Factors are alphins faforck throw Partford touchdown. What a win for this Miami Dolphin team. Wow? What is up? Dolphins? And welcome to the Drive Time Podcast, part of the Miami Dolphins podcast network, covering your Miami Dolphins each and every day. How's it going everybody, It's Wednesday. I am your host, Travis Winkfield, and as always I am here to bring you your daily dose of Miami Dolphins football. And on today's show, the last of the position preview series,
we conclude this thing with the safety's. Last year's starters Eric Row and Bobby McCain changed positions, plus another rookie in the room who can do both play the slot and play safety in the third round of this year's draft in Brandon Jones. And we are going to hear from the Texas product here on the podcast to give his experience early on as a professional here with the Miami Dolphins. I'll give my thoughts on the debut episode
of Hard Knocks as well. All of that and more on this Wednesday, August the twelfth edition of the Drivetime Podcast. And we start this podcast off with some news the Dolphins made in addition to the roster on Wednesday morning, adding Brandon Bryant to the roster defensive tackle out of f a U six ft pounds. He came out of college back in He got signed in ten with the Seattle Seahawks, spent some time on the practice squad there,
went to the Jets as well. He also had a stint up north in the Canadian Football League, one year with the Winnipeg Blue Blue Bombers and one year with the Montreal Alouettes. Last year he made his NFL debut with the Cleveland Browns. He played in four games and notch three tackles there as well. So Brandon Bryant new defensive lineman here in Miami. He also is a co owner of a company down here in Davy called Merry Maids.
So Brandon Bryant, well entrenched in the South Florida community, is now a Miami Dolphin, and Brian is in And where we go next here on our premier matchups is
in that same spot up front in the trenches. And yes, we do need pads to come on before we can even begin to discuss this, But I'm gonna go with the man who led Pro Football Focus interior defensive lineman and run stops last year that of course, as tackles within two yards of the line of scrimmage to Von god Show up against the Miami Native and New Dolphins
offensive lineman and Eric Flowers. Now this is not to say they're gonna match up regularly on the practice field every single day or anything like that, but they do play positions that really do come across each other quite often, as Devon can play anywhere from the nose tackle one technique, two two I three, three eye technique all the way out to the four technique, which can get yourself engaged with the guard playing all those spots that range basically
from the center all the way out to the guard and the outside shoulder of the guard on the defensive line out there, and just the pure power of these two guys in the way they match up together. I'm looking at matchups when we talk about this that pit strength versus strength of the players, And like yesterday, for instance, we talk about Davonte Parker on contested catches and balls that are in tight windows, and how Byron Jones created the most tight window throws of any cornerback in the
NFL last season. Well, god Show is one of the premier run stuffers in the NFL, and it really goes beyond the numbers in that department. He's so strong. I asked him last year at camp about two gapping in this defense for Brian Flores, which is more of a read and react type of defense, hold the point style of play compared to the quick upfield penetration. Thought of a one gap defense, and on the surface, it does tell you you're either responsible for one gap or for
two gap in that defense. And Devon said that he played a lot of two gapping back in college, so he's well versed there after a couple of years here under Chris Kusarec, who was the coach on the defensive line for a couple of years in Miami, who of course now is with the forty nine in San Francisco, and that aggressive front fork, with that one gap style of play out there by the bay, lying in some hey, maybe even use some clay maybe one day and happy
Gilmour references aside. Devon did talk to me last year at training camp about playing in this defense and how you want to be more aggressive with the hands. We just playing we on you know, more hands and uh, I guess in this you know, reading reading our blocks the right way, you know, reading our keys, you know, and you know that's about it is said the same thing Stiff Bart. The end of the day, you're enjoying
the two gap over one gapperl Uh. We did some gap in around my last my last year, I think, I think the last year we did we did to gaps. So you hear him talking a little bit there about the difference between one gap and two get. But like he said, at the end of the day, it's all football. You have to win either way, whatever scheme you are playing. And the one thing God Show has is that strength
that just never goes away, It never quits. He can send that initial punch and really shocked the guy across from him. Anytime you watch offensive line verse defensive line, they want to knock that guy backwards right. You want to move bodies on the line of scrimmage, and that can help disrupt the entire play, not just for the guy that he knocks back, but for the entire offensive lines. They try to find their gaps and find their blocks
and find their landmarks. He does a real nice job of staying in his gap and creating opportunities for those guys around him. Now in the other corner, Eric Flowers his job is to make Devon move the other direction. So he signed here to play guard after a damn good twenty nineteen season up in Washington, his first playing guard in the NFL, and from Week nine at Buffalo to the season finale in Dallas for Washington last year,
Flowers was in the green and blue territory. That's where you want to be on Pro Football Focuses grades in the run blocking grades on PFF, he was impenetrable. He moved guys off the spot and it makes sense right he's listed at three thirty pounds. He can bend exceptionally well for a guy that size. He's often the low man off the snap, has that pop in the hips that you hear about from scouts all the time. That really helped him engage and turn out the man across
from him. And he's also no slouch in the upper body strength either. Actually kind of makes me curious who might win in an arm wrestling contest or maybe even a bench press contest, because both he and Devon are super strong in that upper body. He's got big, powerful arms that he uses to help gain position and leverage on the block across from him or the defensive lineman across from him, I should say, and he can really really finish blocks with a temperament he plays the echo
of the whistle. Love watching him on combination blocks as well, and that's where Devon has his work cut out for him in this matchup, simply because it's just a tough thing to do against one body, not to mention to hold that point against the double team, and Flowers is a more than formidable opponent in that regard. So watching these two dudes clash the pads will be a lot of fun and just another one of these premier matchups.
Will detail throughout the next couple of Drivetime podcast here leading up to practice next week and leading up to that practice, something we've been doing here for a couple of weeks on the Drivetime Podcast is previewing the training Camp Roster series and this is our last one of the series. Will have the written component up on Miami Dolphins dot com as well as a written piece for the specialists on Friday. I think it is. But if you missed any of these, go back and check out
a podcast check out the article. Tons of detail on each player on your Miami Dolphins roster, and we finish up here with the safety group, and among them are several guys who have played some cornerback in the NFL have that good coverage background in their back pocket. And we start with the guy that came over as a cornerback last season in Eric Row. He has five accrued seasons in the National Football League, his second now with the Miami Dolphins, fresh off a new contract extension number
twenty one out of Utah. He's twenty seven years old on opening day, and he did sign that contract back in February, a one year deal. Comes in to Miami's a cornerback and then switches to safety after the Week five by and he really had a breakout campaign from that point forward. Twenty four receptions allowed on forty five targets. That's fifty pc completion for two hundred and twenty seven yards.
That's five point oh four yards per target. He worked manning up tight ends, backs, playing the deep half, playing in the slot, covering receivers even at some points. It earned him a contract extension last December, and which Flora has had this to say about Row after the extension. He's a versatile player. Obviously, he's played multiple positions this year. He's got good length, he's a good matchup for tight ends and coverage. He's played some deep half, middle of
the field safety, played corner safety again. Kind of understands the run fits now, that versatility helps, will help us defensively and hopefully just continues to improve. And we expect that.
We expect him to improve. And we wouldn't have done the deal if we didn't think that end quote from coach Flora's there and you hear him talk about the run fits there with Eric Rowe, one of the prominent fixtures of that position, and you saw it last year is Roe coming down into the mess, into the slop and getting involved in the run defense and really at sometimes lining up inside of the outside linebacker, the force defender out there and really getting involved against the offensive
lineman and row tough enough as he is, gets in there, gets his nose dirty and play some tough football against the run down there as that safety. So playing different positions in the secondary. And we talked about the completion rate over the final twelve game of the season, well, his entire season completion rate was just fifty eight and
a half percent allowed in the passing game. He also made eighty one tackles twenty three run stops, and from the Week two game onward, he missed just five tackle opportunities. So from Week two to Week seventeen had a tackle percentage of ninety three point three percent successful tackle rate.
Very good year last year for Eric row Up next another safety, more of a true safety here and Stephen Parker his first season last year, second in Miami, now number twenty six out of Oklahoma, twenty four years old on opening day. He arrived in Miami on September one, like so many players did, and had a couple of weeks to acclimate. Then, after the first two games, playing just thirty three snaps in those games combined, his workload jumped up to one hundred and five snaps in the
following two contests. He played three hundred and thirty nine snaps on defense last year, seventy four on special teams, and he made arguably for my money, the highlight real play of the Dolphins season with that touchdown saving effort
in the win over Indianapolis. Eric Ebron, the tight end tries to make the catch and he hasn't initially but Parker stays with the play, continues to fight, continues to show the effort, and took the ball right out of Ebron's arms, as even the announcers on the play call were confused by who actually had the football. Here is the sound from Stephen Parker's interception against the Colts in
Week ten last year. Player over the middle, touchdown. Now, let's see what the call is is the officials conferred it's Stephen Parker who came away with the football. Well, they're saying touchback, they're saying intersection. An interception. We were talking to the Colts on Friday, as we get announced,
is an interception that results in a touchback. First of now, and just watching the play again, you see Stephen Parker has one arm in there on the football and he's able to pull it away from Ebron as he hits the ground, rolls over. Really good looking play there from the Dolphins safety. Here's a quote from coach Flores, who talked about Parker's acclamation after his September arrival. Quote, he
works really hard. He spent a lot of time with our younger coaches getting up to speed on what we're doing. He's a lot more comfortable now than he was when he got here. He's obviously played a little bit the past couple of weeks, and I like what I've seen. I like what I'm seeing in practice. Again, this is another guy who football is important to him and he wants to take advantage of his opportunities. I think he'll
do that in the safety room. Also another guy who's kind of a newcomer at the position, played a little bit of everywhere without the course of his NFL career. He is the most tenured player on the Dolphins defense five accrued seasons, entering number six here in Miami, number twenty eight. Bobby McCain out of Memphis, twenty seven years
old on opening Day. He was a team captain last year, his first year in Brian Flores defense, and he selflessly made the switch from safe from cornerback rather to safety. He had that team first mindset. He's a sure tackler, good communication skills on the back end, and those will always go a long way with coach Flores, who said quote, I think Bobby can do a lot of things from a communication standpoint, from a tackling standpoint, from a playmaking standpoint.
He's been very good so far. He's smart enough to definitely move around. He can play corner, he can play safety, he can play nickel, he can play a variety of positions. He's a smart player and a guy who's made a lot of plays in this league. We're looking forward to working with him and over those five years with the Dolphins, Bobby McCain has three thousand, seventy one snaps on his resume.
He's made two eight tackles, nine for a loss. He has fifty run stops, four sacks, six interceptions, and twenty five pass breakups in his Dolphins career. Up next here rookie Brandon Jones out of Texas, number twenty nine. He'll be twenty two years old on opening Day, and he made a really unique request to all thirty two teams last year, or rather earlier this year in the run up to the draft. You guys probably know the story by now. He was recovering from a shoulder nge ree
and unable to work out at the combine. He inquired about each team's nineteen defensive film. He went back and watched four games of every team, a hundred twenty eight games of defensive film and put together a big binder with all the notes. He made a hundred nine tackles in his three seasons as a starter at Texas last year, picked off two passes, broke up seven others. He made four and a half tackles for a loss last year
with one sack and a forced fumble. And you watch him on tape the way he's all when you watch Texas play, He's always around the football. He's always getting involved in the run game, in the passing game. You always see him late to the pile if he is on the other side of the football field, always pursuing, always chasing, trying to get after the ball carriers. And he plays all over the field on multiple units. He has a blocked punt in his career returned touchdowns on
his resume. Played all over Texas special teams units, but also everywhere on defense. Per Pro Football Focus, Jones played two dred and eighty five snaps last season at free safety one and fifty four and the box, but his most frequent possition was in the slot, with three hundred and seventy one snaps, so well versed in all three
of those spots. In total. In three years at Texas, Jones played two thousand, three hundred and thirty three snaps, with one thousand, two hundred and eighty five of those plays coming in pass coverage. Chris Greer talked about what the Dolphins saw in Brandon Jones when they made the decision to draft the Texas Longhorn, saying, quote, it's his whole game. He's a good football player. He's smart, he tackles,
he covers, he can play special teams. We met him at the Senior Bowl, and the coaching staff and Brian Flores felt really good about him. The more that we got to spend time, they showed that thing about him watching every team's defensive plays. He's a really good football player and an all around football player. The coaching staff
is always looking for. So Brandon Jones new Dolphins safety. Here, another newcomer on the roster via free agency, number thirty five, Formerly of the Dallas Cowboys, he went to Central Michigan, going to be twenty six years old on opening day.
Cavon Frasier had four years there with the Cowboys, played in forty four games in Dallas, started two of them the teen season, and his career, he has sixty seven tackles a sack of force fumble and made four tackles for loss on four hundred and sixty one career defensive snaps. He's built like a tank, six ft tall, two hundred twenty pounds cut up a special team standout in college,
and that prowess continued into the professional ranks. He played six hundred and thirty eight special teams reps over those four years in Dallas. His participation in that third phase of the game as widespread hundred and fifty six on kick return to twenty nine on kick coverage, hundred forty punts punt return reps, and a hundred forty five on punt coverage. He also has sixteen reps on field goal block and he made seventeen tackles as a Cowboys special
teams ace up next number thirty six. Another in season acquisition last year, Adrian Colbert, formerly of the University of Miami. He'll be twenty six years old on opening Day. Has three seasons in the NFL, entering number two here in Miami, and he came in after Bobby McCain was lost for the season with an injury and filled that free safety role. Coming over from the Seattle Seahawks, practice squad. The former
Miami Hurricane stepped right in and contributed immediately. He played sixty four snaps at free safety in the team's Week thirteen come from behind when over the Eagles. That was his second game with the team, already getting sixty four reps. Learning quickly, he would go on to play four ten snaps, three hundred and sixty one of those on defense, forty
nine on special teams. Started every of the five December Dolphins games last year, made twenty two tackles, broke up two more, and he showed the range and closing speed to play free safety. He can get sidelined the sideline back on that back end playing that free roaming safety position, and Flores was impressed with Colbert's energy and as well as his ability to acclimate to the defense quickly, saying quote, he brings a lot of energy on a day to
day basis. He's got some leadership qualities. He's been here for three weeks and it feels like he's been here all year. He's smart, He's a really good teammate. It's important to him. He works extremely hard from a preparation standpoint. He's here early, stays late, trying to get the information correct. He's a guy who brings people together. It's been good having him and Quote and finishing out our safety position preview.
Here is another newcomer of free agent from the Cincinnati Bengals, Clayton Federalum four crude seasons, first in Miami, now number forty two out of Illinois. He too, will be twenty seven years old on opening Day. Another captain on the Bengal special teams unit. Last year they ranked six on Pro Football Focus and he was the captain of that unit, and he bawled out in the kicking, coverage and units
of that Bengals special teams group. He played one thousand, four hundred thirty five career snaps on special teams and his fourteen tackles on that unit in seventeen alone was second in the entire National Football League and his average career special teams grade at Pro Football Focus is seventy three point seven. Right there in that nice green territory. He has six hundred ninety four career snaps on defense on his resume, two hundred seventy eight against the run,
three two and coverage. He has six quarterback pressures on twenty four pass rush reps, fifteen run stops and a passer rating against of just eighty one point three. He i'll so had a big fumble return for a touchdown against the Colts back on Week one. This is a guy that's gonna be a sound tackler for you. You You can play with those sub packages on defense and let
him just rally and tackle and get guys to the ground. Again, you see that on special teams in open space on defense, a physical player that loves to play a hundred miles an hour and get out there and wrap up guys and bring them to the ground. So those are your safeties, your Miami Dolphins safety group. Again. That's every player on the roster now except for the specialist. We'll get to
them on Friday. Let's go ahead now and play some audio from an interview I did a while back with Dolphins rookie safety Brandon Jones and writing Shotgun here on the Drive Time podcast is Dolphins rookie safety Brandon Jones and Brandon First, I want to just start here and ask you about this off season and how different it has been for you as from a player's perspective and kind of dealing with the virtual offseason all the adjustments you've had to made. What's it been like for you
this offseason. It's been a lot different. Um, still being able to see phases, spaces. I think that's a big thing, just getting to know your teammates so you kind of you know, you can put a pace to the voice that you hear throughout meetings. It's a lot different, especially for the type of person I am. Just when it comes to overall learning new things, I'm big on going
through walk through is actually seeing stuff in person. It helps me kind of you know, keep my cost to stand there and just helps me learn a lot easier. So it's it's been a challenge for the most part. It's kind of weird to say that this is our normal now, you know, and you never would expect to be in virtual meetings throughout the whole offseason. But we definitely as a team, I think we made the best
of it. Um, I'm still being able to you know, have have and make relationships with a lot of the guys on the team. Which, yeah, it's just with these crazy times, you know, you gotta do what you gotta do at the end of the day, and we're definitely making the most of what we have and what we
can do. Well, maybe your experience is a little bit easier for you since you did go through the situation at the on bind where you couldn't work out because last year and I talked was about that shoulder injury that prevented you from working out and doing on field stuff. So you went out and that story I had you tell on the podcast then was when you procured all the film, all the playbooks from all thirty two teams
and watched four games of everyone's defense. I want to get your perspective here, three months or so removed from that process, how has that benefited you this offseason heading into your rookie season. I think that it just gave me a kind of an overall site on how the NFL works. I think if a lot of people don't have any experience or no kind of what to expect, you assume that its NFL is the best of the best. You're gonna be getting all this complicated stuff. But at
the end of the day, football's football. You know from you know, from Peeweet to all the way to the NFL. Like Covered three is gonna be covered three. Everybody has a different version in a different way of getting to certain things. But like I said, football is just football at end of the day. But I was able to just kind of get an idea not only of how the Dolphins run defense, but just get a view on
certain players on offense. You know, just how different certain teams attack, um, a certain key guy on a team, and just kind of put my eyes on um, just players and schemes and and all that stuff. So I definitely think it's it's benefited me obviously. Now with the playbook, it's a whole different story trying to get that down and trying to learn all of that. But I'm just giving you a sense of football. It's really just build my Q and I think it's definitely correlated to me
being able to pick up the playbook. Now. The good part about having this conversation this time of year compared to in April when you hadn't met anybody yet at least virtually, is that you have had a chance to meet your coaches and your teammates now a little bit. But I'm curious to get your take here because the Dolphins are unique for a defensive back like yourself, because we have defensive backs Coach Gerald Alexander who obviously coaches
defensive backs. You've got Josh Boyer, Dolphins defensive coordinator whose background last year was with defensive backs, and Brian Flores himself as well also has coach defensive backs at one point in his career. What have you taken from those three guys? And is there a little bit extra tutelage there because there is so much defensive back knowledge on
this team and on the staff. I think it's just you could feel just the overall experience that they have and that's huge, especially when it comes to trust, you know, the based off of their resume, what they've been able to do in the past, and and even coach you know him getting up here. They just have so much knowledge and it's I literally can pick their brains all
day just about defense. They literally have an answer for every question that you give, and you know, a lot of stuff is at the end of the day gonna be situation we're just like it is for for college or for NFL. So, um, it's it's a little different right now because we are just installing our defense, getting
to learn our stuff. Um, it's obviously gonna be a lot different once we're getting a training camp and in the season, and I'm really curious and interested to see like how it changes versus when we have an opponent and we have these guys that we have the key in and this is what we have to run based off of certain formations and stuff like that. But it's definitely been super interesting just to see the knowledge that
they all have. It's funny you mentioned the Brian Floor isn't kind of knowledge they have because he's known for kind of doing those on field practice quizzes where he'll put you in a situation and say, what's your answer here? Have you gotten that yet? Oh? I get it every day,
even virtually we get from not only defense, from special teams. Man, it'll put you on a spot real quick, and you just have to take it up by yourself and to be a pro at the end of the day and really really study of notes, because yeah, they'll they'll come with the question to real quick. It's pretty a pretty
high stressed moment. Oh yeah, I mean I'm usually prepared for the most part, you know, but sometimes they'll you know, throw some stuff that, say, like four weeks into it, they'll throw in something from day one just to see if you could kind of get your mind back to, oh that, this is what we did, this is what we talked about. So that's been the most shown the things, just getting back to that. Yeah, you're still in school, man, You're always going to be learned on this organization and
this profession. So that's that's good to hear. Brandon. We really appreciate your time today. Man. It's it's it's nice to talk to you and get to know you a little bit better. Brandon Jones, your newest safety for the Miami Dolphins NFL Draft class. Again, appreciate it. Best of luck this season, stay healthy and we'll see you down there for camp. Man. I can't wait to watch you play, sir. Thanks so much, man. And so there he goes Brandon Jones,
Dolphins rookie safety here on the Drivetime podcast. We didn't meet the rookie series back in July, maybe late June. Talking to Brandon himself, there's more in depth stuff there on his background, on his upbringing, on his high school, college career, his brothers, talked to his mom as well. We also talked to Tom Herman, the Texas head coach there. So go back and check that stuff out I'll conclude our safety preview here on the Drivetime podcast. Our training
camp preview series is a rap. And before we go on this podcast, it is the middle of August, and you know what that means this time of year on the football calendar. Let's go ahead and talk about the first episode of the new Hard Knocks Los Angeles. And first up, for me, I'm always about the laughs, and
nothing made me laugh harder. By the way, we're gonna spoil some Hard Knocks episode one detail here on the podcast, so if you haven't seen the episode and you want to watch it, probably go ahead and turn the podcast off right now. We're gonna talk about episode one of
Hard Knocks Los Angeles and talking about the laughs. Nothing made me laugh harder last night watching that episode than Sean McVeigh confidently and I mean confident swaggy strut when he emerged for that team meeting for the first time
rocking one of those face shields. And listen, I think he's got valid points across the board with the non verbal communication, the cues of looking at somebody's face and the potential efficacy of those shields as they block away you know what, ever is leaving your mouth when you speak. But Holy crafted his entire ensemble just look absolutely hilarious.
And I think that's where the comedy presides because the first responders, the heroes out here, they're doing the testing and doing a wonderful job of making sure everybody in the building is healthy, and we know they're health status going into every day with testing. That looks normal. That's a completely normal outfit. So maybe if McVeigh rocked the white lab coat and had some surgical glows, then maybe
that would look normal. But you give my man some jim shorts, a muscle tea, and a very prominently displayed headband that attaches that shield to the head. I lost it at that point, just because it looks It looked hilarious, and how could it not. It's just a unique thing, the headband attached to that face shield. It cracked me
a big time. That was a big laugh. The other big one that got me was in the credits scene at the very end of the episode when they made it abundantly clear that the rules state there are no number two's in the porta potty, none whatsoever, and that's a valid rule, and the players make a great point. It was definitely a Hard Knocks crew member who did that because they were not allowed inside the building. So that was a good laugh at the very end of
the episode. And now on this podcast on the Drivetime podcast here with your host Travis Wingfield on the Miami Dolphins Podcast Network, we stand Dante Dion. He was the one flexing up on Aaron Donald, which, by the way, mother of God, what kind of a specimen is Aaron Donald. But to go back to mcveigh's confidence, you gotta give it up for Dion because soaking wet, he might weigh a hundred and forty pounds. Well the Rams list him
at one and how about that. I guess I'm big enough to play a position besides kicker or putter and that's where I clock in at. But back to Dion, I absolutely loved his review of the locker rooms, showing his over and what he called the good projects, especially when he got over to what he called the suburbs and the shock and his voice the absolute surprise when he saw that Jalen Ramsey had a bench seat at his locker that he could lift up for extra storage
under where he sits blew my man's mind. That was great. To see. And speaking of Jalen Ramsey, am I the only one that was on his side during that little dust up with the media. I mean three answers of the same question over and over again. That would annoy me too personally. I thought it was awesome on the Chargers side of things when they did the digital roundtable discussing protesting and social injustices, all those things that are
going on right now. And the one guy I forget his name who wanted some insight on the anthem protest, they provided some perspective the rest of his teammates did. He takes it and stride and learned from it, And that was a thing of beauty if you ask me. That's what social discourse is all about. And good on the Chargers for facilitating that conversation. And finally, back to
the funnies. Although I'm sure the player watching it didn't find it funny when they showed Andrew Vahler being released and he was completely blindsided by the news, And yeah, he probably didn't handle it all that well, but I love the way that Anthony Lynne handled it. That frustration was a sign of of did it means something to him? For the player, and he and Tom to let's go, you acknowledge that. I love the conversation they had with Anthony Lynn there and Tom to LESCo, especially when he
told to let's go. Look, I like the fire, but come on, you're not Antonio Gates was one of the best parts of the episode. Two good for a bunch of lass Another good episode Hard Knocks always knocks out of the park. All in all, I thought it was a great episode, as good as it can be without actual football. I will say early on the overarching theme of showing the protocols and the precautions that are being taken or there are a great example for how the virus can be combated and the job the NFL is
doing on that front. But I couldn't help but take it as a reminder that things are just so different right now under COVID on top of being a deadly virus, that it's just been kind of an overall bummer here for the last few months with coronavirus going across our entire country here. But we do have the return of football coming up soon and that'll be a good look into some normalcy hopefully here in the near future. As for today's podcast, let's go ahead and get out of here.
Tomorrow We're gonna have some fun audio for you guys on this show. I'll go ahead and say the biggest name we've had on any podcast I've ever done, so keep an eye out for that. We'll continue cranking out the content as the season gets closer and closer. We are within one month as of tomorrow, so exciting times down here from Davy signing off. That's gonna be my time. Subscribe rate review. Follow me on Twitter at Wingfield NFL. Follow the Dolphins at Miami Dolphins. We have the fish
Tank and the audible podcast. Go check out their library, and of course Miami Dolphins dot com. Until next time, fins up.
