trust me, I hear all the different kinds of spellings for it. Two good brother, Well, thank you again for
your time today, man, it's it's good stuff. The Film Room on YouTube. And of course Brett Coleman on Twitter, Thanks a lot, Man, I appreciate it. Thanks for having me and away he goes every time he comes in the podcast here. Every time he speaks, we learned something about football. Brett Coleman, The Film Room on YouTube. We'll get him back on the podcast throughout the course of the off season and talk some Dolphins football with him. He's a very knowledgeable guy. Again, go check out his
YouTube channel and subscribe. Watch all the episodes. You will learn something about football. Al Right, guys, it's gonna be my time on this edition of the Drive Time Podcast, two episodes per week now up until we get cranking back full time here with some more stuff to talk about, like free agency in the draft down the line. We'll get there eventually, but right now it's still January. We'll have another episode this week with Brandon Thorne of Established
the Run. He has a great scouting eye for offensive line, front seven and all that stuff, and he writes great analytical work for them as well as his Trench Warfare. He grades the quality of pass rushers throughout the course of the NFL. We'll talk about that with him, Emmanuel Ogba and this Dolphins offensive line later on this week. In the meantime, that's gonna be my time you all, please be sure to subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcast, leave us a rating, leave us a review, Go ahead
and give me a follow on Twitter. It's at Wingfield NFL. Follow the team at Miami Dolphins. Check out the fish Tank and the audible podcast, and of course Miami Dolphins dot com. And until next time, fins Up.
