To on remove Darlin Deep Speedways Past Hell. From the Baptist Health Studios inside the Baptist Health Training Complex. This is Drivetime with Travis Wingfield. He's got my hands in the playoffs. What is up Dolphins? And welcome to the Draft Time Podcast. I am your host, Travis Wingfield. And on today's show, we're back in the film room. Just to be my favorite show of the week. Now it's not so much. Let's go ahead and dive in on what went wrong for the Dolphins and Titans. From the
Baptist Health Studios inside the Baptist Health Training Complex. This is the Draft Time Podcast. May gaffs a couple of injury updates. It sounds like Odell Beckham and camp Smith could be back here very soon. Jalen Phillips will not play in the game on Sunday, and they'll have further testing to determine the severity of his knee injury as he works to get back after leaving the game on
Monday night. Football. Beckham and Campsmith, by the way, had their practice window opened on Wednesday or they will, I should say have it open tomorrow and we should get Armstead and Fuller back for the game. On Sunday as well. Per McDaniel, let's go ahead and crack into this tape here off the top here and quite frankly, the opening
script couldn't have started any better. Like you got lateral displacement from your play action game on the first snap a walk in the park, drive, starter, throw, Waddle all alone beyond the sticks. That's how I always want to start every drive first and ten play action dig route in behind linebackers because their forward flow tends to be their modus operandi. How do you say that on first down?
And it creates those windows in behind the linebackers like we saw Fits hit those routes to Devonte freaking Parker and Preston Williams on the rig. Keep throwing to these guys. It was there. Then Tyreek gets out on the edge of the defense on a jet sweep and gets great blocks from Johnny and Waddle to spring him off the edge. Two plays in a row, you have the ball at the plus thirty three. But the fourth play is where you go, huh, you know? The first what so to speak,
comes in. Tyreek is behind Tyler Huntley in the pistol and runs the swing route, working backwards, not down the line. He's running away from the goal line, which has kind of become his go to a move, And that's what makes this whole play a head scratcher to me on that particular rep because did they run it that way in practice? And if it was, the emphasis has to be it must be if you drop this, which is what happened, we have to cover it up because it's
a fumble. It's a live football. But the minute the ball hits the ground, he pulls up and stops playing. And thankfully there's an inadvertent whistle because that's a touchdown for the Titans if they don't blow it dead. I can understand not being on the right track with a new quarterback, or knowing where he's going to throw the football, or him not knowing how Tyreek angles his routes, but all of that aside, I feel like it's inexcusable to not have the urgency to fall on the football there.
But that's what this team has lacked all year, even in Game one. Urgency. I mentioned the different run schemes out on that fourth down failure drive in the second quarter on the podcast and on Twitter yesterday where they went inside zone counter man scheme and then quarterback power. I like the thinking there, and just a general thought to kind of add more variety all these edge carries, particularly the ones where the receivers get the ball on
jet sweeps and whatnot. They're consistently having to bubble, which is where you take that snap down the line. You want your first step to be upfield, like we saw with Xavier Worthy in his opening day touchdown for the Chiefs where he takes that jet sweep and just goes upfield for a touchdown. If you have to go backwards, the amount of pursuit that you get from that from over the top of the defense, it shuts those plays
down instantly. And I think that the reason you're getting those bubbles is because you're getting overplayed from the cornerbacks in the run game. They keep recognizing it and shooting across the face of our receivers who cannot hit those crack blocks, and it forces us to bubble back behind the line of scrimmage, which allows the pursuit to get over the top. Like if Waddle can crack snead on that Tyreek jet sweep, it's a foot race to the sideline.
With Kenneth Murray and Tyreek wins that race one hundred and one times out of one hundred. Those are some general thoughts. Let's go ahead and talk about the quarterback play, and this is going to be a rough review, but I want to drop the disclaimer off the top here that you know, what can you really expect? Right, It's
a complex offense. He's been here for two weeks. What I was excited to see from hunting and why I tweeted about it, you know, over the course of the weekend was the creativity and some design runs, and we got a flash of that. But from an execution standpoint, it's kind of what you'd expect. That third down sack on the second drive, that's a well schemed up pressure where we just flat out got the protection wrong and Tyler didn't have his hot ready to break it down.
On the front side where the rush came from. There was a one tech, a four tech, and a nine technique. What that means is a player off the right side of the center's body, off his right shoulder. The four technique is head up over the right tackle, and the
nine technique is the camwake position. Right, you were way out beyond the entire formation and to the Titans backside was a bugged up linebacker in the B gap and a five technique, So their goal was to leave both the left tackle and left guard without guys to block,
and that is precisely what happened. Well, actually, they did get one rush out of that side because that front side one technique did twist across Aaron Brewer's face and it got him to over extend and pulled him to the left side of the formation, which created a three on two situation for the Titans pass rush. Then the stack linebacker that was behind the four technique, he blitzes the B gap. So a stack linebacker means you lamb directly behind a defensive player or an offense It could
be offense as well. Stacks is when you have two guys on top of each other and that creates blocking in decision sometimes and in pass protection. One oh one louder for those in the back. Pass protection one oh one says to eliminate the most imminent threat and that comes from the inside, which in this case is that stackbacker who is screaming unblocked into the B gap. So Austin squeezes the B gap and gets it blocked. That's him.
It's what he's supposed to do. The only answer in that play because everything's covered up otherwise, which has been an issue in his own self, is Jalen Wright in the flat, who's in the pattern the entire time. He never once showed signs of picking it up in pass pro.
So I know someone keeps saying that's not what they would do with Jalen Wright, like he ran the route that he was not in pass protection, that is, scan and squeeze and have the most imminent pressure be the one you pick up most and leave the edge vacant. And what do we always say in the podcast when there's a blitz, throw the football with that blitz came from. But again, that's a lot to process for a quarterback brand new in the offense. He doesn't do it. We
eat the sack and look, it's been bad. But I want you guys to hear the why behind this rather than just dealing with droves of angry tweets about that's my goal to provide the why not just say shambalack from the right tackle right, you know, I think he started seeing ghosts from there though, because the next play is a design swing where you pull the offensive line into the flat and which hey, that again means you're hot, right, But he double clutches, gets hit as he throws and
misses the easy throw, but he did draw a fifteen yard flag. Just a few series later, you can see where you can get some plays off on this stuff. The Titans brought a fifth rusher and he recognized where that linebacker came from on a slight delayed blitz and
he vacates that spot. And this opens this massive gap in the b gap between the tackle and the guard where Rob Jones squeezes down inside and Patrick Paul fans out for a wide nine technique rush and Huntley sees it immediately and they convert with a twelve yard scramble on third and eleven. So I do think the more reps he gets, the more you could see some of that.
You can see his lack of experience and knowledge in an offense though, on the next play when he tries to throw a corner route to Tyreek in double coverage. But the reason he's in double coverage is that deep curl to e Chan that he runs is completely vacated as they both run the middle of the field. Third and the other deep third corner off on the Tyreek route, so they get two guys that run with Tyreek and it leaves a chan all alone. In fact, they hit
Tyreek on this play. In the Jacksonville game two was I think to his best throw of the entire year so far, for a gain of like twenty one yards in the fourth quarter. That made a huge difference in that game. And this one was way more open. His feet get wonky at times, and it's not all tied to rhythm of the play. Like I said this back in camp and have probably said it twenty times now, but I just really appreciate too, and thought we could
all stand to appreciate him more. This offense works because of his skills and the footwork and the timing and the repetition of all that. That's really it. Because some of these max protections two man deep route combos, he looks for it if it's not there, but he's already strided to one of those routes, doesn't get his feet reset, the base widens, the ball goes stram up in the air.
It's like a golfer who has like yippie hands on chipping or putting, like the backstroke is so broken and sudden that you jerk forward and there's no speed control on the downswing and it results in off target balls or you know, Shank Hauzle rocket shots on these simple swing routes. The ball placement was an issue. The out to Waddle before the first field goal he's on, which I love, but the ball brings Waddle reaching back inside to the defender to make the catch. You throw it
on the outside shoulder. It leads him right into a first down run. And I don't know Snoop, but if I had to guess, he's still thinking about that deep shot to Reek. At the end of the first half, we get run action to the boundary that develops into a swing screen and something that kept the half field safety to that side's attention. I'm not sure what it was because he doesn't move. He's doing a poyer and
stand there just watching the action. And Reek takes this outside release on Lugerious Sneed and makes him whiff on
the jam. He stacks him and has two yards of separation, and Snoop throws the ball flat like Tyreek has to come back to that ball, and when Cheetah's behind, someone make him run further because the further he runs, the more distance he'll create because he's the fastest player in the league, right and if he catches that like that could change the entire complexion of the game, because it's two eight to play in the half, it's six to three, and not only do you take a ten to six lead,
not only do you open up oh damn, we have to cover that route now because like they hit it on us, you change, You can run the ball more yourself, You can cause the Titans to run the ball less. It changes the entire complexion of the game. Pair of that with the fumble on the first drive, that's two plays that you know, probably could have changed this entire game, and I think change maybe the perception of how this
team looks right now. But you are what you are because you continue to fail to execute in those critical spots. And honestly, for the second straight week, I come away from the tape less down on the structure and scheme and more just like, look, look we were down quarterback one. Our quarterback two can't play at this level. That seems pretty abundantly clear to me. And now we're working in
this third quarterback who's been here for two weeks. So when you missed the first down deep shot, then you go quarterback power and creates this third long situation at the end of the half, and you call this screen pass. I can't sit here in act like you should have been more aggressive, because even when you call it right and there's openings, our odds of hitting those plays have
been like less than half. So why even create the opportunity for a negative when you aren't hitting the opportunities that you do have. That's kind of how I feel that at the end of the game. I'm okay with a game manager role when you can't get execution from
your players really across the board. The coaching thing that does get me, though, is the personnel decisions with certain roles like Braxon burials blocking the linebacker at the point of attack on a slip screen, or throwing the screen to Eskridge's side rather than John Hu's side later in the game, like let John new block because he had some good ones in this game, and I saw them do this right away in camp, So I don't know why it's going away from it here, but I digress.
And of course, our best pass play of the entire night was negated by an illegal shift call, and I'm not sure what caused that because Eskridge is on the line of scrimmage covering up the tackle and Cheetah goes in the short motion running parallel to the line of scrimmage and the flag comes out. So I don't know what caused that, But there you go, and it's amid a multiple illegal shift calls they made in this game.
Let's go ahead and take our first break rate there, come back and do individual standouts and misses and snap counts on the offense. That's the next Draft Time podcast, your host Travis Wingfield, brought to you by AutoNation. A few individual standouts to talk about. On the offensive side
of the football. I thought alec Ingold played really well with his control and the way he scored up some blocks and frequently got knocked back and was consistently you know, creating edges and the b gaps that we didn't get to at the running game, which we'll get to in a second here. And I've seen a lot of talk about Austin Jackson, which again the pass protection thing, like you got to study the ball to figure out what
happened there. I can I'll talk to him blue in the face and argue that point until we were, you know, one hundred years old here. But with the running game, I've seen you know, thousands of runs in this system now, and I think you're hard pressed to find a player who has better balance as he transitions from first level
catch to second level climb. He plays so well connected, his center of gravity remains under him at all times, and he's able to attach to these linebackers running at full speed like it's so impressive for a guy that's always keeping his feet and we always talk about a guy that never keeps his feet like it's the complete opposite there with his athletic ability. I think Aaron Brewers
had a great year so far as well. And it's funny because the knock on him in Tennessee was anchoring in one on one pass protection situations when he's giving up twenty thirty forty pounds to guys. But I can't recall more than a snap or two where he got beat on those. In fact, a lot of it has been teach tape from him where he shoots the hands, has patients patient feet as he builds towards the anchor and lets those guys' initial bold rush kind of peter out.
Then he drops the anchor and stone walls them and gets himself in a position where he can redirect. And then it just becomes the rabbit drill from the combine, where you mirror the rusher's movements and keep him chasing air and Brewers so quick in that regard that once he gets to that spot, you're not going to beat him. I thought Jalen Wright earned more carries as he continues
to do that. His natural feel for the angles to take at unblocked defenders is something I feel like we've been missing from the offense since for heem Moster it went down, and not just the running backs, but across the skilled groups. Like running parallel to the line scrimmage compared to getting upfield. I like the way Right hits it with conviction. Tyreek was open a lot. It's easy
to see why he's frustrated. But now that said, you're a captain and the highest paid player at your position, all of that, right, So can we maybe show a little bit better body language? Can we not give up on fumbles? Can we stop having a costly play every single time you play a national prime time, And for the love of freaking God, can we stop running backwards when you catch the football. Oh and on the snap that went past Tyler Huntley, there is no reason to
not be set right there. He was hit for a legal shift because we snapped it with a man in motion and Rieke was still moving like the snap was early for sure, but I can't understand why we're like two seconds from the snap and you're still not getting set. What do you He was just stand there like moving around, And then later he lines up on the line of scrimmage and Escridge tells him to scoot back, and you know somebody was emotion and he didn't get set. It
costs as another illegal shift. So bruh, how do you not know where to line up and the guy that just got here a few weeks ago does? It blows my mind some individual misses. Rob Jones has been on this list every single week and he continues to stay there. I feel like you have to make the change to Isaiah Win when he gets back, but it sounds like that's not gonna happen anytime soon. McDaniel provided no updates
for that on Tuesday. You got to make that move because the second drive he can't get connected to Aaron Brewer and loses the gap for a short run. The next step gets swiped and discarded. Next snap, I should say, gets swiped and discarded by a one on one pass brush and a Pham booth way too easily. He doesn't
process either, like the Huntly Keeper on Power. In the second quarter, he goes for this combo block where there's an unblocked man off the edge, and he winds up blocking neither because he can't decide who to go to. If he had just gotten the way of the edge, it's a first down, but as a tackle for loss. The first drive of the second half, there's a game coming his way and he runs towards the Twister, not the the Hell and Hunt film that the guy does
kind of twist off of the game. He runs at it and overruns it and then just has to turn back around and chase him back to the quarterback. And of course it's just been that way all year, like I don't know where you're going, it's coming to you. There's no patience, there's no processing. Everything is I thought Devon Acham was brutal, brutal, I don't know what's going on there, because we haven't seen this from him in the past, but he just kept passing up these bang shots. Bounce, bang,
or bend are your options on the outside zone. Bounce it to the perimeter, bang it up into the gap, bend it back in the cutback lane. And if I had to guess, I would think that it's like what we saw from Julio Rodriguez this year for the Seattle Mariners, something you guys are all privy to, right. We all watched all one hundred and sixty two Miers games this year.
Essentially they had nothing going on around him, and every time he came to the plate in high leverage situations, he would chase the first pitch that was a foot off the plate and then wind up having a horrible bat where he swung at three balls because he pressed trying to hit the ball to loom and field across the street to get the three run home run. Too long. Didn't read he's pressing, But damn man, we had some well blocked plays that he'd either bounced or cut off.
The first play of the second half stretches it out. There's a massive cutback lane and it's walled off on either side. You get a seal here, a seal here, in alle there, but he just keeps running to the edge right into the tackle, does the exact same thing on his next carry, runs into a scrape rather than the massive amount of daylight. I don't know. That was the worst game of his career. For my money, I thought Patrick Paul had a brutal start in his career.
He's still catching in his technique when he gets deep into the drops. He was a little late to react on some pass pros as well. He looked like a rookie making his first career start. We had a designed shot play on the first rep after it was sixteen to six and you had everything set up. Now the receivers didn't get open. But this is where you missed Tron Armstead because they slide protection away from Paul and he has this horrendous technique where he gets smoked and
gave up the sack. That would have been a big scramble gain for Snoop if he just stayed in the way. Thought Liam turned back into a pumpkin in this game. Well that might be harsh. It wasn't like last year's center bad, but it wasn't good, and then Waddle I had him getting shoved to the ground on a reroute where he was off the line of scrimmage, like, come on, dude, you have to get around those. Then the drop pass. I haven't seen him let a ball into his body
like that all year long. He does it, and here comes the drop seas And I also don't think he blocked very well in the game either. Offensive snap counts hunting in the entire line with the distance a chan continues to get a heavy workload seventy three percent of the work Jalen Wright got forty seven percent, with Jeff Wilson getting hurt in pregame playing just two snaps. I think we're gonna see more Jalen Wright here going forward.
Alec Ingold played thirty percent of the snaps, and him and the tight end crew like Julian Hill fifty percent, John hu Smith forty two percent, Durham smy thirty percent. It's just not been good enough all year from that group. And those are the guys that you need to play. When you have Reak and Waddle playing three corps of the snaps and Dwayne Eskridge playing a cord of the snaps or Braxon Barrio is playing a court and Malak Washington.
All these guys played one quarter of the snaps like you have to have the other, you know, the muscle in the room play at a high level. Otherwise you're running guys out there that just don't you know, don't cut it. One last thing here, just again, I keep seeing this this thread and it's it's a losing argument on Twitter, but whatever, please consider other very other avenues for offensive line play than PFF grades. I don't know
what they're watching because they're they're completely wrong. And I know Kyle Krabs the Great Lockdown, Dolphin's Host and Eric Smith from Three Archs percarious that way too. Just want you guys to think about that, because I could not disagree more with their O line assessment here. Early on, it's been an issue at times, but they've had massive gaps. And go watch the Hgan reel Man. There was so many big runs available for him and he just didn't
take them. Let's pivot to the defense here before we take our last break and do the general takeaways before we get to the individuals. I get a kick out of teams trying to run duo on sealer and Campbell duos.
When you get two double teams at the point of attack and then you try to climb off of that and get second level attachment, they stack it up and then when the second combo blocker tries to climb, the original blocker always loses his position on the block because they just aren't connected to the block well enough, and then the seiler or Campbell whind not making the play. It happened a ton early on this game, and I'm not smart enough to know how to adjust to this.
This is a different topic, by the way, slow down, Travis. I'm not smart enough to know how to adjust this. But something I've noticed as a trend as we run a lot of robber from two high looks. That's where you have too high safety and one pivots to single high in the middle of the field and the other one comes down and tries to rob crossing routes from
the backside of the formation. Teams have just been firing this deep curl where the receiver runs fifteen yards, turns back to the quarterback and the ball is there in this massive void of space. It's usually paired with a vertical from the one receiver that pulls the other half field safety over the top, and then we're walling off a crossing route that just never gets there, and we
hit that too. I mentioned in the offensive portion. I think a chan had the curl in a play that we hit to Reek and Jacksonville that we didn't hit in this game. It's a great wrinkle, a great overplay concept off one of the more common concepts you'll see where the one vertical and the two on a crosser.
It almost becomes this deeper version of smash where you're in the corner route and the hitch route, but adapted for a robber and cover one and you run it off play action so that hook linebacker can't get proper depth. We get hit on that all the time. To me, however, as far as positives go, the calling card of this football team so far through four games has been Anthony Weaver's sim pressure looks. That's like the one thing that's
been consistently good for this team. The defense has been good man first on third downs and six in total defense. That's something I think we do really well four weeks in is these sim pressure looks. If you pull up NFL Pro you can sort quarterback pressures by down and if you go to the third down pressures. It's a beautiful balance of similar looks that evolve into something else
post snap. And we got one of my favorite variations last night on the Ogbab pick where they condense Calvin Ridley in tight and so Ramsey is lined up over him and it converts to a pass rush for Jalen Ramsey,
who was great in the game. Ogbab peels off on the other side and runs with the flat route and Levis reads the most basic passing concept in football, slant flat, although it turns into stick flat where rather than on the slant, you stick your route down and sure you numbers with the quarterback and the second he goes to throw that, Ogbab peels off the flat into the stick
route and makes the catch. Great call, great execution, great knee grab down there and manual and we'll do a breakdown of that dolphin sim package on the next episode of HQ, so check that out on YouTube. I thought the Titans did a good job of sequencing their screen game with the run game. They committed to the flow of some of the pre snap motion and quick throws out to the perimeter to widen the Dolphins second level of defense, and then they'd show you know, drop back
action which fans the rushers out wide. Then they find their way into the big gap, which had no second level defender because of the motion displacement. I think we're getting deeper into coverage bag as we go along here for Coach Weaver, like late second quarter they inverted Javon Holland and Kater Kohu in cover two where Holland runs down and plays the slot and Cater plays the deep
half with Jordan Poyer opposite him. I just like seeing the variations of coverage and the rush that Anthony Weaver has at his disposal. I think this defense is playing well and will continue to get better. I also thought the linebackers played pretty well, but I think you can see the rep count wearing on them. And this is why, like you know, the whole Tom Brady established the run. Like making defenders tackle people for twenty snaps a game, it can have an impact in the way you play.
And I thought in the second half they didn't get off as many blocks, and they couldn't stop the momentum of some of those down blocks trying to take those on and abdorbills blocks. I tend to think that's a side effect of all the three and outs the offense had. Let's go ahead and take our last break, come back and do individual standouts and misses and snap counts, and
get the hell out of here. A Drift Time podcast your host Travis Wingfield, brought to you by Auto Nation, finishing up another rivening film review podcast with the individual standouts. Zach Seeler, on the first drive of the game, retraces a screen, beats a double team to stack a play up, and then on the next drive rides the wave on outside zone and makes the tackle wide of the numbers. He's a freaking stud dude. I love watching his tape
every single week. I thought Kalays Campbell was really good too. The hustle on that Levis scramble where he got hurt was impressive. The very next series he plays the five technique and just effortlessly swims the tight end makes a tackle for loss. He did get back in the backfield on two plays where he destroyed blocks, but misstackles. He can just do a little bit better there, right, great player can do a little bit better. Jordan Brooks, this is the free agent that I saw on tape quite
frankly block DEFEATIONI defeating. I just love the way he plays the angles. He knows where he has to get to force the back to change his track, and then has the change of direction to get back into shape after running that track down. So it's like you force him a change direction and then you meet him at that spot. It's impressive to me. He explodes out of
his stands and flies around. He made a tackle on a drag route where he got depth to the sticks, felt the flow and closed before the quarterback through the football and was right there for the hit the moment he made the catch short of the sticks and actually jarred it free After review, I thought Ramsey was awesome in this game. He was in phase on Hopkins and Ridley. They run routes to his blind spots against his leverage, and he would wheel back into position. He rushed the
edge effectively. He flattens the strong side seagap defender a lah Rashad Jones and Days of Old, and the way he would flatten on the line of scrimmage and make the play. In the running game. I saw him stick his face in the fan the run fit that was
vintage Jalen Ramsey. I thought Emmanuel Ogba had two big plays outside of that up and down play, but the pick obviously, and then a second down tackle for loss where he beat a block and then sipped it through the traffic and took on the split flow tight end and made the tackle in the backfield. I thought Javaon was at his most impactful down around the line of scrimmage, really good into the box count and defeared some blocks and made some plays at the point of attack. And
I put Anthony Walker in both categories. I thought he had some good moments in the running game. But they adjusted off of him though, and went after him where they got him on some two way go spots with pulling guards and that's a tough assignment. But he would often jump inside and basically take himself out of the play for the running back to hit the other opposite side of the gap and they would get out the gate on the other side. We had some not so
great performances. I thought Chop Robinson got out physical all night. He also had a pick stunt rep where he I don't know enough ball to know how you convert this, but the tackle fanned out and he ran so far to go pick him and he didn't really need to be picked. And Emmanuel Ogball loops back over and it was just so easy for the guard and sent her to read this action that it was basically and it was the Cater defensiveass interference play, a critical play in
the game. Speaking of Cater, it's the same thing every week. We're just there's no feel at the top of the route. I thought Deshaun Hann got knocked back the entire game. I think Benito Jones seems content to just kind of eat a block and not try to get off of it. Sometimes the little one arm half swings, he takes it guys as they go by. He's like really comical to me. The juice or lack thereof on pass rush is also comical.
It reminds me of that video of the construction worker who lines up for a pass route one on one versus the cornerback construction worker and all he does is like moves his hand and feet really fast, but doesn't go anywhere. That's what it looked like with Bonito Jones. Peely, his awareness of what's going on around him is just not there. There was a screen pass where he just ran up field out of the play, like they let
him go and he just kept running that way. Got to retrace those I feel like JP never found his footing in this game. He tried to back door an outside zone play that lost and lost the edge. That's something that coaches will really get on him for and tape and if you back door, you have to make the play. And then Jordan Poyer, I don't know if he's competing for a lost step or his or what it is, but his angles of attack are just atrocious. Man.
He's been a nightmare in space ten yards downfield. And I get that half field cover two has a lot of responsibility for the deep game, but man teams are picking on the underneath area against him. He's never even in the picture. The play before the end of half field goal, Cater is funneling a dig into Poyer, who's trying to rob double crossers in the backside, and like it runs right behind him, he just lets it go
and there's nobody there. He's hunting for the interception, but all Rudolph has to do is wait, hitch up a beat, throw it into open space, easy conversion there, field goal three points. To end the half way too easy. It's been a liability all four games snap counts. Who cares? But Jordan Brooks with the distance Walker played all but six snaps. Duke got the other ones, and what a terrible night for Duke right. Javon Ramsey and Duck All with the distance Cater played thirty three snaps. I think
they're gonna see some reduction there in his workload. Jordan Poyer also got reduced to thirty seven. Marcus May played thirty. I know that was an injuries Actually that's where that comes from. I hope it's to change, but we'll see fifty one snaps for Sealer. Let's set your watch to it. Campbell played thirty six, Hand played thirty seven. That's where your depth ends right there. If one of those guys goes down and Peelee comes in for eleven snaps in
the game, like, that'll be an issue. Ogbah fifty one, Phillips thirty two, Chop twenty two, Bell fifteen. That group has been an issue man without Phillips. Oh, it's gonna be rough going forward, all right. Top five tapes Number one was Jalen Ramsey. I thought he was his best version of himself in this game. Jordan Brooks is number two, Zach Sealer number three, Klays Candell number four, and Javon Hall at number five. All defense, Let's get the hell
out of here. I'm gonna go get some Mexican food with my family and go to Spirit Halloween. Just shopping with the family for the costumes. Looking forward to that. You all, please be sure subscribe to the podcast. We listen Ringan looms a review, follow me on social at Wingfield, NFL. Follow the Dolphins at Miami Dolphins. Check out the fish Tank podcast with my guys Seth and Juice. Kevin Burnett coming up this week on the podcast. You don't want
to miss that. Also the Dolphins YouTube channel for Dolphins HQ. I have some fun breakdowns planned this week for you guys, but not least Miami Dolphins dot Com. Until next time, Finn's Up, Colin Cameron, Daddy's Coming Home.
