To us fires touch style by waddle stuck into the end zone of Miami Boyd tight froll, tight window. They had to get that touchdown on that play. They get it. What is up, Dolphans And welcome to the Drive Time Podcast, part of the Miami Dolphins podcast network, covering your team, your Miami Dolphins. How's it going everybody? I am your host, Travis Wingfield And on today's show, we are back at it. It's the final week of training camp and our last
practice before the Eagles arrived from up north. We'll hear from head coach Mike McDaniel, cover the practice notes from a rainy Miami gardens, and we'll finish up with player media from the Baptist Health Studios inside the Baptist Health Training Complex. This is the Drive Time Podcast Miami Dolphins. Some roster news here. On cut down Day, the NFL teams across the league are required to get to eight
d players at the four pm deadline. The Dolphins didn't waste any time early on Tuesday morning making their announcements as punter Stephen hoff richter, safety Sheldrick RedWine, and outside linebacker DeAndre Johnson were released on Tuesday, where john Lovett, the fullback, and Mackenzie Alexander, the newcomer at cornerback, were placed on injured reserve and as the rule state, players placed on i R before the season begins must miss the entire season. There was some good injury news from
head coach Mike McDaniels Tuesday morning presser. He says that cornerback Nick need Um, after going straight to the locker room after his injury, is good to go. He's gonna be back out there on the practice field on Tuesday, and Keion Crossing is day to day with his injury. So some really good news there among those two cornerbacks. We didn't get an update on Byron Jones, just that he is working diligently to get ready for that Week one game, so we'll see what happens there. And then
also coach spoke about some other stuff. Some more fascinating things that I find about this entire month of the calendar, this exhibition season, is how teams approached these preseason games and coach, as we talked about on the podcast Our shorthand c aw A, Coach's answer was awesome. Gave us more gold here about the preseason approach talking about the run game and their plan and approach for how to play these games. Again, like like I told you, I'm not, Um,
I'm pretty well versed in preseason football. UM. And no, I look at it more like, Okay, what are we going against? How are they playing? And what should we do? You know? Is it our things in the run game a product of um, three or four guys and how they're operating, or is it one player on each play? Um? You know the more than anything, really this preseason, we haven't got stuff going because it's been one or two guys off, which UM, I'm more concerned about the players
w they learn from that or not. Uh, joint practices generally have UM, you're you're a little more comfortable uh doing not the uh one oh one version of of your run game pass game defense. So uh, but I wouldn't see myself you know again, I'm I look at a collection of things. UM, I want stuff to be better from that Raiders game, and I want I want us to run the ball well. Um. But at the same time, I think, UM, our players are pretty confident that and and the coaching stuff I know is that
we're we're gonna be fine moving forward. We just have to get better from stuff. That's what I'm concerned about. So um, I wouldn't. My philosophy is not going to change that. That's something that's par for the course in preseason. Sometimes, uh, depending on what the other team is trying to work on and do, um and what they're concerned about, sometimes
you have awesome Yeah. I think we've had I've had a hundred and eight r running games in seasons that you haven't finished high in rushing yards and vice versa. So um, it's just kind of part for the course. So we've been the beneficiaries of some pretty good expertise there from head coach Mike McDaniel defensive cornea or Josh Boyer Earlier in the week. I believe I spoke to Matt Apple Obama as well about some of the stuff.
But you get the idea like there are certain things you're trying to accomplish that don't involve the final score of the game or the result necessarily, but finding out what works on tape, how guys match up individually without help of the scheme, And that's where us next question goes towards about what are you trying to find out about these games and coach mentions directly like, we don't want to put scheme in there to benefit guys. We want to find out how they play on their own
without the help of the scheme. Talking about lots of man coverage on defense, here's coach McDaniel. You also you're also doing on both sides of the ball. You are, um, you're really trying to be basic for the for that sense, because you want to see how they can perform without schematic help necessarily, UM your your you know, offensively and defensively.
You call games different because you are trying to there's a portion of it that you're really trying to not just hold back the stuff that you're going to do in the regular season, but you're also trying to put people in positions to prove themselves. You know, UM, we had a ton of um man coverage uh in in this game, in this past game, a ton of it for that reason, so that we could evaluate people at all positions. UM. And you know that that's a very
important thing. Now we might show up with games and do the same thing. You know, who knows, But the purpose of doing it was just for the reason you're talking about as we're trying to evaluate and see how people UM can do the fundamentals and technique that we
talk about at length each and every day. Mike, you find it easier to evaluate analyzed players in those specific situations you can put them in and enjoin practices UM as opposed to the game format of of preseason and of course, with the Eagles coming to town tomorrow, coach was asked about joint practices and how you balance the value of those reps and practice versus measuring whether or
not guys should play in the game. Here's McDaniel. The joint practices are easier because you can there's a large a large, there's a good majority that you can dictate the terms. You make sure you get a certain amount of plays. You can dictate how much run versus pass um. You know, those things UM are kind of controlled, you know, whereas in a game, you know you you you can't control whether or not you have multiple possessions and in the in the first quarter or and you can you
can't really determine and whether or not UM. You know, people call games off of the momentum of it, so UM you end up adjusting to what's being called or
trying to dictate the terms with what you call. So it's a lot easier there, UM and in joint practices really, UM, that's that is my favorite part of the preseason UM in general is when you do get those opportunities to practice against other people and and you know you're you're really trying to It's such a great opportunity for both sides of the ball to defend UM against and to run your offense against different techniques, coverages, UM, alignments, assignments,
all that stuff that that is what you have to do to be successful in the NFL season is a just so the it it is. It is really fun. UM. It breaks stuff up. You know we've been doing this.
I feel like I've been meeting guys in this room for um a couple of months now, maybe it's been one, but training camp does you know that does get monotonous to guys, And so it's a great way to really break stuff up, and UM, make sure you you keep that competitive nature UM going through the process and UM before you start preparing for your Week one opponent, we're gonna play an answer here just a minute about alec Ingolden coach actually did give us some details about the
fact that he expects Ingle to play in the game on Saturday after wearing a medical red jersey for much of the training camp season here this month of August. But Coach was again asked about playing starter this week, and he gave you the same answer he's given you for the last three weeks about how we're not going to short change the process and we're gonna let this thing play out before and make decisions on the actual
game day decision. But he did get a follow up question about how he would feel about this long layoff between now and the September eleven opener against the Patriots and not having starters play from this time in a game against live bullets until that game, and Coach basically said, well, last year's World champions didn't play their quarterback one time in August. Yeah, I mean, in theory, In theory, I could go, uh, I really like where we've developed on
both sides of the ball. Um, in theory, you could I think what you guys are seeing um across the league is the bunch of a bunch of organizations and coaching staffs and head coaches trying to adjust to three preseason games because there there's way more variants in the protocol. Um. You could almost like, uh, it was like clockwork when it was four preseason games. Um, But it's not just that it's only three. It's that there's two weeks until
the regular season begins. So those compounding variables make it kind of tricky. UM. I believe, Uh, the Super Bowl champions last year didn't play anybody the entire preseason. I know Matthew Stafford didn't, so um. But then you know, philosophically, Uh, it kind of gears everything towards my belief anyway, which is it is case by case, and I don't I
don't like absolutes. UM. I think there's a lot of people, um in that same boat because there's not an exact formula the you're trying to get guys to play together, um, and you want those opportunities. Well, some guys that's not as big a deal for because they're you know, vested veterans that have done it, um, you know that have
a hundred games under their belts or whatever. Then UM, you're you're also trying to weigh the risk that that everyone undertakes every team every time they're on the football field. So it's a it's really a maddening non perfect formula. But you know, I feel very um uh uh, I'm happy and I feel like I'm very lucky to be able to have that burden of decision on my plate, you know. So that's uh, that's something that I don't take likely trying to figure out the best formula um
for the final product. But UM, to do that for me, I have to just let the process play out, um and ignore my feelings, which I don't think you're that interested in because right now I'm hungry. Is that worth writing? Yeah, well I am hungry. Um. Maybe I'll explore more feelings moving forward. Frankly, I think we would all be interested
in more more opening about coaches feelings. Up next, the question about alec Ingold, not just about Ingold's availability, but how the full back position might be beneficial for the rest of the running game on offense. Coach breaks that down. Remember on the Monday podcast we talked about the tight ends getting some run at that fullback position with Hunter Long, Durham Smith, and Seethan Carter. Let's go ahead and talk about alec Ingold first. When we'll come back and talk
about Hunter Long to finish this thing up. He's you know, the fullback position in general, um is is something that I believe does assist um a lot of other players, not just his assignment, but how how offensive linemen are able to execute their their stuff. So I firmly believe in that. UM. You know, my I guess, um, you know what I'm just I'm feeling in a great mood. UM. My feeling is that Alec will get some get some time here Saturday. UM for that very reason. Boom, there
we go. UM. But but it is it is a good Uh, it is a asset that not just you know, that position in particular, UM, ultimately affects UM really all the positions with how to do their job when you're schematically setting up a play. So that's that it will be. It will be exciting to see him get some joint work without a red jersey, UM, which is, by the way, one of the more confusing things fullbacks and red jerseys.
But UM, nothing we haven't been able to handle. It's just another obstacle we've had to climb this this offseason. But yeah, I think I think it will It will be cool to have him out on the field this week. UM and and hopefully everything goes well so that we can see a little bit of him on the game. And now a really cool story about second year tight end Hunter Long. Hunter Long had a very good week
of practice. In particular, he was he he started off really really good UM in O, T, A. S. And then I think if you even asked him himself, you know, there was there was a little there's a little bit of time where you just kind of was out there and he wasn't making that many plays in the running past game UM and specifically his position coach John Embry, UM, you know, had a had a heart to heart with him about a week ago, uh, just because you know, just checking on him, and he really turned it up.
So those are the things that I really really look for, UM as a coach when you're when you're when you're looking at players, is how do they handle, um any sort of adversity, So that that being a light adversity. He he had his best week of practice last week, and I thought he played very very good in the game. UM. One of the reasons that you call in the red zone, UM, you go for it on fourth and seven, UM, is not because that's your philosophy in the preseason or just
your philosophy and football. UM. I I was excited for a fourth and seven play to be called because I wanted to see what players would do what UM, you know, in a big moment. All right, it's fourth and seven. Do they all of a sudden make stuff up and go rogue or do you see their best UM version of whatever route they're running UM on the field. And Hunter was in on that play and he ran one of my favorite UM routes on the concept we ran
that he's ever run. That told me a lot. That was cool to see UM, and I think, uh, you know, he's I'm excited for him. The joint practices to build upon his specifically his last week of work, which I thought was outstated. And go back and check out that route by Hunter along very good job sticking his footing the ground a little whip route and creating some separation that way on a very very well run route there as coach mentions. So there you go, head coach Mike McDaniel.
Let's go ahead and take our first break and come back here and get to the practice notes, and we'll preview some top matchups for Dolphins and Eagles this week here live from the Baptist Health Training Complex. That's next Drive Time podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought to you
by Auto Nation. A practice broke out on Tuesday, and it wasn't a whole bunch of work, a bit of an abbreviated period for us to get eyes on this football team one last time before they take on the Philadelphia Eagles tomorrow and Thursday, before the game on Saturday, and then it's full go into the season from there. The notes as a result gonna be a little bit shorter, but also taking a look at the Eagles matchups coming
to town tomorrow. It started today with three splash plays, two of two Ingold, two to Tyreek and twoa to Mike Alec. Ingold caught the ball along the sidelines heading vertical and according to him, a little bit of toe drag swag on that he pulls that thing down and
gets the feet down in bounds. And the other two were against the blitz and I loved the poise we saw from Tua and his approach to get the ball out early and where it needed to be with plenty of arc to allow the receiver's time to find it go get it and adjust to it. And first with Tyreek, actually you know, let's go let's go ahead and go back here a little bit. I just love watching the receivers work through the individual drills, and when they go
inside for a little bit, they're closer to us. I get a chance to keep a closer eye on those guys. You know, when we're outside the defense's nearest us offense on the far field. That gets flipped when we go inside. But the line of scrimmage release packages, that portion of their drills is appointment viewing for a football dorc. And if you know this podcast by now, that is me, especially with ten and seventeen, Tyrek and and and Jilen Waddle.
I mean West has that unit West Welker bouncing around, running from drill to drill. And in fact, when they went from indoors to outside, I saw West kind of doing that hop skip and throwing his arms up to pump up the crowd that wasn't there by the way, like he was coming out of the tunnel back in uniform.
You just don't manufacture that kind of passion. I think it rubs off on the rest of the room and the way they work now back to practice, Tyreek deploys that same release game that we saw in the individual portion during the team portion on a play from the plus forty yard line forty yard by going in and to a has a shotgun snap and loft this thing downfield immediately. There's a video of it on social go
check it out. And when he threw the thing, Tyrek is barely ten yards out of his break, like he's at the thirty yard line, but there was enough air under it down to the goal line so that Tyreek could run under it for a score and actually rewatching it. I think he got tackled at the one, but who cares the same idea later on another blitz, and I think this is a good example of two of showing post snap application of pre snap acumen. The rush had
more guys than the protection had to account for. I mean, that's blitzing one on one right create free runners. We've seen this defense cripple opposing offensive attacks for sixty minutes with that approach. On this one, too, of fades back just enough to buy an extra tick and lobs that thing down the field. This time it's Mike gets Sicky who gets free. He has a hatch and has to contend with a defensive back for run after the catch. I didn't see the number, but I'm about sure we
have a sixty yard touchdown on that place. So three big splash plays in the short period. Just really good work from two of showing the same stuff we saw Saturday with processing, getting through your reads based upon your pre snap snapshot and post snap rotation. And rather than exploiting checkdowns in this practice, you're hitting home runs with
long touchdowns. That's why you love to see that first part because you can apply it to more explosive plays that you will naturally create by getting the football out, moving the chains, and giving yourself more reps. If they're gonna give you that, keep going after it. Eventually they won't give it to you, and that opens up opportunities downfield. Playing quarterback isn't just about the four or five downfield
throws a game. It's every single snap playing with an attention to detail and the precision to put yourself in position that when those big opportunities arise, you can capitalize on them. That and the fact that I think to A has demonstrated an ability to help raise the floor a little bit and eliminate some of the more costly plays, the sacks and the turnovers. As a result of this quick processing, I think those two things could add up to go a long long way for two and this
Dolphins team this year. Teddy Bridgewater had some good work today. There was one ball I think he'd like to have back on a deep shot to Braylon Sanders who got free and stacked the defensive back. The ball was just under thrown, but he was in rhythm on time and threw it accurately. Today there was some tough sledding for the running backs, just not a lot of room to operate with. Chase Edmonds had a nice run to the second level with his patented one cut, getting north and
south and explode type of move. And then Myles Gaston bounced one run outside where I thought he looked really quick out of that break. But it was a lot of stacking up and penetration for the front on the defensive side. Just some last notes here on the offense. I thought Mike get Sick he had a really good day. I thought Hunter Long had himself a really nice day, getting in and out of breaks but also holding his
own and some pass pro slash run block looks. I want to take talk more about Hunter Long down the road this week. He's an interesting topic here, I think on the podcast we'll come to that, I think probably tomorrow. Braylon Sanders had some big plays. River Craigcraft caught a couple of passes, including a five yard touchdown pass from Teddy where he got all alone in the back of the end zone. And as for the guys upfront that made those stops in the running game, Wilkins had one.
John Jenkins got good pushed from much of the day. Zack Seeler had one that I saw, Ray Kwon Davis had a couple of pile ups, Andrew Van Ginkle crashed that edge for a couple of plays, and then Jerome Baker fit the run really nicely today. He had one play where he was pretty much it was him or nobody to make a stop on Chase Edmonds for your potential long touchdown run. And he scrapes off of this block and squares up Chase and meets him in the
gap and tags him off. So good stuff from the linebackers. And speaking of good linebacker play, Melvin Ingram was a bit of a bowl today. Man. He sets one of the hardest edges I've seen out here. He is getting the job done consistently. And then Channing Tindall also had a big stick or a would be stick in the running game. He continues to look good. I continue to be very pressed by his game. I would take that word of mine. Jalen Phillips really showed his stuff with
a pair of would be sacks in this practice. The first one was an awesome bull rush where he did something similar to what Tyreek Hill did that I mentioned earlier, where he put the application of individual work into the team period. He gets initial contact and sends that punch across the offensive tackles chest and then spun back inside
to get to the quarterback. He worked on that move continuously with Tyrone mackenzie in the pre practice portion, and then he's later in the practice he wins with a speed rush around the edge. He's just one of those guys that I think in a practice you maybe can't fully appreciate it, or in a preseason game where he has, you know, seven or eight snaps, but when he gets forty snaps and he can incorporate that rush. Arsenal And put together a plan for I'm gonna do this move
three times. In the fourth time, I'm going to counter off of that. Keep an eye on that this year as we get into more games and more snaps for Phillips, I think that he can really show you his stuff in that arena. And I don't really have any notes on the defensive backs, but I did like watching them after practice get some extra work. Exaving Howard one of the main ones I saw working on their press and
mirror technique. Him and Nick Needham were out there. I just can't wait to watch those guys compete against the Eagles tomorrow with A J. Brown DeVante Smith And speaking of that, well, actually, hang on, real quick, real real quick, let's give some punterer love. Thomas Morrist had hit about twenty puns a day from his own forty thirty five and thirty yard line, aiming for the coffin corner but also checking some balls up on the hash marks like
a good golf approach shot. And I was blown away by the way he did it, because he hit every single one of them down around the five yard line just like it's It was like watching you know, I don't wally, no golf is Rory McElroy good like just putting a hundred and sixty yard approach shots right next to the pin. It was fun to watch so Eagles this week. I wanted to talk about a couple of matchups I'm looking forward to as we get into the one on ones, but also the team portion of practice.
I'm also very excited to have my perch up top to watch these practic this as opposed to being on the field up in Tampa Bay. Some things I'm excited to see, I think traits that will provide a good test for our guys. Look, the whole thing is a good test, but there are some personal, uh my personal marquee matchups here. Jordan Davis in the middle, just the pure strength that he offers, how we move him and anchor him against pass rush as a pass rusher. Really
curious to see that. Hassan Reddick for a guy outside his ability to convert speed to power and the secondary moves kind of like we talked with Jalen Phillips, I think are a good test with what we've been really impressed with all camp, how our guys keep their feet moving and redirect those rush moves. Excited to see Darius Slay and James Bradberry, two of the best mirror coverage cornerbacks in the league. I talked about the receivers working on the releases in the start of the notes. Here
here's a really good test for you. Nakobe Dean and linebacker. I have no idea how he felt to the third round. He's having a great training camp in preseason. I'm just excited to see how we can work off of blocks on him in the second level running game. And then the other side of the ball, Davante Smith and A. J. Brown. Do you really need an explanation here? One of them is the smoothest, most detailed rout runners to ever come out for my money, and the other is a physical technician.
Good blend between those guys to give us different body types and different looks. And then Dallas Godder is a good matchup for our safeties and linebackers. Just any good tight ends good for that, and he's definitely one of those guys. So those are a field looking at I would I would put Jalen Hurts in there, but it's difficult with a quarterback that you can't you know, hit, especially a running quarterback. So I'll keep him off the list here, but good work coming your way here against
the Philadelphia Eagles. Let's go ahead and take our last break, and then we'll go ahead and get right into player media availability. I've got alec Ingold, Cater Caho, Melvin Ingram, and Zach Seeler. That's next here on the Draft Time podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought to you by Auto Nation. We had fullback alec Ingold at the podium today after practice and he is a fun interview, a great guy
to talk to. Let's go ahead and start his media off about how do you feel about getting out there for a game. We heard Mike McDaniel say that you're gonna see Alec in gold on Saturday in the game against the Eagles. And he has not played. It's the a c L injury last season. The red jersey is off, he's practicing the full go had the big catch today. Fun to talk to you. So, how are you feeling about your first time back on a game day football field? Alec,
there you go, It's been a long time coming. It's um. I love playing football as a football player. You love playing football, and I've spent way too long in film rooms and practice fields, like it's time to it's time to go strap up with these guys. So I'm really excited. Earlier we heard coach McDaniel talk about the value of the fullback and alec Ingold and how not only they can just help the offense from their own position, but
how it helps the rest of the guys. Let's go ahead and get alec Ingold to take on the running game here in Miami. I mean, I think it's all about the details, and I think we got a lot of guys that are detail oriented, a lot of talent, a lot of characters. So it's just staying on schedule, is staying on all these installs and not taking anything lightly. So every detail, every place we have on practice field, you have to have all of the intent in the world to make it better, make it go, and then
we'll it's time to translate onto the game field. It's really exciting. And continued regarding that McDaniel quote, Lineman, they line up there in the trenches right here, nose to nose, face to face, face mask to face mask, and they got those cages on right, so they're seeing things quick. As a fullback, I got five yards to be able to read things, to be able to see the defense.
I have one of the best seats in the house, so anytime there's any late stems, any late rotation in the backfield, we can pick that up and we can adjust. So I think that's you know, everyone's gonna take responsibility for it, but as a fullback you definitely want to help the guys in front of you and then the
guy behind you too. I'm really excited to watch Alex trap it up and play a game because I think that his impact is going to be much more, much greater than I think that a lot of folks realize when it comes to this running game and really getting the taken off we had, I mean tight ends play in that position all all game on Saturday. Alec is definitely, you know, a more natural fullback to can play that
position pretty well. So next we heard from Kater Caho, the undrafted rockie out of Texas and m Commerce had a big, big game on Saturday point one five yards per coverage snap, four yards on twenty uh man, my math getting tested here, twenty seven coverage snaps. I think it was in three run stops on fourteen rundowns really interesting kid. And we talked to him about the fact that Josh Boyer has such a good history of developing
undrafted rookies. How important was it for you to come here knowing that Josh Boyer was a guy that you that liked you. And the question was, we know he called you about the you know, the U d F A process. Here's Cater on his relationship with Josh Boyer and him recruiting him to the Miami Dolphins. Yeah, oh no, I try to make it. I know, when you get recruited to college, you want to you want to go
to like a good coach guy every relationship. When when I had when I talked with Josh, he seemed like he was just uh funny, like real, real, real to everything he was saying. And I just I read that zoom cross. That was like a big deal. First chance seeing Cater up close like that, and man, he is rocked up. That dude. Is he kind of has that like Tyreek muscle composition where he's just not only is he super fast you see out there, but every muscle in his in his body pops And that certainly looks
the part getting off the bus. I didn't notice about him either. He came here from the Ivory Coast as a kid and didn't speak English. His first language language was French. And let's go ahead and hear him tell the story about how he got to the States. And this first part of this answer. I have about a million questions, but I don't know how to ask them. Let's go ahead and go to cater short story. My dad just won the lottery and we moved over here.
He just went a bad opportunity for his kids, so we moved out here and knew it was That was proye the way hardestansition not speaking English, uh, not knowing anything about football, but I kind of use sports, uh to make friends and stuff like that. So from then on, it just kind of just starts sticking on top of each other. So blearning the language was the biggest It was the biggest barrier though. So I have to learn the language. I can start it going along pretty smoothly.
Really cool story there from Cato. Let's go ahead and go next to Zach Seeler, another guy that kind of came from nowhere, off the radar, and uh has made a big career for himself here at the Miami Dolphins. He was asked about how it feels to watch his teammates make plays in that preseason game. When you're done, your night is done, you're off the field, And I wanted to play it because it goes along with this message about how this team loves playing for each other.
Here's Zack Seeler on the rest of the guy's performance on Saturday. It's awesome. We're excite if everybody who want to see everyone succeed here. Um, So it's it's a great feel and seeing those guys take the technique they've learned in the last few months and kind of apply it and using in games and be successful with it. One more here for Zach. He was asked about what stands out and Connor Williams game is something we've been talking about all offseason. So I want to let Za
go ahead and tell you how he feels. He's very smart. Um, he's very smart. He knows he knows what to do. Um, he's savvy, and he's just he works short and sweet. They're just like it's gonna be here with this guy. Melvin Ingram was asked about facing the Eagles and practice. How do you feel the team is going to perform against the Eagles. Here's Melvin Ingram. We're gonna come out and step up to the town. That's what we're gonna do. We're gonna always do that, no matter who we yet,
We're gonna come out and do it. We're gonna play football. It's gonna be another day, another day office thanking for the hard head. I want to go work last one here for Melvin and the day. Asked about coach McDaniel's thoughts this morning about joint practices versus games. Here's Melvin
Gram and how he feels eleven year vet about just that. Yeah, you get a chance, you get a chance to go and get another opponent innocent a practice style like environment where you can do move the ball, run and you can you can kind of control everything. So it's definitely
always good to do do things like that. The preseason is always good to you can go out of full attack when c clais do they think, but it's always a good thing to go out of hand joint Paris and there you have it, short and sweet today, but we've got plenty of content and there for you. We'll come back tomorrow and do it all over again with
the Philadelphia Eagles in town. Don't forget the notebooks up on Miami Dolphins dot com as well, so check that out, some videos on social all that fun stuff for you 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. You can follow me on Twitter at Wingfield NFL. Follow the team
at Miami Dolphins. Check out the fish Tank podcast and our weekly Twitter Spaces show Wednesdays at eight o'clock and the post game show after every Miami Dolphins game on five six w q AM and Country down Here in South Florida out of town on the Odyssey app. Check out the YouTube channel for media availabilities and Dolphins Today, and last but not least, Miami Dolphins dot com. Until next time finds up Caroline Daddy is going
